trinityvixen: (horror)
trinityvixen ([personal profile] trinityvixen) wrote2009-02-04 10:43 am
Entry tags:

::INSERT SWEAR WORDS::

(Trigger warning. I never give trigger warnings, SO BE FUCKING WARNED, ALL RIGHT?)

What the fuck?

No, really: WHAT THE FUCKING FUCK!?!


...people do some fucked up shit in war. (Not to mention in the name of God.)

For one second, I was able to peak past the horror and go, "Wow, that is devastatingly effective." Then I went back to being horrified. Whattheshitshitshitshitshit!?!

[identity profile] chuckro.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
It's a brilliant bit of psychology. The sheer audacity of it makes you almost admire it--kinda like the Eddie Izzard bit:
Pot killed 1.7 million people. We can’t even deal with that! You know, we think if somebody kills someone, that’s murder, you go to prison. You kill 10 people, you go to Texas, they hit you with a brick, that’s what they do. 20 people, you go to a hospital, they look through a small window at you forever. And over that, we can’t deal with it, you know? Someone’s killed 100,000 people. We’re almost going, "Well done! You killed 100,000 people? You must get up very early in the morning. I can’t even get down the gym! Your diary must look odd: "Get up in the morning, death, death, death, death, death, death, death –lunch- death, death, death - afternoon tea - death, death, death - quick shower..."

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Not admire, really. Appreciate that this must work extremely well, sure...

Ah, Eddie Izzard, so wise in the way of things.

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I just keep thinking around this, you know? I come back to consider the topic and I go "..." too and then I go back to not thinking about it long enough for it to sneak up on me again.

Holy. Fuck.

Yes, humans suck

[identity profile] arcane-the-sage.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 05:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's best I don't say anything. Why? I know of worse. Much worse. Happening within the same time frame, but elsewhere in the world. I have found it best never to underestimate what humans are capable of, even in the most monstrous of possible ways. Some how, they always find a way to "one-up" the last person.

Re: Yes, humans suck

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)
That's the problem right there: that we're competitive about how awful we can be.

[identity profile] jendaby.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
You have to wonder if it is in the name of God, or if some people are so sick and twisted and broken that they feel they have to humiliate and terrorize other people. Either way, it's terrible.

I don't know why I am always shocked when women do things to hurt other women. We are obviously JUST as capable of evil as men. I guess it's just the whole "If you're lost, ask a woman for directions" thing that sticks in your head from childhood. Makes one feel that women are more safe and sane than men. Given what that creature did, it is obviously not always true.

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-04 08:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm reasonably certain that this is not a religious phenomena, more that it is a psychological one. This pathology of marked indifference to and dependence on suffering was helped along by the religious/cultural atmosphere (that made the raped women feel worthless enough to consider death an attractive alternative). I think the people start off sick and they find whatever logic they can to justify it. However, those who use religion enjoy a certain degree of invulnerability from attack and even accusation, most of which has to do with people not wanting to criticize others' religions (especially when they are not intimately familiar with them).

Where this gets into the other point you make--women hurting women--is in the case of power. Women in this system of extremist Islam have little to no power. They are useful for things--suicide bombers, obviously, though I'm sure there are other unsavory roles they might play besides--but they are not valued. This woman probably was very determined to have her own worth. Unfortunately, she succeeded. She made herself the go-to woman for the production of reliably desperate, depressed, guilty, and suicidal would-be bombers. As I said in my post, this is a terribly efficacious little ploy, given gender biases both on the parts of the men in this terrorist group and the soldiers trying to stop them. But the women still don't matter. They're only around to be tolerated until they can die so the men have more power. This awful woman seems to have decided for herself to grab a bit of that fruit of power and nurture it. Undoubtedly, she was well-respected and constantly on call for these terrorists. She wasn't just a tool, she was an essential operator. Woman or man, that sort of power, when you have none, is intoxicating, and if you start from a questionably sane and debatable position of empathy for your fellow human beings, it's probably downright irresistible.

