Annals of Human Depravity, Iraq Division (cont’d):

William Saletan: What Bush said as the Iraq prison scandal unfoldedSlate

UK forces taught torture methods:

“The sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison was not an invention of maverick guards, but part of a system of ill-treatment and degradation used by special forces soldiers that is now being disseminated among ordinary troops and contractors who do not know what they are doing, according to British military sources.” —Guardian.UK

Iraq abuse: US policy?

“The man brought in to run the Abu Ghraib prison…, Maj Gen Geoffrey Miller, …told reporters who were shown the prison near Baghdad that sensory deprivation methods would now be used only after a general had “signed off” on them. “We will examine very closely the more aggressive techniques,” he said. But he did not say they would be stopped. ” — BBC

US approved sleep deprivation, nudity for Guantanamo inmates: report:

“The US government last year approved interrogation techniques for use at its detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, that permit reversing the normal sleep patterns of detainees and exposing them to heat, cold, loud music and bright lights.” — Yahoo! News

A Defense Dept. memo orders military personnel not to read or download the Taguba report on the grounds that it is classified. — Time

Dissension grows in senior military ranks on war policy:

“U.S. May Be Winning Battles in Iraq But Losing the War, Some Officers Say” — Washington Post

“The Bush administration was bracing itself last night for the release of new pictures and video footage from Abu Ghraib which show US soldiers having sex with an Iraqi woman prisoner, troops almost beating a prisoner to death, and the rape of young boys by Iraqi guards at the jail.” — Independent.UK

If accountability for the prisoner torture goes no higher than the transgressors and their immediate superiors, we should not understand that to be because these soldiers were acting in an aberrant, “un-American” way, but exactly the contrary. There have always been atrocities in war; the demonization of the enemy and the dehumanization of nice American “kids next door” given almost unrestricted power are business as usual unless restrained by either a command and discipline structure or an innate moral sense, both of which have increasingly broken down. One commentator pointed out that the photographs and videos out of Abu Ghraib were essentially recreations of porn flicks, the highest-cashflow sector of the entertainment industry, loath as we are to admit it. And one caller to a radio talk show on the Abu Ghraib abuses reminded us that this sort of thing goes on routinely in domestic prisons as well as with alien ‘terrorist’ suspects abroad.

When confronted by monstrous acts, we often vacillate between seeing the perpetrators as clueless and seeing them as wanton. “My son was only following orders”, “they had not been trained in caring for prisoners”, “they were not provided with the Geneva Conventions to read”, “I didn’t read the Taguba report in detail”, “I didn’t learn about the abuses until I heard about it on TV”, “reservists should not be given the hard jobs to do”; vs. “these were the wrong people for the job”, “they must have had some innate sadistic tendencies”, “the guy who is the prison guard in domestic life was the ringleader”, etc. The transgressors were poorly led both from within and without themselves, and it is difficult to disentangle. Psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg described a trajectory of moral development and, while he was talking about individual psychology, it seems clear to me that as a society we have regressed from a moralistic to a legalistic stage of moral function where, increasingly, an innate sense of what is right is supplanted by a sense of what rules someone else has set up and whether we can violate them without being caught. Many are preoccupied with what the significance must be of the fact that these crimes were recorded in such detail. This is the first war in the age of ubiquitous personal digital media, but trophies of the kill, from the severed heads of slain enemies to Nazi uniform insignia, have always been collected triumphally. Thinking in terms of the stupidity in creating evidence or in allowing the evidence to get out only makes sense when you consider the problem from the vantage point of secrecy, lies and whether you will be caught doing what you are doing. I am more horrified that the bestiality of the acts was accompanied by the depravity of celebrating them with digital trophies.

