Posts filed under 'Culture'

Andrew Sullivan: The new anti-intellectual

Andrew Sullivan asks:

How Anti-Intellectual Is Palin?

By Andrew Sullivan

Ramesh Ponnuru asks the question. He refers to Noam Scheiber’s devastating piece on Palin’s Nixonian hatred of educated elites. But Ponnuru wants more evidence. Here’s one way to look at the question: how has Palin brought up her own kids? Her eldest son is a high-school drop-out. Her eldest daughter has had, so far as one can tell from press reports, very uneven attendance in high school, and no plans for college. Her other daughters seem to spend a lot of time traveling the country with their mom at tax-payers’ expense. I’ve seen them at several rallies with the Palins this fall. Are they not in school?

The least one can say is that none of her children seems to have been brought up thinking that college is something to aspire to.

Sarah Palin’s own record of several colleges over several years - ending with a degree in sports journalism - tells you a lot. So does her interest in policing the Wasilla library as mayor and using the town’s money for a sports stadium. She cut funding for the town museum and opposed building a new library. So does her amazing ignorance about the constitution. She is, in my judgment, the final rebuke to what Buckley tried to do for conservatism. She is burying it as an intellectual tradition and returning it to the pre-Buckley era. With the eager encouragement of a now Buckley-free National Review. Yes, the karma is overpowering. This is a tragedy worthy of Shakespeare.

Add comment October 22nd, 2008

Daily Show: Wasilla, Alaska

The Daily Show helps us understand small town values in Wasilla, Alaska:

Add comment October 22nd, 2008

McCain supporters oppose intolerance at rally

As we hear so much about the hate expressed by McCain-Palin supporters, here are some who reject those politics. This video shows McCain supporters, including Muslem supporters, chasing away someone claiming that Obama is a Muslim and therefore should be feared:

[H/t Daily Kos]

Add comment October 20th, 2008

Judith Miller to join Fox News

Judith Miller, the New York Times reporter who wrote numerous front page stories spreading administration lies about “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq is going home to Fox News, the Washington Post reports. Presumably this is a reward for her crucial role in helping sell the “Iraq War” brand. Perhaps she’ll “report” on Iranian weapons of mass destruction next.

Add comment October 20th, 2008

Gov. Palin’s first press conference

Also:

Add comment October 19th, 2008

Newsweek on Steven Reisner, APA, and Guantanamo

Newsweek has just posted an article on Steven Reisner and his campaign for APA President. The article provides further details of the recommendations for the abuse of Mohammed Jawad by a BSCT psychologist at Guantanamo. As Newsweek reports:

[T]he psychologist not only eased interrogators’ worries, but also encouraged them to continue to dial up the emotional pressure on Jawad: “He appears to be rather frightened, and it looks as if he could break easily if he were isolated from his support network and made to rely solely on the interrogator,” according to an excerpt of the report read to NEWSWEEK. The psychologist recommended that Jawad be moved to a section of the prison where he would be the only Pashto speaker, and be moved again if he somehow began to socialize in his new block. The psychologist also suggested that interrogators emphasize to Jawad that his family appeared to have forgotten him: “Make him as uncomfortable as possible. Work him as hard as possible.”

This is what BSCT psychologists did: Recommend isolation and total dependence on the interrogator. This new species of psychologist recommends: “Make him as uncomfortable as possible.” They succeeded in making him “uncomfortable enough that Jawad attempted suicide on December 25, 2003.

While this was going on, the APA claimed that psychologists were”keeping interrogations safe, legal, ethical, and effective.” Surely an organization that can maintain such a colossal “error” for years is in dire need for change. Which is why we must elect Steven Reisner.

Here’s the whole article:

The Biscuit Breaker
Psychologist Steven Reisner has embarked on a crusade to get his colleagues out of the business of interrogations.

