Massimo's
other ramblings can be found at his Skeptic
Web.

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It has been an awful month in Iraq, dominated by the news of prisoners’
abuse in detention facilities run by the US and its allies, by the
decapitation of an American, broadcast on the Internet, and of course
by the usual list of bomb explosions and casualties all over the Middle
East. Plenty of commentators have remarked on all these events, but
I have made a list of what I think are interesting phrases related
to the prisoners’ abuse scandal, and that I’d like to submit to the
readers’ attention. What I think is relevant in the following quotes
is what they reveal about the common sense of morality that appears
to be shared by a lot of us. As we shall see, it makes for a disturbing
picture of our ethical standards.
One of the first excuses adduced by the accused soldiers and their
friends and families is a classic: “I (he/she) was following orders.”
Well, all right, what that means is that responsibility needs to
be ascertained throughout the chain of command, but in what sense
is this an excuse for the soldiers’ behavior? It didn’t help the
Nazi at Nuremberg whenever they tried the same approach, and for
good reasons: when an adult individual does something, even at the
prompting of somebody else, that individual is primarily responsible
for what he has done. In the United States, it is common to try
children as adults for all sorts of crimes, and one often hears
calls for the death penalty in some such cases. But when it comes
to our own “boys” (and “girls”) doing awful things, all we have
to do is to point the finger to whoever gave the order? What happened
to one of the cornerstones of the American ethos, personal responsibility?
A second common refrain heard during the past few weeks has been
that “they were not properly trained.” As if a mature adult actually
needs special training to figure out that it is not moral to torture
prisoners of war, that it is not ethical to humiliate people that
are in one’s custody, for example by forcing them to engage in acts
that their culture or religion considers demeaning. On a much minor
scale, of course, a similar attitude is behind the idea that if
someone at the office sexually harasses one of his employees, the
problem will be fixed with “sensitivity training,” as if any reasonable
man wouldn’t know that touching, or even talking to, a woman in
a certain manner without permission is simply not an acceptable
thing to do.
Many of the friends and family of the accused soldiers have been
understandably shocked and surprised at the news of the abuses.
But, rather than accepting the reality of photos and testimonies,
a common reaction has been along the lines of “he is such a nice
boy, I simply can’t believe he could do that sort of things.” This,
of course, is the same simplistic attitude that explains why the
majority of crimes are committed by people who know the victim,
the latter being simply unable to think that her nice uncle, neighbor,
or friend could possibly do what they in fact went on to do. In
several of the televised interviews with friends and family of the
accused soldiers, the attitude was palpably not just one of disbelief
at the reality of the events, but rather one insinuating the possibility
that somebody, somewhere, was simply making all of this up.
To continue with our brief analysis, consider Donald Rumsfeld,
the (too) briefly embattled Secretary of Defense: he immediately
went on television to “take full responsibility” for the abuses,
and then gingerly (even contemptuously) ignored calls for his resignation.
What exactly does it mean to “take responsibility,” then? I thought,
naively as it turns out, that it would mean that someone at the
top of the chain of command (say, Rumsfeld) would resign because
he had not been able to correct a problem of which he had been aware
for months before the scandal erupted. But I guess Mr. Rumsfeld’s
dictionary includes some other, hitherto unknown, definition of
“taking responsibility.”
We then come to President Bush, who has been quoted saying, after
viewing the photos of the prisoners’ maltreatment, “this does not
reflect the America I know.” Well, the problem is that -- contrary
to what Mr. Bush and his cronies have been saying for years -- there
is no such thing as “the” America they know. The United States of
America is, like many other places in the world, sometime a wonderful
and sometime an awful place to live, depending on the circumstances.
Americans, like any other people in the world, don’t have a monopoly
on goodness (or on evil, for that matter), but are simply a bunch
of human beings, with all the great potential and faults that human
beings typically have. That is why it is equally silly to say that
one is “proud to be an American” (how can one be proud of a birth
accident?), as that one “hates America” (how can one meaningfully
hate an abstract entity?). Rather, one should say that one is proud,
ashamed of, or even hate, particular Americans, especially individual
leaders and the policies they implement.
The Bush administration also tried to get some mileage out of the
alleged fact that the US is “dealing” with the matter openly and
swiftly, as opposed to some dictatorship that American blood has
helped eliminating. Right, except of course that that dictatorship
had actually been helped into place by the same American interests
that later removed it, not to mention the maddening fact that the
Bush administration tried to keep the news of the abuses out of
the public eye for months, while at the same time doing absolutely
nothing to stop the practice. Only when the news finally became
public Rumsfeld “took responsibility” (see above).
Lastly, one of the most disturbing comments I’ve heard in the news
about this whole horrible affair began appearing after the decapitation
of Nick Berg was broadcast on the Internet: “well, see, at least
we are not as barbaric as they are.” Yes, there is no question that
the decapitation of a human being is a barbaric act (although, let
us remember that the US is the only Western country that still applies
the death penalty -- being killed by raw decapitation is surely
worse than being fried on the electric chair, but at some point
this becomes an academic matter for the person involved). And surely
decapitating one prisoner outdoes abusing several by a long shot
(then again, at least one prisoner did die under torture in American
hands). But even to make the comparison, it seems to me, dramatically
lowers our own moral standards. So now the US is no longer a knight
in shining armor, interested only in bringing democracy and economic
prosperity to the rest of the world. We are reduced to a picture
of the US army doing awful things, yes, but at least not as awful
as those of the other side. Have we completely lost our moral compass?
Did we ever had it to begin with?
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