Analyzing Every Torture Scene in Call of Duty - All 46 of Them

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  • čas přidán 20. 06. 2024
  • Pain destroys one’s world, and, in that silence, torturers impose the myth of the state’s legitimacy. | Sign up for Nebula: go.nebula.tv/jacob-geller / Buy a Nebula Gift Card: gift.nebula.tv/jacobgeller
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    SPECIAL THANKS:
    Cameron Kunzelman for additional voices: x.com/ckunzelman
    Alex Adams for additional background information
    Hat Man and Nebula Studios for graphs and motion graphics
    AFGuidesHD for allowing me to use their gameplay footage: / @afguideshd
    Iavor Todorov for additional background information
    SOURCES:
    Torture and Democracy by Darius Rejali
    How to Justify Torture: Inside the Ticking Bomb Scenario by Alex Adams
    Anatomy of Torture by Ron Hassner
    Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? by Michael Sandel
    Serial Season 4 - Guantánamo: www.nytimes.com/interactive/2...
    U.N. Convention against Torture: www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-...
    Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture: www.intelligence.senate.gov/s...
    Wait, There’s Torture in Zootopia? by Casey Delehanty and Erin Kearns: www.cambridge.org/core/journa...
    Guantánamo by the Numbers- ACLU: www.aclu.org/issues/national-...
    Report on Guantanamo Detainees: A Profile of 517 Detainees Through Analysis of Department of Defense Data by Mark Denbeaux, Joshua Benbeaux, and John Gregorek: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.c...
    Personal Responsibility Under Dictatorship by Hannah Arendt: themontrealreview.com/Article...
    History of Guantanamo Bay- CBC News- The National: • History of Guantanamo Bay
    Every Torture Scene in Call of Duty- MrSp3ctre: • Every Torture Scene in...
    Policing in Japan: A Study on Making Crime by Setsuo Miyazawa
    Media shown: Call of Duty: 2, 3, 4: Modern Warfare, World at War, Modern Warfare 2, Black Ops, Modern Warfare 3, Black Ops II, Ghosts, Advanced Warfare, Black Ops III, Infinite Warfare, WWII, Black Ops 4, Modern Warfare (2019), Cold War, Vanguard, Modern Warfare II (2022), Modern Warfare III (2023), Black Ops 6
    Music Used (Chronologically): Multiplayer Menu Theme (Infinite Warfare), Multiplayer Menu Theme (Black Ops), Downtown Sniper Soviet Tension (Call of Duty 2), Third District (Katana Zero), Captain Toad Goes Forth (Super Mario 3D World), Polina’s Vengeance (Vanguard), Multiplayer Menu Theme (Modern Warfare 2), Multiplayer Menu Theme (Ghosts), Pripyat (Call of Duty 4), Furnace (Control), Olympus Mons (Infinite Warfare), Embassy (Modern Warfare), Afterlife (Infinite Warfare), Collateral (Modern Warfare), Smooth Talking (Nocturnal Spirits)
    Additional music and sound effects from Epidemic Sound
    Thumbnail and Graphic Design by / hotcyder
    Description credit: “Torture and Democracy” by Darius Rejali
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Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @JacobGeller
    @JacobGeller  Před 7 dny +423

    Want to gift a year of Nebula to a friend? Or tell them to gift a year of Nebula TO YOU? Check out Nebula's new gift cards (with a discount, when you use this link): go.nebula.tv/gift?ref=jacobgeller

    • @jacobsouls
      @jacobsouls Před 6 dny +6

      Why does this video have 1.2 thousand likes, but only 372 views???

    • @sakinano99
      @sakinano99 Před 6 dny +10

      Can't comment on Nebula so telling you here: in the Nebula version of the video, every line of subtitles has a double space in the center of it, just fyi. I noticed it a few minutes in and it bothered me throughout the rest of the video. Maybe you care enough to fix it maybe not? Just thought you should know.

    • @Billiamwoods
      @Billiamwoods Před 6 dny

      ​@@jacobsoulsCZcams is broken

    • @pezvonpez
      @pezvonpez Před 6 dny

      wagoogus

    • @callmetired2294
      @callmetired2294 Před 6 dny

      Jacob I just gotta say you're awesome that is all

  • @grfrjiglstan
    @grfrjiglstan Před 5 dny +1183

    "Getting rid of [torture] from MW's campaign would be like removing Jesus from the Bible"
    You could make another 40 minute video essay just unpacking that comment.

    • @bojack6987
      @bojack6987 Před 5 dny +25

      i mean its reddit after all , you cant expect them not to make such a comment sometime

    • @julianpedersen9167
      @julianpedersen9167 Před 5 dny +137

      @@bojack6987 It's not that the comment was surprising -- as you said yourself, it's reddit, it was the total opposite of surprising. Rather, the amount of logical, emotional, and moral assumptions and equivalencies required to equate the necessity of depicting full-blown interactive torture in CoD with the necessity of _depicting fuckin' Jesus of all people_ is so bafflingly absurd it loops around to being brilliant again. (Despite there only being a vanishingly-small chance that any of this nuance was intentional.)
      I, for one, would _love_ a deep-dive into the social, historical, and cultural contexts required to even understand how such a statement could ever have possibly been unironically made in the first place.

    • @Liam_Patton
      @Liam_Patton Před 2 dny +29

      Jesus was tortured to death.
      I mean, he came back afterward, but the torture is definitely a common factor.

    • @UkrainiansWillLose
      @UkrainiansWillLose Před 2 dny +3

      the commenter has a point actually

    • @charlie-im
      @charlie-im Před 2 dny +10

      The implication that the torture exists so that others can be... Forgiven, somehow... The implication that the torture absolves the sin eaters of the very sin they eat. It's sick.

  • @TheEvilmonkey25
    @TheEvilmonkey25 Před 6 dny +4652

    This is how torture is actually effective:
    The Brazilian dictatorship is considered a success story among totalitarian regimes, as it lasted for nearly 30 years, and none of the leaders were punished in any way after the fact. My countrymen's greatest "innovation" was to favor torture instead of murder as a repression tool, because if people lived, it looked less bad. However, as they were tortured, they most often just self-exiled and very often killed themselves afterward.
    In a sense, when you torture someone enough, they essentially die (as far as being a political opponent for your regime), while remaining alive. So the torturer don't get as much blame, and their regime doesn't get as much flak internationally. Also, torturers seem to be much prouder of themselves than executioners are (as you can see in Indonesia, where they consider themselves national heroes).
    Another advantage of torture is that there is no limit to how many people you can torture at once. If you torture someone in front of any number of people, you are effectively torturing everyone who is watching. This happened to my aunt: she was forced to watch a schoolmate of hers (an underaged girl) being tortured by policemen in front of her entire class, and that forever diffused her (and I assume all of her classmates as well) from being an effective opposition to the state. In fact, the statistics that the Brazilian police state "only" tortured 40,000 people are laughable. Not only are these numbers probably an underrepresentation of the number of people who were dragged to basements and tortured for hours, but they completely discount the likely hundreds of thousands of people who received public beatings or sexual assault at the hands of the dictatorship. They also don't even attempt to account for all the people who have been tortured by being forced to watch or be aware of another person's torture, which can be just as much of a torture.
    In Brazil, the idea of torture being about gathering information was just a thinly-veiled excuse for enforcing and demonstrating the power of the state. It was very effective; Brazilians were a terrified people for 30 years.
    It's also a grim testament to the power of torture that people can forget. Currently, there seems to be a wave of amnesia affecting the older generations, where they have convinced themselves that it made the country safer, that it wasn't so bad, and that it prevented something worse, like a socialist regime being instilled here (this one is especially inaccurate).

    • @LaRavachole
      @LaRavachole Před 6 dny +555

      As a Brazilian, I think this comment is sadly spot on. Our history is being rewritten, first by that regime from 1964, now by the sons of those who ran it. It's haunting...

    • @redblue5140
      @redblue5140 Před 6 dny +216

      That is depressing. I thought torture never worked but now I can understand why governments do it.

    • @lmaolol9357
      @lmaolol9357 Před 6 dny

      ​@@redblue5140 It worked for the mentioned fascist regime and it was horrible for the people.

    • @sabretoo
      @sabretoo Před 5 dny +107

      Thanks for sharing this. That's so terrifying.

    • @deeznoots6241
      @deeznoots6241 Před 5 dny +359

      @@redblue5140yeah the ‘torture doesn’t work’ line only applies to a shallow reading of the purposes of torture, torture as a method to gain information doesn’t work, but torture for other purposes can be very effective.

  • @Sky-bx9mn
    @Sky-bx9mn Před 5 dny +1183

    This reminds me of a phenomenon I've observed for a while. It's when people get so enamored of their own willingness to "make the hard choices"/"do the hard thing"/"be cruel to be kind"/etc. that they reject all information that the hard thing actually is ineffective/has results actively contrary to their aims and the easy thing would be the better thing to do. Outside of torture, this often comes up in the context of how to treat children, addicts, homeless persons, immigrants, prisoners, etc.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 5 dny +137

      It's difficult because the person rejecting softhearted approaches to social problems usually ignores the potential for some really effective softhearted solutions that aren't in general use. Instead, they're looking at the two approaches generally in use: ignoring the problem and letting it fester, or punishing the people doing the behavior to encourage them to change their behavior. It's a "this isn't working, we need to try the other approach" but also ignoring that the nasty approach isn't the only untried approach.

    • @themanofquagga
      @themanofquagga Před 5 dny +49

      I feel that often happens because they lose track of why they were making the hard choices to begin with, and start to simply do it because it's "the hard choice", even if it's objectively the wrong choice. They've built up some kind of mental block causing a dissonance that leaves them simply unable to face the fact that they've fallen straight into the abyss. "He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster . . . when you gaze long into the abyss the abyss also gazes into you"

    • @GlacialScion
      @GlacialScion Před 5 dny +84

      You see this a lot with exercise, funnily enough. People working too hard, lifting too much, running too fast, etc. Doing what sucks because it sucks, thinking that fact alone means they're doing what's optimal.

    • @hughcaldwell1034
      @hughcaldwell1034 Před 5 dny +78

      This is only tangentially related, but the "make the hard choices" or "get dirty so the world stays clean" mentality has been on my mind recently, specifically in comparison to common attitudes toward defence attorneys. People love to defend cops, troops, etc as people making the hard choices in awful situations in order to keep society safe. "You might not like them, but they're the reason you live in a democracy," they say.
      Then many of these same people will absolutely excoriate the defence attorney of someone accused of a crime, going so far as to say "Some people don't deserve to have their rights," when it's pointed out that this, too, is a job full of hard choices that is crucial to the functioning of the democracy they hold so dear.
      It seems that making the hard choices is only heroic when it's dealing out punishment to one's enemies. And that doesn't sound like a hard choice, it sounds like an unpopular choice that grants a simple, shallow catharsis.

    • @czwarty7878
      @czwarty7878 Před 5 dny +9

      @@hughcaldwell1034 eh, I get what you mean but it's not exactly the same, at least not completely. People don't usually have problem with lawyers being defense attorneys to bad people, but rather with crooked lawyers defending bad people in crooked way. It is of course well understood that even the worst people must have right to defend themselves in court, but some lawyers for money are ready to go beyond just "hard choice" of defense itself here. Trying to derail the trail, get obviously guilty violent criminal freed on technicality, or worst of all, try to dig dirt on victim, re-traumatising victim by forcing them to re-tell story of SA/child r*pe/murder attempt etc just to try and catch them on some minor discrepancies etc all that are really despicable practices that go beyond simply criminal defense. Those are not "hard choices" at all, those are straight up immoral practices

  • @Silverman160Zero
    @Silverman160Zero Před 4 dny +383

    Friendly reminder that the best interrogator in history was a German man named Hanns Scharff, who frequently got his info out of POW's by treating them with kindess, often doing stuff such as: Telling jokes, giving them homemade meals, occasionally sharing drinks with them, and nature walks, amongst many other actions.
    He's also partially the reason why I remember the saying, "You attract more flies with honey than you do with vinegar."

    • @DanKaschel
      @DanKaschel Před 2 dny +9

      Any books or sources you good recommend on the topic?

    • @JCTBomb
      @JCTBomb Před dnem +18

      Fascinating, actually! The notion that people are just as easily (if not more so) persuaded to cooperate when given positive reinforcement then when punished…

    • @Healermain15
      @Healermain15 Před dnem

      And when we say "German" we mean "Nazi".
      The top interrogator of a delusional fascist murderstate concluded that torture is useless and they should stop doing it.

    • @EddieM1994
      @EddieM1994 Před dnem +7

      iirc there was a guy in al-Qaeda or similar, who gave up valuable information because he had diabetes and one of the interrogators brought him sugar-free cookies.

    • @DanKaschel
      @DanKaschel Před dnem +8

      @@EddieM1994 I wonder if this can be properly considered interrogation. One-on-one experience and compassion are how prejudice and hatred are destroyed. Maybe he just realized he'd been lied to about how evil we were and how we all wanted to eradicate them.
      I saw a clip of Alex Jones wailing into the camera, crying: "they hate our children so much". There must be some people who genuinely believe that liberals hate their children. I imagine it would be a real blow to their worldview to see liberals protecting and being kind to their children, not caring about the beliefs of their parents.

