The Top 10 Atrocities of All Time

tay

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The following happened a lot but here is one short story...........








Genevieve “Gennie” Pilarski quietly passed away in her nursing home room one September day in 1998 at the age of 79. Few noticed or cared as she had been a prisoner of Illinois state mental institutions for over 50 years.

Gennie’s parents had her committed to Manteno State Hospital in 1944 when she was only 25. But after being committed to Manteno, Gennie would never be the same. The state would take her freedom, and the doctors would take her sanity.

Gennie’s life before college is not well-documented, but we know she was gifted and suffered from bouts of depression.

She enrolled at the University of Illinois in 1941 with a major in chemistry, and would study for three years before a disagreement with her parents over where she would live resulted in her being sent to Manteno State Hospital in 1944.

Records from the early years are incomplete, but we know in Gennie’s initial evaluation physicians noted she was neat, clean, and tidy. Doctors also noted she was extremely quiet, but friendly and agreeable. Her initial evaluation resulted with the verdict: “No signs of active pathology.“

Another early account has Gennie questioned by a therapist if life was worth living. Replied Gennie, “What I have of it is.” Gennie asserted she felt normal except for the stigma of insanity that comes with being a patient in an “insane asylum.”

Gennie deliberately used that phrase with little attempt to hide her displeasure for the circumstances of how she came to be there. The therapist noted that Gennie kept repeating a statement during the examination: “A person that is 25 years old should be away from family entanglements.”

When asked what she would do if she were released, Gennie said she would like to have a job, get some new clothes, and some books. She also indicated she would buy powder, rouge, and other makeup – typical fare for a 25 year old female of the time.


Several months later Gennie was given an experimental version of hydrotherapy at Manteno State Hospital. The hydrotherapy used at the time involved plunging the patients into bathtubs filled with extremely hot and cold water back to back for extended periods of time.

Not understanding her crime, Gennie’s only words: “Is life a farce?”

By August of 1945, Gennie had been given 40 insulin coma treatments and she was nearing her fifteenth session of electric shock therapy – all in addition to her hydrotherapy routine.

Her second evaluation wasn’t nearly as positive as the first. A physician wrote that Gennie was “Idle. Rather unfriendly, does not mingle. Occasionally talks in a very disagreeable way to the other patients.”

He then added “. . . and she is not especially neat or clean.“

By the middle of 1953 Gennie had already received 187 electric shock therapies, averaging treatment twice a week. She was transferred to the research ward at Manteno State Hospital, where medical experimentation took place on mostly involuntary patients.

One procedure that was beginning to spread across the country at the time was a form of psychosurgery known as the lobotomy.

For reasons unknown, Gennie was the subject for a lobotomy procedure in early 1955. According to records she had “extensive neurosurgery with bilateral extirpation of most of the frontal and temporal lobes.”

Post-operation, the chart also noted Gennie was now mute, totally dependent on commands for functioning of everything from toilet urges on up. To be given an experimental course of (electric convulsive therapy) to see if any affective change can be brought about.

By all accounts, the lobotomy was a complete failure. Gennie was largely unresponsive, and subjected to yet another seven sessions of shock therapy.

Gennie’s evaluation the following year highlights her deterioration:


Confused. Unresponsive. Needs supervision because of wandering. Has to be led and helped. Unsuitable for further research.


For the next 45 years Gennie was the failed experiment, left as a mumbling woman who stares at walls. She would be moved between state institutions and homes, treated as a legacy responsibility no one wanted. The state had turned Gennie into an incoherent and soulless shell, plagued by demons only she could understand.

For the last 20 years of her life doctors reported she was “incapable of any kind of human interaction” and she was reported to have spent her final days “buried under her bedclothes or roaming the halls of her nursing home, drooling and babbling.“

Sadly, for the time much of what happened to Gennie was not considered unusual or cruel; our reactions today are fueled by medical knowledge far beyond what doctors of the era knew. Fortunately advances in medicine have made the process more humane, if not morally acceptable.

In the beginning Gennie just wanted to be “free from family entanglements at age 25.”




