The Abolition of Man at the Pentagon
by
Lee
McCracken
Remember
the American pilots who accidentally killed four Canadian soldiers
last year in Afghanistan? Well, turns out that their lawyers are
arguing that the pilots’ misjudgment was a result of being pumped
full of military-issued "go pills" – amphetamines given to soldiers
who have to stay awake during extended missions. U.S. troops have
used amphetamines for these purposes since at least the Second World
War.
Far
more disturbing is the Pentagon’s
quest for the "Extended Performance War Fighter," a genetically
or neurologically modified soldier who won’t need drugs to stay
alert during combat missions. Military contractors at prestigious
universities like Columbia are conducting research to figure out
how to "zap" a soldier’s brain with electro-magnetic energy to beef
up his resistance to lack of sleep.
Some
research has focused on animals who stay awake for long periods
of time (such as sparrows during migration seasons) or partly awake
all the time (sea mammals who need to surface for breath even while
sleeping). The idea is that analogous structures in the human brain
could be tapped into and tinkered with to ward off the effects of
sleep deprivation. Other researchers are trying to isolate the part
of the human genetic code that might allow humans to stay awake
indefinitely. Soldiers could then be genetically modified to enable
them to stay awake for days on end.
If
you grew up reading Marvel Comics like I did, you might recall that
Captain America, that most patriotic of all superheroes, started
out as the proverbial 98-pound weakling. But after being given a
dose of "super soldier serum" the skinny Steve Rogers became a one-man
Nazi-fighting machine. Maybe our Extended Performance War Fighters
will come equipped with red, white, and blue titanium shields to
hurl at Osama and Saddam.
Reasonable
people disagree about the morality and wisdom of various kinds of
genetic engineering, but I think all of us can agree that the prospect
of the U.S. military creating genetically enhanced super-soldiers
is worrisome, to say the least. If soldiers can be modified at will
to stay awake longer, why can’t they be modified to be faster, stronger,
or more ruthless? Why not more obedient? Why not incapacitate the
soldier’s ability to feel guilt so he won’t have any moral qualms
when ordered to carry out orders? In fact, as a
recent article in the Village Voice reported, researchers
at several universities are developing drugs designed to dampen
the emotions associated with memories of traumatic events. This
could allow soldiers who witness (or participate in) acts of brutality
to prevent their memories from being associated with remorse and
other messy emotions. According to bioethicist Leon Kass, this would
be "the morning-after pill for just about anything that produces
regret, remorse, pain, or guilt."
Now,
this may be so much science fiction fantasizing, and such a thing
may never even be possible. The intersections between human biology,
consciousness, and free will may very well remain mysteries. But
it’s deeply disturbing that the Pentagon apparently doesn’t regard
the inner citadel of the soldier’s soul to be off limits from chemical
and genetic manipulation.
It’s
useful to remember that what sets the State apart from other institutions
in society is that it recognizes no law above itself. This is what
it means to be sovereign: to be the ultimate arbiter of what is
right and wrong, lawful and unlawful. History has shown that States
don’t recognize the restraints of traditional morality or customs
if those restraints stand in the way of a government agenda. When
the State attempts to remake human nature itself, it has thrown
the last vestige of natural law out the window.
The
power to deconstruct human nature and remake it along the preferred
lines of the ruling elite was the dream of despots for much of the
blood-soaked 20th century. The animating idea of Communism
was to create a "New Socialist Man" who would be free from greed
and self-centeredness (and unquestioningly loyal to the "People’s
State"). Traditional thinkers tried (mostly in vain) to remind these
utopians that human beings were heir to a tendency toward sin, and
that to try to eradicate this tendency would be to erase humanity
itself. The nightmare scenario of a broken and domesticated humanity
was portrayed with vivid horror in the dystopian novels of Huxley
and Orwell.
Maybe
the obedient, ruthless automaton will have to replace the citizen-soldier
in order to man the far reaches of the Empire. We can’t have soldiers
like Cincinnatus, who dealt with the present danger so he could
return to tend his land. No, running the world is a full time job,
and we can’t let anachronisms like longing for home, love of peace,
and conscience get in the way.
And
who’s to say that successful genetic manipulation in the military
won’t be irresistible to government officials as a tool of social
control over the civilian population? Of course, it would all be
done in the name of creating well-adjusted, tolerant, compassionate
citizens. Forget Ritalin; get them where it counts – in the genes!
C.
S. Lewis wrote, "What we call Man's power over Nature turns out
to be a power exercised by some men over other men with Nature as
its instrument." The State always seeks to extend its power. This
is demonstrated both by theory and by history. And it often does
so without regard for natural law. Is there any moral principle
that hasn’t been violated by governments in the name of some "higher"
good (like the infinitely elastic "National Interest")? Thou shalt
not murder? Check. Thou shalt not steal? Double check. What reason
do we have to think that it would stop short at violating what was
once thought inviolable – the freedom and dignity of the human soul
itself?
February
4, 2003
Lee
McCracken [send him mail]
writes from the San Francisco Bay area.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
|