PTSD: The Reality vs. the Rhetoric 

By S. Brian Willson

Published in CounterPunch, Weekend Edition, March 18 / 19, 2006

 

I was flabbergasted to read Sally Satel's March 1, 2006 New York Times
Op-Ed, "For Some, the War Won't End," describing the diagnosis of
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as creation of a suspicious
"culture of trauma" providing veterans a "free ride" as they approach
retirement age. A flag immediately went up for me because of my own
history with PTSD, but also because Satel is a former VA psychiatrist
who now is a resident scholar at the very biased, neoconservative
American Enterprise Institute (AEI). AEI is a very wealthy think tank
funded largely by old-line conservative family money such as the Scaife
and Olin Foundations, and is closely associated and shares headquarters
with the Project For A New American Century (PNAC), the latter offering
a 1997 blueprint for an aggressive, unilateral U.S. global hegemony,
including domination of Middle Eastern and Central Asian energy
reserves.

 

The American Enterprise Institute

 

AEI, a more than 60-year-old think tank committed to preservation of
private enterprise at the expense of The Commons, supports such policies
as censorship of the arts, required prayer in schools, and privatizing
Social Security. It has a list of current and past fellows, scholars and
trustees which makes those interested in a just human community shudder
in angst. Lynne and Dick Cheney, John Bolton, Ken Lay, Richard Perle,
Newt Gingrich, John Yoo, Charles Murray, and many, many others are
affiliated with AEI. One might remember Korean-American John Yoo who,
only a few years ago as a young lawyer in the Justice Department, wrote
legal memos supporting torture while denying legal protections for
"illegal combatants" and advocating the legal imperative of the Patriot
Act. It is worth reminding ourselves that Charles Murray is the
architect of the Bell Curve concluding existence of intelligence
differences between the "races," meaning in fact the superiority of the
White "race," just as Hitler's vision motivated German Aryan efforts to
conquer Europe.

 

AEI's Board of Trustees includes present and past corporate insiders
such as the Chair of Dow Chemical which exposed several million people
like me and the Vietnamese to the most intense chemical warfare in human
history, and more recently, with the acquisition of Union Carbide,
continues to ignore responsibility for the Bhopal, India chemical leak
disaster that killed and severely maimed thousands. Other trustees
include the CEO of huge corporations such as ExxonMobil, State Farm
Insurance, and Merck Pharmaceutical, the latter still reeling from
misrepresentations about its painkiller, Vioxx, which, it turns out,
increases risk of heart attacks.

 

George Bush II The Younger, in a February 2003 speech to the AEI lauded
them as possessing some of the "finest minds in our nation" and noted
that he had grabbed twenty of its thinkers for his administration. Along
with Sally Satel, Lynne Cheney is also an AEI scholar, and they have
worked together with the Independent Women's Forum (IWF) to counter
efforts of the National Organization For Women (NOW) and to oppose
feminist politics in general.

 

Dr. Satel & "Oppression-Based Therapy"

 

In Sally Satel's book, PC, M.D.: How Political Correctness Is Corrupting
Medicine (Basic Books, 2001), she defines "politically correct" medicine
as a dangerous orthodoxy intended to maintain victim status. She insists
that the healing profession's concern for "social justice" interferes
with patient health because it downplays the role of personal
responsibility. Satel condemns three popular "oppression-based
therapies": (1) those encouraging patients to be part of what she calls
"victim groups"; (2) those suggesting that psychic stress results from
racist or patriarchal society; and (3) those suggesting that healing is
enhanced by activism that assumes a malignant political-socio
environment that contributed to illness of the patient in the first
place. She goes so far as to accuse these therapies of being
malpractice. She opposes "consumer and psychiatric survivor"
organizations and believes in the necessity of coerced drugging.

 

By subscribing to these "malpractice" techniques I was rescued from the
scrapheap of war-induced traumas being part of veteran's groups where we
safely share experiences and help process our cognitive dissonance
crises; recognizing that many of our decisions and harmful behaviors
resulted from a cultural racist ideology and blind obedience to
patriarchy that disempowered and dumbed us down; and becoming active in
addressing the causes of war and working for a just society has assisted
in our validation and redemption as human beings.

 

Satel stoops to the comforts of reductionist thinking, denying the
holistic interplay among dispositional, situational and systemic
factors. In so doing, she ignores the need for understanding the
revolutionary role that historical, social, racial, economic, and
political contexts have had in shaping our thinking, assumptions, and
behavioral patterns. Thus, Satel advocates, in the name of therapy,
perpetuation of the politics of massive obedience to the prevailing
authority and power system, even as such obedience assures rapid
deterioration of the necessary ingredients for a healthy society --
empathy, equity, and mutual respect for all life. Of course, it is
likely that her sense of mental health "requires" ideological adherence
to the prevailing system. I prefer the emergence of homo humanus,
replacing homo hostilus, and the terrifying possibility of homo
extinctus.

 

I would like someone like Satel, and all those folks associated with AEI
to have shared just one or two hours of my traumatic experiences. A dose
of that reality likely would overwhelm their ad nauseum rhetoric in a
matter of minutes, if not seconds.

 

My PTSD

 

Coming from the "indentured servant" class, I was drafted out of law
school in 1966 at 25 years of age. Unlike Vice-President Dick Cheney, I
possessed no special connections or family money that enabled me to keep
my deferment in order to pursue those other things that I would have
preferred. So, I enlisted in the USAF in lieu of going into the Army to
more likely avoid a combat experience. In 1969, however, I was ordered
to Vietnam as head of a special ranger-trained AF combat security unit.
While there, as fate would have it, I experienced sickening patterns of
crimes that led to my opposition to the war. I was discharged in 1970 as
a Captain at 29 years of age.

