07-09-2013, 05:33 AM
So I've come across a video which intrigues me for a very particular reason. In the video rapper/actor Yasiin Bey (formerly Mos Def) agrees to undergo a forced nasal gastric feeding which is supposed to be the identical procedure used on Guantanamo inmates who are on hunger strike.
Many people in the comments section of Youtube and the Huffington Post seem to think that Mr. Definitely is overreacting. Many do not. The video (created by The Guardian) is certainly designed, filmed and edited in such a fashion as to provoke an intense emotional response from the viewer as it shows the cruelty and inhumanity of such a procedure.
I'm not sure where I stand. Let me also be clear, this has nothing to do with politics (though I'm sure this thread will head that way in oh... two posts maybe? Once that happens I will most likely stop contributing for I am dumb. But please don't let that stop you, by all means).
I don't know if Mos Def's response is over dramatized or not. My guess is that it is not. If it is, then he deserves an oscar.
However, in other simulated torture scenarios, there is always a safe word or some other type of signal, like dropping weights as a sign to stop. In this video, Def just screams stop repeatedly until they take him seriously, which seems a crap safe word to me.
Another thing that gives me some doubt is that I have put tubes in my nose everyday of life and I can't quite imagine someone reacting quite this violently. Mos Def wasn't really "forced," he went there specifically to experience it. Obviously they are handling him roughly as they would a real detainee, and that's enough to panic anyone... but I don't know.
Does anyone thing there's a chance that Mos Def was putting on a bit of a show? I mean, if he didn't then all that time and energy would be wasted. It'd be terrible if he said, "you know, that wasn't so bad. I don't know what everyone's so upset about."
Let me be clear again, I am not stating any political opinion, but if I had to I'd say whether the procedure is traumatizing or not, I think the force feeding of prisoners on strike is cruel psychologically if not strictly physically.
What do y'all think?
Many people in the comments section of Youtube and the Huffington Post seem to think that Mr. Definitely is overreacting. Many do not. The video (created by The Guardian) is certainly designed, filmed and edited in such a fashion as to provoke an intense emotional response from the viewer as it shows the cruelty and inhumanity of such a procedure.
I'm not sure where I stand. Let me also be clear, this has nothing to do with politics (though I'm sure this thread will head that way in oh... two posts maybe? Once that happens I will most likely stop contributing for I am dumb. But please don't let that stop you, by all means).
I don't know if Mos Def's response is over dramatized or not. My guess is that it is not. If it is, then he deserves an oscar.
However, in other simulated torture scenarios, there is always a safe word or some other type of signal, like dropping weights as a sign to stop. In this video, Def just screams stop repeatedly until they take him seriously, which seems a crap safe word to me.
Another thing that gives me some doubt is that I have put tubes in my nose everyday of life and I can't quite imagine someone reacting quite this violently. Mos Def wasn't really "forced," he went there specifically to experience it. Obviously they are handling him roughly as they would a real detainee, and that's enough to panic anyone... but I don't know.
Does anyone thing there's a chance that Mos Def was putting on a bit of a show? I mean, if he didn't then all that time and energy would be wasted. It'd be terrible if he said, "you know, that wasn't so bad. I don't know what everyone's so upset about."
Let me be clear again, I am not stating any political opinion, but if I had to I'd say whether the procedure is traumatizing or not, I think the force feeding of prisoners on strike is cruel psychologically if not strictly physically.
What do y'all think?