The lesson we have to learn from this dilemma is that those who gravitate to power — from the grunts in the front lines of the armed forces to the halls of Washington (and the corporate boardrooms with the latter is increasingly interchangeable and intermingled) — embody the worst in all of us. As difficult to accept as is Goethe’s observation that “I have never heard of a crime that I could not imagine myself committing,” constraining this evil cannot occur until we embrace the potentiality within us rather than dismiss it as utterly alien. Individual psychological maturity also comprises in part integration — acknowledging and owning the unacceptable parts of ourselves, and so too maturity in national identity. The revelations of the abuses — and I reiterate my conviction that we have just seen the tip of the iceberg — give the lie to the naive faith in our celebrated social ideals of freedom and justice, which are these days largely empty propaganda spin by feckless and corrupt leaders. From the top down, embarking on a premise as monstrous as that upon which the invasion of Iraq was based leaves no choice but for the emergence of the monstrous in the participants.

There is another individual psychological mechanism which is at play in malevolent character pathology and which I think is relevant here on a national level. In projective identification, although it is very complex, you exxentially disown your own debased rageful impulses by ‘projecting’ them onto some external object, by whom you thus feel wronged or threatened. It is then safe to reciprocate with equivalent hostility and rage because you see it as reactive rather than proactive and, in so doing, preserve your sense of your own moral integrity. But the impulses, in the eyes of the outside observer, were yours all along, and you precipitated this convoluted maneuver to discharge them without reprobation, for fear of being seen or seeing yourself as the aggressor. And you can never master your own hostile urges with a more effeective, ‘mature’ defense mechanism as long as you continue to rely on projective identification.

Whistleblowers’ honor roll?

Rafe Colburn:

“It’s worth keeping an eye on the list of people and groups who now claimed to have warned people about what was going on at Abu Ghraib and went unheard. (Or, in some cases, mentioned it before 60 Minutes II ran the horrific photos that I’ve seen too many times.)

  • Spec. Joseph M. Darby (unknown timing)
  • Colin Powell (via Kevin Drum)
  • Paul Bremer (last fall)
  • General Antonio Taguba (late February) (Taguba has now learned, it seems, that no good deed goes unpunished.)
  • David Kay (before leaving Iraq)
  • the Red Cross (November 2003 at the latest)
  • Amnesty International (March 2004 and some initial warnings on June 30, 2003)
  • the Department of Defense (January 16, 2004)

I’m going to try to keep this list up to date, so if you have any additions, send email, with a URL to a news story if possible.”

Blogger Redesign

Many people must already be aware that Blogger, the web content management system I have used to do FmH since its inception in 1999, unveiled a major redesign this weekend. People had been waiting to see if Google, which acquired Blogger over the past year, would put any resources into it, and now we have it. So far, most commentators are favorably impressed by fawning over blogger.new, pointing to new templates designed by luminarites like Zeldman and all standards-compliant; per-post pages; an in-house commenting system — “the kind of things that we’ve come to expect from a modern blogging tool.”

I on the other hand am not so impressed, and it is not merely nostalgia. Am I the only naysayer?? I don’t need no steenkin’ canned template; I enabled the comments system but could not get it to work (so we’re still stuck with the imperfect but better-‘n-nothing Enetation for now…); without their commenting system enabled, per-post pages are just going to clog my storage capacity on FmH’s webhost pretty soon; and I find the new interface much clunkier to use for my purposes. A number of the macros I have written over the years to automate posting and maintenance functions now go into the trash. And republishing speed seems to have plummeted.

Most seriously, there were no indications this was coming and no consultation with their user base. Just this week, I was corresponding with Blogger tech support because their posting interface page was broken in newer versions (>1.6)of the Mozilla browser. Why didn’t they tell me it was a moot point because, in less than a week, the interface was going to be obsoleted anyway? [That is the only silver lining in this cloud for me so far; that the only obstacle to my updating my Mozilla is hereby removed…]

In any case, I am stuck with the change until I make a major move to a different publishing system, something I do not have the time to engineer anytime soon (requiring, as it would, exporting and importing almost five years of posts, rewriting and tweaking my page templates from scratch, and switching to a new webhost…). Please let me know if you see any new glitches in the design or rendering of FmH that might be attributable to this blogging revolution.

Herbal Drug Widely Embraced in Treating Resistant Malaria

“After years of hesitation, world health agencies are racing to acquire 100 million doses of a Chinese herbal drug that has proved strikingly effective against malaria, one of the leading killers of the poor.

