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Friday, March 16, 2012

The Atrocities of War


They took a clean-cut kid
And they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

                            ~ Bob Dylan


The news this week of the massacre of Afghani families by an American soldier was came as yet another highlight of the horrors of war. For over ten years the U.S. has attempted to wage war while hiding the dark consequences from its citizens. That tone was set in the early days when the Bush administration declared that the call to war was an utmost endeavor to preserve freedom and democracy, but we should not worry our little heads, we should just go shopping.

I side with the Quakers’ stance that war is not the answer. This latest atrocity is but one example of why I am not in favor of armed conflict. It is impossible to wage war without unleashing mayhem, madness, and atrocity. It is indeed an atrocity that Afghani citizens were attacked and slain in their homes in the dead of night. It is also an atrocity that the young soldier accused of the massacre suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2010, yet was patched up, dusted off and sent back in to fight another day.

It is also an atrocity that politicians living in luxury and ease take advantage of the idealistic patriotism of our youth by calling them to fight for freedom when they may in fact just be fighting to preserve the economic interests of the elite.

It is an atrocity that politicians living in luxury and ease can take advantage of young men and women who see military service as the best way out of their economically depressed neighborhoods.

It is an atrocity that we have a system in which wounded military personnel are quickly treated and sent back repeatedly into military action because that’s just what needs to be done with our smaller, leaner volunteer forces.

It is an atrocity that hard-working, honest, salt-of-the-earth families bear unspeakable losses when their sons and daughters are killed or permanently wounded in body, mind, and spirit while politicians speak of war in such a cavalier manner.

It is an atrocity that we have more and more wounded soldiers returning who suffer from physical injuries or PTSD and have insufficient support from the government that sent them out to fight.

There can be no war without atrocity. Even the victors of war bear the scars of war into the next generation. This is why war should never be considered lightly.  

                                                                                                                  Charles Kinnaird





Clean-Cut Kid
By Bob Dylan
(From the album, Empire Burlesque)

Everybody's asking why he couldn't adjust
Adjust to what, a dream that bust ?

They took a clean-cut kid
And they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

They said what's up is down, they said what isn't is
They put ideas in his head that he thought were his.

They took a clean-cut kid
But they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

He was on the baseball team, he was in the marching band
When he was ten years old he had a watermelon stand.

He was a clean-cut kid
And they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

They said, "Listen boy, you're just a pup"
They sent him to a napalm health spa to shape up.

They gave him dope to smoke, drinks and pills
A jeep to drive, blood to spill.

They said "Congratulations, you got what it takes"
They sent him back into the race without any brakes.

They took a clean-cut kid
But they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

He bought the American dream but it put him in doubt
Only game he could play was Russian roulette.

He drank Coca-Cola, he was eating Wonder Bread
He ate Burger Kings, he was well fed.

He went to Hollywood to see Peter O'Toole
He stole a Rolls Royce and drove in a swimming pool.

They took a clean-cut kid
But they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

He could've sold insurance, owned a restaurant or bar
He could've been an accountant or a tennis star.

He was wearing boxing gloves, took a dive one day
Off the Golden Gate Bridge into China Bay.

His mama walks the floor, his daddy weeps and moans
They gotta sleep together in a home they don't own.

They took a clean-cut kid
And they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.

Everybody's asking why he didn't adjust
All he ever wanted was somebody to trust.

They took his head and turned it inside out
He never did know what it was all about.

He had a steady job, he joined the choir
He never did plan to walk the high wire.

They took a clean-cut kid
And they made a killer out of him
That's what they did.


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Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Hoping for a Good Death: End of Life Care


"Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph" oil painting by Rembrandt

I attended a symposium last week titled, “Palliative Care: In Search of the Good Death” at Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law. The presenters included medical doctors and legal scholars who talked about end of life care within the context of modern healthcare systems and societal attitudes toward death. I attended the symposium as a healthcare provider thinking of physical needs of those facing death, but another reason I attended was a realization of the need for spiritual care in the final stages of life.

As a Catholic convert, one of the things I heard that was new to me was the request to pray for a holy death for one parishioner or another.  My first impression upon hearing that prayer request was to imagine how this petition might have been viewed in years past, knowing that this is a prayer dating back through the centuries. I thought of how many terrible ways one could die before the advent of modern medicine. What kind of pain would a cancer victim have endured 200 years ago? What about those with diabetes before the days of insulin who gradually became sicker and sicker until their bodies just shut down?  There were so many other unpleasant ways to die from injury, infection, pestilence and famine, with very few effective drugs to mediate the suffering.

As I thought further, within the context of the Roman Catholic Church, there was also a fear of judgment and punishment which only began to abate somewhat after the fresh air of Vatican II.  The hope was to be able to have a priest present at the time of death so that sins could be confessed, absolution given and the holy Eucharist received. It was only then that one could be assured of a happy repose free from the torment of judgment.  Consider the traditional petitions:

“From sudden and unexpected death, deliver us, O Lord.”

“May we be free from sin when we leave this world and rejoice in peace with You forever.”