The Story of Gennie Pilarski | Sometimes Interesting
 

55Mercury

rigid member
May 31, 2007
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Locutus. Master wanker. likes to watch his 'ho'es in action. stable fits

...but you're right. I really don't wanna go there!
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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I've got the brains, you've got the looks...

oh wait.

anyway, never mind...let's make lots of money.



The 80's were a goodly decade kids.
 

Locutus

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I'm more about the tunes. Not as good as the 70's though. The zenith of rock. Sixties sucked and the 90's+, well, forget it.
 

JLM

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Skinny leather ties, big hair, acid wash jeans.

I'm thinking that the '80s had more bad than good


Probably goes for all the decades since the 60s Capt. With all the f**kin' dope!

I'm more about the tunes. Not as good as the 70's though. The zenith of rock. Sixties sucked and the 90's+, well, forget it.


Tunes have gone straight down hill since the 50s and 60s and definitely since the demise of the likes of Johnny Cash, Hank Snow, Roy Acuff, Porter Wagoner et al.
 

Locutus

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Probably goes for all the decades since the 60s Capt. With all the f**kin' dope!




Tunes have gone straight down hill since the 50s and 60s and definitely since the demise of the likes of Johnny Cash, Hank Snow, Roy Acuff, Porter Wagoner et al.


Not talking Country music. That's all good.

Nothing good came out of the filthy stoned hippy sixties other than Magic Carpet Ride.

Beatles and Elvis included.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
The following happened a lot but here is one short story...........
Genevieve “Gennie” Pilarski quietly passed away in her nursing home room one September day in 1998 at the age of 79. Few noticed or cared as she had been a prisoner of Illinois state mental institutions for over 50 years.

They say it was in those times that todays mass market treatments were developed, the drugs the shocks the head games. Never trust a smiley faced lab coat helping you with anything. Of course the violence and fraud of these atrocities are not counted in the OP's simplistic material. War is not what it used to be. It can reasonably be stated that medicine education religion have all been mobilized in the war effort to neutralize the human threat against the entrenched hierarchy. The OPs author fails to include the larger atrocity in his narrow considerations of the word perhaps. I'll wait a while and dig the book out of a bulk bin at Walmart next summer.
 
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WLDB

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Historians disagree about the source of the outbreak. If it can be proven that the US Army distributed smallpox blankets to the Mandan then it is unquestionably an atrocity imo.

Its been awhile since Ive read about that period of North American history but I thought it was done before the US existed. I suppose it could have happened both before and after.

Tunes have gone straight down hill since the 50s and 60s and definitely since the demise of the likes of Johnny Cash, Hank Snow, Roy Acuff, Porter Wagoner et al.

I dont disagree but most tend to like whatever came out while they were in their teens and twenties far more than anything that came after. Fortunately my parents and grandparents mostly played older stuff so I gravitated towards that rather than what was popular as I grew up for the most part.

Nothing good came out of the filthy stoned hippy sixties other than Magic Carpet Ride.

Beatles and Elvis included.

Blasphemy!
 

Blackleaf

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The Worst Atrocities

Allowing Little Mix or One Direction to make "music". You can't get more atrocious than that.

 

Tonington

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Oct 27, 2006
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Easy, we do not even know when or where civilization started, and we can't ever know that the world now represents the highest level of civilization, we do not know the cataclysmic past of this planet, we have regularly suppressed archeological evidence by burning and dumping artifacts that do not fit the established paradigm. In summary, history is a mystery and that is by design.

I asked you how you know that 'reliable numbers do not exist for the last century and that in every other period both inflation and deflation of those numbers was common'...The beginning of civilization and archaeological findings don't factor in here.

And if you want to go back further than say the last century you mentioned earlier, well you can only know they're unreliable if you have some information about what the true value was. Nobody seriously treats the data that goes back that far as anything other than an estimate.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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I'm more about the tunes. Not as good as the 70's though. The zenith of rock. Sixties sucked and the 90's+, well, forget it.

You fool!

90s were undeniably the best decade.

In many ways the music was a refinement of what came out in the 70s and 80s.