Archive for May 5th, 2008

Minneapolis Catholic Church bans anti-torture talk by bioethicist Steven Miles

Yesterday I posted a talk that bioethicist Steven Miles gave to St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, Torture and the Courage to Be Inconvenienced. As a result, someone sent the Minneapolis Star Tribune article on Steve’s banning by the diocese from delivering the talk in the church. My already great regard for Steve increased upon reading the article and finding out about other times he has stood up for principle. If you respond similarly, please help distribute his talk far and wide.:

Anti-torture but pro-choice? Can’t have that in church, please

By Nick Coleman, Star Tribune

Dr. Steven Miles, a world-renowned scholar, author and anti-torture activist, has won many awards in his career on the faculty of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Bioethics. But the Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has bestowed an especially rare distinction on Miles, one that puts him in excellent company:

He just got Tutu’d.

As you recall, Nobel Peace Prize winner and Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu recently was barred from speaking at the University of St. Thomas. Now Miles, who has written extensively about torture practices authorized by the Bush administration and who has warned that America is becoming “a torturing society,” has received the Tutu treatment.

Miles was invited months ago to talk about torture and its effects on society before masses at St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church in Minneapolis on Sunday. The invitation was issued by the peace and justice ministry at St. Joan’s, which has a tradition of social justice work in the Twin Cities. In addition, Miles was scheduled to speak Tuesday to an adult education class at the church.

But last Wednesday, four days before Miles was scheduled to speak, the archdiocese intervened: St. Joan’s was ordered not to let Miles talk before mass. Or Tuesday, either.

He was persona non grata.

According to a spokesman for the archdiocese, Miles was barred from St. Joan’s because he supports abortion rights, a position “contrary to the teachings” of the church. Miles acknowledges that, but says he had no intention of speaking about abortion and that he sent the text of his talk on torture to the archdiocese.

“I wasn’t asked about my position on abortion, euthanasia (he opposes it), divorce, papal infallibility or the Nicene Creed,” he says. “The issue is whether I have something relevant to say to Catholics on torture.”

On that, there is no doubt. Miles believes passionately that torture violates fundamental rights of life and dignity. And causes abortions.

“Torture causes women to abort at a horrendous rate,” Miles says, “and people who have been tortured are much more likely to commit suicide. The point is that an anti-torture campaign is a pro-life campaign.”

But at a time when the archdiocese is clumsily tightening the chancery’s control on parishes and demanding orthodoxy from pulpit and pew, a whispering campaign developed against Miles after word of his St. Joan’s appearance appeared in a recent church bulletin.

According to the archdiocese, anti-abortion activists called to complain about Miles’ appearance at St. Joan’s. Miles has been seen as a highly visible antagonist by some since he helped reverse an anti-abortion scare tactic by the Minnesota Department of Health.

The department was telling women that abortion increases the risk of breast cancer. There is no established connection between abortion and breast cancer, and that spurious assertion was removed after scientists, including Miles, testified at the Legislature that it had demoralized the health department and “besmirched” (Miles’ word) its reputation.

Miles, a geriatrician, has performed no abortions. But when the Catholic Bulletin threatened to publish the names of doctors who provided abortions to indigent women, Miles wrote a letter to the editor asking that he be named, too, since he supported safe, legal and affordable abortion for those who needed them.

“As a Christian,” he wrote, “I will continue to try to respond with compassion to the complex and sometimes tragic situations [in] which my patients find themselves in a way which is sensitive to the hard facts, difficult choices and individual differences which are present.”

His letter was published in 1978.

Last week, 30 years later, it was circulated by those who wanted the archdiocese to ban Miles from speaking at St. Joan’s. Many in the church are perplexed by the ban.

“Steve Miles is the country’s leading expert on torture, and I believe his message on torture is very pro-life,” said Julie Madden, coordinator of the peace and justice program at St. Joan’s. “We wanted to have him speak to us about how religious communities can get active around the issue of eradicating torture. We’re very disappointed that Dr. Miles will not be allowed to speak.”

He will speak. Just not at St. Joan’s.