By Dan Ephron | NEWSWEEK
Published Oct 18, 2008
From the magazine issue dated Oct 27, 2008

Before he became a psychologist, Steven Reisner didn’t know much about the long history between spies and shrinks. Soft-spoken and cerebral, he’d spent seven years as a theater actor and director, switching to psychology as a profession in 1989. But the ties go back decades, to the early years of the cold war when psychologists helped the CIA experiment on U.S. citizens with mind-altering drugs. The relationship has warmed and cooled over the years, heating up whenever defense or intelligence officials wanted better mind-control methods, ways to direct people’s behavior or detect deception. Since 9/11 military and civilian psychologists at Guantánamo Bay and other sites have often watched through the glass when detainees have been interrogated, part of a secret program about which few details have ever emerged.

Reisner first read about the program in a newspaper article in 2004. The 54-year-old psychoanalyst is convinced that some of the techniques used in those interrogations amounted to torture, and he has made it his mission since then to get psychologists out of the business of helping the military as they break down prisoners. Reisner’s crusade has been waged largely within the American Psychological Association—in the minutiae of association bylaws and on the pages of internal listservs. Last week, balloting began for a new APA president in what for many is a referendum on the relationship between psychologists and the military. Among five contenders, Reisner has staked his candidacy on the issue.

The APA is the only remaining medical association not to have shunned the contentious interrogations in the years since Guantánamo was opened in 2001. Two civilian psychologists helped introduce techniques like waterboarding into interrogations, drawn from the military’s SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape) schools where troops are taught to withstand torture. Since 2002 psychologists have observed interrogations and suggested specific ways to exploit the weaknesses of detainees, including Mohammed Jawad, whose disturbing case is now being heard by a military tribunal in Guantánamo. The military claims the psychologists have only helped to make interrogations “safe, legal and effective.”

Judging by recent internal votes, APA members have grown uncomfortable with the interrogation business. Reisner has received endorsements from a few big-name psychologists, including Stanford University’s Philip Zimbardo. (The four other candidates in the race for president—two clinical psychologists, one professor and a researcher—have mostly campaigned on the bread-and-butter issues of the profession, such as gaining prescription-writing authority for psychologists.) If he wins, Reisner says he will use his authority to expose the precise role individual APA psychologists have played in the interrogations, not only at Guantánamo but at the CIA’s “black” sites around the world. He says wrongdoers will be brought before an ethics board; like doctors and other caregivers, psychologists are bound by a do-no-harm principle. But for Reisner the main point is to air the details publicly, in a kind of truth-and-reconciliation process. “The discussions … need to have a public venue so that we can learn the lessons and not let it happen again,” he says.

Reisner’s passion for this issue is not only professional. He traces his interest in psychology to his parents’ reluctance to talk about their experiences in World War II. Both are Holocaust survivors. Reisner found out when he was only 10 from a family friend that his mother had spent time in the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. He came to know her full story—she fled a death march in the waning months of the war—when she addressed his high-school class. “I always wanted to know how people went into the darkest places and came out of them,” he says.

As a psychoanalyst Reisner says he’s attuned to the deeper truths people conceal when they tell their stories (his sparse office in a Chelsea walk-up features an analyst’s armchair and a leather couch where the patient, in traditional Freudian fashion, faces away from the psychologist). That instinct led him to believe that there was more to the relationship between psychologists and interrogators than what had appeared in initial media reports. He began collecting documents in a file on the subject that now takes up a large chunk of his computer’s hard drive.

One noteworthy document Reisner came by in August of this year is a court filing submitted by the defense in the case of Guantánamo detainee Jawad. It describes how the Afghan youth’s mind had begun to unravel in September 2003. Jawad had been through a hellish ordeal in the 10 months since he’d been nabbed at the scene of a grenade attack against American troops at age 17. Afghan police beat him and broke his nose before handing him to U.S. forces. In prison at Bagram Air Base near Kabul, an American guard allegedly hurled him down a flight of stairs, according to a report his attorney filed with military investigators. At Guantánamo, he was kept alone in a cell for much of the time, which can be especially anguishing for a teenager. When an interrogator approached Jawad on Sept. 3 for questioning, he noticed the wiry teen talking to a poster on the wall, according to the court filing.

