Forward from mart

U.S Military Science Gone Mad! The "Warring After Pill" Makes Guilt "Obsolete"

Even the NAZI's couldn't have dreamed up something this evil and disgusting.

mart

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http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0916-08.htm


Published on Thursday, September 16, 2004 
by www.CommonDreams.org 
 
Is Guilt Obsolete? 

by Lisa Martinovic

 
Now that the various Abu Ghraib commissions have finished their unseemly tap dance 
around the assignation of blame, it's time to explore some of the subtler, 
far-reaching implications of the "scandal." 


Before Abu Ghraib, before Fallujah, in fact just weeks before the whole shock and awe 
campaign was to launch, came news of a preemptive strike -- on memory. The stealth 
attack was initiated by clever scientists who thought not of a cure for infectious 
greed, or a vaccine against the plague of moral relativism, but instead prepared to 
market a pill that will help us forget what we cannot bear to remember. 


To the unimpeded brain, painful memories provoke responses as varied as solemn 
reflection, incapacitating fear, or self-imposed exile to the bleak landscape of guilt 
and regret -- depending on our role in the precipitating event. 


But with a very off-label use of the beta-blocker propranolol, doctors can stop the 
emotions associated with a traumatic event from embedding in the brain where they 
otherwise act like land mines; every time they're triggered, an explosion of memories 
forces us to relive the grief we suffered . or inflicted. 


Scientists seeking to spare the rape victim her trauma forgot that what's good for the 
victim is good for the perp, forgot there might be a downside to sealing off access to 
a conscience -- the very capacity that defines us as human and endows us with 
compassion and empathy. Imagine: our internal moral compass, painstakingly honed by 
evolutionary forces over millennia, circumvented by one little pill. 


And wouldn't this pharmacological end-run come in handy during the preemptive wars of 
the future? Handy for any soldier not sufficiently amputated from his emotions by 
military hardening and pre-battle infusions of sado-porn and methamphetamine; useful 
for those medics who cannot block the acrid stench of charbroiled flesh; and essential 
for the Special Forces operative who's not far enough away from collateral or 
intentional damage to pretend that this strike was surgical and he a mere technician.
 

So if he's close enough, and sober enough, his senses not dulled enough to keep him 
from taking in the enormity of his deed, he can instead take the warring-after pill 
and feel no pain, suffer no remorse, believe he was just doing his duty. He'll go home 
PTSD-free, kiss his wife, and get on with his life. He may still father deformed 
children and die of cancer the VA insists is unrelated to depleted uranium, but by God 
he'll die with no regrets at all. 


But that was before shock and awe, before Fallujah, and before Abu Ghraib where 
American soldiers and their digital cameras proved that there was no big bonanza for 
the pharmaceutical companies because among the perpetrators there was no guilt that 
needed to be medicated, nor memories to be short-circuited. 


To the contrary, the offending troops were so unconcerned with the legality and 
morality of their behavior that they chose to immortalize it, gleefully sharing those 
memories with friends and family. Pfc. Lynndie England apparently spoke for many when 
she testified to her belief that she had done nothing wrong. (It's not like we were 
beheading anyone.) Likewise, for Rush Limbaugh and a startling number of Americans, 
the whole episode was on par with a fraternity prank, little more than light amusement 
for the troops. Others among us pray that those same troops will someday discover that 
you can't dehumanize your enemy without diminishing your soul. 


And those further up the chain of command? Apparently, if all you did was order the 
torture, or look the other way, or sign a Presidential Directive authorizing it in the 
name of national security, well you've got no trauma to get over, do you? 


And, perhaps, no soul to wound. 


In the end, we are all being poisoned by a culture that breeds generals who boast our 
god is better than theirs; a nation where lawyers are paid good money to decide who is 
eligible for civil rights and who for torture; and a press corps that laughs along 
with a president who jokes about not finding the weapons of mass destruction he 
dreamed up to justify a war he can't win. 


In such a culture that little pill for guilt is obsolete. 


Because we're Americans. 


We have no regrets. 


We're in a war on terror and our humanity is just so much collateral damage. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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