I saw just enough of the beheading video to cast me in a terrible depression. That - added to the prison abuse still photos - leaves me wondering why humans continually sink to such depravity. (I never thought I'd be saying this, but I'm sick of seeing naked men.) Yes, there are many examples of men and women who have shown great integrity and demonstrated outstanding courage in the face of challenge. Yes, we can still take comfort in the fact that the individuals who participate, condone, or ignore such atrocities are not in the majority; still I am sickened to think that people are capable of doing such terrible things to each other.
Some would blame the culture of the Muslims, but I would remind them that it was not that long ago (a short time when human history is being considered) when Christians were burning people alive for heresy. Nazis - nominal Christians - turned murder and torture into an art form. All cultures and faiths have been guilty of extreme cruelty, slaughter, ethnic cleansing, etc. One only has to read the Old Testiment accounts of the "cleansing" of the Caananites from the Promised Land to be reminded that this sort of thing has gone on, in the name of God or gods, as long as humans have recorded their history.
When I watched the Disney cartoon version of the story of Moses, I wondered: "Who was more culpable? The Egyptians who slaughtered first-born baby boys, or the Hebrew God who slaughtered first-born baby boys?" I'd give it a tie.
Much has been discussed about which is worse - acts of humiliation in an Iraqi prison, or the brutal murder of an American contractor. My opinion is that both are unacceptable, and I don't want to be part of either culture. Blame is easy to throw, but in all of the party rhetoric being bandied about, have we asked ourselves what that young man who lost his head was doing in Iraq in the first place? Did he need work because he could not earn a fair living in his own country? Should you expect trouble when you insert a group of people into a place they are not welcome and for which they are not prepared? Does this sort of thing transcend politics and get to the core of who we are as human beings?
Questions I cannot answer, and I wonder if anyone can. Tonight I am sad not only for the family of Nicholas Berg, but also for my species.
Wasa