The interrogator asked a military psychologist to observe the next session with Jawad. Psychologists at Guantánamo are organized into Behavioral Science Consultation Teams, referred to informally as “biscuits.” Little is known about the composition of the teams and their precise role. Detainees held at Guantánamo have complained over the years of beatings, isolation and sleep and food deprivation. But few documents detailing the precise role of biscuit psychologists have ever been made public. Col. Larry James, a senior biscuit team member at Guantánamo for about five months in 2003, told NEWSWEEK he and his colleagues mainly helped interrogators build a rapport with the detainees. “We’re the ones who made sure prisoners aren’t abused,” he says.

Reisner says the Jawad case shows how psychologists can stray into ethically complicated territory when they participate in interrogations. The court filing says a biscuit psychologist observed Jawad being interrogated on Sept. 11 and then suggested he be pushed even further. “Based on the BSCT recommendation, Mr. Jawad was moved into isolation the following week,” the document says.

The full assessment penned by the psychologist after the interrogation is redacted from the court filing. But NEWSWEEK discovered through two independent sources familiar with the report (who could not be named discussing sensitive material) that the psychologist not only eased interrogators’ worries, but also encouraged them to continue to dial up the emotional pressure on Jawad: “He appears to be rather frightened, and it looks as if he could break easily if he were isolated from his support network and made to rely solely on the interrogator,” according to an excerpt of the report read to NEWSWEEK. The psychologist recommended that Jawad be moved to a section of the prison where he would be the only Pashto speaker, and be moved again if he somehow began to socialize in his new block. The psychologist also suggested that interrogators emphasize to Jawad that his family appeared to have forgotten him: “Make him as uncomfortable as possible. Work him as hard as possible.”

The psychologist’s name can be gleaned from a court witness list, but multiple e-mails sent by NEWSWEEK asking for a reaction went unanswered. The court filing goes on to say that two weeks after the start of his isolation, Jawad gave his interrogators a detailed account of the events surrounding the grenade attack (that did not implicate himself). But his mental condition deteriorated further and in late December 2003 he tried to commit suicide. “If the goal was to break him, the psychologist succeeded,” says Maj. David Frakt, Jawad’s military defense attorney. The chief of prosecution in the Guantánamo trials, Col. Larry Morris, declined to comment. A Pentagon spokesman said, “Our policy is, and always has been, to treat detainees humanely.”

There’s no indication Jawad was subjected to physical abuse as a result of the psychologist’s advice. But Reisner thinks psychologists, military or civilian, should never be put in the position of legitimizing any form of abuse. He believes they can contribute in more general terms to the country’s national security and still remain within the profession’s ethical framework. “If we have knowledge that says in certain circumstances violence is more likely, we certainly should make that information available,” he says. “If we have information that helps interrogators not to get violent or sadistic in their interrogations, we should certainly make that available.”

The line, he says, must be drawn at the point where a psychologist’s direct actions harm individuals—including suspected terrorists. And since coercive measures have been standard at Guantánamo, he says, psychologists should not be working there at all. Current APA president Alan Kazdin said in response: “APA’s position has been clear and loudly articulated; in all instances it is unethical for a psychologist to participate in or assist with any interrogations that involved torture or abuse or place the detainee at risk of injury—physical or psychological.”

James, the retired colonel and former Guantánamo psychologist, says Reisner fails to recognize that procedures have evolved at detention centers where terrorist suspects are held. “What bothers me is that these people who criticize the biscuit program have never been there,” James said by phone from Ohio, where he is now dean of the school of professional psychology at Wright State University. “Their assumption is that if you work at Guantánamo, you’re automatically torturing people.”

James arrived at Guantánamo in January 2003. In a book he published this year about his experiences there and at Abu Ghraib, James says he witnessed abuses early on. Peering one night into an interrogation room at Guantánamo through a one-way mirror, James saw an interrogator and three MPs wrestling with a detainee on the floor. “It was an awful sight,” James writes in the book. “The detainee was naked except for the pink panties I had seen hanging on the door earlier. He also had lipstick and a wig on. The four men were holding the prisoner down and trying to outfit him with the matching pink nightgown, but he was fighting hard.”