  • @alexr1632
    @alexr1632 Před 6 dny +7814

    I think it's a good time to remember that the US Military is actively involved in the development of Call of Duty games as a consultant where they push for the games to be recruitment propaganda.

    • @warrust
      @warrust Před 6 dny +1071

      while framing torture as this highly efficient and justifiable process
      so those recruits can bring the same philosophy once they end up being cops

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Před 6 dny +632

      Fascists gotta fascist

    • @mustardorb8867
      @mustardorb8867 Před 6 dny +26

      This!!!!

    • @noize8148
      @noize8148 Před 6 dny +395

      @@Coffeepanda294 I wish people such as yourself would stop devaluing the word "fascist" to mean "people who do things that I don't like." It's really bad and unproductive rhetoric. The United States military is not fascist, and if the armed forces that is subject and accountable to a democratic government is fascist, then the word fascist has ceased to mean anything.
      Fascism is not when the government creates bad propaganda.

    • @Coffeepanda294
      @Coffeepanda294 Před 6 dny +468

      @@noize8148 You're welcome to actually look up the definition instead of putting words in my mouth. Looking up the 14 characteristics is a good starting place.

  • @dylangergutierrez
    @dylangergutierrez Před 6 dny +2303

    Can't help but sing "Call of Duty Torture Spreadsheet" in my head in the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" cadence

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean Před 5 dny +149

      Oh no, it fits the meter.

    • @devinward461
      @devinward461 Před 5 dny +60

      Best comment on this video

    • @briand.6359
      @briand.6359 Před 5 dny +116

      There was a whole twitter account for a few years that did nothing but post phrases that could be sung to that theme. One of my favorites (and apt for this video) was "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder"

    • @notanaveragedoktah8390
      @notanaveragedoktah8390 Před 5 dny +69

      Would the ending of the song go: *"Torture in a half-hour! America power!"*

    • @soup9911
      @soup9911 Před 5 dny +20

      XKCD 1412 moment.

  • @irgendeintyp3754
    @irgendeintyp3754 Před 5 dny +1100

    To cite my disillusioned ex-military sports trainer, who in turn cited his trainer from an anti-torture exercize: "You don't torture to gain information - you torture because you feel like it."

    • @John-X
      @John-X Před 4 dny +13

      My favorite torture scene was in Modern Warfare 2007 when Price's S.A.S. squad captures Al-Assad in his safehouse. They burst in through the door, Price takes out the hostiles, & punches out Al-Assad, then the scene cuts to black. Then you hear punches, & the scene fades in to Price beating the crap out of Al-Assad yelling "NAMES, I WANT NAMES" then Al-Assad gets a phonecall, which Price answers, then he drops the phone, blasts Al-Assad in the head, then Gaz says "who was it sir?" and Price says "Zakhaev...Imran Zakhaev." Then the scene fades to black into the next most iconic mission "All Ghillied Up"
      What was your favorite torture scene? 🤗

    • @Based_Gigachad_001
      @Based_Gigachad_001 Před 4 dny +3

      So? Cope.

    • @cheyhey2170
      @cheyhey2170 Před 3 dny +59

      @@Based_Gigachad_001 wat

    • @Based_Gigachad_001
      @Based_Gigachad_001 Před 3 dny +2

      @@cheyhey2170 Hmm?

    • @bonebag1961
      @bonebag1961 Před 3 dny +71

      ​@@Based_Gigachad_001This sort of response is the entire reason this video exists at all.

  • @chronocrusade2464
    @chronocrusade2464 Před 5 dny +99

    There's something unpleasantly appropriate about the fact that the metaphor for torture was Jesus. Jesus, a man who preached compassion, kindness, anti-violence and tolerance of other peoples, and yet has served as the driving force of some of the most bloody wars in human history. A man who's kindness is ignored, and a cruelty which has its horror ignored.

    • @ZgermanGuy.
      @ZgermanGuy. Před 3 dny +12

      I Must admit that i have a morbid fascinatation with These types of people the mental gymnastics needed to Turn such a simple straightforward Message completley upside down

    • @Emmariscobar
      @Emmariscobar Před dnem +4

      Not to mention that He was _tortured to _*_death_* by people who the Bible pretty clearly depicts as being bad guys (sure, it was all for the greater good, but His torturers didn't actually know that)

    • @harsharya08
      @harsharya08 Před 22 hodinami

      The idea of religious wars being common needs to stop lol. Outside of the Crusades (even they were more a political and cultural phenomena) religious wars were NOT common. When you send your people to war you wrap the experience in religious fervor, but to sit and say that the war was in the name of their God is ignorant and reductive. So many Americans are scarred from their fundamentalist parents and have reacted by just hating axiomatic religions all together.

  • @princessjellyfish98
    @princessjellyfish98 Před 6 dny +4775

    the revelation that call of duty contains child torture followed by kevin spacey jumpscare was like a punch to the gut followed by an uppercut to the chin

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +10

      Can't a child hold a rifle towards you, too?

    • @zdavis9091
      @zdavis9091 Před 6 dny +431

      @@homelessalcoholic2716 How is that relevant to the scene shown in the video above, where the child is unarmed and captive?

    • @Sopsy_Hallow
      @Sopsy_Hallow Před 6 dny +64

      @@zdavis9091 seems less like a defense of the game and moreso another wild thing on the list of wild things

    • @Sopsy_Hallow
      @Sopsy_Hallow Před 6 dny +232

      actually i take it back i saw that persons replies on a different comment and they're absolutely trying to defend it

    • @mortazam.qassem5194
      @mortazam.qassem5194 Před 5 dny +190

      ​@@homelessalcoholic2716 POV: u r a spokesman for the IOF

  • @kingflumph5968
    @kingflumph5968 Před 6 dny +3780

    I'll never forget Trevor Phillips's line from GTA 5. "Torture is for the benefit of the torturer. Or sometimes the torturee! It's useless as a means of getting information." Whenever it's been actually examined in real life, torture is found to be of extremely dubious value in actually accomplishing the interrogator's goals. But it often works in fiction because of course it does, it's a narrative contrivance to move the plot along. The author has already decided that it's going to work.

    • @davidtaylor142
      @davidtaylor142 Před 6 dny +316

      That's because GTA weirdly has good politics

    • @username1660
      @username1660 Před 6 dny +507

      @@davidtaylor142 Sometimes yeah, others it can veer into South Park 'caring about things is cringe' territory

    • @davidtaylor142
      @davidtaylor142 Před 6 dny +233

      @@username1660 yeah I think it's a little more cohesive in its satire that South Park tho

    • @lyricbot8513
      @lyricbot8513 Před 6 dny +148

      @@davidtaylor142 plus you don't get to steal a car when you're watching south park

    • @kayagorzan
      @kayagorzan Před 6 dny +13

      @@davidtaylor142It can be goofy at times but I love it

  • @livingwiththeliving
    @livingwiththeliving Před 5 dny +362

    During a Model UN conference my senior year of high school, one kid told us the story about how him and his buddies had driven out to the middle of the woods to waterboard each other. They had gotten all the rags, water jugs, googled the necessary instructions, and took turns pouring the water over each other's heads.
    What I recall most of all from this conversation is how he ended the story: "I'm glad that we do that to terrorists". Again, no thought it might be misapplied, no thought for the efficacy of it. It's as if he somehow thought that we were in Omelas, and the existence of a child being tortured also meant there was necessarily a utopia around it.

    • @thehuman2cs715
      @thehuman2cs715 Před 5 dny +79

      That is absolutely deranged

    • @livingwiththeliving
      @livingwiththeliving Před 5 dny +112

      @@thehuman2cs715 The odd part is that isn't even the only story I have about my peers waterboarding each other. The dorms at my college had to institute a "no torture" rule after students started consensually waterboarding each other so they could have an "informed debate" on the practice in class. I know the rule was real, I saw it in the student handbook they handed out. The story goes that an RA walked in on the students waterboarding each other in the bathroom but couldn't figure out a way to ban the practice because there wasn't any rule against it. Thus, the "no torture" rule.
      I'm a Zillenial fwiw - basically everyone in my age cohort was a baby when 9/11 happened and grew up amidst Iraq and Afghanistan. I think that did shit to people's brains, hearing your parents, teachers, and peers debate whether it was OK to drown people from the time you were a small child.

    • @errorite6653
      @errorite6653 Před 4 dny +59

      And like there's a 99% chance it wasn't even legit waterboarding, just some wussy bullshit to make them feel badass for putting a wet towel over their face.

    • @melkore31415
      @melkore31415 Před 4 dny

      Well, at least this clearly illustrates how the only real motivation behind this is individual sadism. People who want to torture people seek out careers where they can legally torture people. And folks wonder why there's so much overlap between the police and white power groups.

    • @anotheryoutubeaccount5259
      @anotheryoutubeaccount5259 Před 4 dny

      Terrorist lover...

  • @matthalderman475
    @matthalderman475 Před 5 dny +122

    I find the interrogation between Batman and the the Joker especially interesting here - it was only shown briefly but to me it stands as a direct critique of torture.
    The Joker tells Batman not to start with the head since it numbs everything and ruins the torture. Batman slams his head down anyway, and the Joker laughs. The torture in the scene doesn't bring any information, the Joker only tells them what he wants to. It seems to only be for Batmans own catharsis, subverting the trope of creating impossible situations in media where torture is the only way forward.

    • @shaeisgae8952
      @shaeisgae8952 Před 3 dny +44

      The torture of the Joker is framed as a win for him, by getting batman to stoop that low he was succeeding in his goal of destroying The Batman and everything it stands for.
      A movie that imo more effectively gets that point out is Prisoners, I won't spoil it but if you've seen it ykwim.

    • @gunnarschlichting9886
      @gunnarschlichting9886 Před 3 dny +20

      @@shaeisgae8952 It's also a win for the Joker because he uses a smart combination of the truth and lies to manipulate Batman. The locations were accurate, but who was present at each location was swapped, so the person Batman wanted to save was the one who died.

    • @shaeisgae8952
      @shaeisgae8952 Před 3 dny +28

      @@gunnarschlichting9886 yeah, also proving the point that torture isn't a good way to get information, joker gave him information because he wanted to, not because he was tortured

  • @TheGlooga
    @TheGlooga Před 7 dny +5086

    I never thought about it but the fact that police torture becomes so 'obvious' that other investigative methods atrophy leaving it as the only 'quick' and 'viable' method is so depressing. A self-justifying cruelty machine

    • @croozerdog
      @croozerdog Před 6 dny +280

      thats the most fancy acab ive seen

    • @asddsa8203
      @asddsa8203 Před 6 dny +299

      "Ah dang, we asked him if he did it and he wouldn't confess, guess I get to whip out the chainsaw. Dang, I'm forced!"

    • @Yixdy
      @Yixdy Před 6 dny +73

      America, baby. We aren't free at all lmao

    • @jesustyronechrist2330
      @jesustyronechrist2330 Před 6 dny

      This is why the constitution wants you to have guns.

    • @HPLovesCraftsCat
      @HPLovesCraftsCat Před 6 dny +1

      another acab communist

  • @lukaschin1038
    @lukaschin1038 Před 6 dny +1063

    5:20 the fact that it's called PRIMARY call of duty torture spreadsheet implies the presence of a secondary, more in-depth call of duty torture spreadsheet

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean Před 5 dny +83

      Or possibly just a secondary CoD torture spreadsheet with details irrelevant to the main spreadsheet. (I saw someone speculate that it was Zombies-related.)

    • @joewaid
      @joewaid Před 5 dny +27

      I think it just means the primary series of Call of Duty games, so none of the many, many other games not made by Infinity Ward and Treyarch.

    • @zaidlacksalastname4905
      @zaidlacksalastname4905 Před 5 dny

      Why would the primary be more in depth dawg what are you on about

    • @lukaschin1038
      @lukaschin1038 Před 4 dny +4

      @@zaidlacksalastname4905 learn to read i said the secondary one would be more in depth

    • @8stormy5
      @8stormy5 Před 4 dny +3

      Probably filled to the brim with other columns and questions that *probably* won't be useful, but might be, but even if they are it's not something you'd need to reference more than once or twice.

  • @merlintitouan6949
    @merlintitouan6949 Před 5 dny +121

    I remember Fanon' describing among the psychiatric consequences of torture in Algeria, the case of a police officer that go so used to torture that he caught himself torturing his wife and kids as a mean of settling arguments. And even though he wanted to stop harming his family, when he was told that giving up on torture altogether would be the most effective, he refused.

  • @dusksentry5836
    @dusksentry5836 Před 5 dny +139

    "it's the spanish inquisition. I'm not going to say the line." (1 second of silence)
    That is a show of sheer power and authority that just brute-forces me into respecting Jacob even more

    • @gandalfthegrey1873
      @gandalfthegrey1873 Před 2 dny +3

      Goku levels of will power. Jacob's the real Giga Chad.

    • @iddan1205
      @iddan1205 Před dnem +1

      Read this and then he said the line...but didn't say the line.

  • @alexroselle
    @alexroselle Před 6 dny +1082

    “The only times it villainizes characters for their torture is when the *predetermined* morality of those characters already swings villainous”
    Oh shit, so CoD isn’t only militaristic propaganda; even worse, it’s *Calvinism*

    • @victorkowalski9737
      @victorkowalski9737 Před 6 dny +177

      The more I read about Calvinism, the more convinced I am that its popularity among colonial America is our nation's true Original Sin.