 

In 1981, twelve years after those traumatic experiences, I suffered, at
age 40, a near psychotic flashback that revealed graphic details of what
I had witnessed on a special assignment in April 1969 while documenting
the aftermath of bombing missions that intentionally annihilated a
number of inhabited villages. The flashback revealed that I had observed
somewhere between 700-900 Vietnamese, mostly women and young children in
five separate villages in a week's time. In the very first village I
initially heard, then observed a water buffalo screaming in pain from a
3-foot gash in its belly. Taking several additional steps I could walk
no further. There were bodies lying everywhere; I estimated more than
125. I covered my face with a handkerchief as the stench from burning
flesh and lingering napalm was overpowering and I began to weep, then
vomit. This was just the beginning of the memory. The flashback shook me
to my roots and it took me several months to recover from the sudden
recall of what had been buried in my subconscious.

 

I attended a few VA rap sessions but didn't feel safe, so sought my own
therapy, both group and individual, and continued to pursue my life. I
avoided alcohol or drug use and was considered quite functional. But I
began to experience chronic insomnia; hyper-alertness to noises; sudden
crying periods; distracting, intrusive memories during daytime hours;
avoidance of public crowds; terrifying bodily sensations later termed
"panic attacks," etc. Nonetheless, for awhile I even directed a
state-funded veteran's outreach center as I struggled to mask my
symptoms the best I could.

 

In the early 1990s my symptoms were becoming more acute and I sought
Jungian therapy. Several people suggested I was suffering from PTSD and
advised me to consider help from the VA. In 1994, at age 53, I had my
first scheduled assessment with a VA psychiatrist. I was so terrified at
the thought of baring my soul to an employee of the government that I
remained in my car outside the VA hospital and never made my
appointment. Three years later, in 1997, with the emotional support of
other veterans, I re-applied and within a year I was diagnosed with PTSD
at age 57, twenty-nine years after the worst of the traumas. Now 64, I
have discovered lessons about managing the symptoms, and am more mindful
of taking care of myself. However, the trauma and memories of the events
remain vivid, though I allow space for them in my psyche.

 

PTSD is nothing to make light of and Dr. Satel, I would submit, needs a
dose of war to grasp a reality about her "theories." War is insane, and
those of us thrust into it for God, Country and Right of Passage pay a
dear price for the remainder of our lives, even though we may have been
politically awakened as a result. WWI German soldier Paul Baumer, in the
epic film, "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1930), had it right when he
proclaimed, "I'm no good for back there anymore." That was true then,
and it is true now.

 

Don't Blame the Victim

 

Instead of questioning motives of veterans who have been forced to
endure wars, the vast majority of which are grotesquely illegal upon
honest examination, it would behoove psychiatrist Satel and others who
think similarly, to condemn the criminality of the political leaders who
continually conspire, plan, prepare, initiate, and wage wars of
aggression in violation of international treaties, agreements or
assurances, and the Constitution itself. Blaming the victim, rather than
the intellectual and political architects of this supreme international
crime, practices the ad nauseum trick of "shadow" projection of fault
onto others, perpetuating cultural denial and avoidance of
accountability.

 

Satel wants only the lowly troopers to take responsibility for their
healing, ignoring the responsibility of war policy makers and
profiteers, who are committing the supreme international crime of
aggressive wars deserving Nuremberg-style prosecutions. And I suspect
also that it would not occur to her that these policy making men and
women be subjected to forced therapy or coercive drugging to cure them
of their dangerous psychopathological behavior. Thus, we witness the
typical double standard imposed by those at the top in hierarchical
power systems.

 

If Satel and her comrades were really concerned about saving taxpayer
funds, they would cease their glib support for extraordinarily costly
aggressive wars of hegemony. Then the psychiatric community could truly
be proud that they are preventing hundreds of thousands of people from
becoming PTSD patients. How about that for modern psychiatry? But then
the shrinks would have to possess the courage to confront the inherent
contradictions of a market-obsessed, capitalist economy that values
private profit over public justice and caring. 

 

Brian Willson served 4 years as an Air Force officer, including a stint
in Vietnam's Mekong Delta heading a 40-man combat security unit. A one
time member of the District of Columbia Bar he has worked as a penal
consultant, prisoner rights advocate, dairy farmer, legislative aide,
tax assessor, veteran's advocate, and small businessman. Willson has
conducted on-site study of U.S. overt and covert policies in two-dozen
countries, documenting numerous violations of Constitutional and
international laws. A long time activist he has written a number of
articles and essays, many posted on his website
<http://www.brianwillson.com> http://www.brianwillson.com   He currently
is working on his memoirs.

 

 He is a member of Humboldt Bay Veterans For Peace in northern
California and the Arcata Nuclear Free Zone and Peace Commission. With
his partner he maintains a permaculture garden while generating most
household and transportation energy needs from the sun. Willson
possesses a Juris Doctor, Master's in criminology/corrections, and two
Honorary Doctorates, in Humanities and Law, respectively.

 

 He can be reached at:  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

 

In Peace,

 

Frank Dorrel

Publisher

Addicted To War

P.O. Box 3261

Culver City, CA 90231-3261

 

310-838-8131

 <outbind://53/[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 <outbind://53/www.addictedtowar.com> www.addictedtowar.com 

 

 


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





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