Google Search

Showing posts with label Twisted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twisted. Show all posts

Friday, September 27, 2013

The Twisted Premises Implicit in the Drive for War


By Anthony Gregory

On its own terms, the government?s case for war with Syria has problems. We cannot deny the monstrousness of Assad?s regime, but the Obama administration has failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the Syrian state is responsible for the particular chemical weapons atrocity that supposedly justifies a strike. Some of the very same folks who lambasted the Bush team for refusing to listen to the UN and allow its inspectors time before stampeding into Iraq have not as loudly denounced the Obama team for similar behavior. The U.S. government has indicated it cannot say for sure who ordered the attack. Moreover, any U.S. intervention that displaces Assad?s regime would empower some unsavory rebels, some of whom have connections to al Qaeda or who display troubling levels of brutality, such as the rebel leader who took a bite from an organ he ripped out of a dead enemy soldier. Any U.S. action that merely intended to ?punish? Assad while keeping him in power also seems counterproductive at best. The logic behind such a bombing--that a dictator is so brutal his subjects deserve to die--should deeply trouble all good people.

The hidden premise, of course, is that the U.S. government necessarily must intervene, bomb, wage war, and inflict mass bloodshed as a remedy to foreign horrors. It is taken for granted that nonintervention is no option, which assumes that U.S. intervention tends to cause more good than bad, or is worth the effort even if it sometimes fails. This premise is steeped in a cold utilitarianism and stands in tension with the actual results of U.S. policy over the last few decades. The utter calamity that has unfolded in Iraq should guide even those who philosophically embrace intervention toward a realistic advocacy of U.S. restraint. Even if humanitarian war were not a total oxymoron, the United States in particular deserves a prolonged time-out. It has in the last fifty years left behind millions of corpses piled under a thousand broken promises, and so a 50-year moratorium on further American wars would seem like a reasonable goal, rather than starting yet another war even as the chaotic and inhumane consequences of interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya continue to unfold.

Whereas in the recent past, U.S. wars were primarily sold to the public under the banner of national security and foreign liberation, the justification given today dispenses with any sustained argument that the war will actually make Syrians freer or Americans safer. These advertised benefits might come, but they are not the focus. You see, if Obama fails to kill in Syria, the United States will lose street cred. This is the justification for unleashing the dogs of war, according to such mainstream articles as this Time Magazine piece, which nonchalantly weighs the costs of inaction (appearing weak) against the costs of too much action (regional instability) without much apparent care for the flesh-and-blood human beings who would die in the president?s redemptive and face-saving conflagration.

All along, we see a portrayal of the U.S. ruling class as victims of historical circumstance: ?How did it come to this? some of it is bad luck?although that often comes with the job: Bush had 9/11, Clinton had the Balkans, Carter had the Iranian hostages.?

Also throughout this unfortunately typical article appears the theme that the U.S. government simply looks foolish when any government in the world misbehaves, flouting American will, a sin implicitly characterized as much less forgivable than the killing itself. If Assad murders thousands, as he has, that?s bad enough--but if the Obama administration tells him to stop and he refuses, such recalcitrance is just beyond the pale and can?t be left unpunished. After all, Syria ?has been a dictatorship since 1949.? But what?s apparently worse is that the nation-state ?has also been a constant thorn in the U.S.?s side, aligning with Iran?s ruling mullahs and sponsoring the Lebanese terrorist group Hizballah.?

There is nothing defensible about the latter group?s terroristic attacks on civilians, but unfortunately such crimes appear around the world, as does the common tendency of states to brutally crush their opposition. America?s ally Bahrain has conducted particularly egregious offenses against dissenters. What makes Syria?s sins so mortal is they stand in defiance of American authority.

So we can take stock of the main premises implicit in the drive for war: The United States has a natural role to intervene abroad, such intervention is either likely to succeed, or else is worth risking failure, which could never be so significant as the U.S. empire losing its reputation as global savior. The U.S. government has generally been a force for good and must continue to be, and its leaders wage wars reluctantly to protect their own public relations image, a sad circumstance imposed upon presidents who would rather be peaceful but are forced into war because nothing is worse than the American government being called a chicken. The most unnerving of all premises, of course, is that it?s justifiable to kill innocent people by bombing the area where they happen to live, and this calculation of slaughtering people for the greater good is properly left up to the American state.

The causal acceptance of such murderous pretension infects almost all of the current foreign policy debate. In one of the closing paragraphs of this Time Magazine article, we see a cavalierly hopeful reference to what could potentially spiral into the worst war of the century: ?But to his critics, Obama does hesitate, and trouble follows as a result. With more than three years left in his presidency, he has the opportunity to reverse that impression. Success in Syria and then Iran could vindicate him, and failure could be crushing.?