    • @zXPeterz14
      @zXPeterz14 Před 6 dny +4

      I disagree, the torture in mw2019 was definitely supposed to show that captain price was ready to throw away morales for the mission

    • @tristansmith8824
      @tristansmith8824 Před 6 dny +170

      ​@zXPeterz14 The problem is the games love to portray their protagonists as morally gray like this, but never actually have a real point to make about that beyond the original "we get dirty, so the world stays clean" line. Price's moral ambiguity or his position that said ambiguity is necessary is never questioned or challenged, and is treated as Truth by the franchise.

    • @sabretoo
      @sabretoo Před 5 dny +3

      This comment made me laugh

    • @Bluecho4
      @Bluecho4 Před 5 dny

      @@victorkowalski9737 Agreed.

  • @jaybeans981
    @jaybeans981 Před 5 dny +664

    I forget the exact situation, but I recall that there was at least one Supreme Court case which dealt with the legality of torture. Justice Scalia, when discussing the topic, said this:
    “Jack Bauer saved Los Angeles. He saved hundreds of thousands of lives. Are you going to convict Jack Bauer? Say that criminal law is against him? 'You have the right to a jury trial?' Is any jury going to convict Jack Bauer? I don't think so. So the question is really whether we believe in these absolutes. And ought we believe in these absolutes."
    Real-life people use the fictional portrayals of torture to justify using torture, the use of which is then shown in other works of fiction to try and justify it.
    The ouroboros, in pain and anger, bites its own tail.

    • @AirLancer
      @AirLancer Před 5 dny +107

      Reminds me of that Onion skit, Supreme Court: Death Penalty is "Totally Badass".

    • @williamjeffries5074
      @williamjeffries5074 Před 5 dny +52

      John Oliver references that exact quote when he discussed torture and the politics of it on his show. He then described what he saw a better thing Kiefer Sutherland contributed to society: an incident, caught on video, of him drunkenly tackling a Christmas tree in a hotel lobby.

    • @Sky-bx9mn
      @Sky-bx9mn Před 5 dny +70

      I'll paste this from another comment I left: I honestly believe it's the duty of authors and game developers to not perpetuate the myth of efficacy, at least once they've learned the truth about it. (And I say this as someone who writes pretty dang macabre fiction.)
      It's also the duty of Supreme Court justices not to have their heads so far up their butts they sniff their own poop and think it's flowers, but I think we'll have better luck with the fiction writers.

    • @williamjeffries5074
      @williamjeffries5074 Před 5 dny +20

      @@Sky-bx9mn I mean, it’s the Supreme Court, what else can you expect?

    • @butt317
      @butt317 Před dnem

      Reminds me of when I cited Half-Life 2 in an essay about imperialism. I was like 15, and I lost marks for it.

  • @scootcha
    @scootcha Před 5 dny +268

    The mods of /r/callofduty are removing this video every time it gets posted to their subreddit. Sad.

    • @elbowjuice2627
      @elbowjuice2627 Před 5 dny +62

      they'd rather talk about how cod infinite warfare was "overhated"

    • @kevinle1083
      @kevinle1083 Před 5 dny +19

      I guess they must think torture is effective. But according to this video, torture is something used by the torturer for pleasure; pleasure from another person being in pain.

    • @HalTheBot
      @HalTheBot Před 5 dny +2

      @@elbowjuice2627 What does that have to do with anything?

    • @elbowjuice2627
      @elbowjuice2627 Před 5 dny +5

      @@HalTheBot ¿?

    • @thismakesnosense
      @thismakesnosense Před 4 dny +3

      Why? Is there a rule against criticizing the games?

  • @DrFrankenMax
    @DrFrankenMax Před 5 dny +57

    "They used to do these thangs called... studies. Anyway, this one particular study came out and it said that.... torturin a person don't do shit."
    -The Ghoul

  • @JulianDanzerHAL9001
    @JulianDanzerHAL9001 Před 6 dny +4789

    applying actual media analysis
    to THE mainstream military shooter
    a SECOND time
    this is gonna get jsut as brutal figuratively as literally

    • @jesustyronechrist2330
      @jesustyronechrist2330 Před 6 dny +125

      This topic, if handled by any other video essayist, would have gotten us and utter dogwater video. A hitpiece on whatever they barely understand but have decided they want to get rid from existence.
      But luckily it was Jacob. 0/10 not enough climate alarmism.

    • @qapleulia
      @qapleulia Před 5 dny +163

      a second jacob geller video has hit the call of duty series

    • @rezician8433
      @rezician8433 Před 5 dny +5

      can you remind me which video was the first time again?

    • @prophet2187
      @prophet2187 Před 5 dny +32

      ​@@rezician8433that would be "Does Call of Duty Believe In Anything?"

    • @beautifullights8484
      @beautifullights8484 Před 5 dny +4

      @@jesustyronechrist2330 Which videoessayists are you referring to?

  • @gregoryb6494
    @gregoryb6494 Před 7 dny +2048

    The lack of confrontation the series has with the efficacy (or lack there of) of torture is the biggest shortcoming to me. While torture is abhorrent, depicting it in a work of fiction isn't something I'd consider beyond the pale by any means. However, the choice this franchise makes to have torture results be a binary - either you get your Intel or you get nothing - is such a failure of the writing. Getting false or misleading information is, in reality, an extremely common result of torture (as that congressional report you cite calls attention to, it is so common that no information taken from torture can be trusted without thorough corroboration, making the torture itself effectively a waste of time). Yet, unless you just didn't bring it up, the torture victim simple *lying* to make the torture stop and the player being led on a wild goose chase as a result never happens in the entire series. This just seems like such lazy writing to me. It could be an interesting moment as they realize their time has been wasted, their methods failed. This can cause reflection on the efficacy of torture in a way none of the other scenes do, and would still be dramatic and interesting for the player as you are now forced to act upon the real information you presumably got to disprove the lies given under the torture far faster than is comfortable. This strikes me as an interesting, dramatic moment that the call of duty writers have somehow never implemented in their stories.
    Instead they go with such a lazy depiction of torture. I think your conclusion touched on this very nicely; these depictions are so lazy. In the absence of potentially long and arduous intelligence gathering, call of duty substitutes in brief, highly effective torture scenes. In the absence of interesting writing that causes the heroes to reflect on their darkest deeds, the good guys' methods are always justified by their effectiveness and their ability to mitigate further harm.

    • @warrust
      @warrust Před 6 dny +113

      And that in a way makes every torture punitive, because if every Intel is this automatic, all performative violence is just to satisfy the bloodlust.
      The character will get their requested information no matter what in those scenes, so the writers went for the laziest gore to dress it up instead

    • @asddsa8203
      @asddsa8203 Před 6 dny +140

      Torture in movies (except Unthinkable) or games: "oh noes, it's the barbaric act, but WE MUST! Utilitarianism!!! It's effective but also unethical!!"
      Torture in real life: "Yes I am definitely the culprit, here's the names of my compatriots (actually it's Egypt's male football team), please stop putting me into a tiny box for two days at a time".

    • @paulnavales6469
      @paulnavales6469 Před 6 dny +1

      I'm curious about your thoughts on how GTA 5 handled torture. Do you think they did it better than Call of Duty?

    • @0uttaS1TE
      @0uttaS1TE Před 6 dny +52

      Well, there is one instance of false intel coming from an interrogation in the CoD games. Black Ops Cold War's protagonist, Bell, is a former member of the enemy faction who was captured, brainwashed and forced to serve the US in order to find Perseus, the antagonist. This interrogation gets weird, I'm talking MK Ultra namedrop, P.T. corridor weird. But at the end, you have the option to tell Adler, your torturer, false information and lead the team into an ambush. This is an alternate ending, of course, not canon, but I like the fact that you can...well, not betray, but lie to your "allies".

    • @levi2725
      @levi2725 Před 6 dny +30

      @@asddsa8203 In Katana Zero, something I really like is that not only when you get tortured you give no valuable info, you end up counter-interogating your torturer. Gods Will Be Watching sorta has the same thing.

  • @NotSoMax
    @NotSoMax Před 5 dny +99

    you gotta think that even if it was as successful as COD portrays it, its exceptionally stupid to execute someone after they seemingly gave you the information you wanted. either they could've given false information and now you've eliminated your only lead. or they give you the correct information and you've just wasted what could've otherwise been a wellspring of new information. or by being as brutal and savage as possible, you've now radicalized civilians who just witnessed you execute their parent/ partner after they gave you what you wanted, proving every bad preconception they've heard about you. I love the conclusion that beyond it being abhorrent, unrealistic, and outright dumb, it's also just lazy unimaginative writing. it's treated as a panacea and follows this almost child like naivete where the bad guys always tell the truth if you just smack them a few times.

    • @simoneidson21
      @simoneidson21 Před 5 dny +1

      That is realistic. People relent to torture to stop the pain

    • @springshowers4754
      @springshowers4754 Před 4 dny +23

      ​@simoneidson21 my brother in christ did you watch the video

    • @NotSoMax
      @NotSoMax Před 3 dny

      @@springshowers4754 the answer is no, and considering he didn’t read my comment either shows he lacks any form of comprehension. We shouldn’t make fun of the illiterate and cognitively challenged

    • @redkite1908
      @redkite1908 Před 3 dny +11

      @@simoneidson21 They say anything to stop the pain, you don't know if they're saying the truth. And that's assuming that the person in question even knows anything and isn't just making shit up because they're being agonisingly tortured for no reason.

    • @exyzt9877
      @exyzt9877 Před 2 dny +4

      ​@simoneidson21 hypothetical question. You're feeling really bad, have no energy to engage in social interaction, and want to avoid a conversation with a person on the street.
      What's easier? Being honest, and saying you aren't feeling well? Or lying, saying "You're fine" and moving on as quickly as possible?

  • @sabretoo
    @sabretoo Před 5 dny +355

    This reminds me of an observation I read somewhere about old vs new Star Wars that I'll try to expand upon here:
    Vader tortures Leia in A New Hope and Han in Empire Strikes Back, but he does not get any useful information out of them. Leia is able to resist/lie, and Han is just being used as bait for Luke ("They didn't even ask me any questions"). Palpatine tortures Luke in Return of the Jedi to punish both Luke and Vader, but this backfires and provokes Vader to kill Palpatine. So, torture is ineffective to get information but effective to provoke their loved ones, whether that's part of your plan or not.
    The sand people torture Shmi in Attack of the Clones, which lures Anakin to find them (as Luke went to Han in ESB), and provokes Anakin to kill them (as he did to Palpatine in RotJ). Palpatine maneuvers his fight with Mace in Revenge of the Sith to make it look like Mace was torturing him to gain sympathy points with the politicians. So, torture always leads to more violence, which you can still use to your advantage.
    (There is weirdly a lack of interrogative torture in the Bush-era prequels, but a ton of it, especially electrocution, in the Obama-era Clone Wars cartoon. Anakin often tortures Separatists for information or revenge, though they play the Imperial March so you know he's being bad.)
    But in the new canon, there are a bunch of major examples of interrogative torture being effective. Kylo tortures Poe in The Force Awakens and learns about BB-8. Snoke tortures Rey in The Last Jedi and learns Luke's location. Saw tortures Bodhi in Rogue One and learns he's telling the truth. Vader tortures Cere in Jedi: Fallen Order and learns about Trilla. Dedra tortures Bix in Andor and learns about Cassian.
    It's such a shame that the new canon uses torture like this, not just because it is unrealistic, irresponsible, and contradicts the original story, but because it is a lazy way to move the plot forward.

    • @Atoll-ok1zm
      @Atoll-ok1zm Před 5 dny +51

      Tbf the new star wars movies are loaded with lazy storytelling. "Oh, that dead dude who had zero way to survive is back because sith magic. Oh, you aren't powerful because of your journey and growth, it's because of your last name. Here, I can use the force to magically heal everything, this "dagger" just happens to perfectly match the sky line of the fact spot of this massive planet, need to do a thing? Well just go get the mcguffin-thinger that does exactly that!"

    • @43bg1
      @43bg1 Před 5 dny +31

      Don't some of those examples involve using the force to pull information from someone's brain directly though? There's not really a real world analogue for that (thank God).

    • @maciejglinski6564
      @maciejglinski6564 Před 5 dny +27

      It is just "written before and after 9/11" isn't it

    • @iheartblock3792
      @iheartblock3792 Před 4 dny +10

      @@maciejglinski6564 No, all except the OGs were before 9/11. It's only the divide between Disney-controlled Star Wars and George Lucas, though in Clone Wars it is shown as effective AND wrong.

    • @arthurdent6256
      @arthurdent6256 Před 4 dny +27

      "Dedra tortures Bix in Andor and learns about Cassian." Yes, however there's also a scene where Andor is questioned and then almost strangled to death where he literally has nothing to do with the guys the Stormtroopers are chasing. There's also the collective punitive torture of prisoners to speed up production and the eventual use of it to execute an entire floor of prisoners that backfires and emboldens Andor and his cellmates to fight their way out and escape.

  • @YeetYeet-gg7sf
    @YeetYeet-gg7sf Před 6 dny +1105

    Can we count your research on this video as the 47th torture that COD committed?