                                  “ Remove far from me every kind of sin; obtain for me that my
                                   death may not come upon me unawares, but that I may have
                                   time to confess my sins sacramentally and to bewail them
                                   with a most perfect understanding and a most sincere and
                                   perfect contrition, in order that I may breathe forth my soul
                                   into the hands of Jesus and Mary. Amen”

Death could be a frightening thing in days gone by, as it still is today, though most of us try to push thoughts of death into some undetermined point in the future.  At the symposium on palliative care, we heard medical and legal experts discuss ethical issues surrounding end of life care, societal attitudes, and ramifications in healthcare/insurance coverage.

The "Good" Death?

Dr. Ryan Nash, Director of UAB's Palliative Care Leadership Center, began the symposium by presenting an overview of the hospice movement and the palliative care movement.  Referencing Rembrandt’s painting, “Jacob blessing the Sons of Joseph,” Dr. Nash said that the Old Testament narrative of Jacob’s death informed the hospice movement. In that narrative, one finds an acceptance of death, blessing, grief, good burial arrangements, and no mention of suffering. Modern medicine has sought to triumph over disease and death. The hospice and palliative care movements came as an answer to medicine’s triumphalistic denial of death. The goal of hospice at the outset was to return dying and death to the community, taking it away from the sterile medical environment. Palliative care has sought to bring some of the care measures of hospice back into the hospital.

With hospice and palliative care, we have acquiesced to the finitude of human life, but we are lacking in a unified ethic to offer blessing and hope.  The ancient prayer of the church had been to prevent sudden and unexpected death (having time to prepare), whereas the common wish today is to die quietly in one’s sleep.

Dr. Nash suggested that the way to move forward is by way of informed respect along with the acceptance of life’s finitude and medicine’s limitations. Informed respect takes into account the patient’s belief system as well as that of that of the healthcare provider.  Such attitudes would lead to a pluralistic palliative medicine.

Dr. H. Tristam Engelhardt, whose background is in medical ethics and philosophy, then proceeded to give a sweeping picture of the history of thought and philosophy in western civilization. Our problem today, he summarized, is that there is no one canonical secular morality that is agreed upon. Many issues have been de-moralized and deflated.  For instance, one may ask which society seems better when comparing cultures.  Values may be security, liberty, prosperity and health. These ideas could be agreed upon, but different cultures will rank these differently in importance.  Englehart made a good case that “The moral system constructed in the 13th century went belly-up in the 19th century.”  Our society today has deep and incompatible differences, most evident is the fact that people with theistic and atheistic world views live and work side by side.

Rationing, Death Panels, and Healthcare Reform

Jack Nelson, on faculty at the Cumberland School of Law, gave a presentation on healthcare in the U.S. and in the United Kingdom. He succinctly summed up our healthcare dilemma by stating that “Medicare is unsustainable,” and “rationing healthcare for the elderly is political hemlock.”

Kathy Cermina, a professor who teaches health-law-related courses at Nova Southeastern University, gave a presentation on end of life care.  She pointed out how hospice care provides an essential health benefit that is high-value and low cost.  Many do not enter into hospice care until they have only days to live. She effectively made a case for a system that would allow for concurrent care thus granting patients and families opportunity to receive the benefits of hospice earlier.

Enhancing Autonomy: Protecting Patients from Conflicted and Coercive Healthcare

Elizabeth Kvale is a board certified physician in Family Practice and Hospice and Palliative Medicine, currently doing research in palliative medicine at UAB.  She spoke of the importance of autonomy to physicians, the need for health literacy, and problems when there is a conflict of interests in decision-making and healthcare delivery. She stated that palliative care enables autonomy by prioritizing according to the patient’s values, clarifying options, increasing health literacy, and being oriented around the patient and family.

During discussion time one interesting concept that was mentioned was the millet system, whereby under the Ottoman Empire, the ethnic groups within the empire (Muslim, Jewish, and Christian) could each operate under their own legal system. In discussing how different groups within our current pluralistic society coalesce around the common values of their particular group, some comparison was made to the millet system under the old Ottoman rule.

Another vital point that was made in discussion was that one thing we can all do to help facilitate end of life care in a way that we would consider humane and in accordance with our beliefs and values is to have advanced directives. Most of us have an idea of what our wishes are concerning end of life care, but so few of us have actually taken the time to put those in a legal document.

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The symposium certainly provided important information on aspects of healthcare and end of life care. It also raised some important questions of how we can bring meaning to our living and dying in the modern world.  Here are some other sources online that you may find interesting:

Death and Budgets by David Brooks 

Thank God for Death, by Michael Dowd 

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Wendell Berry on Eternity




Here’s a poem about eternity by Wendell Berry.  I have heard entire lectures about the nature of eternity, and about how the Greek term for eternal life in the New Testament scriptures might have more to do with quality of life than length of life.  I have not heard it stated more clearly or concisely than in this poem.


Eternity is not infinity.
It is not a long time.
It does not begin at the end of time.
It does not run parallel to time.
In its entirety it always was.
In its entirety it will always be.                                                        
It is entirely present always.

From Leavings, by Wendell Berry


(Photo by Charles Kinnaird)