The drug, artemisinin (pronounced are-TEM-is-in-in), is a compound based on qinghaosu, or sweet wormwood. First isolated in 1965 by Chinese military researchers, it cut the death rate by 97 percent in a malaria epidemic in Vietnam in the early 1990’s.” — New York Times

Congress to See Unreleased Abuse Photos

“Bracing for what the defense secretary has described as ‘sadistic” pictures, Congress will see the unreleased photos showing Iraqi prisoners being abused by U.S. soldiers, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said Sunday.

Another leading Republican, Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, suggested that Pentagon chief Donald H. Rumsfeld and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Richard Myers may not keep their jobs as the scandal unfolds.” —Guardian.UK

The ‘English disease’

“The roots of ‘nostalgia’ can probably be traced back to a time when to leave home for long was literally to risk death. Our current use of the word, though, is distinctly modern and metaphorical: the home we miss is no longer a geographically defined place, but rather a state of mind. Nostalgia, or homesickness, is no longer (perhaps never was) about the past but about felt absences or ‘lack’ in the present.

The historian Frederic Jameson talks (disapprovingly) about ‘nostalgia for the present’: the unhealthy desire to hold on to disappearing worlds – the day before yesterday, rather than that of the old Elizabethan sea-dogs, medieval chivalry or Gothic architecture…

Jameson’s conclusion, which is presumably one that would have been shared by Dylan at the time, is that “nostalgia for the present” represents a loss of faith in the future. This loss of faith has produced a culture that can only look backwards and re-examine key moments of its own recent history with a sentimental gloss and a Vaselined lens. Angela McRobbie has summarised Jameson’s position thus: “Society is now incapable of producing serious images, or texts which give people meaning and direction. The gap opened up by this absence is filled instead with cultural bric-a-brac and with old images recycled and reintroduced into circulation as pastiche.” Steps, in other words. Kylie. The retread of Starsky and Hutch. The plague of tribute bands to Abba, Queen, the Beatles and others.” —Guardian.UK

Tall Stories

“There are people who are prepared to believe almost anything. There are those who hear voices from the other side, believing that there are messages for us in the ether. Others believe they have seen flying saucers, and have encountered beings from distant planets. Extra-sensory perceptions and paranormal powers may be unproven, but someone somewhere is working on them. The collective unconscious is big in some quarters. Some poor souls even think that art can redeem us.


Who is to say what goes on in an artist’s mind? Studios are always haunted, by someone or other, or some unbidden thing. The persistence of unproven or improbable beliefs has provided the material for much of Susan Hiller’s work. There is, thankfully, more to her art than the spooky or the deluded. Much of her thinking is focused on the creativity of the human mind itself, the tricks it plays, the sometimes curious ways in which it reveals itself through its preoccupations.” —Guardian.UK

Fifty years of pop

“This year, pop – or, more accurately, rock’n’roll, a term which suddenly seems almost quaint – is 50 years old. Its date of birth, like its trajectory, is difficult to define. What is indisputable is that Elvis Presley, a Southern white boy inhabiting a black form, was the first, and perhaps the most dynamic, expression of a music that was raw and primal, charged with a sexual tension that was best measured by the shrill din of the adult voices attempting to shout it down.


At that moment the notion of youth, both as a culture and a demographic, was born; it defines our culture now to a degree that we no longer question. In the transition, rock’n’roll has lost much of its power to shock and to galvanise, has become both fragmented and ubiquitous. Yet it endures.


The following is a collection of moments from the last 50 years of pop, some of them obvious, some of them, I hope, not so, all of them possessing some deeper cultural relevance. I have tried to be objective but, at times, could not resist the urge to be utterly subjective. I have left out Sgt. Pepper, for instance, because it sounds to me like a period piece and, I confess, I am tired of the canonical received wisdom that prevents us from seeing the Beatles – and the Sixties – clearly. Conversely, I have included the Spice Girls, not out of any fondness for their music or antics, but because they are unquestionably a modern pop phenomenon. You, of course, are bound to disagree. Already, I do.” —Sean O’Hagan, Guardian.UK