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean Před 5 dny +54

      This video is about torture committed _within_ the CoD games, not _by_ them.
      _(Can someone really into the balancing of CoD multiplayer write a punchline? I'm not really an FPS guy.)_

    • @soop7349
      @soop7349 Před 5 dny +26

      I mean if you think about it, every player who has played through these torture sequences are themselves being tortured by simply observing it happen (like with that reddit post). So probably in the multi-millions.

    • @zackatwood2867
      @zackatwood2867 Před 5 dny +1

      Torture isn’t funny

    • @esssss8415
      @esssss8415 Před 5 dny +18

      @@zackatwood2867Nobody said it was?

    • @CubesAreCool
      @CubesAreCool Před 2 dny +1

      48th torture is activision making shit games now

  • @snoozeanne.
    @snoozeanne. Před 6 dny +2453

    The ticking time bomb theory dumbfounds me with how opposed to basic reality it seems to be. Bomb is going off real soon and the situation is "urgent enough to justify torture" (assuming that is the actual bomber & assuming everything else). So, as the bomber, who presumably knows when it will detonate, you have the knowledge that if you resist the pain for X amount of time, you succeed. Additionally, well presented misleading information is readily slurped up, wasting time, resources, and personnel. It seems like if you want your bomb to successfully detonate, it would be preferable for your captors to torture you, as is it far easier to let information slip when feeling comfortable, especially if you dont believe said info to be relevant or crucial to your success.

    • @warrust
      @warrust Před 6 dny +399

      The Joker scene in TDK showed it perfectly imo.
      The torturer just wants any information so they could act. The one revealing the information has all the power in the world in deciding how the ones causing them pain would fuck up majorly. Especially if you're gonna get killed afterwards anyway, what's a better fuck you parting gift than making those people desperate for information act against their own goals?

    • @asddsa8203
      @asddsa8203 Před 6 dny +130

      You'd enjoy watching Unthinkable.
      It uses that mechanic: The bomber knows when the bombs will go off (but doesn't know the current time), and he either gets killed before the bomb, or the bomb detonates and he gets killed/prison for life.
      He's essentially testing his own faith: Is my faith strong enough to sustain me through torture?

    • @slyseal2091
      @slyseal2091 Před 6 dny +23

      The scale of the problem you present would re-justify torture though. If we know our victim is mentally acuite enough to give false information _while_ everything in his body screams "make it stop", he's for sure good enough to just not speak (the truth or in general) in a regular discussion. Your conclusion of waiting out the fail-deadly works in both scenarios, so if nothing works, we have the choice to leave him alone, freeing up the resources of... one guy and a bucket of water. Or we get a non-zero chance of information we can act on. And if you don't, you figure out something else.
      "but what if he slips up while talking", but what if he slips up while torturing? Your argument invalidates interrogation as a whole, which would be a legitimate answer for small things like hideouts, enemy positions etc. But in the context of the ticking time bomb, the outsiders perspective is that you just chose to leave the trolley on it's tracks, "because the lever was stuck" - so push it harder.

    • @alphachicken9596
      @alphachicken9596 Před 6 dny +235

      ​@slyseal2091 First off ticking time bombs aren't real scenarios. Many many many many many people have failed if the only thing stopping a bomb from going off is the info of one person in a short time frame.
      Secondly I think your missing the point, which is that torture provides no incentive to the tortured to give accurate information. You are either going to get hurt and fail your own cause, or get hurt and your cause succeeds. The Allies figured this out and documented it extensively during WWII, but modern militaries are vastly undereducated and quite frankly not incetivized themselves to get information. Eternal war cannot be eternal if all your anti terror ops actually succeed.

    • @origamifan5515
      @origamifan5515 Před 6 dny +30

      what if the terrorist wait until the few last minutes and says the bomb is hidden in a foreign country's embassy, and the Good Guys rush into it, but it's not here, so the bomb blow up, and there's a huge diplomatic incident on top?

  • @cartilagehead6326
    @cartilagehead6326 Před 4 dny +21

    It's notable how the length of torture differentiates the suggested brutality of the good guys vs bad guys (and conversely, their mettle and strength of character). Good guys can get away with torturing for very little time, with the narrative exercising restraint on their behalf. Bad guys will essentially safety word out by divulging information quickly and the scene will end long before any really difficult feelings have to come up. You never have to wonder if the good guys would ever go so far as to really mess somebody up because they never have to go that far.
    By contrast bad guys will torture as long as the story needs them to- hours, days, etc. for maximum effect. Good guys and sympathetic NPCs get pulled out of enemy blacksites and POW camps after literal years in the belly of the beast. Not only are we supposed to feel for the captive hero and awe at their strength of will, maybe wondering what we'd do in that situation, but we are also supposed to understand the inhumanity of the villain for making the torture go on for as long as it does.
    Ultimately it creates this sort of imaginary line in the mind of the audience that we know the protagonists won't cross, even if we have no idea where that line actually would be and have never been explicitly told anything about it beyond maybe bringing on the cultural assumption that "Guys from the global west more or less representing a conglomeration of the west's armed forces + GI Joe fundamentally believe in freedom and human rights", a line between Good and Evil that the audience can take comfort in as they are asked to witness and partake in brutality

  • @WelfareChrist
    @WelfareChrist Před 5 dny +102

    This kid I grew up with joined the military at 18 and had been deployed three times by the time we ran into each other again in college. We became close and it turned out he had been running “night missions” where he said he was basically shooting into darkness a lot of the time. He had really extreme ptsd and he told me a story about what his squad did to this guy who led their friend into a building armed with IEDs. I’ll spare the story suffice to say I think this kind of emotional trauma
    really feeds into how this question of torture is often framed

    • @raulfernandez57
      @raulfernandez57 Před 5 dny

      What in the fuck!? Seriously, what in the fuck!?
      Like this is just a CZcams comment but I feel disgusted!

    • @dannydanumba2619
      @dannydanumba2619 Před 4 dny +15

      They tortured the guy out of revenge pretty much?

    • @WelfareChrist
      @WelfareChrist Před 4 dny +28

      @@dannydanumba2619 basically they beat him up but he was restrained. point is I think a lot of the torture was done as revenge, I mean what else are you gonna do against people who aren't really afraid of dying and are blowing themselves up to get to you already? You end up needing to come up with something worse than dying. All the rest of the words spent on it are window dressing I think, they all knew what they were doing.

  • @siristhedragon
    @siristhedragon Před 5 dny +968

    The idea that anyone actually believes that CALL OF DUTY is even slightly realistic in its portrayal of war is by far the most terrifying thing brought up in this video...

    • @user-rf1wp3sb2i
      @user-rf1wp3sb2i Před 5 dny +124

      They hired Oliver "locked up for doing Iran-Contra" North as a consultant, surely COD is not morally compromised

    • @HollyHummingbirdriver
      @HollyHummingbirdriver Před 5 dny +118

      The thing is, in every interview I’ve read or seen, the cast and interviewers rave about how realistic it is. Either they’re delusional, or they don’t want to piss of Activision.
      I’ve even seen it extend to to those “real-life SAS man reacts to Call if Duty” and they talk about how realistic it is which…I doubt.

    • @raulfernandez57
      @raulfernandez57 Před 5 dny

      Damn I didn't know that​@@user-rf1wp3sb2i

    • @yourmanjimbo1302
      @yourmanjimbo1302 Před 5 dny +116

      @@HollyHummingbirdriver When it comes down to 'realism' as in those SAS reacts videos, a lot of it is superficial. It's things like the way your allies clear rooms and the detail and function of your weapons. You'll notice they only tend to react to levels like 'Clean House' where the focus is on realistic military precision, and not say a level like 'Violence and Timing'

    • @thebrightestsun4685
      @thebrightestsun4685 Před 5 dny +22

      "But do you see how the realistic graphics is??? It is real!" lol

  • @skeletonwizard
    @skeletonwizard Před 6 dny +160

    I keep getting baited with "drama" and "video game analysis" by youtubers, only to learn about history and current affairs, and im not mad about it.

    • @Kikiapina
      @Kikiapina Před 4 dny +19

      We're dogs and they're hiding the pill of information inside our treat of video game analysis

  • @roastbeefy0weefy
    @roastbeefy0weefy Před 5 dny +58

    26:56 - No, it doesn't work
    32:32 - COD is a fantasy series
    34:07 - sadistic laziness
    Anecdote: I have a republican friend. Once we were arguing about capital punishment. I said it doesn't work as a deterrent, which is the only utilitarian argument for it. And he said, "You know, I like seeing stuff like that. People hanging in the square, people being quartered, I like that. The world doesn't have to change because you don't like that." So now when I see all these "tactics" nerds defending unimaginable cruelty in the name of realism or effectiveness, I know that they just "like stuff like that." It's really that simple. If they didn't, then they would be receptive to learning how things could work in some other way. But they're committed to brutality, because they enjoy it.

    • @geraldfreibrun3041
      @geraldfreibrun3041 Před 5 dny +2

      Painfotainment by Dan Carlin is a good series to listen to, as a reference.

    • @LWoodGaming
      @LWoodGaming Před 4 dny +1

      Just because your friend with immoral and weird republican person doesn't mean everyone has the same opinion as him.

    • @roastbeefy0weefy
      @roastbeefy0weefy Před 3 dny +19

      @@LWoodGaming I think his weirdness just allowed him to be abnormally honest. But mostly, I notice people who defend this stuff like it. There's a No-Nonsense Useful Man aesthetic that is not representative of actual practicality. It falls apart under the lightest scrutiny. The way COD portrays warfare, as described in this vid, is one example.

    • @Healermain15
      @Healermain15 Před dnem +1

      Your friend is an actual supervillain.

  • @alenietouh4789
    @alenietouh4789 Před 5 dny +49

    I understand the feeling of being tired of studying such a dense topic as torture because for some reason my school made us study about massacres around the country (not US, I live in Colombia) and man, studying that shit was HARD, I had to go through pages and pages detailing how 60 mfs went to a town and killed 14 people because their leader was mad with the government, how the people that survived had to leave because their life got ruined and how the government that could have stopped the tragedy DID FUCKING NOTHING.
    I got traumatized and didn't even got a good grade

  • @dramacomum
    @dramacomum Před 6 dny +250

    they get dirty and we forget we ever valued being clean goes WAY too hard

  • @TheTyper
    @TheTyper Před 6 dny +463

    5:20 - Wait, that said PRIMARY Call of Duty Torture Spreadsheet

  • @RedRiotRoss
    @RedRiotRoss Před 3 dny +7

    Pretty sure "call of duty torture spreadsheet" is just their release schedule and acquisition plans

  • @adanperez2796
    @adanperez2796 Před 5 dny +140

    I read a lot of Tom Clancy and his books feature a fair amount of interrogation scenes with some added torture. However, his books depict that brutal torture is inefficient, especially against government and military officials who are trained to resist those techniques. So, the good and bad guys resort to taking care of their captives in a way that lets them drop their guard and spill the information. A good example is Without Remorse, where an American fighter pilot became a POW in the Vietnam War. A Soviet officer needs to interrogate the pilot for information about American nuclear defense systems, so what he does is befriend the American. The officer shares personal stories about his experience with flying, as well as slowly feeds the American alcohol to the point that the American feels safe enough to talk. It worked, and the Amerian shared all of the information that the Soviet needed.

    • @kevinle1083
      @kevinle1083 Před 5 dny +5

      Probably more effective.

    • @thirdcoinedge
      @thirdcoinedge Před 5 dny +27

      I remember watching a WW2 US Army training video about that some years ago, with captors being trained to act friendly to POWs in order to encourage their cooperation and allow them to provide useful information. Much easier and significantly less difficult than the useless antagonism of torturing prisoners.

    • @leetlevolfie8250
      @leetlevolfie8250 Před 3 dny

      The British did something similar in ww2. They put a bunch of high ranking german pows in a luxurious manor and simply let them talk with each other. The thing was, the Brits had put microphones everywhere, so the Germans were willingly giving up valuable intel, and didn’t even know it. It was called Trent Park.

    • @Palgineer
      @Palgineer Před 2 dny +3

      @@thirdcoinedgeOn the Axis side, you have Hanns Scharff, a Luftwaffe interrogator who never used physical means to acquire the information and got the most information out of captured pilots and commanders by…
      Being friendly with them, taking them out to walks and to see compatriots, and gaining their trust.

  • @Lashmer
    @Lashmer Před 6 dny +675

    *Refreshes youtube* "Alright, what's ne- Analyzing Every Torture Scene in Call of Duty? Wack, who would do th- NEW JACOB GELLER VIDEO?!"

    • @ahshucks
      @ahshucks Před 6 dny +16

      omg those were my thoughts exactly

    • @throughcolouredglasses9300
      @throughcolouredglasses9300 Před 5 dny +7

      LITERALLY lmao

    • @peterfazio9306
      @peterfazio9306 Před 3 dny +1

      Oh my God, this has been popping up in my feed for a week and a half (ignored it of course), and I'm just seeing it's a Jacob Geller video.
      Sneaky.

  • @IsSarahPi
    @IsSarahPi Před 6 dny +1186

    This is my response to your Nebula companion video: You need to pour water in very slowly when you're making pastry.

