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Showing posts with label Will war end?. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will war end?. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

CHAPTER FIVE. HOW WE WILL BECOME THE DOCTORS WHO HEAL OURSELVES




Written by: Rick Staggenborg, MD on May 25, 2009 9:07 AM PDT



What motivates people to work for change is the awareness that we have the power to make the world a better place if we put our minds to it and spend our time working for the betterment of everyone. The most effective agents of this change realize our interconnectedness and try to order our efforts to maximize the effectiveness of our labor. 

The Internet has been a powerful tool in this regard. It can serve to isolate those who do not recognize that the only real purpose worth valuing is to work for the benefit of mankind, but overall its effect has been positive. Our attitude is not altruism, but the simple recognition that since we are all connected, our actions ultimately benefit ourselves and those who we love. 

If we take the time to care for each other, it is not only satisfying but multiplies our own pleasure as we see the effects of our efforts making the lives of both ourselves and others easier and less painful. Our intent is to do the same for those who do not see the caring for of others as their duty and even if they do not appreciate that it is our intent to make their lives better. It is important that we keep this in mind and respect those who disagree with us as we strive to open their minds to new possibilities. 

We must listen to those who see the world differently as well. It is important to emphasize our common goals as we discuss how to move forward together into a more just and secure future for our children. We must respect the ideas and values of others even if we disagree if we want them to be  more receptive to our own ideas. It is critical to remember that we are all more alike than otherwise and it is these commonalities that make us human. 

By approaching the task of healing America with respect and civility, we accelerate the process. We cannot afford to continue to use a conflict model to resolve what has become a very uncivil war if we want to solve the problems while there is still time to save the United States from economic and moral destruction. While our Congress excuses its every failure to put the interests of the People of the United States over those of their corporate patrons, other problems threaten the survival of human civilization as we know it.



Effective doctors have many essential qualities. They must have empathy, analytic ability, willingness to listen, good communication skills and above all, a single minded dedication to the patient. To apply these skills, doctors must be willing to dedicate themselves to the task of becoming familiar with the scientific evidence for the causes and treatments of the ills to which humans are subject. 

It takes all of the energy of the effective doctor to help our increasingly ill and undertreated patients. When the problem outstrips our knowledge of proper treatment, the doctor must apply skillful listening and active observation, then apply deductive skills to use their knowledge base to solve the problems of the individual patient.

At some point the question becomes, who is the patient? To be most effective, the doctor must be physically and psychologically healthy to withstand the pressures of the job. Like the familiar warning that adults must put on their own oxygen masks in an airplane decompression before attempting to assist others, we must first attend to our own needs, whatever they may be. 

Fortunately, this is easy when the doctor enjoys the work. When this happens it does not seem like work at all, but becomes pure pleasure. This does not mean that we are indifferent to the pain and suffering of our charges. The doctor must learn early on that at this stage in the history of medicine, we cannot save every individual patient. The heartache of our failures spurs us on to ever greater efforts to improve the effectiveness of our methods.

Once we understand how to prepare ourselves for this awesome responsibility, we turn our attention fully to the patient before us. In the case of non-physicians, the patient is mankind. To address the illnesses of contemporary society, we must become lay doctors who can apply the art and science of modern medicine to social ills. 

The first step is to develop a problem list. The doctor then attempts to narrow this list to a set of likely diagnoses. This requires deciding which problems are manifestations of the same underlying cause, and formulating a treatment plan to address each of the derangements of the body’s systems. The treatment approach needs to be carefully considered so that its elements complement each other, rather than causing so many side effects that the treatment is worse than the illness.

With all this in mind, we are now prepared to formulate an action plan to maximize the good we can accomplish for our patient, who is all of us. I will now share with you my proposed treatment plan, developed in consultation with hundreds of other doctors, physicians and non-physicians alike. It is based on an understanding that the sequence of treatment interventions is critically important when operating on such a sick patient, all of whose problems are interrelated. Only by utilizing a holistic approach can we hope to be most effective in the daunting task of treating our critically ill patient.

I propose that we use a system based approach. We must treat the most life threatening problems first, while simultaneously supporting the patient by strengthening its defenses against disease. I suggest that we begin by focusing on restoring to health the democratic system that our Revolutionary forefathers gave birth to so long ago. 

In those days, birth was a very dangerous experience. The life expectancy of nascent democracies was limited, most previous attempts having died young. While our Republic has survived to adolescence, it is like the cystic fibrosis patient who is not expected to live beyond young adulthood despite our best efforts, due to a genetic defect which we have not learned to cure.

