Names, Places and Moral Things

SCREENED REAPER

How does one reconcile the execution of individuals placed on a secret “kill list” with a national foundational narrative based in the rule of law?

Answer: Black it out. If the obliterated are nameless ciphers from nowhere, then they have no defined existential standing. That makes their outlaw execution a mere technical problem, easily solved by operators stroking keyboards, safely insulated from the imminent carnage.

In the below video, Medea Benjamin of Code Pink disrupts a proclamation by the principle architect of drone assassinations, John Brennan. As Ms. Benjamin gives voice to the names of killed civilians and their families, a large male officer in a “police” vest, wearing the latex gloves that would appear to signify that dissent is now classified as contamination, carries her out of sight while she affirms her love for both country and constitution. Before the door slams shut, she manages to deliver one last sentence to the dronemaster : Shame on you!

The spirit of tyranny thrives in darkness and secrecy: black sites, silence, rendition, redaction and anonymity. Hence the significance of dronestagram, a project initiated by writer James Bridle that synthesizes Google map images with the extensive data base of drone strikes compiled by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism.

By erasing names on kill lists and obliterating the built reality of specific places that are attached to the names, drones are essentially a weapon of disappearance. The idea of “disappearing” political opposition developed in the course of the Argentine Dirty War; the mothers of the disappeared refused to accept erasure and oblivion, and testified to the humanity of their sons and daughters in the Plaza de Mayo. In time, the architects of disappearance received a degree of justice, themselves named as war criminals. Will the architects of drone assassination eventually meet with a similar fate?

EVERY VICTIM HAS A MOTHER            AND A NAME

In a past DP post, we discussed certain philosophical weakness in the arguments of Bradley Strawser, who has since clarified his views in the pages of the Guardian:

We are grateful for Mr. Strawser’s clarification, and we certainly agree that the primary discussion must be whether or not the mission is just, a discussion yet to be convened in any public forum. Why is this? Who benefits from this silence?

Mr. Strawser refers to Augustine, who also wrote  (DP editorial emphasis added): “The natural order, which is suited to the peace of moral things, requires that the authority and deliberation for undertaking war be under the control of a leader.

For Augustine, the leader was God’s divine representative, as embodied by the Emperor; in a constitutional republic, the appropriate body would be the congress of elected representatives. The absence of any such legitimate control thereby violates the peace of moral things, as lethal weapons suddenly descend from the heavens, to shatter lives and livelihoods.

Finally, we note that Mr. Bridle’s brave and timely dronestagrams would not be possible without the valuable research performed by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, linked below:


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