T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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613.1 | readjustment from a life of "kill or be killed" | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Tue Dec 22 1987 18:07 | 12 |
| I agree with .0 that military training and combat are a likely source
of much violence in our society. Consider, that a very large
percentage of the male population are trained killers - many with
actual experience of killing people during the wars of this century.
What happens when the man gets out of the military, the war is over,
and he attempts to live like a normal human again. It will undoubtedly
cause an adjustment period. Some will not adjust.
I am sure that this is not the only cause of violence, but I don't
think it should be discounted.
Elizabeth
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613.2 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Wed Dec 23 1987 09:17 | 11 |
| One of the 'skills' taught to soldiers is to de-humanize the enemy.
This allows you to kill without guilt. It is difficult to kill a
fellow human. Much easier to kill a [gook, slope, jerry, nip, etc..]
Unfortunately, when faced with opposition in civilian life, one
can revert to this attitude. Disagreeing wife -> bitch (less than
human) -> *bang*
The military creates attitudes useful for war, but obviously not
in civilian life. Part of the responsibility lies with the process
of discharging soldiers without helping them discard 'skills' that
will hinder them in later life. Unfortunately, soldiers are often
seen as tools to be used, then discarded.
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613.3 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Dec 23 1987 09:28 | 12 |
| re .2:
> Unfortunately, soldiers are often seen as tools to be used, then
> discarded.
Hence the term "G.I." (i.e. "Government Issue")
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
613.4 | Military = Viloence graduate school. | WCSM::PURMAL | Oh, the thinks you can think! | Wed Dec 23 1987 11:58 | 36 |
| RE: .0
I'm *not* a big fan of the military, but I think that you may
be placing a bit more blame on the military than it deserves. I
think that the violent tendancies are being formed well before
people are old enough to enter the military.
There seems to be an increasing level of violent behavior in
the children of our society. (I include teenagers in the group I
call children) I don't have any statistics, but I would imagine
that the percentage of children who perpetrate acts of violence is
higher than ever. I can think of a few examples of acts of violence
which have left me bewildered and somewhat depressed.
The Howard Beach beatings and killing.
An article I read about gang members in East Los Angeles that
indicated that killing someone increases a members prestige amoung
his peers.
The Milpitas, CA boy who killed a girl, bragged about it and
took friends to see the body. (I believe the movie "River's Edge"
was based on this case.)
Gay bashing incidents which have occurred in San Francisco
instigated by youths from the central valley.
Those are the incidents that I can think of off the top of my
head. Given time I could document the ones I have given, and provide
quite a few more.
I don't think that your premise is wrong. I just think that
there is evidence that the major cause of violence in our society
today is present well before military life.
ASP
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613.5 | conditioning = "education" ? | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Wed Dec 23 1987 12:40 | 36 |
|
I agree that conditioning happens in more places than the
military, here's three examples off the top of my head;
1 More men get sent to jail than women. Jail is definitly
a conditioning experience, they call it "rehabilitation", but the
operative reality is "obedience". The conditioning can definitly
cause a type of repression that later leads to violence.
2 Biology classes can be a from of conditioning. I once
witnessed a biology experiment where a group of rabbits were
given overdoses of anesthesia as an experiment. I noticed
that many students denied that the animals had feelings or
knew in any way wehat was happening. It became clear that
these students were being conditioned to repress their own
emotions through the process of "experimenting" on the
rabbits. This type of conditioning is now being given to
almost as many women as men. All doctors are required
to dissect human corpses in similar ritual initiations, which
may partailly explain why so many medical professionals act
so dehumanized.
3 Gym classes are mental/emotional conditioning, not only
physical. When I was in junior high school, the gym teacher
was an ex-marine who used his position to humiliate some
students and give pseudo-authority to others. I love
exercise, but hated these gym classes. The stronger
boys were encouraged to act superior to the less physical types.
The class was divided into ranks, with color-coded t-shirts.
Later, we were subjected to the more rigorous and militaristic
conditioning involved in "team sports". Some good, like
exercise and strong friendships came from all this, but there
were also polarizations formed between the "jocks" and other
groups.
Alan.
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613.6 | | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Dec 23 1987 12:49 | 9 |
| I can fer sure relate to the all-male gym classes teaching boys
how to be "real men". Co-ed classes have changed this some, I think,
but I noticed in my male colleagues (whan I was teaching p.e.) an
...I'll call it..."uneasiness" with the new order. Somehow, the
old P.T. and P.E. classes came from some type of military-type mindset,
and it's taken a long time to wear that away.
