A
rally to restore sanity was held in the Washington Mall
on October 30, 2010. Called by two comedians, Jon Stewart
and Stephen Colbert, the rally drew over 200,000 persons
according to CBS
News. Another 4 million persons watched this rally on
cable television. The escalation of intolerance and use
of violent language by the conservative forces gave this
rally tremendous importance in the politics of the USA.
The singers and performers who appeared in this 3 hour rally
were persons known to be opposed to Islamophobia and militarism.
Although
built in jest as a “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or
Fear,” we take the theme of this rally very seriously,
especially for a society that is involved in wars, militarization,
and robotization of its youths. It is important to adequately
highlight the insanity inherent in the militarization of
the US society and the psychological warfare and mind control
of the US citizens, oriented toward hate, killing, and perpetual
warfare. Unfortunately, in the “Rally to Restore Sanity”
Colbert and Stewart did not make clear and strong statements
on the US wars of occupation in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan
or the trillion dollar budget devoted to the militarization
of the planet.
It
is now up to the peace and justice movements to deepen the
delegitimization of US militarism and torture. The conservative
forces have been so emboldened that there is a rehabilitation
of George W. Bush who can now boast on national TV that
he authorized torture. Amnesty International and the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) have rightfully called for
a criminal investigation into his admission of authorizing
torture.
In
a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, the ACLU reminded
the US Department of Justice that “a nation committed
to the rule of law cannot simply ignore evidence that its
most senior leaders authorized torture.” This call
for investigation should not be taken lightly because this
sort of criminal investigation into international lawlessness
would be one other way of beginning to restore sanity in
the US. Indeed, such sanity can only come from a break with
the traditions of celebrating killings as progress and brutality
as true courage.
George
W. Bush and the Conservative Corporate Media
It
was during the period of George W. Bush that the mainstream
US media became more deeply interwoven with the US psychological
warfare against its citizens. Simultaneously, new sources
of insurgent news platforms developed from below. It was
no less a body than the Columbia Journalism Review that
elaborated on the “mind games” that have been
played against US citizens immediately after September 11,
2001. It was Donald Rumsfeld who argued that “the
most critical battles may not be in the mountains of Afghanistan
or the streets of Iraq but in places like New York, London,
Cairo, and elsewhere. More than half of this battle is taking
place in the battlefield
of the media.”
Those
who study public relations and information management are
comparing the propaganda capabilities of the US and the
propaganda machine of Nazi Germany. We leave it to these
students to decide if the information warfare and mind control
in the US has not far outstripped the capabilities of Goebbels
and the Third Reich Ministry of Propaganda in Nazi Germany
from 1933 to 1945. In the USA, the propaganda techniques
to psychologically prepare the society for perpetual warfare
remain in the hands of a conservative corporate media which
is dominated by the same elements who profit from the military-information-industrial
complex. For these forces, it is essentially profitable
to mobilize and motivate US citizens for war.
There
are now revelations that the Justice Department of the USA
has been hiding for the past four years the CIA'’s
efforts to protect known Nazi war criminals in the United
States. The New York Times carried an extensive account
of the role that prominent members of Germany'’s Nazi
party played in the early, formative years of the CIA, following
World War II. It alleges the CIA created a “safe haven"
for Nazis believed to be of use to the US'’s Cold
War efforts. See details in the New York Times article,
“Nazis
Were Given ‘‘Safe Haven’’ in U.S.,
Report Says.”
It
is urgent that the forces for peace push the Justice Department
of the USA to publish this report on how the collaboration
with Nazis shaped the intelligence and security apparatus.
Peace activists in the USA must raise their voices to expose
the past mind control and the full extent of the collaboration
of the intelligence services with Nazis, past and present.
It is now even most alarming that the mind control has gone
beyond the popular media into the virtual world of video
games to robotize and militarize the psyche of young persons,
preparing them for perpetual warfare.
Robotization
and Militarization of the Youths
Whether
in fiction or in forward planning for military engagement
in the 21st century, writers such as P.W. Singer, (Wired
For War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st
Century) are involved in the discussion of the period when
robots would do most manual work and when robots would be
deployed for war to maintain the military superiority of
the US. What writers such as these also need to connect
is the robotization of the youths to turn them into mindless
consumers and warriors.
On this front, the conservative media conglomerates are
reinforced by the video game industry. Youths are raised
to the violence of games such as Grand Theft Auto. The Pentagon
itself is using video games as a recruiting tool. We are
now informed of a new video game in which the youthsyouth
are supposed to practice the killing of Fidel Castro. This
video game entitled, “Call of Duty: Black Ops”
went on sale in North America and Europe on Tuesday, November
9, 2010.
