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Rights and Liberties

A Torture Debate Among Healers

By Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. Posted April 10, 2008.


Why is the American Psychological Association still allowing its members to participate in torture?
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Imagine, a candidate for president who, a year or so ago, no one would have considered electable. Now the person is the front-runner, with a groundswell of grass-roots support, threatening the sense of inevitability of the Establishment candidates. No, I'm not talking about the U.S. presidential race, but the race for president of the largest association of psychologists in the world, the American Psychological Association (APA). At the heart of the election is a raging debate over torture and interrogations. While the other healing professions, including the American Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association, bar their members from participating in interrogations, the APA leadership has fought against such a restriction.

Frustrated with the APA, a New York psychoanalyst, Dr. Steven Reisner, has thrown his hat into the ring. Last year, Reisner and other dissident psychologists formed the Coalition for an Ethical Psychology in an attempt to force a moratorium against participation by APA members in harsh interrogations. During the initial phase of this year's selection process, Reisner received the most nominating votes. He is running on a platform opposing the use of psychologists to oversee abusive and coercive interrogations of prisoners at Guantanamo, secret CIA black sites or anywhere else international law or the Geneva Conventions are said not to apply.

The issue came to a head at the 2007 APA annual convention. After days of late-night negotiations, the moratorium came up for a climactic vote. We saw a surreal scene on the convention floor: Uniformed military were out in force. Men and women in desert camo and Navy whites worked the APA Council of Representatives, and officers in crisp dress uniforms stepped to the microphones.

Military psychologists insisted that they help make interrogations safe, ethical and legal, and cited instances where psychologists allegedly intervened to stop abuse. "If we remove psychologists from these facilities, people are going to die!" boomed Col. Larry James of the U.S. Army, chief psychologist at Guantanamo Bay and a member of the APA governing body. Dr. Laurie Wagner, a Dallas psychologist, shot back, "If psychologists have to be there in order to keep detainees from being killed, then those conditions are so horrendous that the only moral and ethical thing to do is to protest by leaving."

The moratorium failed, and instead a watered-down resolution passed, outlining 19 harsh interrogation techniques that were banned, but only if "used in a manner that represents significant pain or suffering or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm." In other words, this loophole allowed, you can rough people up, just don't do permanent harm.

Immediately after the vote, Reisner spoke out at a packed town hall meeting: "If we cannot say, 'No, we will not participate in enhanced interrogations at CIA black sites,' I think we have to seriously question what we are as an organization and, for me, what my allegiance is to this organization, or whether we might have to criticize it from outside the organization at this point."

Reisner and others began withholding dues. Prominent APA members resigned, and the best-selling author of Reviving Ophelia Mary Pipher, returned her APA Presidential Citation award. After several months of bad publicity and internal negotiations, an emergency committee redrafted that resolution, removing the loopholes and affirming the outright prohibition of 19 techniques, like mock executions and waterboarding.

When I asked Dr. Reisner, the son of Holocaust survivors, why he would want to head the organization that he has battled for several years, he told me: "If I have this opportunity to make a change, I have a responsibility to do it. I never had the intention of being involved, but the only way to ensure this be changed was by claiming the democratic process in the name of human rights and social-justice issues. I was hoping that mass withholding of dues and mass resignations would shame the APA to come to its senses. It made them take a big step but didn't go far enough."

He expanded: "American people are sick of the reputation of the United States as torturers, as people who abuse prisoners. American people want to see a restoration of values from war to health care. I think what happens in the APA should point to a direction for the whole country."

The APA's annual meeting is this summer, in Boston. Expect interrogation to be the major issue confronting the members gathered there. Final voting for the APA president starts in October. The APA and the United States will determine their next presidents at about the same time. In both elections, a thorough debate on torture should be central.

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See more stories tagged with: torture, military, guantanamo, apa

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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The APA and Torture
Posted by: fanny666 on Apr 10, 2008 1:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stephen Soldz is a great source to keep up on this debate. Prominent psychologists such as Mary Pipher (who wrote the classic Reviving Ophelia ) have been speaking out against what they perceive as the APA's weak stance against torture.

Now-declassified documents such as the infamous 1963 KUBARK Manual point to a long history of torture, with techniques designed by trained psychologists.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Hitler
Posted by: bc430 on Apr 11, 2008 8:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
had Doctors.

Cheney/Bush have Doctors....

and Nurses,

and Republicans,

and Democrats,

and Independents,

and The US. Flag,

and Saluting,

and The Pledge with hands upon chests,

and The National Anthem with more standing,

and more hands on chests and stomachs,

and more Saluting,

and Lawyers,

and Torture,

and False Prophets,

and The Military,

and Police,

and Blackwater Mercenaries,

and Judges,

and The Supreme Court,

and Jails,

and Prisons,

and Military Base Concentration Camps,

and Biological,

and Chemical,

and Radiological WMDs,

and an Imperial Genocide Agenda.

The equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles which was the Svastika is now reconfigured and very visible at evening kkk functions. This symbol is even worn as jewelry by indoctrinated men, women and children of all ethnicities that comprise the American population. Many have it tatooed on their skin.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Triumph of the Will Posted by: EJW
» RE: Triumph of the Will Posted by: realtruther
This shouldn't be surprsing....
Posted by: chalquist on Apr 11, 2008 8:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....given that the APA has relied on military funding since its beginning. Its current self-serving argument that psychologists make interrogations safer ignores the fact that psychologists designed many of the interrogation and torture techniques now in use at places like Guantanamo, just as they designed mass marketing methods and instruments of mass political control. Many psychologists are ethical practitioners, but the APA has been aggressively expansionist throughout its history. They now control certification programs throughout the U.S. such that you can't work certain places as a psychologist or even be recognized as one unless you graduate from an APA-approved school.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Look at what psychology involves and you aren't surprised by their behavior
Posted by: dkm on Apr 11, 2008 9:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Much of the psychological research involves lying to the subjects being studied. This is the beginning of a culture grounded in dishonesty and manipulation. Then consider that many people entering the profession are divorced women who blame men for their psychological problems, and also studies showing that psychologists as a whole have more psychological problems than the general public. So the people in the association by and large are self-selected to be the sort of person that should NOT be in charge of people with psychological problems.

Then on top of that you have the money factor as has been explained in a post above with the military financing a lot of research into how to control people using psychological techniques.

I applaud the attempt by some of the more human and humane individuals within the APA to reform their policies. I wish them every success. Unfortunately a lot of the damage has already been done. May I suggest that a project for psychologists is to find a way or ways to repair the damage that has been done to these victims of torture?

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Good luck to Dr. Reisner
Posted by: fearn on Apr 11, 2008 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and may he be able to make changes and bring the APA out of the dark ages.

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Perverts as Healers
Posted by: markw4786 on Apr 12, 2008 11:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Am Psychiatric Assoc and the AMA have for years been using dangerous psychotropic drugs on children. Drugs that have never been tested on kids. They have no room to talk.
That said, I find it ironic that the "mind healers" are as sick and perverse as the people they're trying to heal.
Mr. Reisner should reconsider his membership in this cabal. They only changed their vote because members were withholding $$$$. The perverts prostitute themselves. How appropriate.

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» RE: Perverts as Healers Posted by: inverse_agonist
What about "Do no Harm"
Posted by: EJW on Apr 13, 2008 4:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Psychologists have no oath. Like lawyers their only allegiance is to 'the Client' which is often a Corporation or other group. They often work to the detriment of individuals and poor groups (most of us). Who brought us Dr. Strangelove, advertising and 'looking out for #One'.

Psychology can be a great force for good but good doesn't make money for the wealthy.

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Go All the Way
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Apr 13, 2008 10:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since the APA is taking this course, why don't they hire Alberto Gonzales and John Yoo as their counsel, inaugurate the Josef Mengele Research Institute, offer training in waterboarding and stress positions in addition to psychotherapy and assessment and confer honorary doctorates on Dick Cheney and, posthumously, Alberto Pinochet and Slobodan Milosovic?

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Oops
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Apr 13, 2008 10:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ooops, I meant to say Agusto Pinochet. Sigmund must be smiling down from the hereafter.

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Power and collusions
Posted by: talkville on Apr 18, 2008 3:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Especially, but not exclusively, amongs the "behaviorist" schools of psychology, much collusion has occurred in parallel with the development of the discipline itself since its early beginnings. They have contributed much into the methodologies of individual and social control and 'streamlined' nice, tidy Taylorized methods of "training" to suit the needs of well-heeled and well-paying corporate and government institutions. Not to forget the key role of psychological 'research and development' (proprietary of course) into such areas as advertising, marketing and public relations!

So now they rest their justifications into merely interceding in order to make sure, real sure, that any TORTURE applied is done with the Utmost Consideration and in Humane ways so as to ensure that the utmost Dignity remains to the individual(s) being TORTURED!!

How kind! How CAN the quality of such mercies be strained? What heavy burdens these self-less, just and oh, so caring, individuals load upon their shoulders to make real sure that TORTURE is 'appropriate' and ever so tasteful and refined!

Unlike those messy and gruesome medieval times, ours is such a cultured, clinical and ever so civilized Barbarism. Now that's progress!

Yikes! They're coming! Gotta scurry back to my Skinner Box and gulp down a couple of Prozacs -- it's not too cool to displease the Shamans (they got ways!).

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