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LETTERS
VIVISECT
THYSELF
Your
most recent article on the Regional Primate Center ("Monkey in the
Middle," March 21, 2001) has convinced me that at least one form
of primate research needs to go forward. We need to answer the question
of what drives certain Homo sapiens to incarcerate, inflict
pain on, and otherwise experiment on sentient creatures not unlike
themselves. We also need to better understand how such behavior
is rationalized.
Claude Bernard,
regarded as the father of modern physiology, cut up living dogs
in his pursuit of knowledge. He explained that as a "man of science
(he is) absorbed by the scientific idea which he pursues; he no
longer hears the cry of animals, he no longer sees the blood that
flows, he sees only his idea and perceives only organisms concealing
problems which he intends to solve."
Alfred North
Whitehead called this deafness and blindness the "fallacy of misplaced
concretism"--abstractions become more important than flesh and blood.
In common language, it's alienation. This psychological disorder
allows many of us to commit all sorts of acts, from pulling the
wings off flies to genocide, and to justify it because living things
(human or not) are seen not as subjects with their own intrinsic
value, but as objects--and we can do what we want with objects.
The researchers
at the Primate Center could usefully focus on trying to answer some
questions about this disorder:
*Is this estrangement
from and lack of respect for life the same in animal researchers
as it is in the military commanders who experimented with nuclear
weapons on live human subjects during the Cold War? Is it the same
in those who experimented on live human subjects in Germany in the
'30s and '40s? Is it the same in those who seek to eradicate wild
animals to make the world "safe" for domestic livestock? Is it the
same for those engaged in factory farming?
*What are the
origins of this alienation? Lack of adequate nurture in childhood?
Or is it, as some have argued, a tendency that exists in humans
because it confers apparent power over things, and is highly rewarded
in our society with lots of material toys? If the latter is the
case, then we need to ask whether the treatment of animals is primarily
institutionally driven, with profit- or power-seeking organizations
simply taking advantage of the alienated to do their dirty work.
*Can this disease
be controlled or treated with drugs or other forms of therapy such
as electro-shock? Or do we need to take a structural approach, exploring
how to put a much tighter leash on the institutions that make money
from inflicting pain?
In the interim,
we should determine whether people or institutions afflicted with
this disorder, given their propensities to inflict injury and rationalize
it, should be allowed near animals, children or other creatures
unable to defend themselves.
Of course, it's
unlikely that researchers at the primate center will be able to
answer these questions by studying rhesus monkeys. They'll need
to look in the mirror and to each other.
David Johns
Southwest
Mill Street
YELLING FIRE
IN A COLLAPSING THEATER
Gee,
I wonder how many facts you left out of your story ["Shaky Ground,"
March 21, 2001]? All one has to do is read today's Oregonian
to get a little more info on how many buildings have been upgraded
since that list of 1,800 was created in the early '90s. And if you
have a second to do a little more investigating, you will find that
the state/county/city governments have a great post-earthquake evaluation/emergency
response system.
I hate this
kind of journalism--you skim the facts, inflame the flammable and
then hide out. You are not doing the public any good at all with
this kind of flaky journalism. In fact, worse, you are contributing
to public paranoia and distrust in government. You need to do some
more real investigating to find out what's really going on, correct
the right facts and develop some kind of moral code before you continue
to sling bad information. I wonder how many people you will be responsible
for misinforming (with deadly consequences) before you get a spine.
You know you have an opportunity to do some real good for the community;
why don't you do it?
Marina Wynton
Bainbridge
Design Inc.
Southwest
Washington Street
News Editor
John Schrag responds: I agree that the article should have
included an estimate of the number of unreinforced masonry buildings
(URMs) that have been upgraded since the list was compiled (approximately
200). But the fact remains that the vast majority of the city's
URMs have not been upgraded, nor has the city made any effort to
warn residents of buildings at risk of collapse in a major quake.
Despite her
vertebracentric slur to the contrary, this particular bit of flaky
journalism involved two WW investigators, three weeks of
research, dozens of interviews and thousands of pages of seismic
analysis. We arrived at our list of seven featured buildings--none
of which have been upgraded--after reviewing and rejecting hundreds
of others. Ms. Wynton accuses us of stoking paranoia, but the truth
is that, while big quakes very seldom occur, they can inflict catastrophic
damage on older buildings.
RAVE REVIEW
I
would like to thank you for your article about the rave culture
in WW ["The Agony and the Ecstasy," March 14, 2001]. As a
young person who has been deeply engrossed in and dedicated to the
electronic music scene for a number of years now, I have become
increasingly disgusted with the local media's response to our community's
ups and downs. Both local television and newspapers alike have turned
their backs on reality in favor of a more raw, dramatic story to
tell those who are curious about what goes on inside warehouses
at night. While drug use is a reality at raves (just as it often
is wherever kids gather in droves), I have yet to see an article
or a newscast admit the less-than-shocking truth: Many kids go to
raves to see old friends and meet new ones, get a good dose of their
favorite artists, and avoid the drugs that are blackening our reputation
all across the country.
It is a heartbreaking
tragedy that Peter Vu and Melissa Flaherty had to make the choices
they made that eventually led to their deaths. But it is also tragic
that these recent deaths have to define our scene. It enrages me
time and again that this burgeoning stereotype about ravers being
drug-addled freaks is based on negligent and irresponsible media
reporting. I want to thank you for doing your job by presenting
the facts as they are, instead of crafting a hyped-up version of
the truth that is sure to cause a frenzy. Did Melissa Flaherty die
of an ecstasy overdose? We don't know, and we may never know. Thank
you for dispelling the rumors, and for the special piece on the
Temple of Sound. ToS exemplifies why many of us are involved in
this scene to begin with: We love the music and are deeply moved
by it, we love the atmosphere, and we love each other.
Please keep
the straightforward, well-researched articles coming. It is a refreshing
change of pace to read an article about rave culture and not feel
belittled by the hype.
Sarah Leimert
Northeast
Clackamas Street
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