    • @kurdemati7655
      @kurdemati7655 Před 6 dny +31

      yeah it took me a second but clarification is necessary on this one

    • @haysdixon6227
      @haysdixon6227 Před 5 dny +22

      big brain comment… this is the closest thing to get me to buy nebula I’ve ever seen (in college and very frugal, I probably will eventually)

    • @MrRydude17
      @MrRydude17 Před 5 dny +69

      @@haysdixon6227to assuage your curiosity a bit, the companion video is a more pleasant vlog style thing where he tries to actively not think or talk about torture while making pie with his girlfriend

    • @mackenziedesire7515
      @mackenziedesire7515 Před 5 dny +16

      @@MrRydude17 Thank you, this both assuages _my_ curiosity a bit, while also making the companion video sound even _more_ interesting (and delightful)!

    • @shredjward
      @shredjward Před 5 dny +11

      The fact that you can't comment on nebula is something i definitely wish was different about the platform

  • @swagathachristie5242
    @swagathachristie5242 Před 5 dny +41

    If anyone wants a first person narration of early torture (circa Span. Inquisition) look up Johannes Junius, mayor of a German town accused of witchcraft in the 1620’s. He was tortured and burned at the stake.
    His is one of only few self told descriptions of the torture suffered by those accused “witches”, and it was only able to escape his cell due to his using the last of his clout as mayor to get a letter to his daughter Veronica telling her of his innocence and suffering.
    Out of all the things I ended up reading in college it was one of the few that sticks with me keenly to this day, in almost complete detail because it felt so visceral and modern. No matter what, “Nobody escapes, though he were an earl…”

    • @rosemary8136
      @rosemary8136 Před 5 dny +8

      Just read the letter because of this comment. Powerful stuff. It feels wrong to call such a confession "well-written", because he was a real human being, but it really struck me becase it felt--familiar, I suppose? It felt like the timeless suffering of injustice and false accusations of the bigoted against the weak. That poor man... What a wretched way to die.

  • @fruitwagon9275
    @fruitwagon9275 Před 4 dny +20

    “The bad guys talk, while the good guys stay silent.”
    That’s a great example of CoD acting as US military propaganda. They’d never want to show one of their own beaten to the point of saying anything to make the pain stop.

  • @pexilated1638
    @pexilated1638 Před 6 dny +200

    The time bomb hypothetical is like the perfect prime example of why I hate hypotheticals in arguments like this.
    Even if I answered yes to the question of “would I torture the guy” (which I wouldn’t), what does that prove? That in this one extremely specific example with circumstances so ludicrously set up that it takes an entire paragraph before you can even pose the question and so many suspensions of disbelief that it may as well be an MCU movie, I, a random jackass, would do the morally bad thing? Okay????
    We have learned nothing about if torture is a good solution to anything because this situation is literally never going to happen, we’ve just wasted both of our time.

    • @michimatsch5862
      @michimatsch5862 Před 5 dny +44

      Yeah. As Jacob said.
      It seems more like they are constructed to make you say a specific thing.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 5 dny +9

      Most people, in crisis, just stand around. Or flee to cover and then just kind of hang out. A minority will flee to cover and make their way toward safety. It takes a lot of training for someone to become useful in a crisis. Without that you can be useful in a team meeting, or at the espresso machine, or in bed, or all the other low-pressure situations civilians generally find themselves in.

    • @remem95
      @remem95 Před 2 dny +11

      TL;DR: its a rationalization argument / A Priori
      The goal isn't to prove torture is right, but to persuade the listener to think on the speakers level. It communicates premade assumptions of the world in a more easily digestible way than openly stating "the people we torture are evil". It's the difference between a statement and a narrative.
      The addition of "what would you do?" changes the question from "does this person deserve to be tortured for harming others?" To "Would I torture an evil person to save others?" Making it less likely for the listener to inspect the assumption that the person is in fact evil.

    • @chriss780
      @chriss780 Před 2 dny

      Thought experiments in philosophy are like 70% sophists playing games with language to get people to the result they already wanted, they're not really a great method to get at any deeper truth.

  • @Lordblow1
    @Lordblow1 Před 6 dny +255

    I must say. I did in fact *NOT* expect the Spanish inquisition

    • @VoxAstra-qk4jz
      @VoxAstra-qk4jz Před 6 dny +23

      In a video about torture? It was almost a given they would show up at some point!

    • @snowballeffect7812
      @snowballeffect7812 Před 5 dny +24

      @@VoxAstra-qk4jz in hindsight, this is a good point lol

    • @naufalmEZa
      @naufalmEZa Před 5 dny +7

      ​@@VoxAstra-qk4jz reverse psychology

    • @smithwillnot
      @smithwillnot Před 5 dny +9

      Nobody expects the Spanish inquisition!

    • @stiery853
      @stiery853 Před 4 dny

      For real i was expecting Group 935 instead

  • @rylan7946
    @rylan7946 Před 4 dny +15

    During the first couple of minutes I thought you were literally just going to list and describe every single torture scene one after the other and I’ll be honest I was entirely prepared to watch a 40 minute video of just that from you.

  • @vvitchofthewest
    @vvitchofthewest Před 5 dny +49

    Gardening tip: keep eggshells, and put them in your soil if needed! My grandma used to put whole eggshells in her compost or ground eggshells in her soil so the plants got more calcium. My mom did the same with banana peels for her tomato plants

    • @veggiedragon1000
      @veggiedragon1000 Před 3 dny +3

      Crushing dry egg shells and scattering them on top of the soil can also repel slugs without using pellets, since they don't like to crawl over sharp edges.

  • @manperson6354
    @manperson6354 Před 6 dny +461

    It is interesting seeing cod fans demand for grounded and serious stories but what they really want are action film plots that pretend to be grounded. Reminds me of how ubisoft keeps making the same stories about toppling vaguely dystopian factions in order to maintain all the YA novel people.

    • @Sky-bx9mn
      @Sky-bx9mn Před 5 dny +74

      Reminds me of the GoT fandom thinking the constant murder/etc. is realistic to the medieval period (it's not, ACOUP has a great breakdown of why it's not).

    • @cookieface80
      @cookieface80 Před 4 dny +9

      @@Sky-bx9mn GoT isn't set in real history though. It's in a fantasy world.

    • @Sky-bx9mn
      @Sky-bx9mn Před 4 dny +45

      @@cookieface80 Yes, that is correct, and part of why it's a problem that a chunk of the fandom thinks it's realistic to the medieval period.

    • @channel45853
      @channel45853 Před 4 dny +2

      It is more interesting that you think you know a large group of people whom you only "know" through the internet.

    • @trueblindman647
      @trueblindman647 Před 4 dny +18

      @@channel45853 well they tend to not hide what they think

  • @jadefae
    @jadefae Před 7 dny +690

    The thing about Jacob is that through dozens and dozens and dozens of videos, he never gets lazy with conclusions. So many videos out there provide examples until they run out and then they say "There, that's what I have for you today, wasn't that all very interesting."
    Jacob still writes conclusions that don't just summarise and contextualise the core arguments. To use a strange analogy, it reminds me of bandage fasteners. You can wrap a bandage around an arm as long as you like, but if you leave the end dangling, it'll come undone. A fastener digs into the end of the bandage and hooks into the rest of it.
    A bunch of ideas that were all just swimming in your mind suddenly feel secured and understood. It primes you well for doing your own thinking afterwards.

    • @chaoscinereous
      @chaoscinereous Před 6 dny +25

      love this comment. so insightful and puts into words one of those things that i appreciate a lot about jacob geller's essays specifically

    • @cringusmoss9937
      @cringusmoss9937 Před 6 dny +15

      I've been focusing on pruning my subscriptions of channels that are simply time filling summaries of media.
      Seeing my feed go empty for hours has pushed me out of my comforting feed into doing the things I've been procrastinating.

    • @groofay
      @groofay Před 6 dny +25

      Because he's genuinely a good writer. You always watch his videos to the end because you know it's going to be worth it, and *then* he blows your mind.

    • @thirdcoinedge
      @thirdcoinedge Před 6 dny +24

      That's really what essays are meant to be, especially conclusions. The ending is supposed to be the "So what?" section, explaining why this argument even matters in the first place, possibly linked with a call to action for the audience. Other essays that just peter out by the end aren't really good essays, because they're really just long, semi-educational rambles by someone interested in a particular topic. Entertaining, yes, but nothing you can really cite on a college paper.

    • @tawnyflower-in5yy
      @tawnyflower-in5yy Před 5 dny +4

      I agree. I feel like a lot of jacob's videos, I'm watching it and I'm like "this is interesting yeah, I'm enjoying it" but maybe it's not my favorite video/I'm not sure yet where he's going with it, and then the conclusion hits and it makes me go holy fuck

  • @GLL98
    @GLL98 Před 5 dny +110

    When people discuss the themes and actions of the COD franchise, I think it is important to remember that the US military is actively involved in the marketing and development of the games. This isn't a matter of what is ok to display in fiction. This is the world's largest military complex actively participating in a campaign to spread concepts and ideals to the minds of potential future recruits. So when discussing characters in this franchise choosing to violate human rights and commit war crimes, we have to remember that this is the US military planting the idea that those actions are ok as long as you are one of the good guys into the mind of future soldiers. We have seen young men who grew up with the franchise commit atrocities time and time again in conflicts the US military keeps getting involved in across the ocean. This is a big deal.

    • @geraldfreibrun3041
      @geraldfreibrun3041 Před 5 dny +1

      I don't know if I fully agree as some of these games, can sometimes direct the player to reflect on their actions, as well the circumstances portrayed. WAW and BO1 come to mind

    • @simoneidson21
      @simoneidson21 Před 5 dny +2

      You’ve never played Black Ops have you?

    • @thebrightestsun4685
      @thebrightestsun4685 Před 5 dny

      so why other armies are commit atrocities then? they don't produce COD games...

    • @pleasegoawaydude
      @pleasegoawaydude Před 3 dny +7

      @@thebrightestsun4685 "It's okay if we teach our kids specifically that atrocities are fine, because other people already do bad things, so somehow that justifies encouraging MORE evil! Why yes, I am an idiot." -You, 1 day ago.

    • @thebrightestsun4685
      @thebrightestsun4685 Před 3 dny

      @@pleasegoawaydude So? This whole "teaching" stuff is the reason why the military in decline on the west (because "peace") while Iran, Russia, China etc. are freely engage in conflicts without "make peace no war" nonsense.

  • @sonwig5186
    @sonwig5186 Před 5 dny +25

    I don't think the problem is just some abstract moral thing. Torture happens a lot in real life in war zones, it doesn't need an obvious 'its evil' sticker on the side to be depicted. The problem in Call of Duty is that its normalising military special forces to torture 'terrorists'. It's not normal people doing horrible things in a horrible situation. Its the cool good guys who are the police making hard choices to protect citizens in an evil terrorist crisis. Then when they come and torture us in real life they've conditioned people with games like this.

    • @Amonkira1029
      @Amonkira1029 Před dnem

      "us" No, it's about normalizing brutal methods against brown people. Right now, not some vague dystopian future.

    • @sonwig5186
      @sonwig5186 Před 23 hodinami

      @@Amonkira1029 I'm not talking about some vague dystopian future. I was violently attacked and arrested a month ago by police for protesting.

  • @matthewmcarthur1879
    @matthewmcarthur1879 Před 6 dny +62

    torture is one of the ultimate acts of dehumanization. you can only do it on someone if you in some way label them and believe they are inherently "sub human". this is why torture is used as a tool of Empire - against others who look different, have different language or culture or religion, etc - those who oppose or pose an ideological threat to the Empire's objectives. it is not to extract useful information, it is a form of supremacy and control used for millennia to perpetuate Empires, from the inquisition to modern times. I recently read the book "Waiting for the Barbarians" by JM Coetzee and it explored this point interestingly

  • @DinoChecksOut
    @DinoChecksOut Před 6 dny +110

    6:58
    enhanced interrogation techniques ❌
    interrogation roughhousing ✔

  • @sartorially
    @sartorially Před 5 dny +25

    Firstly: it was an absolute masterstroke to use Katana Zero's "Third District" as backing music for this particular analysis. As an avid enjoyer of Katana Zero, I think what may be forgotten in its progression is how interwoven the idea of "war is hell and hell is torture" can be in gaming culture. Katana Zero as a baseline endorses the idea of war veterans, child soldiers in particular, being "stained" and permanently violent because of their own associations with torture. They were tormented, and became stronger. Others are weak, falling prey or victim to the aggressive Chrono-flooded NULL.
    Also the music is fucken great in that game. No notes.
    Secondly. I really appreciate your attributions in the Spanish Inquisition and literary works which address it. A lot of "anti torture" literature, if one were being simplistic, tries to say that torture "never" works. It plays this moral game of asking why you would even think to consider that. Why would you want to hurt another person for information, gain, your own protection or the protection of others? is there something wrong and strange about you? Something broken?
    The fact of the matter is: torture does sometimes work, but as you said, it is ineffective. Breaking a person is, functionally, just a way to make a whole being into a fragmented host. Torment, torture, violation of human rights in pursuit of saving the world, it is wrong to say that the world has not daydreamed about quick-dirty-easy fixes to all the worst problems. [Examples being that people discuss how we "know the names of all the richest people in the world, and where they live" as though it would be so simple. As if we could simply hurt the bad people who make money from big oil and that would fix everything.]
    But on the flipside, if one accepts that torture is morally wrong, one must also accept that the "good" we have done via torture is also wrong. I think that's where people trip up. We almost want to justify what HAS happened, what we HAVE done, so we don't have to do the work of unpacking what we actually did to reach this point. In a way, a belief that one must have always been good. You cannot "become" good, you cannot be "redeemed" and have an informed opinion based on things like research.
    No, you were either good and righteous, or you were always a bad person deep down. "Why would you think about hurting another person?" is the moral imposition made by people that think hurting people is justified when THEY do it. "Why would you want to be a violent person?" asks the institution that builds homes on stolen land and imprisons people for innocuous crimes to churn up a workforce. Well, sure, sometimes violence seems like the most applicable answer. To return fire is justified. Until that retort is somehow unconscionable and you are no longer "in the right" or whatever.
    All-in-all. Fantastic video. I really enjoyed it and I'll be thinking about a lot of these points for a bit. More than I already do, I guess. Deepest condolences for your spreadsheet madness. Suppose I'll have to start watching some of your other stuff too!