It saddens me that there are female misogynists, but they are EVERYWHERE. And they're not all extremists having women violated and blown up. Sometimes they're just the loathsome scum that argue their need to control wombs outranks your right to medical privacy. It's all about power and grabbing it where you can. Women who are stuck in lives of relatively little power will re-channel their desire to attain control/power into incredibly destructive forces. (Which are often directed by men, a fact that makes me as a feminist scoff at their claims that they are "empowered" at all.)

[identity profile] wellgull.livejournal.com 2009-02-05 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I think what you're saying here is absolutely true.

But I think you're also overlooking two factors: first, the way that a climate filled with generalized violence and uncertainty can radicalize people and remove their normal inhibitions against awful things; and second, the way that people will overlook all kinds of moral restraints if they think they're doing something that will result in the "greater good."

If relatively non-traumatized American neoconservatives are willing to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians for the sake of some idealized world-building, we shouldn't be too surprised that a brutalized woman, who grew up in a repressive religion under one dictatorship, only to see her country then handed off to a new, foreign, power, would be willing to brutalize other women as a way of getting back at anything within reach...

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-05 08:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Good points, of course, and ones I hadn't really brought up. There are lots of cases where abuse/violence leads to desensitized people who are then capable of horrific behaviors because their metric of moral good/bad is messed up. Do I think that that is a dominant factor in this case? Eh, not so sure. Yes, it's a violent world she inhabits, but how much of that violence shaped her, at her later age versus how much was shaped by her experience before it is up to debate. Not that Saddam's reign was great and totally nonviolent, just that open guerilla warfare that has led the insurgents is more a feature of the Iraq war than not. So she probably developed her depraved indifference long ago and not necessarily as a response to her own trauma. (I'm not ruling it out, though.)

The "greater good" argument against religion is very damning. Without the sort of supernatural backing that religious zealots claim, they would have less influence over people who are more or less anesthetized against physical violence and doubtful of physical comfort or safety. With beliefs that encourage a focus on the afterlife and its rewards you get people sufficiently worked up to a point that they overlook the overwhelming biological urge of self-preservation. It's not impossible to do that without religion--plenty of "atheist" movements have slaughtered people just as wantonly--just that it's easier.

[identity profile] wellgull.livejournal.com 2009-02-05 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Eh, I figure she could just as easily have been traumatized by living in Saddamist society -- it wasn't exactly rosy, and they weren't kidding when they talked about the "rape rooms" and such. I don't know anything about her biography; I'm guessing that she must have been radicalized by something that happened during the Occupation (because she started doing this), but maybe that was just an opportunity to let loose with the crazy?

I'm interested in the phrase "the 'greater good' argument against religion." How do you mean? I mean, personally I am highly suspicious of most violent acts done in the name of the greater good, and of "greater good" arguments generally--such that I think that they may actually taint whatever ends they're applied to, though I haven't really decided on that--but I hadn't meant to go there with this; do say more!

[identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com 2009-02-05 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
What I meant was that religions, by dint of appeal to a super-human creator being have established unassailable beachheads of thought that can reconcile any demand or dogma with the "well, the Sky Fairy says it has to be this way, too fucking bad if you disagree." Their "greater good" is thus structured to ignore any signs of suffering on Earth--and their thinking cannot be challenged by suffering on Earth. Their illogical, unreasonable demands lead them more often than not back to the "greater good" argument because they can't defend much otherwise. Non-theist dogmatics also appeal to "greater good," but with rare exceptions, they tend to lose power if there isn't some proof that their deeds actually produce a tangible, physical improvement in general welfare. A religious zealot has no such limitation--everything can go to Hell on Earth so long as the greater good is done by Heaven.

That's why I call it the "greater good" argument against religion: people who judge what is good and what is not entirely by rules that are immutable and out-dated and who will ignore the evidence of their eyes and their experience are not worthy to hold power over anybody. In essence, if someone starts spouting about the greater good their work will do by your soul rather than your mind, body, or spirit (in this case your emotional response/joie de vive more than soul), DO NOT TRUST THEM.