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Created on Wednesday, 21 February 2007 17:46
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Written by Paul J. Balles
Brutal Bullies
by
Paul J. Balles

Living through five or six major wars has hardened me to what I thought were the extremes of inhuman cruelty and brutality. Two things made those extremes almost bearable: the brutality always revealed - at least according to the media coverage - the viciousness of the enemy. It was therefore quite understandable when our "brave men and women" pulverized the enemy.
Films of Japanese torturing captive Americans somehow justified
holding over 7000 Japanese Americans in internment camps during World
War II; and only a small percentage of Americans found the bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki unreasonably vengeful at best, at worst,
depraved .
The North Koreans were portrayed in the media as
barbaric beasts with their captives, quite unlike their southern
counterpoints - our allies during the Korean War. No one ever felt the
need to explain how the South Koreans were a civilized breed while the
North Koreans were absolute savages, at least according to the official
line.
In Vietnam, our warriors justifiably (or so the media made
us believe) dropped napalm on the North Vietnamese who had the gall to
hide in villages and tunnels to ravage our invaders. At least it was
accepted practice until some rogue photojournalist filmed a young girl
screaming down a Vietnamese road in flames.
One of our
lieutenants also got caught commanding his troops to open fire on an
entire village of civilians - women and children. We had obviously - to
some - gone too far. If those few torturous incidents hadn't been
filmed, we might have carried on and won the war in Vietnam (or so the
thinking goes) with our napalm and wanton village massacres.
Then,
when the Iraqi troops ran (literally) fleeing Kuwait in 1991, our
airmen annihilated them on the road north, bombing their retreat to
melted glass (as one Lockheed acquaintance put it). That feast for
hungry slaughterers received little attention. The bombers and strafers
felt no guilt after Saddam's troops had blown up Kuwait's oil wells.
The
nagging memory of unrevenged defeat somehow allowed members of the
clergy to ignore the devastating inhuman cost to children in Iraq
during 10 years of sanctions. Only a few humanitarians among academics
spoke out. Congress completely ignored it. The public didn't care. Why
should they? Our leaders spoke of everything but the brutality of our
enforcers.
We have now reached a stage where our extreme horrors
of brutality and cruelty have exceeded our past records. We no longer
have the rationale of moral righteousness of the earlier wars.
There
were no excuses for Abu-Ghraib, but our interest in that inhuman
travesty dried up and blew away. We have little concern about our
violations of human rights in Guantanamo. We care less about
ill-treatment of Arabs and Arab Americans in the USA.
But the
most extremes - the real horrors - of this war come with the most
primitive killer mentality developed in our youth. I've now seen a half
dozen documentary films and read eyewitness accounts that reveal troops
or pilots gloating over the massacres of civilians who just happened to
be available targets.
"They sacrificed their lives, limbs and sanity
for money, some education and the thrills of the violence for which
they are socially bred."
Dr June Scorza Terpstra, a "Social
Justice" teacher, writes of our "killers" she's had in her classrooms:
"These students proudly proclaimed that they terrorized and killed
defenceless Iraqis. They intimated that their Arab victims are nothing
more to them than collateral damage."
US Marines who had done
tours in Iraq told Dr Terpstra that they had "sacrificed" by "serving"
in Iraq so that she could enjoy the freedom to teach in the USA.
Dr
Terpstra rebuffed the rationalization, saying that the "sacrifice" had
nothing to do with any self-justifying line about making the world a
safer place to live in. "They sacrificed their lives, limbs and sanity
for money, some education and the thrills of the violence for which
they are socially bred."
No conscience or empathy for others -
these are the qualities of the brutal bully. They also happen to be the
defining qualities of the sociopath.
The sickness goes back
further than the current war, according to Dr Terpstra: "Sacrificing
for the 'bling and booty' in Iraq or Afghanistan, The Philippines,
Grenada, Central America, Mexico, Somalia, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan
or any of the other numerous wars and invasions spanning US history as
an entity and beginning with their foundational practice of killing the
Indians and stealing their land."
Dr Terpstra concluded her
reference to students who enjoyed the thrills of pillaging, rape and
murder by adding, appropriately: "These military and mercenary
terrorist-students are trained in terrorist training camps all under
the USA, funded by American taxpayers."
Without doubt, the US
has not only become the world's major power, it has become the world's
sickest, most inhumane terrorist state. Brutal bullies.
It's the
brutal bullying behaviour that brings the USA so close to Israel.
Answering the question "what makes a bully?" led Dr Sam Samenow to
explain: "Children who systematically bully others usually have a group
of children they bully regularly while other bullies randomly target a
variety of students."
A perfect fit for Israel's systematic
bullying of the Palestinians and for the USA randomly targeting a
variety of victims. The variety of America's victims doesn't include
Israel. Why not? Israel destroyed an American naval vessel, killing US
servicemen. The attack by North Vietnamese on a US destroyer in the
Gulf of Tonkin was enough provocation for war. Why didn't the US bully
pick on the Israel bully?
Israel had the chutzpah to develop at
least 200 nuclear weapons. The American bully hasn't castigated the
Middle Eastern bully for that or for Israel's failure to sign the
nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Yet the brutal American takes pride
in bullying Iran for wanting to develop nuclear power as a source of
energy, despite Iran's membership as a nuclear non-proliferation state.
We've
seen what the victims of bullying can and will do. They resist in
whatever way they can. They learn to make bombs and they become suicide
bombers when they can't stand the bullies any longer.
Like the
advice given to schools for the treatment of bullies, the rest of the
world needs to adopt a zero tolerance policy for bullying. The
countries of Asia and Africa and Europe and South America need to say
STOP and mean it.
Italy, it seems, has the right idea. They've
arrested and charged 26 Americans for kidnapping an Italian Muslim
cleric and taking him to Egypt on a rendition programme during which he
was tortured. Let's hope that the Italians stick by their anti-bullying
guns, and that others follow suit.