    • @Orpheus6428
      @Orpheus6428 Před 4 dny

      "Do you enjoy hurting other people?"

  • @pyraeusjuxtani
    @pyraeusjuxtani Před 2 dny +13

    The fact that the top comment on that Reddit post was “Maybe you just need to grow a pair” tells you all you need to know about the simplicity and callousness of the average COD player.

  • @alexroselle
    @alexroselle Před 6 dny +368

    I think someone else already said this on your Twitter, but this video answers your earlier one about “What does Call of Duty Believe In?”

    • @NotReal-187
      @NotReal-187 Před 5 dny +2

      Depends on whether you think it actually believes in what it wants you to believe or not, is suppose

    • @zaidlacksalastname4905
      @zaidlacksalastname4905 Před 5 dny +27

      They believe in torture and "means to an end" guys

    • @rowd149
      @rowd149 Před 5 dny +17

      ​@@zaidlacksalastname4905The heroes of CoD are expys of the villain of A Few Good Men. Which says a lot.

  • @TheEpicPancake
    @TheEpicPancake Před 6 dny +134

    I remember writing a paper in high school about the efficacy of torture (as part of researching a controversial topic) and whether it could be theoretically justified by results. I went in knowing it was at the least morally abhorrent from nearly every lens possible, but hey, maybe it was effective enough to be worth consideration in the face of catastrophe? Let's just say that line of thought died pretty quickly in the face of the meager scrutiny my 17-18 year old ass could muster.

  • @Foede
    @Foede Před 5 dny +23

    Here in Argentina where I'm from, we had a series of military coups by the far right, which resulted in a dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, among other things. During this military government the use of torture was extremely common, and ever since hearing about this, I had always wondered "what kind of people, what kind of mindset one must have to become a torturer". The idea that someone works as causing pain, trauma, that they dedicate their expertise in this horrible field... how can someone choose to do this by their own free will...
    As time went on, I found some answers to that question, some of which were pointed out in this very video, but still, the idea is still hard for me to fully grasp. And I guess good guy torturers who are rewarded by their actions is just another push in that direction making that decision just a lil bit easier...

  • @nathancarter8239
    @nathancarter8239 Před 5 dny +32

    I'm reading the _First Law_ trilogy, which is grimdark in the extreme, and one of the characters, Glokta, is a torturer. He admits to himself that torture is only effective at getting people to confess to crimes they didn't commit. And yet, I can't help but think of a moment in the second book where he tortures a spy for information that turns out to be actionable. Perhaps I forget some context, but I wonder how many of us can "know" torture isn't effective, but deep down have a hard time believing it.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 5 dny +2

      It's because we all know we are weak and would give up the info immediately. And we expect that a lot of people are the same way. And if a soldier has the chance to get sent to a POW camp instead of being tortured horribly to death, his patriotism won't be enough to stop him from spilling the beans.
      The thing is, you know you can't trust one person. So you have 20 prisoners, and you tell them that their info needs to be corroborated and it needs to check out and actually end up being true. Because whatever torture you would have done for refusal, you will give them ten times as much if they give false info.
      "Ineffective torture" advocates usually assume a highly constrained set of circumstances, where you have 1 prisoner, you can't verify any intel he gives, you have no other intel sources, and you can't come back to the prisoner later. That's like handing someone a frozen Hot Pocket and telling him he can make any dinner he wants using 2 minutes of microwave time and that Hot Pocket; he's not making a cake or a quiche or a soup under those circumstances. But give him a bunch of different Hot Pockets and a full kitchen and a whole afternoon and he can make a wild variety of meals. So, don't be surprised that under ridiculous constraints the outcome is unsatisfactory.
      I think the reality that torture statistically isn't productive is more because plucking a random combatant out of the theater will get you someone who just doesn't know anything useful. You can't get blood from a turnip. But that's a far cry from the situation in the CoD torture scenes that we're discussing, where the captive is the most-informed person in the operation and the issue is simply whether he tells you what he knows or refuses.
      An example of this is grabbing a random New York resident and torturing him to extract my CZcams password. Versus grabbing me and torturing me to extract my CZcams password. The difference between those two things is so staggering as to make the discussion meaningless until it shifts to account for it.

    • @shadowthespikythingy
      @shadowthespikythingy Před 4 dny +3

      @@googiegress7459 the spanish inquisition disagrees

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 4 dny +2

      @@shadowthespikythingy Apples and oranges. You pick up a random person the street and demand specific info, you won't get anything useful.
      You pick up Jimmy and demand Jimmy give you his cell phone password, he will do it.
      You're referring to an entire institution that was torturing ineffectively. It's hardly surprising they turn up 99.9% bad outcomes.

    • @daniellin6239
      @daniellin6239 Před 2 dny

      @@googiegress7459maybe no one can withstand torture forever, but I can see an ideological zealot, whether soldier or terrorist, the kind that has useful operational information, to hold out at least for some time, possibly long enough for any information that they may know to become outdated.
      It’s also not a really applicable defense to CoD’s or many other kinds of media since there often is only one prisoner with intel that can’t be readily verified and can’t be revisited because the torturer either pulls a Cap. Price and kills the dude after getting information or because they can’t just lock them in a holding cell in the middle of an operation.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 2 dny

      @@daniellin6239 Movements don't have many fanatics to lose like that, and many of even those may waver when faced with enemies with a reputation for effective torture. If nothing is gained via torture, at least there is one less fanatic, which is what would have happened if he had been shot in combat instead of captured alive.

  • @EpicBeard815
    @EpicBeard815 Před 6 dny +717

    “Torture has never been a reliable means of extracting information. It is ultimately self-defeating as a means of control."
    Once again, Star Trek putting us in our place. Torture is always a means of retribution or catharsis for the torturer, masked as detached "means to the end" methodology.

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +7

      Star Trek didn't put anyone "in their place" because every lesson they've ever taught is something you should already know if you're a halfway decent person. Don't be a bigot, don't torture people, that's all STANDARD morality

    • @Tuned_Rockets
      @Tuned_Rockets Před 6 dny +61

      @@homelessalcoholic2716 dude are you okay? you seem very triggered by this comment section

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +8

      @Tuned_Rockets Honestly, you're right, my comments here have been awful defensive and angry, but that's only because people who have NEVER touched the series seek to rip the lives of the fans apart and make assertions that they're "cool with torture" despite the fact that MUCH of the fanbase doesn't even touch the campaigns anymore. It would be one thing if they were just criticizing the game like Jacob, but they're genuinely making ignorant statements about people they've never met and passing it off as some moral high ground.

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +1

      @Tuned_Rockets I'm sorry, your right, I don't know if my last comment got deleted but I'm overreacting to ignorant people seeking to rip the lives of CoD fans apart when they've never personally touched the game.

    • @Jeougi
      @Jeougi Před 6 dny +27

      "In spite of all you've done to me, I find you a pitiable man"

  • @LimeyLassen
    @LimeyLassen Před 5 dny +310

    This reminds me of the common trope in media that terrorists rarely have sincere beliefs. Like it's not a clash of ideologies because the enemy's ideology isn't even real, it's disingenuous. That's why they crack under pressure.
    Which in turn reminds me of the kinds of religious people who think atheists/heathens also believe in God but are just rebelling because they want to sin. Bringing it back around the the Spanish Inquisition, I suppose.

    • @teogonzalez7957
      @teogonzalez7957 Před 5 dny +17

      Is that a trope? If anything in media I think it leans the other way. Irl terrorists aren’t all brainwashed suicidal drones, but in fiction they’re shown as almost noble in how devoted they are.

    • @youradhere3476
      @youradhere3476 Před 5 dny

      Yeah, in media, members of pseudo-leftist terrorist groups or organizations fighting for - ostensibly - generally "noble" beliefs are often pesented as disingenuous and hypocritical, while religion-flavored extremists are usually portrayed as devoted to the point of apparent insanity. i have some ideas as to why that is, but i'm not confident enough in their validity to share them.

    • @simoneidson21
      @simoneidson21 Před 5 dny +9

      I mean, the only reason people confess to things under torture is to get the pain to stop. That’s why torture is generally unreliable in interrogation. Anyone will crack under severe enough pain

    • @niwaka273
      @niwaka273 Před 5 dny +3

      I guess that's why I loved Jujutsu Kaisen so much.
      To oversimplify, there is a guy who wants to kill all the normal people i order to protect the ones who are "different".
      Even if he has to abandon his best friend, his former allies, kill his own family.
      As his best friend is about to kill him, he doesn't back down.
      That guy was antagonistic but his conviction unbreakable and motives somewhat pure.
      I prefer this writing over the simple "bad guys are dumb and lose" approach.

    • @Adoochi
      @Adoochi Před 5 dny +5

      @@niwaka273 That's just the evil ending in Infamous 2

  • @LOBricksAndSecrets
    @LOBricksAndSecrets Před 5 dny +10

    I'm also reminded of Mass Effect 2, where the squad comes across the scene of an NPC torturing prisoners. Some squadmates object to the morality of it all, but even the most rogueish of your teammates criticize the use of torture because *it doesn't work.*

  • @smugbowkid9919
    @smugbowkid9919 Před 5 dny +24

    Leaving a second comment here a few hours later because I got hit with a new train of thought while thinking about this video. Something we rarely see in terms of torture is "Bad Guys" torturing "Bad Guys." We see Good Guys at Bad Guys, Bad Guys at Good Guys, and even Good Guys at Good Guys as Jacob provided examples of... and yet, its kind of rare in media (though not absent) to see Bad Guys performing acts of torture against Bad Guys. Except, I'd like to point out, in possibly the most influential piece of media ever published- the Bible.
    Hell is a place where damned souls, or people who have sinned, go to in order to get tortured by its residents. The people who go to hell, no matter what sect of Christianity you follow, are always the "bad guys," people who have done abhorrent things or performed acts that go against morality itself. They go to hell to get tortured... by Satan/Lucifer/The Devil and his army of demons. The Devil is consistently portrayed as the Ultimate Evil, the greatest corruption a good person could face, and Demons are literally direct manifestations of sin. Both are, in every sense, the epitome of "Bad Guys." And yet... they perform torturous acts against other Bad Guys, the sinners. Angels do not do such things. They are proponents of Gods divine will, and they do not do actions like that in the Bible, at least from what I've read and remember from Church. Even Archangels do not punish sinners, that job is solely left to demons. You cannot "pray for another's downfall," because who would answer? Not an angel, and definitely not God... though he does seem to have some suggestions of "divine retribution," but that's a little off topic.
    You would think that the threat of not getting into Heaven, a place where you are eternally happy with no need for want and are completely fulfilled, a literal utopia, would be enough to dissuade people from committing diabolical acts, but it apparently isn't, because Hell exists. It's not enough to say you won't be given everything you could ever want, no, it is enough when you will also be thrust into a complete nightmare, the antithesis of what Heaven stands for. (This is ignoring the outliers of concepts such as the Rings of Hell and Purgatory.) And Hells punishment is entirely punitive- it isn't for any other reason but for the sake of harming someone who was deemed deserving of it. Not only this, it is the literal perfect torture scenario that Jacob mentions- infinite time, infinite resources, under a rule that allows for nothing else but the subjugation of those beneath its higher members, the demons. But it also simultaneously presents a moral question, the question of whether or not Hell is right. There are no ticking bombs in Hell's scenario, no threat looming over the horizon. Rather, it's as if the terrorist you captured had already set off the bomb, killing millions, and you have the opportunity of torturing them in return.
    Hell exists in this weird area I don't see a lot of people address. It's a threat, a deterrent to act against what's right... and yet, its also seen as something almost just in its existence. It fulfills a dirty, primal sense of justice, at least- "this man murdered my family, but I know he shall suffer for it below a thousandfold of what he has made me suffer." Instead of the "forgive and forget," tenet preached by Christianity and the like, the very existence of Hell almost undermines the idea by subtly giving those who have experienced loss a guarantee of that "divine retribution" mentioned prior. But Hell is anything but divine. So, you see demons and the Devil as the end-all-be-all for absolute evil, that punish those who did more flawed, incomplete evil in your life. When would a Catholic draw the line at how much torture a criminal should be given? Would they ever? Why is Hell spoken of so negatively, when those who practice faith are reassured at justice is ever-present and will be served appropriately to the weak and to the wrong? Why do people take solace in the comfort this torture, when it is undoubtedly far more than even the most heinous of people would deserve? God gives you joy, but he does not give the evildoers hate... he just leaves them to those consumed by it.
    It's just an instance of torture being used en masse. And it's fantastically popular, moreso than any other portrayal of to exist today. Hell is torture. Maybe I don't hang around the right people or in the right places, but I just never hear people truly address this kind of stuff involving the place, and definitely not in the philosophy and righteousness of complete, ultimate torture.
    Just wanted to write this out because it was bouncing around in my head. Thanks for reading it if you did anyways.