Building
on the macho themes of the elite forces of the US armed
forces, this video game, set in Cuba, the Soviet Union,
and Vietnam, is a hyper-realistic violent Cold War role-playing
game in which the player joins the Bay of Pigs invasion
and then completes the task of the failed Bay of Pigs invasion
of 1961 of Cuba with the mission to assassinate a young
Fidel Castro.
The
game’s first mission is to assassinate Fidel Castro
before the 1962 missile crisis, the moment when the Cold
War came closest to tipping into a full-blown nuclear conflict.
Later
missions take gamers inside the former Soviet Union and
southeast Asia during the Vietnam War.”
According
to the website Cubadebate, “This new video game is
doubly perverse. On the one hand, it glorifies the illegal
assassination attempts the United States government planned
against the Cuban leader … and on the other, it stimulates
sociopathic attitudes in North American children and adolescents.”
What
the United States government did not manage to do in 50
years, now it attempts to accomplish by virtual means.
Perhaps
these unrepentant beings would soon make video games in
which kids are trained to facilitate the CIA’s collaboration
with and recruitment of Nazi officials for safe haven in
the USA.
Peace
activists in all parts of the world must denounce these
video games and call for a boycott of these violent games.
There are dangers in raising a future generation of persons
who are meant to see nothing wrong with killing in the virtual
world in preparation for killing with drones and bombs in
the real world. The training ground for the perpetual war
of the US military is not just in the military bases, but
in the virtual world of video games that are supposed to
entertain the youth. In the words of Nick Turse, “through
video games, the military and its partners in the academia
and the entertainment industry are creating an arm of media
culture geared toward preparing young Americans for armed
conflict.”
It
is in this context that the video games that meant to help
young persons practice the killing of Fidel Castro is not
accidental but part of the forward planning to turn American
youth against those youth who admire Che Guevara and Fidel
Castro. Can a society which carries out torture, murder,
killing with drones, assassinate perceived enemies, and
raise its young ones to do the same, be a healthy society?
Militarism
and Insanity
The
concept of the hero and the triumphant American has been
so ingrained in the popular culture that the society cannot
cope with the decline of American power. Economic decline
is threatening to reproduce new forms of insecurity in the
US. The US society is delicately poised at the precipice
of a new form of insanity, inspired by the military-entertainment-complex.
Last weekend, I participated in a commemoration of the life
of Bill Sutherland at the Schomburg Institute in Harlem.
Bill Sutherland passed away at the age of 91. What was striking
of Bill Sutherland was his refusal to fight in World War
II. He was a pacificst who supported the self determination
projects of peoples all throughout the 20th century.
At the same time there was another ceremony to celebrate
the life of Marilyn Buck, a freedom fighter who saved the
life of Assata Shakur and who fought against racism, homophobia
and the militaristic state. It is the history of peace and
justice forces such as Marilyn Buck and Bill Sutherland
in the USA that has prevented the society from complete
insanity.
Frantz
Fanon, the Martinican psychiatrist, gave us some of the
best insights into the relationship between wars, colonial
occupation, and mental disorders. In his book, The Wretched
of the Earth, he wrote a chapter on how states at war carry
out brainwashing of their population. Added to this brainwashing
is the general attempt to manipulate the minds of the people
and make them insensitive to hating and killing other human
beings. The evidence of brainwashing and psychological warfare
against the citizens of the USA is now well documented.
This documentation needs to be engaged by the peace forces
in order to link mental health to physical health.
Inside
the US there are many young people who return from Afghanistan
and Iraq with deep psychological scars such as post traumatic
stress, suicidal tendencies, and other forms of mental illnesses.
Many communities suffer the after effects of the psychiatric
problems of many of their youth. And the challenge for the
US is whether the mental disorder is only to be found in
these youth or in the society as a whole. Again, I ask:
can a society that carries out torture and murder and kill
with drones be a healthy society?
It is here that we have to go back to Fanon who said that
“total liberation is that which concerns all sections
of the personality.” In this sense, we would want
to agree with Fanon that physical health, spiritual health,
and mental health are all related. The absence of robust
health care for the citizens of the US is only one manifestation
of the wounds that have to be carried by a society facing
psychological warfare and brainwashing.
Health, in this context, requires a radical transformation
of society. And a prerequisite for health is peace. What
the US society should be teaching young people is Ubuntu
– how to be at peace with other humans and with the
planet earth. Young persons in the US need Ubuntu and video
games for peace, not militarization, robotization, and the
rehearsal of how to kill perceived enemies. The sanity of
mind of our children is required for a peaceful world.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board Member, Dr. Horace Campbell,
PhD, is Professor of African American Studies and Political
Science at Syracuse University in Syracuse New York. He is the author of Barack Obama and Twenty-first Century Politics: A Revolutionary
Moment in the USA. Click here to contact Dr. Campbell.
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