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| ©Reuters/Shannon Stapleton |
| The 'Waterboarding Thrill Ride' installation by artist Steve Powers is seen at the Coney Island arcade in New York August 6, 2008. |
New York - A man with a black hood pours water on the face of a prisoner in an orange jumpsuit strapped to a table: no, it's not Guantanamo Bay naval base, but New York's Coney Island amusement park.
The scene using robotic dolls is an installation built by artist Steve Powers to criticize waterboarding, a simulated drowning technique the United States has admitted using on terrorism suspects, but that rights group say is torture.
"Waterboard Thrill Ride" beckons a sign along with cartoon character "SpongeBob SquarePants" who appears tied down and exclaiming: "It don't Gitmo better!"
The public can peek through window bars and feed a dollar into the slot to bring the robotic dolls into action, one more attraction in the beachfront amusement park in the New York neighborhood of Brooklyn.
"Anyone can see this is painful from 50 feet away," said Powers, who had previously been painting signs and storefronts in the area. "I wanted people to understand the psychological ramifications of this."
Marion Tracey, 57, from New Jersey, said she found the installation disturbing. It made her think of her father who had nightmares after returning from World War II. "In all wars, horrible things happen," she said. "I'd rather not see it."
Alex Soto, 23, said he thought it was a good thing for people to learn about waterboarding, but he added: "It is pretty twisted."





















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Actually, what it serves is as a desensitizing mechanism.
The real problem is that it is truly difficult to have an external force wake you up, you can only awaken on your own terms.
In this case the average sheeple will be caught between desensitization and PTSD. If it is too abstract the point is not made and it only desensitizes, if it is all too real and "present", one could end up with a true trauma to the ego.
You can lead the proverbial horse but cannot *make* it drink. You can lead people to the obvious, but you cannot *make* them see or understand.
There are an amazing number of forces present today all of which serve to subtly, slowly and quietly drag everyone to the conclusion that torture is OK, depending on the context.