James says he put a stop to the abuse and began working with interrogators on getting detainees to talk through more positive inducements.

He claims that no incidents of abuse by either an interrogator or a psychologist have been reported since he arrived at Guantánamo. Asked about the Jawad case specifically, James said in an e-mail: “The psychologist at Gitmo right now told me a few weeks ago that there is a whole lot more information than what was presented in those [court] documents … Me attempting to answer this would not be appropriate because I don’t have all the information.”

If Reisner loses the APA election (results will be announced in early December) he says he will turn to lobbying Congress and the Pentagon directly. Already his campaign has earned him enemies. Regularly, he says, other psychologists post listserv comments asking him why he cares more about terrorists than American citizens. Occasionally, he encounters biscuit psychologists face to face, as in August 2006, when he sat near James at an APA meeting on torture. Reisner says James was introduced to him as “the man who was sent to clean up Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib.” For Reisner and his supporters, those prisons are not clean enough.

With Daniel Stone in Washington

Add comment October 18th, 2008

Hayden Panettiere says vote for John McCain

Everyone’s weighing in on the national election. Here’s Hayden Panettiere’s take:

See more Hayden Panettiere videos at Funny or Die

4 comments October 18th, 2008

Jane Mayer’s The Dark Side National Book Award finalist

Jane Mayer’s wonderful book The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How The War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals has been selected as one of five National Book Award finalists for nonfiction! Congratulations Jane!

as the winner will be chosen on November 19, my birthday, i feel confident that my choice will win. What a birthday present that will be.

Add comment October 15th, 2008

Did PBS bury a Frontline episode on torture?

Attorney and blogger Scott Horton asks Did PBS Bury a Frontline Episode on Torture? This episode was apparently “delayed” till after the Bush administration left office, due to a threat to cut PBS funding. It is thus showing as Torturing Democracy on some PBS stations. Call and make sure yours is among them. And make sure to watch and tell others to watch. [See my earlier comments here.]

We must keep up the pressure for accountability as a new administration comes in. We must not allow them to “forget about the past and look to the future,” as their political instincts will suggest. getting a wide viewership for this film is an excellent place to start.

Here is Horton’s article:

“Torturing Democracy” premieres on affiliates as PBS ducks the torture issue

By Scott Horton

This spring, PBS’s distinguished Frontline series aired a mildly critical account of the lead-up to the Iraq War entitled “Bush’s War.” As the airing of the program was announced, the Bush Administration proposed to slash public funding for PBS by roughly half for 2009, by 56% for 2010 and eliminating funding entirely for 2011. Did PBS get the message? Perhaps.

On Thursday evening WNET in New York will air an important new documentary by Emmy and Dupont Award winning producer Sherry Jones entitled “Torturing Democracy.” It appears on WNET and several other affiliates independently because PBS would not run the show—at least not until President Bush has left office. The show delivers impressively on a promise to “connect the dots in an investigation of interrogations of prisoners in U.S. custody that became ‘at a minimum, cruel and inhuman treatment and, at worst, torture’” (quoting Alberto Mora, who served as general counsel of the Navy under Donald Rumsfeld, and features in an interview). In one dramatic scene, former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage describes being waterboarded as part of a training program he went through before being sent to Vietnam. Did he consider waterboarding to be torture, Armitage was asked? “Absolutely. No question.” And he continued, “There is no question in my mind—there’s no question in any reasonable human being, that this is torture. I’m ashamed that we’re even having this discussion.” Watch the footage here:

No one who has seen this dramatic documentary is likely to buy into the “rotten apples” narrative any longer.

Which may help explain why PBS appears to be suffering from acute corporate indigestion over the work. The project was first offered to PBS in September 2007, with the representation that it would be available to air after May 2008. It was completed and circulated to PBS decision makers on schedule in May of this year. Their response? According to producer Sherry Jones, PBS told her that “no time slot could be found for the documentary before January 21, 2009”—the day after George W. Bush and Dick Cheney leave office. Does that reflect concern that PBS would face retaliation from the Bush Administration for airing the program? I put that question to John Wilson, PBS’s Senior Vice President for Program, who didn’t respond following multiple inquiries. But January 21 is a Wednesday, and to me the only obvious reason for its selection is regime change.