Eventually, cystic fibrosis patients must be maintained on oxygen as their lungs succumb to the ravages of the disease. It is tragic, and one of modern medicine's greatest challenges. What a breakthrough it would be if these patients could be made to breathe life-giving fresh air and live healthy, full lives for the allotted fourscore and ten or more that most of us take for granted.

I can only outline the basic treatment approach in this brief progress note. I will try to summarize its elements here and expand upon them in future entries. Remember, this is only a preliminary treatment plan, subject to revision after careful consideration of the effects of the initial interventions. The rational physician must always take into account that we are only humans, and sometimes we must trust in forces greater than ourselves to help us save the patient.

If we succeed in restoring the democratic system to health, our patient will be able to withstand the stressful and sometimes dangerous interventions we must make in our attempts at cure. The treatment consists of cutting out the corruption by corporate money of our increasingly partisan Congress. The process will be painful to politicians and their partisan supporters who do not accept this as an inescapable part of the treatment. Like a pregnant patient terrified of the birth process, they will find that the rebirth of democracy will only be made more painful to them if they struggle against the inevitable.

Once the patient that is America is stabilized by a transfusion of democracy we can turn our attention to the critical problem of maintaining thermoregulatory homeostasis. In layman’s terms, this means that we have to address global climate instability. In doing so, we must intervene on a global level that some fear may require shock treatment to restore the healthy pulse of the global economy. However, more holistic thinkers realize that transforming our energy economy to a more stable system of sustainable, nonpolluting and decentralized production and distribution is the optimal course of treatment for this problem.

The heart of the economy has been damaged by the viral illness of unrestrained greed, amplified by the inhuman growth factor of globalization and a market that is anything but free. The heart of the global economy has been weakened by this virus and will never return to its former functioning. 

Like the patient who has survived viral cardiomyopathy, the only cure is transplant. This is futile however, if the virus cannot be held in check. There does not seem to be a cure in sight for viral infections, but we have learned to control them. The senseless suffering and premature deaths of early AIDS patients was not entirely in vain, for we began to address our societal homophobia and developed treatment to address this scourge, which was initially thought to only affect gays. 

As we carry out our treatment, we must not neglect to assure that it is available to everyone, through a system of truly universal health care which is the only treatment for our ailing health care system that the weakened heart of the global economy can tolerate. The prescription is single payer health care. This treatment must be made available to all nations. As in the case of the decompressing airplane on which we all travel, the US must assume the role of the adult and put its own oxygen mask on before it can help others.

With the heart of democracy healthy, we will be free to address the underlying cancer that will make all our efforts in vain if not addressed. Humans cannot continue to reproduce exponentially without destroying the source of their sustenance as a cancer eventually outgrows its blood supply. It is clear that this will require radical intervention. 

The surgical treatment is brutal, cutting out large parts of the body to save the rest, while leaving a scarred and functionally damaged patient. The scalpel used would be war, famine, pestilence and disease. If this is the only treatment that we have to offer, then the patient should be informed of his right to euthanasia. The only alternative is to find an effective medical treatment. This is a problem whose solution merits intensive research to find an early cure, before millions more succumb to the disease of unrestrained greed.




Shalom, salaam, peace.


Rick Staggenborg, MD


Physicians for a National Health Plan


Soldiers For Peace International

Sunday, August 30, 2009

CHAPTER NINETY EIGHT. NEXT YEAR, LET’S CELEBRATE INTERDEPENDENCE DAY





Written by: Rick Staggenborg, MD on Jul 5, 2010 2:54 PM PDT





This chapter is based on an editorial I submitted to a number of newspapers today. It is dedicated to Captain Paul K. Chapell, author of The End of War. Like me, he believes that the study of war and the men who fight them can lead to the understanding of how to prevent them. Also like me, he is willing to devote his life to the cause. I salute him sor his continuing service to our nation.



My wife and I decided to kick off the weekend of the Fourth of July by visiting a restaurant where a friend of ours works as a waitress. We were disappointed to see that she was not on duty. When we asked if she was off enjoying the holiday, we were told that she was with her family, privately remembering the son that she lost several years ago in Iraq.

Celebrating was harder for us this year. I have always known that freedom is not free. I did my time in the military, as have many of my family. However, the price I paid was to have my medical school education paid for while enjoying my tour of duty at Tripler Army Medical Center in Honolulu. I did not volunteer to go fight a war in a blazing desert or in a frozen mountain range for reasons I could not understand.

