Adding Up
the Broken Souls
By Robert
Koehler
December 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
“The
question now is how to change our institutions so
that they promote human values rather than destroy
them.”
Philip
Zimbardo, who posed this question in the wake of the
famous — or infamous —
Stanford Prison Experiment 44 years ago, might
have added: If we fail to do so, we guarantee our
own social collapse.
The
collapse is underway, one broken soul at a time:
“But the
basic story the men told was the same: (Leonard)
Strickland was pushed down a flight of stairs, and
then beaten nearly to death by a large group of
guards.”
This is
from a recent New York Times investigative piece
about inmate abuse at
Clinton Correctional Facility, in upstate New
York — a particularly boiling cauldron of racism in
America’s prison-industrial complex. Almost all of
the nearly 1,000 guards who work at the rural prison
are white; the inmates, mostly from New York City,
are black. Not surprisingly, the prisoners say “they
face a constant barrage of racial slurs.”
And racial
slurs have a way of escalating, especially under
conditions in which one group of people has
enormous, unchecked power over another group.
Zimbardo called it the Lucifer Effect: the
transformation of ordinary, decent people into . . .
well, monsters. His 1971 study, in which two dozen
college-student volunteers were randomly designated
either guards or prisoners in a makeshift
“penitentiary” in the basement of Stanford’s psych
department, was meant to last two weeks but was
called off after six days because the situation had
gotten out of control.
Zimbardo
said that he came to his senses after an outside
observer, who was brought in to conduct interviews,
reacted with utter shock “when she saw our prisoners
being marched on a toilet run, bags over their
heads, legs chained together, hands on each other’s
shoulders. Filled with outrage, she said, ‘It’s
terrible what you are doing to these boys!’”
Compare
this to the Times story about Clinton Correctional
Facility. Though all the guards were officially
cleared of wrongdoing in the 2010 death of Leonard
Strickland, who was diagnosed mentally ill but had
no history of violent behavior, six prisoners who
had witnessed the event, interviewed separately at
various facilities, told essentially the same story:
that he was called a racial slur, pushed down a
flight of stairs and beaten and kicked repeatedly by
a group of guards at the bottom of the stairs.
As
Strickland fell down the stairs, one prisoner told
the Times, “his skull hit the concrete steps several
times. At the bottom he pulled himself into a tight
fetal position, as about 10 officers took turns
kicking him in the head and the ribs. . . . They
‘beat this kid to zero,’ he said.”
Ah,
Lucifer!
The broken
souls add up. We live in a world where the
prevailing belief is that control and dominance are
necessary . . . because of all the terrorism, y’know,
and the crime and what have you. In so many American
cities, armed police officers (white and otherwise),
wield unchecked power in impoverished, minority
communities. Not surprisingly, the Lucifer Effect
continually makes the news.
“His
near-rote routine,”
Syreeta McFadden wrote recently in the Guardian,
following the conviction on multiple counts of rape
of Oklahoma City police officer Daniel Holtzclaw,
“as described in court by multiple victims, aligned
neatly with what those without much interaction with
the police would assume is proper procedure; in
reality, it was a menacing cover for a serial sexual
predator seeking victims who would not be believed
or missed.”
And last
month the
Associated Press released the results of a
yearlong investigation of sexual misconduct by
police, discovering records of about 1,000 officers
who lost their badges in a six-year period for
various sex crimes, including rape. The figure is
“unquestionably an undercount,” the AP story noted,
because many departments don’t maintain such
records.
“‘It’s
happening probably in every law enforcement agency
across the country,’ said Chief Bernadette DiPino of
the Sarasota Police Department in Florida, who
helped study the problem for the International
Association of Chiefs of Police. ‘It’s so
underreported and people are scared that if they
call and complain about a police officer, they think
every other police officer is going to be then out
to get them.’”
What the
otherwise excellent story fails to do is put the
crimes into a larger context, dismissing the perps
simply as “bad officers.” When they can’t resign
quietly and disappear, they’re turned into
scapegoats: exceptions to the rule in otherwise
good, solid institutions that serve the public. This
is how it is in every institution that commands
enormous power over a particular group of people,
including the scandal-rocked U.S. military and the
Catholic Church.
It’s time
for the media, which usually goes along with the
“bad apple” explanation, to expand its
consciousness. Lucifer haunts the corridors of
power. Ordinary, decent people can turn into
monsters — rapists, murderers — when given unlimited
power over others. It happens with eerie frequency,
especially when, in the era of the cellphone video,
such crimes are not so easily covered up.
In Chicago,
a police officer shoots a teenager walking in the
middle of the street 16 times, almost as though the
gun took control of the officer’s consciousness.
Barbara Ransby, a professor at the University of
Illinois, Chicago, interviewed recently by
Democracy Now, pointed out that, because of
budget cuts, only about 20 Chicago police officers
have received crisis intervention training.
My God,
budget cuts! In a country that’s waging perpetual
war and raking in billions from the global sale of
weapons. Yeah, the boy had been acting erratically.
But real public safety for the city of Chicago would
have included safety for Laquan McDonald, the
17-year-old killed by police officer Jason Van Dyke.
I fear
we’re reversing the evolutionary process. We’ve
surrendered to simplistic, impulsive, fear-based
“safety” and we’re reaping the consequences, one
broken soul at a time.
Robert Koehler is
an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and
nationally syndicated writer. His book,
Courage Grows Strong at the Wound
(Xenos Press), is still
available. Contact him at
koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at
commonwonders.com.
©
2015
Common Wonders
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