• _The Forgiven_ (part 2: a related story, and a tribute to _The Last Fac

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 10 00:20:52 2022
    It would also be impossible to think of _The Forgiven_
    without being reminded of a related real-life story.
    7 years ago I was embedded in an NGO in an impoverished
    African nation where our American engineer hit and
    killed a teenager. Driving was always hazardous there;
    there wasn't a single traffic light or a stop sign in
    the country. That was why we had designated local
    drivers. Just days earlier I had cautioned against
    his reckless driving, to no avail. I was in a second
    car and did not see the accident. He was jailed but
    got off due to what might be called as a technicality.

    I liked the team, made up of recent college graduates
    and which could have come out of woke central casting.
    (People who volunteer for such missions were seldom the
    most well-adjusted, middle-of-the-road types, myself
    included.) They had a really hard job, suiting up
    half the day in noisy bio-hazard level 4 labs and
    spending the remaining work hours in a hot, cramped,
    repurposed steel container. Their only entertainment
    was shopping on amazon for things they would not see
    during their tour of duty, and making up conflicts
    to keep boredom at bay. I was the observer/coordinator,
    in reality a glorified clerk and janitor; what they
    did was far more heroic and dangerous.

    But after the accident, I certainly did not admire
    the way they closed rank against the victim's family,
    just like the party-goers do in _The Forgiven_. The
    tropes were so familiar: never calling the victim by
    his name; accusing his family of being greedy.
    A $1000 compensation was eventually offered, just
    like in the film; this was apparently the universal
    "blood money" figure in third world countries. It
    was the cost of a life. The NGO could easily have
    offered ten times as much; my round-trip airfare
    cost them $10,000. For that amount, my only real
    accomplishment was to insist on calling the teen
    by his name in the report I got to write as
    official record-keeper. His name was Hassan.

    You don't need to be super-rich, or a racist, or a
    religious bigot, to dehumanize the Other. Survival
    instincts and natural group dynamics will do that
    nicely. The film that captures this world perfectly
    is Sean Penn's _The Last Face_, a fictionalized
    story about my favorite charity "Doctors without
    Borders." It shows the volunteer staff performing
    heroically in impossible situations, but this also
    makes they feel entitled, which can be expressed as
    superiority over the very locals they are helping.
    _The Last Face_ also brilliantly personifies the
    two type of people drawn to such organizations:
    the idealists (Charlize Theron) who want to save
    everyone, and the realists (Javier Bardem) who
    know they can do only what little they can. The
    latter bend the rules, play well with the local
    population, bend bribe them with whiskey and
    cigarettes (exactly what our replacement engineer
    did). The idealists have no business in the field;
    they are better off being desk jockeys. _The Last
    Face_ was hissed at during its premiere at Cannes
    by journalists/critics. They were dead wrong, as
    they are more often than not.*

    My story actually had a real villain, unlike _The
    Forgiven_. It was the corporate manager who just
    happened to be on site for training purposes. We
    would have done well with the sensible lab director
    in charge, but the manager had to intervene. She
    could decide on nothing without consulting with
    the suits, literally 10 time zones and 7000 miles
    away, paralyzing the lab. She talked the team into
    toeing her party line, especially regarding the blood
    money. They had a career to worry about. I had no
    use for her nonsense. When she asked me to lie
    about the event (I was in charge of communication)
    we never spoke to each other again. That was the
    end of my second-career NGO aspiration. I am
    better off being a desk jockey, too.

    Still, it was a valuable, unforgettable experience.
    I attended a Health Ministry monthly meeting where
    British, French, Italian, and Chinese representatives
    vied for influence, but the American CDC made it
    clear they called the shot. They provided most of
    the funding, and permanently took over a conference
    suite in the most expensive hotel as their HQ.
    American soft power was a sight to behold. (The
    hotel was teeming with prostitutes, and no doubt
    spies; the waiters called us Mr.'s and Mrs.'s as
    though this was still the colonial times.) The
    Europeans and Chinese were not there only for
    altruistic reasons; they wanted to learn the
    mechanics of dealing with an epidermic in case it
    happened on their soil. The lessons were forgotten
    when COVID and Trump rolled around. But I flew
    home in the company of Icelandic missionaries
    trying to build schools, which was a challenge when
    they did not have clean running water. There were
    really a lot of good people there trying to make
    a difference.

    -------------------------------------------------

    *Sean Penn gets the last mention. In his younger
    days he was a hothead who married Madonna and punched
    paparazzi. Then he turned into an actor, writer,
    and director with admirably integrity. He also
    traveled to war torn Ukraine to make documentaries --
    something that earned him grudging respect even from
    the MAGA crowd. I don't agree with everything he did
    regarding politics (or even art), but in a perverted
    era when the internet obsesses over a certain
    coke-snorting misogynist actor and heaps praise on
    Tom Cruise just for making money, Sean Penn comes
    off as a true American hero, and a worthy heir of
    what we used to call the Western Civilization.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)