    • @lordtheodore13
      @lordtheodore13 Před 2 dny +2

      Well said

    • @KittyKatty999
      @KittyKatty999 Před 2 dny +3

      In older depictions, wasn't Hell supposed to be *just* the absence of God's love? Some kind of dark and dreary place, but *FAR* from the torture fest you read about in Dante's Inferno? There was even a movie that said "Hell used to just involve being disconnected from God. You humans constantly torment yourselves over your sins, and transformed this place into pure agony".
      A priest also once said "Hell is a state of mind, it isn't a place". I find that extremely interesting and true, since no amount of wealth or fame can make some people truly happy, especially when they are wrecked with guilt and/or fear. Sin itself is also supposed to be it's own torment, according to the bible.

  • @MDSF90
    @MDSF90 Před 6 dny +131

    4:56 *THE NUMBERS, GELLER… WHAT DO THEY MEAN?*

  • @alanamarko
    @alanamarko Před 6 dny +93

    watched this on Nebula a few days ago, but wanted to comment here: i genuinely think one of the reasons i love your work, Jacob, is that you do not pussyfoot around these issues, and not only that, but you go into such detail about the ethics and your research is so well-done that it's hard not to just be impressed by this level of media analysis.
    also, you clearly really do not fucking like Call of Duty and i RESPECT IT SO HARD

  • @user-df5nb8zy7e
    @user-df5nb8zy7e Před 5 dny +38

    Here are the very first thoughts that went through my head during the first scene presented:
    - wait, these are the good guys?
    - why won't they just rummage through stuff in the room? The guy has to have SOMETHING connecting to his business partners.
    - what the hell? execution??
    Everything I learn about Call of Duty shocks me. Just a month ago my only knowledge of it was "a first-person shooter franchise that had a mass shooting mission".

    • @giwake
      @giwake Před 5 dny +7

      yeah, it's kind of a running thing in call of duty. a while back i played through the modern warfare trilogy and there's at least one scene per game where captain price just brutally shoots someone after interrogating them. i *think* it's supposed to be a "look at how cool this guy is, he kills bad guy and doesn't afraid of anything" moment but it just felt really uncomfortable. there's a part in one of the early missions, i believe it's literally the first mission in modern warfare 1, where price tells you to shoot 2 enemy soldiers who are sleeping instead of simply incapacitating or arresting them. if you don't do it fast enough he does it automatically and then drops a one liner. it was really uncomfortable.

    • @simoneidson21
      @simoneidson21 Před 5 dny +2

      Ah yes clearly we should feel bad for the guy who is smuggling chemical weapons. Also by the way that mass shooting mission is framed as bad. You don’t even have to kill anyone to progress

    • @yourmanjimbo1302
      @yourmanjimbo1302 Před 5 dny +3

      @@giwake Tbf the OG CoD 4 really doesn't present Price or the West's actions as great. Captain Price was in the earlier WW2 CoDs where he was an honourable man accepting the surrender of enemies, and this contrasts with his cold execution in CoD4. Plus the whole nuke going off thing after a US military intervention

    • @user-df5nb8zy7e
      @user-df5nb8zy7e Před 5 dny +10

      @@simoneidson21 would you feel any different if the guy was selling weapons legally? Like, if the protagonists broken into Lockheed Martin's CEO office or something.
      I'm not talking about whether the bad guy is bad - I'm talking about the good guys not being good in the slightest.

    • @user-df5nb8zy7e
      @user-df5nb8zy7e Před 5 dny +6

      @@giwake I remember a similar scene in Eisenhorn novel - the protagonist, an agent of fascist state, murders a witness after interrogation shows they know nothing.
      And the author forgets about this immediately - it is not treated as a moment that shows protagonist's evil nature, or anything.
      Apparently, this kind of thing is more common in militaristic media than I thought (I always assumed it was more about shooting people on the battlefield, rather than this).

  • @sarahbischoff2375
    @sarahbischoff2375 Před 5 dny +15

    Achille Mbembe’s necropolitics talks about how even the rhetoric of human rights is historically designed to /exclude/ certain people, not include every person in the species. It’s an interesting insight into the relationship of the global north and global south and whose lives & rights are deemed expendable, legally and otherwise

  • @chrisdaniel7903
    @chrisdaniel7903 Před 6 dny +285

    After Dan Olson's latest video where he goes off the deep end and makes a diorama of the Angry Video Game Nerd's basement, it feels charmingly quaint hearing Jacob Geller talk about how nutty it is that he made a spreadsheet.

    • @stonearmor
      @stonearmor Před 5 dny +29

      “You just have to face the fact that you’ve been torturing yourself.”
      “What?”

    • @lenapawlek7295
      @lenapawlek7295 Před 4 dny +1

      Lol so true

  • @jesustyronechrist2330
    @jesustyronechrist2330 Před 6 dny +42

    Did you know that there is and has been a lot of debate if sexual assault should be classified as torture? It's not considered as such legally anyways.
    You'd think it is obvious, but no: Many argue that defining "torture" requires participation and culpability of the state (so Cartel torture videos are just... Funky town?)
    So if you are bound to a chair by Soap and, instead of punching you, he grabs your crotch and gives you a kiss. He has now sexually assaulted you instead of tortured you. Thus if he was convicted (which he wouldn't cuz he's Soap), he'd get a lesser sentence as SA isn't considered nearly as serious of a crime as torture.
    (Of course with law, this depends, and some jurisdictions and cases might be able to classify SA as torture. Also not to mention how false SA allegations would now then be false torture allegations which... are slightly more extreme thing to deal with)

    • @Danae_O
      @Danae_O Před 5 dny +7

      I'll say that during the Chilean Pinochet dictatorship there was one torture facility (nicknamed the "Venda Sexy") that was sadly infamous for inflicting sexual assault as torture.

    • @sophiejones3554
      @sophiejones3554 Před 2 dny +6

      The idea that SA isn't torture is predicated on the idea that it is neither physically nor emotionally painful. Which is... a weird take to say the least. Edit: typo

  • @DJFelixChester
    @DJFelixChester Před 5 dny +105

    It’s funny, I’ve always viewed the COD series as an “all bad guys” power fantasy game. I’m only now realizing that you as the player are supposed to see “your” team as morally good, and the idea that most people in fact, do see it that way.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 5 dny +8

      The world is a jumble of civilizations still struggling with tribalism and very restricted thinking. Cooperation is difficult, antagonism is easy. And leaders tend to be tall men who boast about strength, much like hominids grubbing through soil while one of them peers over the tall grass.
      All the violent diplomacy and war and espionage and reputation-building and economic strangulation is all Bad Things. And the people who do it are not morally clean. The question is whether you want to live in the civilization that does those things and remains strong against adversaries, and suffers little hardship, or if you want to live in the civilization whose name we don't even remember anymore because it was raped to oblivion by its neighbors who actually stand up for themselves.
      So from that perspective, it's less about seeing your team as morally good, but seeing your team as the one that must win, and you appreciate that they won it for you.

    • @simoneidson21
      @simoneidson21 Před 5 dny +4

      Yes, most of the villains are very evil. Because they are villains

    • @freezy2755
      @freezy2755 Před 5 dny +5

      Not really, half the plot of mw19 is the main characters realising they aren’t the good guys

    • @interiordagoth
      @interiordagoth Před 4 dny +14

      @@googiegress7459 there is not an empire on this earth that has not crumbled. If the motto is kill or be killed then surely you must be aware of this mortality and the simple fact is that all of this is a choice, unless an endless series of unwinnable wars against entropy is somehow a preferable alternative to actually attempting to fix our problems.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 4 dny +2

      @@interiordagoth I agree! I would prefer a fix to everyone's problems. But being the first one to remove your armor just means you're extremely likely to be immediately stabbed.
      And that sucks, because it's a Catch-22. If everyone disarmed, everyone would be fine. But if anyone doesn't, they could conquer the world.

  • @samadamadingdong268
    @samadamadingdong268 Před 4 dny +12

    Foucault's "Discipline and Punish" is a great book for further reading on physical punishment. Our prison systems came out of the realization that criminals could be turned into folk heroes if the public sees them withstand their torture or face their execution with dignity, and so the state apparatus of punishment transitioned from making examples out of criminals to locking them away where they can't be seen. I think this is why propaganda about the efficacy of torture on the soul mostly exists today in spy and black ops popular culture because the fantasy can only exist when it is behind closed doors and away from the public. In real life examples, whenever the public witnesses state implemented physical punishments they usually come to the realization that torture is always used on the underprivileged like themselves, and they would be motivated to rebel.

  • @troublesomebirdsong
    @troublesomebirdsong Před 6 dny +59

    See also: 24
    The amount of torture in that show is astonishing.

  • @0uttaS1TE
    @0uttaS1TE Před 6 dny +318

    Is it weird that my first thought was "I hope Jacob covers Black Ops 1's numbers deprogramming, as well as all of its reiterations through that subseries"? Eh, probably. I played Black Ops at too young an age.
    Anyway, I often wonder if torture is used as a shorthand for grit and edge, especially in the new MW trilogy, which constantly emphasises how 141 are largely anti-heroes and bad boys, with dark backstories perfect for yaoi roleplay. The torture becomes background noise, part of the set dressing, a means for us to know where we're going and who we're killing.

    • @PurePancakes113
      @PurePancakes113 Před 6 dny +137

      "bad boys, with dark back stories perfect for yaoi roleplay"
      lmao that's spot on

    • @ghosthand3737
      @ghosthand3737 Před 6 dny +75

      @@PurePancakes113 There's a BIG Soap/Ghost yaoi community, like REALLY BIG.

    • @0uttaS1TE
      @0uttaS1TE Před 6 dny +57

      @@ghosthand3737 That's what I was thinking of. It's kind of surprising how enduring that ship is. I remember seeing a yaoi doujin of that pairing from before the new trilogy, let alone before those characters were introduced. I could probably write for ages about the irony of it all

    • @JuliaJulia-vh4xc
      @JuliaJulia-vh4xc Před 5 dny +12

      @@0uttaS1TEif you were to make a video essay on that I would watch the shit out of it

    • @0uttaS1TE
      @0uttaS1TE Před 5 dny +22

      @@JuliaJulia-vh4xc Ah, as much as I'd want to do it, I have to admit, I'm an amateur. On top of that, I worry I won't do the topic justice. I'm interested in why that element of the fandom has become so prominent, especially in a community that has one foot perpetually in mid-2000s edge and prejudice, at least from the outside looking in. I also want to know if this has always been an aspect of the CoD community prior to MW'22. Because let's be real, from the OG Zombies crew, to Mason and Woods to even characters like Mitchell and Gideon in AW or Hendricks and the Player in BO3, a lot of CoD is ripe for that kind of shipping. So has anyone taken advantage of it, and if not, why not?
      I don't want it to be "Oh, look at this, isn't this weird?" Because doing so not only is a disservice to the fans of that content within the CoD community, the fanartists and fanfic writers, it's a disservice to the games themselves. Because people don't ship out of boredom. These iterations of Soap and Ghost must have been doing something right for people to go this crazy for em

  • @Gabriel64468
    @Gabriel64468 Před 5 dny +20

    Chilling.
    To some extent the defence "it is just fiction/a game" is valid when something like Toture shows up. But seeing how systematic it shows up, how consistently it has no connection to reallife torture and how clear the valuejudgements or lack thereof for torture are for "villains" and "heroes" is honestly stomachturning.
    It feels straight up negligent, especially when claims that CoD is a "more realistic" modern FPS don't just exist, but are even part of their official branding to a degree.

    • @chriss780
      @chriss780 Před 2 dny +3

      its not negligent, its intentional us military propaganda.

  • @AjeetSingh-xq4yb
    @AjeetSingh-xq4yb Před 5 dny +6

    The torture and interrogation scenes in BO1 were just so intense. I remember being shocked to discover the interrogators were Hudson and Weaver. The mind control aspect played into the different agendas so well. The CIA stringing Mason along to get information about the number sequence, Dragovich creating a sleeper agent and Reznov's revenge.

  • @tasmaniantortoise
    @tasmaniantortoise Před 6 dny +578

    The lack of self-awareness the games have for the inefficiency and immorality of torture would make you think there’s probably some controversy within the fan base about it. Then you remember core audience of call of duty games…

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +17

      "Immorality" wow it's almost like bad things happen in war. It's just a game and you come across as SUCH a condescending and pretentious individual. Yeah, torture is bad, so is shooting people, but that's done everywhere all the time in gaming.

    • @piragintheevercorpulent1526
      @piragintheevercorpulent1526 Před 6 dny +198

      ​​​​@@homelessalcoholic2716The game doesn't exactly frame it as a bad thing? Or shooting people for that matter. CoD doesn't exactly try to make you think that you might be doing a bad thing by killing all these living breathing humans.
      Also, do you believe that games are art? Because they are art and thus are subject to scrutiny. Call of Duty certainly tries to take itself seriously.

