“YOU can always tell when something bad has happened involving a follower of the Islamic faith. The big hint is that Islam isn’t mentioned”, Tim Blair writes. Instead, Tim notes that the legacy media have so twisted their pre-existing narrative for Nidal Hasan’s motives into a pretzel — hold the logic — so convoluted that they’ve had to invent a new malady: pre-post traumatic stress disorder:
The [Australian Broadcasting Corporation's] first significant report on the atrocity, presented at midday on Friday by Washington correspondent Lisa Millar, avoided any mention of the killer’s faith beyond references to his “family background”.
Somehow, Millar kept this up for nearly eight minutes. With those dodging skills, you’d back her to emerge bone dry after walking the entire length of a car wash.
By this stage, we already knew, via US television interviews with the killer’s cousin, that Hasan was “a pious lifelong Muslim”.
This minor point was quickly shoved aside by force of media consensus, which quickly settled on another, apparently more obvious, cause of Hasan’s deadly rage.
“A link to PTSD?” asked the Minneapolis Star Tribune. “Thursday’s deadly rampage raises a red flag over the issue of combat stress.
“The most common disorder linked to combat stress is post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which can develop after exposure to one or more traumatic events that threatened or caused great physical harm.”
Media worldwide grabbed hold of this helpful non-Islamic excuse with the same gasping desperation as a chain- smoking asthmatic reaching for his Ventolin inhaler.
One small problem: Major Hasan hadn’t spent a single millisecond in combat. Instead, he’d been based for his whole military career in the US, where lately he counselled troops returning from combat. He had no traumatic stress to be post of.
This technicality was dismissed by London’s Guardian newspaper, which invented a malady: post-traumatic stress disorder by proxy.
“Someone listening day after day to troops describing the tension and carnage in Iraq and Afghanistan could end up as damaged as those facing combat at first hand,” the Guardian claimed.
This is an interesting theory, especially considering Hasan had been in that role only since July.
Agence France-Presse signed on to it, too, reporting that Fort Hood was rife with speculation “as to whether the alleged shooter had snapped under the pressure of his job counselling thousands of war-weary troops”.
I don’t buy that for one minute, unless the report refers to certain journalists gathered at Fort Hood. Soldiers tend to be more sensible.
All of this served to minimise, for whatever timid purpose, the possible role of Hasan’s religion. Sadly for trauma theorists, his history of agitated Islamism soon began to seep through the media filter.
Read the whole thing — and don’t miss the punch line of Tim’s article, which a reminder that it is indeed the 21st century.





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4 Comments
1. Tweets that mention Ed Driscoll ยป You Down With PPTSD? -- Topsy.com:[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Ed Driscoll, dualdiagnosis. dualdiagnosis said: RT @EdDriscoll: You down w/ PPTSD?: YOU can always tell when somethng bad has happend involvng a followr of .. http://bit.ly/3C2pGv #p2 [...]
Nov 9, 2009 - 2:15 am 2. furious:As if the chain of command weren’t enough under scrutiny for their failure to protect their troops from this ticking bomb…
…what if the failure to act earlier were the result of Maj. Hasan actually being under surveillance for his activities, and the investigators didn’t want to roll him up too soon before he enabled them to connect more dots?
The steady flow of firm facts about his activities and behavior indicates these aren’t new discoveries, but part of some dossier built over time.
The NYC tunnel bombers, the Fort Dix Six, both investigations were allowed to play out until at/near the time the perpetrators were ready to act. Hopefully Sen. Lieberman’s Senate hearnings will dig deep and either confirm or disprove the above speculation.
Nov 9, 2009 - 10:34 am 3. Joe Hooker:Really. I have no doubt that John Wilkes Booth did what he did because of the stress of the war and because he was taunted for his pro-Confederate beliefs. Ideology had nothing to do with that bullet in Abe’s head.
Nov 9, 2009 - 1:52 pm 4. Unsupervised:I work at an Army hospital. We just today had “provider resiliance” training. In that (and it was written, I’m sure, prior to the attack at Ft Hood). In it, we were told that working with the badly wounded (or just a bunch of wounded/injured/sick people) can really drag you down, all the way to depression or other mental problems (paranoia being one of them). It also “taught” us that you COULD get PTSD-like symptoms by working with those with PTSD. (I guess I can also get high cholesterol by watching you eat a big Mac.)
But, take a look at http://www.behavioralhealth.army.mil/prt/index.html
(there’s even a quiz).
For an article, there’s http://www.army.mil/-news/2008/12/02/14683-program-helps-bolster-resilience-of-military-health-care-providers/
note that it goes back to 2008. Other refs from a quickie internet search go back at least to 2005.
But it still looks like snake oil to me.
Nov 9, 2009 - 5:13 pm