The producers decided to offer the show directly to local affiliates. As of this writing, roughly sixty-five percent of the PBS network have signed on to run the program, including the flagship New York (WNET) and Boston (WGBH) stations. Curiously, however, just one major player in the network has declined: Washington affiliate WETA. The program manager for WETA also told the producers tha t the station simply had “no free time” until early next year. It’s worth noting that WETA’s CEO is Sharon Percy Rockefeller. She is the daughter of one senator and the wife of another—Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Jay Rockefeller. While neither Rockefeller nor Congressional oversight play any role in the documentary, there can be little doubt but that it raises painful questions for him. As public demands for accountability over torture policy rise, both Administration critics and defenders point to the role of the “Gang of Eight”—of which Rockefeller was one of the most prominent members. According to the Administration, they were briefed in detail about torture policies and acquiesced. Rockefeller handwrote a letter of protest after one briefing concerning the Administration’s broad-based surveillance program and locked a copy in his safe—but there is no suggestion he did anything comparable when torture was the issue. If the next Administration opts to fully air the dark secrets surrounding the Bush Administration torture policies—as many now anticipate—Rockefeller may well have reason to be concerned about what will come out.

Does this explain why WETA alone among the major PBS affiliates has opted not to broadcast this important documentary? WETA station manager Kevin Harris likewise didn’t respond to requests for comment in which I posed that question.

The developments surrounding “Torturing Democracy” fit a pattern. In late May, NPR’s Nina Totenberg secured a U.S. broadcast exclusive for Philippe Sands’s book Torture Team, published by Palgrave Macmillan. The Sands book took a close look at the Administration’s claim that the impetus for harsh new interrogation practices came from the bottom up—from interrogators at Guantánamo—and demonstrated that this was false. Instead, he showed, the practices had their origins near the top of the Administration in Washington, among a group of senior lawyers that called itself the War Council. Totenberg prepared a piece for Morning Edition that was instead put up on the NPR website and released in a minor news show.

Producer Alex Gibney’s “Taxi to the Dark Side” was originally set to run this fall on the Discovery Channel, but the company–then seeking SEC approvals in connection with a proposal to go public—decided to shelve the show until the Bush Administration left office. The movie went on to receive the Oscar for Best Documentary and was premiered last week, after HBO acquired the rights.

When pictures of detainee abuse first circulated in April 2004, the Administration insisted that the abuse was unauthorized and was all the product of a “few rotten apples,” in Donald Rumsfeld’s memorable phrase. Four and a half years later, however, a mountain of evidence has risen against the Administration’s characterization. Most recently, Condoleezza Rice and her lawyer have confirmed their participation in National Security Council meetings in which individual torture programs were approved for prisoners. Jane Mayer published The Dark Side establishing that Alberto Gonzales and other lawyers within the administration warned that the practices could be viewed as war crimes. And Bart Gellman published Angler, documenting the leading role played by Vice President Cheney and his lawyer David Addington in the introduction of torture techniques. Simultaneously with the release of “Torturing Democracy,” its producers have also published for the first time a damning document issued by military authorities at Guantánamo clarifying the highly coercive techniques—regularly identified by the United States as torture when used by other nations—which the Bush Administration had approved to use on prisoners held in the war on terror. “Torturing Democracy” provides a look at the evolution and application of the new techniques from an insider’s perspective. The most impressive of the interviewees are high-level figures in the Defense Department, Department of State and Department of Justice who became involved in the issue.

“Torturing Democracy” runs on Thursday, October 16 at 9:00 pm on New York’s WNET. It can be viewed online at torturingdemocracy.org, and other broadcast times and locations can also be found on the website.

We will update this post if and when Messrs. Wilson and Harris respond to the questions posed or give us other comments.

Add comment October 14th, 2008

Lorri Greene: Stuck Inside of Mobile

Psychologist Lorri Greene has sent a poem and a story, inspired by the death of a patient, a Vietnam veteran who never fully recovered. Here is the story. The poem, Collateral Damage, is here.