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 Před 6 dny +3

      @piragintheevercorpulent1526 Sounds like you've never once listened to what veterans have to say on the matter. Just because you view killing as inherently bad, doesn't make that the objective moral truth. As a matter of fact, if you haven't taken a life before, even that of an animal, you really don't have the credibility for such statements. Killing in not inherently evil, but it's easy for the ignorant brain to fill in the gaps with whatever makes sense

    • @ChadKingSigma
      @ChadKingSigma Před 6 dny +51

      I don't think the average CoD player, plays the campaign.

    • @chodemcbrode2215
      @chodemcbrode2215 Před 6 dny +97

      @@homelessalcoholic2716 "the ignorant brain" alright you had me until your holier than thou position lamo

  • @waldeniv
    @waldeniv Před 6 dny +239

    Forty-six! Try not to torture anyone on the way to the parking lot!

    • @sumanoskae
      @sumanoskae Před 6 dny +64

      Instructions unclear, lost my keys and tortured my coworkers to find them.

    • @zaengo
      @zaengo Před 6 dny +21

      In a row?!

    • @sumanoskae
      @sumanoskae Před 5 dny +23

      @@zaengo Yes. Finally got one of them to break, but he lied about where they were. Turned out they were in my pocket the whole time lol

    • @memesarehere-zg9wb
      @memesarehere-zg9wb Před 5 dny +9

      @@sumanoskae did you make sure to kill him after torturing him?

    • @sydneyjayne4573
      @sydneyjayne4573 Před 5 dny

      CLERKS REFERENCE

  • @LazahNinja
    @LazahNinja Před 5 dny +13

    I was trying to process why the gasmask torture felt so cartoonishly impractical and I think its the fact these operatives released a deadly gas in an open air environment just to scare a guy they were gonna kill in a few minutes

    • @GustEdgeOfficial
      @GustEdgeOfficial Před 4 dny +2

      To be fair, the gas was in a canister so it probably would only be confined to that one room

  • @jadewedge6082
    @jadewedge6082 Před 5 dny +69

    This awakened knowledge of an indie game I heard about. I forget the name, but the premise is something along the lines of:
    YOu're part of an Inquisition, sent to a little village in which there's been rumours of a *witch.* The church has tasked you with a very simple task; find the witch and bring them to justice.
    So, you go around the village, talking to the villagers, asking about the witch, hearing rumours, the gossip, the petty grievances that people have with one and other.
    And then the torture tools come out. You can coerce people into giving you more information. Until you get what you need. Information on the witch, or a confession.
    ... here's the thing.
    You can't prove there is a Witch. There isn't.
    But anyone will say anything to make the pain stop. Anyone can be "The Witch."
    There is no fail state. You can't lose. The game just ends when you find the witch, your task being successful.

  • @Olivman7
    @Olivman7 Před 6 dny +24

    Another franchise that has an interesting relationship with torture is *The Last of Us*. Torture there is framed as an unambiguous evil, and a sign that our nominally good protagonists are going off the deep end.
    It's shown as effective when you can corroborate it, but there's also a scene where you torture someone for their friend's location, and they give you the location of their hideout... while hiding that their friend is *in the same building you're in* at that point.

  • @marcello7781
    @marcello7781 Před 6 dny +43

    Those comments were creepy. It's worrying how many people think physically and psychologically wounding a tied prisoner is something "manly" or tough.

    • @thebandofbastards4934
      @thebandofbastards4934 Před dnem

      Ironic considering that in Berserk, Griffith's torturer is a scrawny and wretched creature rather than tough or manly.

    • @thebandofbastards4934
      @thebandofbastards4934 Před dnem

      They are just weak men who want to feel empowered by harming others.

  • @kingwing7952
    @kingwing7952 Před 5 dny +15

    Man, this might be the most efficient roast of both Call Of Duty and the concept of torture I have ever seen.

  • @DissedRedEngie
    @DissedRedEngie Před 5 dny +7

    torturing info out of someone and then showing that the information was already known, but hadn't just reached the tortures fast enough. That ironically says quite a bit about the efficacy of torture.

  • @Marshydarshy
    @Marshydarshy Před 6 dny +24

    It's worth saying that the first Call of Duty has what I'd describe as implied torture - when you rescue Captain Price from being a prisoner he is visibly injured via the game's health system and limps. The game doesn't explicitly say whether this is from torture or from the plane crash that caused him to be captured in the first place, but given the tropes of war movies I'd suspect it's torture.

    • @Medved725
      @Medved725 Před 4 dny +6

      To be fair to the first CoDs, they were still following the old model where torture was still considered a bad thing. You see nazis torturing people because of course they would, and the rare instance of the allies doing it, it was the soviets partially because "of course they would" and partially because they were the most brutalized by the nazis so there was some "tough justice" to it. Basically back in the old days torture, at the very least, marked you as morally suspect. You'd never imagine classic Captain Price torturing anyone.
      It wasn't until CoD decided to """tackle""" controversial topics that they adopted the whole "we get dirty so the world stay clean" philosophy.

  • @JBOboe720
    @JBOboe720 Před 6 dny +56

    Interesting fact: Alex Adams, the author of How To Justify Torture, is the brother of Transformers CZcamsr Thew Adams.

    • @bepisthescienceman4202
      @bepisthescienceman4202 Před 4 dny +1

      Makes sense if true, have you ever tried to transform a Revenge of the fallen Mixmaster?

  • @DIEGOLOKO82
    @DIEGOLOKO82 Před 2 dny +7

    the fun (?) thing about this video is that it responds to Jacob´s last COD video "Does Call Of Duty Believe In Anything?" by answering that Yes, COD believes in Torture

  • @ttd0000
    @ttd0000 Před 4 dny +6

    I can explain why Ajax broke. He was tortured by Rorke(?), the primary antagonist of COD Ghosts.
    Rorke was not just a former Ghost but their leader, and considered the best among them. Unlike other betrayers in the series, considered weak for turning against their principles or not having them, he gets turned some form of hilariously effective brainwashing. Basically, you're fighting a member of the "good guy".faction with all the narrative weight you and your's are usually provided. He get's to pull info out of Ajax and is one of the villains that "quick & dirty" torture doesn't work on.
    It's actually a pretty cool little narrative trick, whether or not you think the actual narrative is any good.

  • @HadesWTF
    @HadesWTF Před 7 dny +234

    Man comes back with no chill. Lmao

    • @JacobGeller
      @JacobGeller  Před 6 dny +290

      I took 2 months and I came back Worse

    • @Killgore-ip2yq
      @Killgore-ip2yq Před 6 dny +5

      ​@@JacobGeller
      Relatable. 😅

    • @fuucaran
      @fuucaran Před 6 dny +3

      ​@@JacobGellerYou are simply spectacular, my friend. You are in a league of your own in what you do.

    • @threestrawsandasaladspoon2057
      @threestrawsandasaladspoon2057 Před 6 dny +1

      @@fuucaran No hes not im better, i do whatever it is he does but better, i am jacob better

    • @callmetired2294
      @callmetired2294 Před 6 dny +1

      @@JacobGeller AND NO BEARD

  • @void-creature
    @void-creature Před 5 dny +45

    0:04 at first I misheard S.A.S. as "Essayist" and was VERY confused

  • @86fifty
    @86fifty Před 3 dny +6

    While it was only up on screen for a brief moment, The Dark Knight scene with Ledger-Joker I think counts as the exception that proves the rule - that scene is for interrogation, and he DOES lie, and those two people DO die. And then at the climax, with the ferries and the detonators, everyone involved is being punished, and it STILL doesn't work. Nobody dies in that part. Thousands of terrified people, though.

  • @wyattthewordweaver1992
    @wyattthewordweaver1992 Před 2 dny +7

    When I was 13 I stayed up all night playing the campaign of Black Ops with my friends. I remember the glass punching scene. I chuckled at the line “we got plenty of windows.”
    This memory disturbs me as an adult, but I don’t blame my childhood self. These games don’t ask you to think. The directing and writing almost always presents a situation as black and white, the moral correctness of the situation never in doubt. In the glass punch scene you literally look through the eyes of the man torturing. You are him, and you wouldn’t be in the wrong, right? This kind of thing is particularly persuasive to those thinking uncritically, many who are barely paying attention as they wait for the next gameplay section or who are kids. It nauseates me how popular this stuff is.

  • @LonkinPork
    @LonkinPork Před 6 dny +91

    Babe wake up, Jacob Geller's gonna tell us What The Numbers Mean

    • @TheEvilCheesecake
      @TheEvilCheesecake Před 6 dny +1

      you're the call of duty of internet comment writers.

    • @LonkinPork
      @LonkinPork Před 6 dny +21

      @@TheEvilCheesecake originality is for Nerds

    • @TheEvilCheesecake
      @TheEvilCheesecake Před 5 dny

      how would you know when you've never had any.

    • @BababooeyGooey
      @BababooeyGooey Před 4 dny

      @@TheEvilCheesecake L + ratio + The Numbers, Mason

    • @TheEvilCheesecake
      @TheEvilCheesecake Před 4 dny

      @@BababooeyGooey thanks for "contributing", Modern Snorefare.

  • @nanardeurlambda
    @nanardeurlambda Před 6 dny +39

    24:05 I'm sorry, but i legitimately, no meme intended, didn't expect you to go to the inquisition for your essay.

  • @theonionqueen3519
    @theonionqueen3519 Před 2 dny +7

    You guys hear about that young man who was tortured by police into confessing that he murdered his father, only for his father to show up very much alive a few days later, having returned from vacation? Yeah.

  • @ElevatorEleven
    @ElevatorEleven Před 5 dny +8

    I wonder if the myth that torture works at all persists because people who have zero experience with the subject assume it's the same as basic duress. Like, normal threats and normal violence outside of any institutional or military context, outside of any interrogation context, even. Perhaps the average person (and popular culture) can only relate to torture as like, "tying a terrorist to a chair and punching in his teeth, that's roughly the same thing as a mugger pointing a gun at a person and demanding their wallet, right? Just a matter of degrees. Threats are mean but they work a lot of the time, so eh torture probably also works a lot of the time."
    Like you said about how fast torture scenes happen in these games; it feels to me like it comes not from any sort of engagement with actual real world torture, but from childish bullying and arm twisting, just with grown up blood and costumes wallpapered over it. It's like Captain Price isn't performing the moral evil that is actual legitimate Torture on that guy, he's just beating him up and taking his lunch money.

  • @cpt.mcn00b36
    @cpt.mcn00b36 Před 5 dny +107

    As the villains in Kojimas games state: Torture is a sport, a form of self-expression.

    • @dannydanumba2619
      @dannydanumba2619 Před 4 dny +21

      Kojima dead ass predicted memes being used as psyops

    • @ashtonndlovu9470
      @ashtonndlovu9470 Před 4 dny

      That's so true
      What is popular with the young is the best psyop
      Comics ww1
      Cartoons in ww2
      Movies In the called war
      Now memes ​@@dannydanumba2619

    • @Based_Gigachad_001
      @Based_Gigachad_001 Před 4 dny +2

      Based

    • @cpt.mcn00b36
      @cpt.mcn00b36 Před 4 dny +3

      @@Based_Gigachad_001
      - nooo, torture is a violation of human rights!
      - haha, electric bondage wheel go brrrr

  • @prettyspectrum6371
    @prettyspectrum6371 Před 5 dny +85

    Also if you think about it, torture is very counterproductive because of how it may damage the person being questioned, to the point you'll just eliminate the chance of getting an answer. Let just say you torture your prisioner by waterboarding them or with plastic bags, you may as well be killing their brain since the human brain can deteriorate by being less than 2 minutes without air. So in the end, the person won't even be ABLE to answer your questions. Pain overall has a very damaging result to a human being to the point it'll change a person completely and the thing is, it may never heal again.

  • @Jamesssssssssssssss
    @Jamesssssssssssssss Před 3 dny +4

    This video made me realize that the beats i got as a kid were torture.

    • @KittyKatty999
      @KittyKatty999 Před dnem

      It made me realise the extreme abuse and isolation for any slight thing I went through from school staff to "Improve Autistic me", was also legit torture done out of a power fantasy

  • @thedon5596
    @thedon5596 Před 5 dny +30

    Babe wake up jacob geller dropped a 40 minute video about a wildly popular series of games that will undoubtedly end in me crying over the state of our world while you console me and wipe snot from my nose

  • @MitchCyan
    @MitchCyan Před 6 dny +46

    Having to play Black Ops 4 is already torture.

    • @rafaravioli
      @rafaravioli Před 3 dny

      Honestly a bit mind blowing that people still buy the umpteenth annual iteration of Call of Duty 4 like clockwork.

  • @asddsa8203
    @asddsa8203 Před 6 dny +22

    5:10 Imma call it: Torture is effective, and it's A Good Thing (when the Good Guys do it, because they're good so it's justified) and it's A Bad Thing (when the Bad Guys do it, because they're bad!).

  • @FIRE_BOMB1
    @FIRE_BOMB1 Před 5 dny +24

    There a line that I think would be appropriate to add at the end - “Your here because you wanted to be something your not, a hero.”