There comes
a saturation point at which I can no longer listen to institutionalists
(e.g., military and other government officials, academicians,
members of the media) babble about what may be the most telling
symptom of the anti-life nature of the state: the suicides of
those entangled in its destructive machinations. Top military
officials appeared this week before a congressional committee
to discuss the fact that more American soldiers are dying by suicide
than in combat, and to inquire into what can be done about this
situation. I suspect these officers were quite sincere in their
assessments and suggestions but – like institutional authorities
generally – said nothing that might raise fundamental questions
about the military.
I watched
about as much of this hearing as my mind could take, as one officer
after another spoke of the needs for "programs" to address
this problem; to help "train" servicemen and women to
better handle the economic and family pressures, work-loads, and
deployment in foreign countries. One military official spoke of
the need to "analyze the data" to help protect the soldier
who, in his view, was the military’s "most valuable asset."
One would fathom from the bulk of this testimony that what the
young men and women who are contemplating self-destruction need
most are more problem-solving skills; or perhaps another structured
training program for soldiers to go through. The project could
be expected to generate lucrative government-funded research grants
to universities and so-called "think tanks," but no
unsettling questions for the established order.
While I heard
no mention of behavior modification drugs being administered to
potential suicides, such an approach has been used in school systems
to control young children. Might the state decide to fall back
upon this strategy, perhaps to reinforce earlier conditioning,
as well as to please the major pharmaceutical companies? Maybe
"big-pharma" will be able to offer – at the high prices
that always attend government programs – suicide-prevention drugs.
As I watched this viciousness unfolding on C-SPAN, I kept recalling
the Stanley Kubrick film, A
Clockwork Orange. Taken from Anthony Burgess’ novel of
the same name, the movie focuses on coercive methods of operant
conditioning designed to overcome an individual’s free will.
By its very
nature, the state will persist in looking upon human beings as
"assets," as "resources" to be cared for in
much the same way as a rancher cares for his cattle. Problems
that arise within the herd will be dealt with mechanistically
and collectively: anthrax vaccinations and uniform diets for all;
individual tastes and preferences being irrelevant to the "greater
good."
I heard no
mention made of what, I suspect, is the principal contributor
to the escalating rates of suicide: the insanity of the war system
itself, its moral and spiritual bankruptcy. In the time that I
watched these hearings, I heard not even an oblique reference
to the spiritual costs of persons having their lives robotized
and directed by the state for no other purpose than to kill men,
women, and children who have been selected as targets. What does
it do to an otherwise psychologically and emotionally centered
person to have one’s training as a systematic killer of strangers
become the highlight of his or her life?
It is the
war system, itself, that must be confronted and ended, lest it
destroy all semblance of humanity. Those who have chosen to devote
themselves to the planning and carrying out of programs designed
for no other purpose than the mass slaughter of millions of fellow
humans experience psychic costs that no amount of militaristic
strutting or patriotic blather can suppress. It is not in the
nature of any species to consciously destroy itself.
Individuals
have a spiritual and emotional nature that is absent from institutions.
Institutions are, at best, tools driven entirely by linear, mechanistic,
and materialistic considerations. They are abstractions
which, like computer games, are purely the product of thought.
They operate on the basis of compulsion, not compassion; what
is nonmaterial is immaterial; they have become ends
in themselves, while individuals are but transient beings who
can be conditioned into serving as fungible resources to be exploited
for collective ends. "Liberty" is a condition valued
by individuals, but it is a form of entropy – energy unavailable
for productive purposes – to the institutional order.
There is
nothing more contemptible, in my mind, than the spectacle of school
systems training impressionable children in the evil doctrine
that their lives exist to serve alleged "greater interests"
than their own. Whenever I am asked to identify the one governmental
program I would most like to see disappear, my answer has always
been: the government school system. This institutionalized form
of child abuse has generated far more destructiveness than even
the war system, for its pernicious conditioning is what makes
possible our identification with the state as well as our willingness
to give up our lives for it.
Many parents
– having been previously conditioned to become state servo-mechanisms
– are unavailable to their children at a time when most needed
to help question any of this organized insanity. Far too many
mothers and fathers, I am sorry to say, end up loving the state
more than they do their own children, and content themselves with
a folded flag – handed to them by a uniformed officer – as a substitute.
It is not
just the soldiers who commit suicide that provide evidence for
the pathology of war. Those who die, or end up as cripples, or
who desert, or who survive war physically unscathed but remain
silently torn up inside, are all victims of this depraved system.
I can only imagine the turmoil a young soldier must go through
before, as an act of utter despair, deciding to take his or her
own life.
It
is sad that adults – who express concern when an "Amber Alert"
informs them of a missing child – will turn their backs on grown
children who need support to help them through their spiritual
crises. Of course, when "support the troops" really
means "support the war," persons conditioned in the
virtues of war and statism will provide no genuine help for the
potential suicide. They will respond like the man who, upon witnessing
a child drowning in a lake, can do no more than offer swimming
lessons!
What will
come from all of this superficial institutional hand-wringing
will be but another interventionist behavior-modification program
to help the soldiers overcome their failures to better adapt themselves
to the needs of the military. Suicidal soldiers are an embarrassment
to the state, making it difficult to enlist new recruits with
promises to "be all you can be." Such disrespect to
the system must be confronted! Perhaps within the Pentagon, military
officials are even now watching re-runs of A Clockwork Orange.
The state
– like so much of medical practice – profits by focusing on symptoms,
while carefully avoiding attention to the underlying disease.
Raising more fundamental inquiries might produce doubts about
the central role to be played by institutions. It is the soldiers
who are in need of reformation. As long as they are looked upon
as the source of the suicide problem – to be rectified by additional
conditioning – we can expect the self-destruction to continue.
It is sad to think that an awareness of the moral and spiritual
bankruptcy of the war system might be grasped most strongly by
young people caught up in the middle of its destructiveness without
what Joseph Campbell called "invisible means of support."
Paradoxically, their acts of desperation may reflect a sanity
that will be lost to a world wrapped in flags. Their suicides
may be a harbinger of the fate of civilization itself.