Society has made the job of the interviewer much easier because most people don’t listen. The key to being an interviewer/interrogator is to learn how to listen. There are “tricks” of the trade, but on close examination they are common sense.
An experienced interviewer can spot deception with more accuracy than a polygraph, because they are not limited sweating, heart rate, and blood pressure, all of which can be controlled with practice. The interviewer can see the control taking place while a polygraph operator is watching the machine.
Questions are vastly overrated in interrogation. Ask a question and all you will get is an answer to that question. Start a conversation and you find answers to a lot of questions. People would be amazed at how often you can clear multiple crimes during an interview. “I couldn’t have done that robbery, because I was breaking into a store on the other side of the city” is not as uncommon as people would think.
]]>Bush is not.
Again, I’ll assert my claim based on six years observing Bush as Texas governor. His particular psychopathology is well summed up in two words: “mean bastard.” It’s true that he is a coward and (as with many cowards who have an opportunity) a bully, but the real danger from Bush is that, whether from nature or nurture, Bush actively likes making people suffer and die. No rational argument against torture can possibly affect him; he’s made his decision, and of course he never changes his mind.
I’ve seen no evidence that Cheney is any different in that regard. He may be brighter, but he’s just as sick.
They say a fish rots from the head. Being the son of an amateur fisherman, I’ve seen a lot of dead fish, but never saw fit to investigate closely enough to determine the truth of that truism. But it certainly works as metaphor here. With Bush and Cheney on the side of torture, not for information-gathering purposes but for the sheer terror it allows them to project, no one below them in their administration is going to pursue a rational, legal course.
I look forward to the day when we have leaders who believe America and Americans are, indeed, “better than that.”
]]>Anyone who argues for torture exposes his own weaknesses. The cowardly bully likes torture because it makes him feel powerful but it actually shows he has no abilities other than brute force. Once he has lost that, he has nothing.
The fearful, the weak think it gives them strength, and don’t notice we lose the moral high ground. I understand the urge to hurt when hurting, but to torture?
We’re better than that.
]]>one of my very favorite monty python scenes. and too true.
You have to create the environment in which the interviewee wants to talk, and you let them.
always works for hercule poirot. works pretty good in ordinary everyday life too.
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