--DE
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613.7 | nit | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 23 1987 13:08 | 7 |
| in re .5
Medical students are required to disect cadavers so that they
understand how the human body is put together. You simply cannot
learn structure out of a book. You might be willing to trust
yourself to a doctor who had never done a disection but I sure
wouldn't.
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613.8 | Cadavers have no feelings - they're dead | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Wed Dec 23 1987 13:47 | 12 |
| Re .5
Remember, doctors aren't dehumanizing the cadaver - it really is
already dead, and either by the person's choice or by misfortune
(unknown person dies in the street - no relatives come forward and
claim the body), the body is given to a medical school for educational
purposes. The corpse really doesn't feel its dissection, unlike
the rabbits in the biology class who feel the experiments done on
them. Like Bonnie, I wouldn't want to go to a doctor, especially
for surgery, who had never done a dissection.
Elizabeth
|
613.9 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Wed Dec 23 1987 15:03 | 18 |
|
There are books which well document the dehumanization aspects
of having doctors-in-training dissect corpses. It may be necesary
for training (although there may be legitimate doubts on this) but
the way this is done now in many medical schools shows no regard
for the shock people can feel when asked to do this. The ruling
attitude in these situations is that it is proper or OK to develop
a sort of macho attitude of detachment. Students compete to
prove they can "handle it" by eating lunch in the lab, etc.
This category of training may be necessary, but in it's current
format it is a shocking and conditioning sort of experience that
has psychic effects that are not being compensated for, or even
looked at. Sure the cadaver is dead, but it's not the cadaver
I'm referring to here. These procedures have powerful effects on the
student doctor's feelings.
Alan.
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613.10 | | VIKING::TARBET | | Wed Dec 23 1987 20:49 | 8 |
| I think Alan's point is well-taken: imagine (Full Sens-O-Matic,
please) yourself being 'asked' to take mat knife in hand and begin
dismembering a cold, rubbery ex-human being. I positively get the
creeps at the thought and I've patched up my kids on many a drippy
occasion!
*ickkk*
=maggie
|
613.11 | It is a part of learning | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 23 1987 21:04 | 21 |
| Perhaps I am overly sensitive on this subject after 12 years of
being a Biology teacher (and six years previous to that majoring
in the subject). Once a person starts the process of a disection
it should become an intellectual exercise in how the body is put
together, where the muscles are, where the major nerves are...etc.
etc...It is a process of learning about and understanding life by
looking at the nolonger living...and it is an important and necessary
part of an education in Biology or Medicine...just as looking at
flowers and leaves is a part of Botany.
and yes I did make an effort to insure that my students treated
the animals that were used for disection with respect...and think
I am not unusual in that respect.
Cadavers are a different subject I will admit....for most people
it is a lot harder to deal with the body of a human being...and
yes there are macabre jokes because of that...but my feeling is
that it is more in the nature of finger crossing, knocking on wood,
and whistling in grave yards...dealing with a corpse reminds of
our our mortality....and the jokes strike me more as a way of
dealing with that fear than disrespect for life and persons.
|
613.12 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Thu Dec 24 1987 05:36 | 5 |
| Look at it this way, if a doctor cannot deal with cutting open
a *dead* body, how the hell is he or she supposed to deal with
cutting open a living one (for surgery)?
--- jerry
|
613.13 | ugh | VINO::EVANS | | Thu Dec 24 1987 10:18 | 24 |
| Let's face it. People often use "black humor" and other desensitizing
techniques to get through situations such as these. I used it when
working in an insitiution for the mentally retarded - I mean, it
*gets* to you after a while.
I majored in physical education at a school which had both P.E.
and Physical Therapy majors. The P.T.'s had a lot of work at the
med school using corpses. The last class of P.E.'s to do that happened
to be the class *before* mine <hear 19-year-old heaving LARGE sigh
of relief, yea these many years ago>. I am currently enrolled in
a night school program in massage therapy. Our Anatomy and Physiology
teacher uses many plates from a book using pictures of a dissected
corpse. It is so much clearer to *see* these things, muscles and
where they attach, how the fibers run, bone structure, etc. in this
way.
I didn't notice anyone in my undergraduate classes becoming....er...
jaded, I guess. Yes, there was a certain amount of joking around...
but these protective mechanisms are necessary. My god, with the
amount of death certain types of medical personnel deal with every
day, of course they need protection.
--DE
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