The Lucifer Effect by Philip Zimbardo  

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A Curious Aside: A Masked Abu Ghraib Guard

mong the hundreds of photos taken by American Military Police Reserves at Abu Ghraib documenting their abuse of prisoners is one that the media ignored but that I found fascinating. It is of a male guard on the night shift in Tier 1-A, where the primary violence occurred. He is standing inside a prison cell next to an attractive female soldier. He is wearing a Harley Davidson biker cap, and his face is a fully painted in an intricate silver and black design. That facial mask is fashioned in the style of an infamous Detroit hard-core metal/rap band, "Insane Clown Posse." Unique about this group is that their live performances are notorious for featuring fires, chainsaws and simulated violence. Their music is full of murder fantasies, necrophilia, sadistic violence against women, and worse in their "carnival of carnage." There is no evidence that this self-induced anonymity was anything more than a Halloween caper, but it speaks to the breakdown in military discipline among guards in that unit while on tier duty. One can also imagine the reaction of Iraqi detainees at the sight of one of their captors in such a frightening mask. Curiously, some features of this mask are comparable to that depicted by novelist William Golding’s Lord of the Flies in the painted mask on Jack Merridew. all to hell where we are that would be a great revenge against God.”



©2006-2008, Philip G. Zimbardo



About the Book
Overview
Preface
Acknowledgements
Chapter List
Illustration List
Quotations
Subject Index
Additional Content
Book Reviews
Book Endorsements
Reader Feedback
Favorite Passages
Reference List on Evil

About the Movie

About Phil Zimbardo

Stanford Prison Experiment

Celebrating Heroism

Resisting Influence

Dehumanization

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Faces of the Enemy
What does it take for the citizens of one society to hate the citizens of another society to the degree that they want to segregate them, torment them, even to kill them? It requires a ‘hostile imagination,’ a psychological construction embedded deeply in their minds by propaganda that transforms those others into “The Enemy.”

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