We owe it to our young people to examine the reasons we let these few brave young men and women shoulder the burden that rightfully should be shared by every citizen. We might be more cautious if we knew that our children could be called to fight in these God-forsaken places by our so-called “leaders.” Even if you or I do not have children of an age where they might be called to fight, we should have to bear the financial sacrifice needed to pay for the war, not leave it to this same generation to pay by their sweat as well as blood.

There are many reasons that Americans may choose not to look at the reasons for war. Some are too convinced that there is nothing an average citizen can do. Others do not get accurate information because they are dependent on corporate-controlled media for their national news, who have become virtual stenographers for the White House. Some have children in the wars and do not want to consider the possibility that they are dying not for freedom but for Empire. Other reasons include apathy, fear of being out of step, fear of attack by terrorists or simple loyalty to their Party.

None of these reasons is good enough, however understandable. It is ignorance, apathy and despair that have let our democracy slip away from us and allowed international corporate interests become so powerful that they control the Senate and largely determine who becomes President and to whom he or she will be beholden. With this state of affairs, they also determine when we are going to have a war to advance their interests at the expense of the average American. The shifting series of rationales offered for the Iraq war supports this conclusion, since none of them were based on facts. Sadaam was not engaged in terrorism against the US and there was no reason to be in Iraq except to advance the Empire of international oil interests who will stop at nothing to control access to the oil upon which they and government policies they paid for have kept us dependent.

Next Fourth of July, We could be celebrating our independence from the oil industry. The BP gusher may be the thing that makes this possible. These events are not independent. Every event that affects the oil industry affects the chance they continue to destroy the environment and the endless wars for profit. We have a role in this. Each of us still has the right to vote. It is our responsibility to study the issues and the real reasons we fight wars. They have accomplished little but to increase the number of potential terrorists driven by what we have done in Iraq, Afghanistan and by proxy in Gaza and the West Bank in what was formerly Palestine.

The causes of war are inter-related. We are all interdependent and share the costs of accepting the self-fulfilling prophecy that war is inevitable. We all hope for peace but do little to promote it. We vote our pocket books and base our votes on propaganda paid for by the international corporate interests that tell our Senate when it is time for war. Our children pay the price in blood, sweat and tears for our apathy and lack of faith in a democracy that is endangered because we don’t belive in our power to control our own destiny.

If we want peace, let us start with the assumption that it is possible and work to make that a reality. We can each choose to demand an end to wars of Empire and restore our economy by ending the bondage of depending on oil and an unregulated “free market” global economy that has proven as ruinous to our economy as endless war. I hope that by our next Fourth of July, we will be celebrating our interdependence with our brothers and sisters throughout the world. Perhaps then we will see how to celebrate our independence from the ever-present threat of war.





In the words of Edwin Starr:




War, huh, yeah.
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Uh-huh.


War, huh, yeah.
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Say it again, y'all.


War, huh, good God!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Listen to me.


Ohhh, war, I despise
because it means destruction
of innocent lives.


War means tears
to thousands of mothers' eyes.
When their sons go to fight
and lose their lives.


I said, war, huh!
Good God, y'all.
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Say it again:


War, whoa, Lord!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Listen to me:


War, it ain't nothing
but a heartbreaker.
War, friend only to the undertaker.


Ooooh, war.
It's an enemy to all mankind
The point of war blows my mind.


War has caused unrest
within the younger generation.
Induction then destruction.
Who wants to die?


Aaaaah, war-huh!
Good God y'all,
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Say it, say it, say it!


War, huh!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Listen to me.


War, huh, yeah.
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Uh-huh.


War, huh, yeah!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Say it again y'all.


War, huh, good God!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Listen to me.


War, it ain't nothing but a heartbreaker.
War, it's got one friend,
that's the undertaker.


Ooooh, war has shattered
many a young mans dreams.
Made him disabled, bitter and mean.


Life is much to short and precious
to spend fighting wars these days.
War can't give life,
it can only take it away.


Ooooh, war, huh!
Good God, y'all.
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Say it again.


War, whoa, Lord!
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Listen to me.


War, it ain't nothing but a heartbreaker.
War, friend only to the undertaker.
Peace, love and understanding:
Tell me, is there no place for them today?


They say we must fight to keep our freedom,
but Lord knows there's got to be a better way.


Ooooooh, war, huh!
Good God, y'all.
What is it good for?
You tell me.
Say it, say it, say it, say it....


War, huh!
Good God, y'all.
What is it good for?
Stand up and shout it:
Nothing!






Rick Staggenborg, MD


Coos Bay, Oregon