Stuck Inside of Mobile

By Lorri A. Greene, Ph.D.

“And, here I sit so patiently waiting to find out what price, you have to pay to get out of, going through all these things twice.
Bob Dylan (1966)

Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again

The nightmares wake me each night around 3AM. There are usually tears in my eyes. The visions are clear. A man, my age, gun pointed to his head. He looks for the last time at his beloved cat. He pulls the trigger. Peace at last, at least for him. My pain now begins. I don’t sleep well. I am angry, guilty, ashamed, and alone inside with this pain. I never imagined it would be him. What did I miss? All of my professional skills are not helping me now. I am afraid to see most of my clients. What if it happens again? I don’t know how to prevent it, but I think I am supposed to know. After all, I was his psychologist. I am the “professional.” There seems little help available to me. I’m embarrassed to ask for too much. I don’t believe I deserve it.

Suicide is always hard on those left behind. But I was his therapist; the one who everyone believed could have prevented this tragic ending to this mans life. And, in my own mind, I guess I believe it too. It is difficult to realize how little I knew him. I saw him for five years. Not every week, but usually twice a month. He was always on time, a smile on his face, this man who took his own life. He loved animals, especially his cat, a bond we shared with one another. I met him because his dog died. He’d read about me in the newspaper and wanted a therapist who would understand about his love for animals, and not judge him and his pain for his loss. During the time we spent together, he asked me at least once a month to take care of his cat if anything should ever happen to him. I always said yes, and it never occurred to me to say anything else. If asked, I would have said he was not a person who would kill himself. He had survived an unstable home, a failed marriage, Vietnam, and eleven years as a prison guard. One of our colleagues suggests that if I hadn’t offered to take his cat, perhaps he wouldn’t have killed himself. Perhaps it is true. The guilt becomes more real. My colleague might be right. I should have never said I would care for the animal. Maybe he would not have done it. On the other hand, I’m a pet loss therapist. My clients expect compassion, and many have asked the same question over the last 15 years. I have always said yes. No one has actually ever needed me to do it. What should I believe?

He had recently gotten permanent disability for physical and psychological injuries sustained in Vietnam. He didn’t talk much about that war, but he once shared the “stressor” letter he had to write for the Veterans Administration about his combat related injuries. Tears streamed down my eyes as he shared the horrors he had witnessed. I felt ashamed at my own harshness toward those combat veterans, the ones I had scorned when they returned from Vietnam. How young and judgmental I was. It never occurred to me that the military was a way out for a 19-year-old kid who didn’t have much of a future ahead. He was patriotic to the end. His home was filled with his military memorabilia when I went to see his sister the day after it happened.

It should have been me to discover his body. Perhaps he thought I could handle it. He had made an appointment for the next Thursday. On Friday, I received something in the mail from him. I was busy and left it on the table, thinking it was the co-pay that he had forgotten to give me the day before. When his sister called on Saturday to tell me what had happened, I opened the letter. It wasn’t the co-pay, but instead a key to his house along with a map. There were also instructions to his sister that I would take his 9-year-old cat. If only I would have opened it when I received it. Maybe he would be alive today. I will never know.

It has been several months since this event occurred. I wrote this article the day after. I share it now, because it has only been a short time since I have put closure on this experience. Perhaps it might help another colleague. I have seen many clients since then. They still ask me to take their pets if need be. I still say yes, knowing that I cannot prevent someone from taking his or her own life. I thank my dear colleagues and friends, Carolyn Hudson, Denise Zimmerman, Brian Alman, and Wendy Maurer for showing me the way to have the courage to continue in the profession that I love. I have learned a lot. If this article helps one person, it has been worth it.

—————-

Lorri A. Greene, Ph.D., a licensed psychologist, practices in San Diego, California. (www.petbereavement.com). She is also a member of Psychologists for Social Responsibility and the California Psychological Association. She can be reached by e-mail at: lgreene98@aol.com.

Add comment October 13th, 2008

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