Miles’ presentation on torture has been shifted from St. Joan’s to the Carondelet Center in St. Paul, at 7 p.m. Tuesday. The center is next to the College of Saint Catherine, at 1890 Randolph Av.

Miles will give the talk he prepared for St. Joan’s, including his comparison of torture in the modern world to the passion of Christ. Like all torture, he says, the crucifixion of Jesus was intended to destroy a movement, not just a man.

‘Torture is government by intimidation, horror, fear and division,” reads the prepared text of Miles’ banned St. Joan’s remarks. “It is antithetical to [efforts] to create societies that flourish by loving kindness, justice and inclusion.”

By the way, according to a poll published by the National Catholic Reporter, Catholics are more likely than other Americans to approve the use of torture.

Maybe they need to hear from Dr. Steven Miles.

Nick Coleman • ncoleman@startribune.com

Add comment May 5th, 2008

ACLU: Newly released documents confirm psychologists’ roles in Iraq and Afghanistan interrogations

Catching up on what I missed last week. The ACLU posted newly released FOIA documents, including previously redacted sections of the Church Report on detainee abuse. Interestingly, these previously withheld materials are on medical and psychological complicity with abuse. The documents

include new details exposing the role of psychologists in military interrogations. The documents also uncover new information about the failure of military medical personnel to report abuses at Abu Ghraib, the military’s use of unlawful interrogation methods subsequent to a directive that was ostensibly meant to end such practices, and detainee deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“The documents reveal that psychologists and medical personnel played a key role in sustaining prisoner abuse — a clear violation of their ethical and legal obligations,” said Amrit Singh, a staff attorney with the ACLU. “The documents only underscore the need for an independent investigation into responsibility for the systemic abuse of detainees held in U.S. custody abroad.”

With regard to psychologists:

The report states that “analogous to the BSCT in Guantanamo Bay, the Army has a number of psychologists in operational positions (in both Afghanistan and Iraq), mostly within Special Operations, where they provide direct support to military operations. They do not function as mental health providers, and one of their core missions is to support interrogations.”

Of course, these documents don’t really add much to what we psychologists have already known, but they do provide another source. As for Afghanistan, we have already known that Col. Morgan Banks and Captain Bryce Lefever, both of the APA’s PENS task force, were involved in interrogations there. As for Iraq, we knew that psychologists were present in the BSCT at Abu Ghraib, and that SERE psychologists aided Special Forces in Iraq.

Read the new material and the previously released Church Report here.

Add comment May 5th, 2008

83rd anniversary of the arrest of John Scopes

Crooks and Liars tell us that today is the 83rd anniversary of John Scopes’ arrest for the crime of teaching evolution. In memory, here’s a selection from Inherit the Wind:

Add comment May 5th, 2008

38th anniversary of Kent State massacre

Today is the 38th anniversary of the Kent State massacre of four antiwar students by National Guard troops. One seldom hears about those troops, but I suspect that, like the protesting students and their families, they still have nightmares on this day. They should never have been sent to a college campus fully armed. Those who sent them bear the major responsibility for the murders.

[h/t Crooks and Liars.]

Add comment May 5th, 2008

Radio Interview: Involuntary Drugging of US Detainees

My April 29, 2008 KPFK interview on Beneath the Surface with Michael Slate on the Involuntary Drugging of US Detainees can now be listened to here. KPFK is the Pacifica station for Southern California.

Add comment May 5th, 2008

Huge strikes shuts ports in war protest

I was busy on Thursday and succeeding days. But I want to at least acknowledge the momentous event that occurred on May Day. The West Coast longshoremen shut down all West Coast ports in protest of the Vietnam Iraq war. If you haven’t already, go Watch, listen to, or read the Democracy Now! interview with union official Jack Heyman. We can only hope that this strike is portent both of a revitalized labor movement and of increasing engagement of labor in attempts to end this war. After all, the vast resources spent on this war are depleting the resources available for all the other vital needs in this country. And it is workers who do most of the fighting. Further, the threat of internal resistance to the war is one of the best brakes the populace can put upon the war-makers planning the next war.

Add comment May 5th, 2008


Pages

Calendar

May 2008
M T W T F S S
« Apr   Jun »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category