For your consideration: two stories, from opposite sides of the world, concerning the attitude of Power toward those who would question its wisdom:
GI's mental health questioned in WikiLeaks case (AP)
China accused of holding woman in mental hospital for challenging officials (Guardian)
The GI in question is, of course, Bradley Manning, the young soldier charged with leaking the video of American gunships killing civilians in Iraq, and suspected of involvement in passing thousands of war-related secret documents to Wikileaks.
Manning has been quoted by friends (and the false friend who betrayed him to the authorities) about his motives for his actions. He has said quite plainly that he wanted to show the American people the true nature of the hideous Terror War operations being carried out around the world by their government -- "incredible things, awful things." One of his genuine friends said: "He wanted to do the right thing." Concerning the video of the gunship atrocity, the friend, who had been in contact with Manning, said: "He didn't want to do this just to cause a stir". He wanted people held accountable and wanted to see this didn't happen again."
These motives are entirely clear, understandable, and imminently sane. In fact, Manning's actions reflect a mind far more healthy and stable than the diseased brains in charge of the War Machine, who compulsively, continually distort reality to an extreme, pathological degree in order to justify -- to others and, presumably, to themselves -- their own murderous, brutal depravity.
There are also some practical considerations at play here, of course. If Manning were to be declared criminally insane, he could be locked up indefinitely, right away -- no need for a messy trial that might cause more embarrassments for our imperial minders.
In any case, it's good for the prosecutors -- or shall we say, the persecutors -- of Bradley Manning to have the "nuthouse option" in hand among the vast array of "legal" weaponry they are bringing to bear against the young man. And even if the matter proceeds to trial, these stories about Manning's "shaky mental health" will help immunize any unseemly testimony he might give in the dock. Official shoulders will merely shrug at new revelations: "Well, what do you expect? He's crazy, isn't he? He'll say anything." And the corporate media will doubtless shrug along with them.
As the Guardian notes, the Chinese elite -- following the model of the old Soviet Union in its later years -- take the same approach to troublemakers:
They snatched Liao Meizhi on her birthday, dragging her off the street and into a dirty blue van as others held back her husband.
It was only two months later, when a stranger knocked on the door, that her family learned where she had been taken. The man said he had just been discharged from a nearby mental hospital and that Liao was being held there against her will. Her husband insists she has no psychiatric problems ...
Researchers believe she is among a growing number of people wrongly detained in psychiatric institutions after clashing with local officials. One activist has compiled a database of more than 500 such cases.
Some victims have been held for a decade. Those freed describe being forcibly treated with electro-convulsive therapy and powerful anti-psychotic drugs for health problems they never had.
"In the last few years you have been seeing more and more cases involving petitioners and whistle blowers 'the awkward squad' [often when] the authorities have tried other punishments or sanctions to make them stop and nothing else has worked," said Robin Munro, author of China's Psychiatric Inquisition and a research associate at SOAS law school. "Finally they really try to scare them to hell by putting them in mental hospitals."
Well, it worked for Jose Padilla, the American citizen snatched, without
charges, on American soil, and held, without charges, for years, while being subjected to mind-breaking tortures for
his alleged terrorist activities. The charges against him began with
dramatically broadcast claims of nuclear terrorism aimed at the US and
ended with the broken man's conviction on lesser charges of aiding
foreign groups involved in foreign conflicts, far from American shores.
Yet even here, the judge in the case declared that "there was no
evidence linking [Padilla] to specific acts of terrorism anywhere or
that their actions had resulted in death or injury to anyone" -- even as
she handed the torture victim a 17-year prison sentence, as Winter Patriot reports.
Manning will perhaps escape the extremities of torture doled out to
Padilla; he has at least been formally charged and has access to legal
counsel -- something denied to Padilla for years during this torment.
But make no mistake: the depraved minds in charge of our morally insane
empire seek to break him, one way or another -- as an example to us all.