The US Military and the Myth that
Humanity is Predisposed to Violence
By Maria Santelli
September 09, 2015
"Information
Clearing House"
- We have this tragic
misperception that humanity is predisposed to violence.
The truth is that humanity is
predisposed to peace. The default position for humanity
is that of conscientious objector to war and violence.
In our work at the
Center on Conscience & War, this is proven to us
daily, through our individual conscientious objectors. Science
has proven it, too. This tendency for cooperation over
competition is evident in daily life: on an average day,
most people will witness countless acts of cooperation,
kindness, and humanity towards one another, and not one
act of violence or competition. And most of it is so
commonplace, we barely even notice it. We take our
nonviolence for granted.
And so does the news. What makes the
news is violence, not cooperation. Particularly, on our
local news programs, the top stories are the ones that
depict street crimes and “home invasions.” Seeing this
interpersonal violence, I am convinced, leads us to
believe that people are predisposed to acting violently
toward one another.
We all make decisions based on patterns we observe,
and if the patterns we observe are highlighting
violence, we are going to decide that humanity is
violent.
How does this relate to war? If we
believe that violence among humans is natural, we will
believe that war is inevitable.
But violence is not natural. Our
conscience tells us killing another human being is
wrong. And it is the military that knows this better
than anyone.
The military has taken notice that,
over time, and through the history of war, the vast
majority of individuals refuse to shoot to kill. That
means, instead of firing directly at an “enemy,”
soldiers (used here to cover all members of the Armed
Forces: soldiers, Marines, airmen and women, and
sailors) would fire their weapons away from their
“targets,” or pretend to shoot. One investigation found
-- and these
studies have been
replicated -- that in World War I only about 5% of
people shot to kill; in World War II, about 15% of
people shot to kill.
By the US war in Vietnam, the rate at which soldiers
were shooting to kill was found to be 90%. Today, that
number could be even higher.
What happened? Training evolved to
meet the military's goals.
There is a science of teaching
soldiers to kill and it is called
killology. It is the science of circumventing the
conscience.
In order to get an otherwise
psychologically healthy individual to kill, US military
training has been developed to bypass the conscience and
have the act of killing – the act of firing one’s weapon
with the intent to kill -- become reflexive.
Our conscience knows that taking
another human life is wrong. We don't want to do it; we
know that it is the worst possible thing we could do. So
the training has been developed to teach a soldier to
kill without thinking, without filtering through the
conscience.
When we take the time to think – to
filter through the conscience -- we make better
decisions. And in the case of war and killing, the vast
majority of us already have decided.
In fact, 99% of us have decided by
default that we will not chose to kill. The military
comprises less than 1% of the total US population. When
you add veterans to that number, it still only creeps up
to 7%, and some of them, of course, had been drafted;
they didn’t volunteer to join the military. And did
volunteers join the military with a desire to kill, or
for some other purpose?
In my experience, talking as I do to
members of the military everyday, people that volunteer
hold a sincere desire to serve and protect and to do
something bigger than themselves. We call it "the
service," after all. The people who join the military
are some of the most beautiful, selfless, and loving
people you could know. Sure, there are some cynical and
self-serving reasons we could suggest for why people
join the military, and there are real accounts of
skinheads and other racists who were enlisting during
the US invasion of Iraq, but that’s not the rule. By and
large, today’s 1% joined the military out of a deep love
and affection for humanity, not because they want to be
killers.
And they suffer consequences for the
same reasons. It is the same love for humanity and
desire to serve, I believe, that causes them to
experience deep trauma once their conscience processes
the results of what they've done, the deaths and the
pain they’ve been a part of. Military training dulls the
conscience, but not forever. Very likely, the
conscience is going to come back. We all can relate to
that just through our normal experiences of life. If we
have an argument with someone we love and don’t handle
ourselves well, it nags at us. Our conscience tells us
we’ve done something wrong.
Now, put that on the scale a million
times greater: killing someone or failing to prevent an
egregious act in war. Even being trained to kill can and
does cause trauma because it is so foreign from what our
instincts tell us is right. This trauma, these wounds to
the soul – moral injuries – are caused by transgressions
against the conscience.
Hundreds of thousands of veterans are
struggling with this trauma, which is different than the
trauma that is experienced by a rape survivor or a
hijack survivor. It's not characterized by the
hyper-vigilance or fear for one’s life that we see in
those cases. Moral injury is an inner conflict. The
Marines did a
study in 2011 that revealed that much of the trauma
the service members were experiencing was about guilt
and betrayal of conscience.
So, is humanity predisposed to
violence? I don't think so. We’ve allowed ourselves to
be deceived by not only the military industrial complex,
which profits from war, of course, but also by all the
major pillars of our society: our government, our
schools, our media, and even our churches. They all
tell us that violence is human nature. Even the peace
movement falls victim to this myth. We think, “people
who join the military are different from me. They can
kill. I can't kill.” Well, what I’ve learned, and what
the evidence shows is that they can't kill either – not
without consequences.
Between
22 and
35 veterans - depending on who is counting - and an
average of
one active duty service member are killing
themselves every day.
Remember, veterans make up just 7% of
the population, yet they represent
20% of the suicides in this country. That’s a very
telling and shameful number.
So what’s a soldier of conscience to
do? Too often, soldiers in crisis believe they have only
two choices: violate their conscience or violate their
orders. Of the two, violating their orders is a piece of
cake. Maybe they'll get court martialed, go to jail, get
busted down in rank, lose some pay. Maybe they'll get
kicked out with a bad discharge. That’s finite, that's
measurable, it’s manageable by most people.
But the violation of the conscience?
We are just beginning to understand its consequences,
and they can be immeasurable.
It’s important that people know there
is a third option: conscientious objection -- a legal
pathway through which one can apply for discharge by
affirming our natural predisposition for peace, by
affirming the power of conscience.
Beverly Bell, Natalie Miller, and
Emily Simmons helped with this article.
Maria Santelli is
Executive Director of the
Center on Conscience & War, a
75-year old organization founded to
provide technical and community
support to conscientious objectors
to war. Based in Washington, D.C.,
Santelli has been working for peace
and justice since 1996. Via
http://otherworldsarepossible.org