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Apparently the new "ethics refresher course" at the White
House is going to focus on reminding White House staff that classified information
is not supposed to be told to reporters.
Ethics Part 2, to be taught in the Spring, will delve into the appropriateness
of endangering the life of a woman and her colleagues because you're pissed
off at her husband.
Those who opt for Graduate Level ethics refreshment will study the question
of whether anger is justifiable if the object of that anger is guilty only of
exposing you as a fraud and a liar.
And PhD candidates will be required to address the eternal enigma involved
in the question: Is it morally good to aggressively attack another nation if
you tell a bunch of lies about it first?
Students will be required to pay all library fines and parking tickets and
hand in completed applications for presidential pardons prior to graduation.
There will be an extra charge to have Ashcroft pour vegetable oil on you.
Seriously, who in the hell are they kidding? Themselves?
This is not ethics. Of course, neither would in-depth regurgitation of Aristotle
or Kant or Bentham or Moses for that matter do these people any good. If anything
did them any good in the way of ethics, they'd resign and no longer work for
the Bush White House. Bush would have refreshered himself right out of a staff.
But the fact is that ethical education is not refreshment. It does not return
you to a comfortable state of familiar platitudes. Useful ethical education
makes the student ill at ease with previously accepted situations.
If I were designing an ethics course for White House staff, I would begin with
a viewing of and discussion of some of these images
of the victims of the war on Iraq:
Then I would play aloud this
audio recording of Beatrice Salvador telling the story of her nephew, who
was killed in the war as a U.S. soldier.
I would continue in this vein until the stories of the collateral damage and
the supported troops became real. I would ask the students to research, to meet
with families, and to write up at least two new stories of victims of the war,
at least one of them Iraqi. I would be looking for an understanding of suffering.
Then I would ask them to study any of the infinite pieces of rhetoric, new
and old, from rulers sending soldiers to war. You know the stuff: sacrifice,
last resort, war for peace, agonizing decision, no choice, humility. I would
especially focus on humility. I would ask the students to give examples of what
humility sounds like, and of what arrogance sounds like.
Then we would listen to this audio
compilation of Bush and Company lying about the need for war.
Eventually we would discuss the merits of the decision to go to war and the
decision to lie about the justification for it.
Upon completion of the course, students would either resign or agree
to display the 10 Commandments on the door to their office. I would bring a
supply of framed prints of the 10 Commandments, the King George Version:
1. Don't listen to nobody else when Karl ain't around.
2. Don't get too attached to stuff, cause you can always buy another
one.
3. Don't talk back to Karl.
4. Never work on a Sunday. This rule is not to be construed as in
any way stipulating a requirement to work on any particular day or days that
is not or are not Sundays.
5. Honor thy father and thy mother besides they don't NEED Social
Security.
6. Thou shalt not kill but it's OK to force poor people to kill and
be killed if it helps the corporations and if you don't let anyone see the
bodies.
7. Thou shalt not dirty the White House like Clinton!
8. Thou shalt not steal unless you let the European corporations
have a little too.
9. Thou shalt not bear false witness unless it helps you start a
war.
10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's oil or public resources unless
your neighbor is a Muslim or your campaign funding is on the line.