We wouldn?t want a lame duck president to look bad. Torching and shredding thousands of people to death would almost seem futile if the carnage backfired and Obama?s empire came out of it embarrassed. This is thoroughly amoral reasoning at best, and so long as it profoundly pervades discourse over war and peace, we cannot take the interventionists seriously when they insist their own the ethical high ground.


(function(d, s, id) {var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];if (d.getElementById(id)) return;js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id;js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js#xfbml=1";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));

Latest Commentary
- How "Your" Government Works
- Pelosi: Willing to "Protect" Syrian Children To Death
- Who's Really Getting Punished?
- How the State Destroys Social Cooperation
- Perpetual Chaos and Crises
- The US Uses Gas To Kill Civilians
- We're All Edward Snowden Now
- Elysium: The Technological Side of the American Police State

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for the purposes of news reporting, education, research, comment, and criticism, which constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. It is our policy to respond to notices of alleged infringement that comply with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (found at the U.S. Copyright Office) and other applicable intellectual property laws. It is our policy to remove material from public view that we believe in good faith to be copyrighted material that has been illegally copied and distributed by any of our members or users.
About Us - Disclaimer - Privacy Policy



View the original article here

Monday, July 4, 2011

Twisted ethics of an expert witness

By Ken Armstrong and Maureen O'Hagan, Seattle Times staff reporters

Stuart Greenberg was at the top of his profession: a renowned forensic psychologist who in court could determine which parent got custody of a child, or whether a jury believed a claim of sexual assault. Trouble is, he built his career on hypocrisy and lies, and as a result, he destroyed lives, including his own.

Earlier this year, a four-page document with a bland title, "Stipulation for Dismissal with Prejudice," was filed in a civil matter percolating on the King County Courthouse's ninth floor. Hardly anyone took notice. Most everyone had moved on.

But that document ? filed by lawyers tangled up in the estate of Stuart Greenberg, a nationally renowned psychologist whose life ended in scandal ? signaled the end of a tortuous undertaking.

Greenberg had proved such a toxic force ? a poison coursing through the state's court system ? that it took more than three years for lawyers and judges to sift through his victims and account for the damage done.

For a quarter century Greenberg testified as an expert in forensic psychology, an inscrutable field with immense power. Purporting to offer insight into the human condition, he evaluated more than 2,000 children, teenagers and adults. His word could determine which parent received custody of a child, or whether a jury believed a claim of sexual assault, or what damages might be awarded for emotional distress.

At conferences and in classrooms, in Washington and beyond, he taught others to do what he did. He became his profession's gatekeeper, quizzing aspirants, judging others' work, writing the national-certification exam. His peers elected him their national president.

But his formidable career was built upon a foundation of hypocrisy and lies. In the years since Greenberg's death, while court officials wrestled over his estate, The Seattle Times worked to unearth Greenberg's secrets, getting court records unsealed and disciplinary records opened.

Those records are a testament to Greenberg's cunning. They show how he played the courts for a fool. He played state regulators for a fool. He played his fellow psychologists for a fool. And were it not for a hidden camera, he might have gotten away with it.

...Continued


Latest Politics/Corruption
- Geithner: Taxes on 'Small Business' Must Rise So Government Doesn't 'Shrink'
- US Pledges $300 Million More for Central America Drug War
- 14 Reasons Why Rick Perry Would Be A Really, Really Bad President
- Supremes Rule EPA Final Arbiter on Carbon Dioxide
- Gov. worker claims to see shark off S.F. coast, Gov. bans surfing and swimming for five days
- NYT's Love Affair With Fascism Continues
- FDA sends US marshals to seize elderberry juice concentrate, deems it 'unapproved drug'
- Church fined $4,000 for 'excessive tree pruning'

...."he played the courts for a fool. He played state regulators for a fool. He played his fellow psychologists for a fool."

I'm annoyed by this quote for two reasons but only one of them pertains to the content in the article.

The first cause for my annoyance with this quote is the sentence structure. Couldn't the courts, state regulators, and his fellow psychologists, simply have been played as "fools?"

My second reason for being annoyed by this quote is due to the suggestion, that these people were "played." If they went along with Greenberg's findings -- I would just consider them "fools."

Giving the state authority to decide on child custody issues, is a dangerous endeavor, that should be halted. The entire process is a flawed one, that has little, if ever, anything to do with, considering the best interest of a child.

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for the purposes of news reporting, education, research, comment, and criticism, which constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. It is our policy to respond to notices of alleged infringement that comply with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (found at the U.S. Copyright Office) and other applicable intellectual property laws. It is our policy to remove material from public view that we believe in good faith to be copyrighted material that has been illegally copied and distributed by any of our members or users.
About Us - Disclaimer - Privacy Policy
"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened..." - Winston Churchill


View the original article here