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           |  | With Predator Drones, Warfare has Reached a 
	  Psychotic Stage
 
 By Paul Balles
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 23, 2012   Fighting the Vampire Within
 Murder is not an anomaly in war 
	  - Chris Hedges
 
 Early warriors massed on bloody battlefields 
	  with everything from sticks and screams to swords, bows and arrows, 
	  muskets and cannons. That scene remained both disgusting and ridiculous.
 
 The grim reaper heard the call of wild, raging bloodthirsty troops 
	  who could never get enough of head-slicing swords and cannon fodder.
 
 If that description of what goes on in battle is heinous and upsetting, 
	  waken to the reality that we encourage at a distance, nourish and sponsor 
	  and celebrate when the young--willingly sacrificed--return in body bags 
	  for burial.
 
 It's not only the buried dead who rattle the Gatling 
	  guns of our souls. Listen to the unforgiving voice of ex war correspondent 
	  Chris Hedges:
 
 If we really saw war, what war does to young minds 
	  and bodies, it would be impossible to embrace the myth of war. If we had 
	  to stand over the mangled corpses of schoolchildren killed in Afghanistan 
	  and listen to the wails of their parents, we would not be able to repeat 
	  clichés we use to justify war.
 
 Warfare has now reached the 
	  psychotic stage of comfortable blood-letting at a distance with remote 
	  controlled predator drones.
 
 Comments Glenn Greenwald, "The 
	  military slang for a man killed by a drone strike is 'bug splat', since 
	  viewing the body through a grainy-green video image gives the sense of an 
	  insect being crushed."
 
 How psychotic it is when a warrior sits 
	  comfortably at a computer guiding an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) 
	  hundreds of miles from his target to a "bug splat".
 
 Instead of 
	  growing up, maturing after centuries of mass murders at the whim and fancy 
	  of bloodthirsty madmen, we satisfy our murderous desires at a safe 
	  distance from the exploding bodies that splat like bugs!
 
 America's 
	  drones are nothing more than a clever attempt to distance America's 
	  vampires from their bloody victims.
 
 In the past decade 30 
	  countries have been involved in one kind of war or another--from America's 
	  wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to separatist movements, civil unrest, 
	  insurgencies and uprisings, religious and ethnic conflicts.
 
 After 
	  WWII, the United Nations was founded to avoid further catastrophic wars. 
	  But there have been more conflicts in the world since the founding of the 
	  UN than during any previous period in history.
 
 In any war, 
	  nightmarish atrocities become commonplace. People get used to hiding and 
	  running in fear, to refugee camps, secretly hating the blood-letting 
	  violators of decency.
 
 “War is always about betrayal," says 
	  Hedges, "betrayal of the young by the old, of idealists by cynics and of 
	  troops by politicians.”
 
 Those who bleed, those who bear 
	  excruciating pain, and those who struggle to take their last breath have 
	  all been betrayed.
 
 As Hedges reminds us, “The violence of war is 
	  random. It does not make sense. And many of those who struggle with loss 
	  also struggle with the knowledge that the loss was futile and 
	  unnecessary.”
 
 That the people of 30 countries continue to struggle 
	  with the futility of war doesn't seem to faze any but a few idealists with 
	  no control over their own fate, much less that of others.
 
 Unable 
	  to control their bloodletting urges, America, Iran and Israel are sabre-rattling 
	  to prepare for yet more murder and maiming sessions of missile madness.
 
 Netanyahu's government reserves the right to strike directly at 
	  Iran if it doesn't believe Washington and others are doing enough--through 
	  diplomacy or sanctions--to stop it going nuclear.
 
 When are we 
	  going to reach the stage where useful energy replaces the vampire within 
	  and empathy replaces violence?
   
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