US Gov't Lobotomized 2000 WW2 Veterans

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
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Interesting Read.
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Roman Tritz’s memories of the past six decades are blurred by age and delusion. But one thing he remembers clearly is the fight he put up the day the orderlies came for him.

“They got the notion they were going to come to give me a lobotomy,” says Mr. Tritz, a World War II bomber pilot. “To hell with them.”

The orderlies at the veterans hospital pinned Mr. Tritz to the floor, he recalls. He fought so hard that eventually they gave up. But the orderlies came for him again on Wednesday, July 1, 1953, a few weeks before his 30th birthday.

This time, the doctors got their way.

The U.S. government lobotomized roughly 2,000 mentally ill veterans—and likely hundreds more—during and after World War II, according to a cache of forgotten memos, letters and government reports unearthed by The Wall Street Journal. Besieged by psychologically damaged troops returning from the battlefields of North Africa, Europe and the Pacific, the Veterans Administration performed the brain-altering operation on former servicemen it diagnosed as depressives, psychotics and schizophrenics, and occasionally on people identified as homosexuals.

The VA doctors considered themselves conservative in using lobotomy. Nevertheless, desperate for effective psychiatric treatments, they carried out the surgery at VA hospitals spanning the country, from Oregon to Massachusetts, Alabama to South Dakota.

Roman Tritz talks about the scars from his lobotomy.
The VA’s practice, described in depth here for the first time, sometimes brought veterans relief from their inner demons. Often, however, the surgery left them little more than overgrown children, unable to care for themselves. Many suffered seizures, amnesia and loss of motor skills. Some died from the operation itself.

Mr. Tritz, 90 years old, is one of the few still alive to describe the experience. “It isn’t so good up here,” he says, rubbing the two shallow divots on the sides of his forehead, bracketing wisps of white hair.

The VA’s use of lobotomy, in which doctors severed connections between parts of the brain then thought to control emotions, was known in medical circles in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and is occasionally cited in medical texts. But the VA’s practice, never widely publicized, long ago slipped from public view. Even the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs says it possesses no records of the lobotomies performed by its predecessor agency.

More: Lobotomy For World War II Veterans: Psychiatric Care by U.S. Government - WSJ.com
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
73
48
I can't imagine how harrowing it must have been for that one poor guy to know what they'd intended, fight it, succeed only to have them come at him again. To know that you use to be different, better and to know you're not right because of it

You fight for your country. You're prepared to give up your life to defend others freedom only to have your freedom removed by the very institution you were helping to protect.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Really? They must have been practicing on themselves first then.

Really. Lobotomy was considered a last-resort treatment at the time. This was when they were still doing hydrotherapy and massive doses of brute-force drugs.

I have a horror of psychiatry, because I consider it little more advanced than when they were beating patients at Bedlam in the early 1800s. Nonetheless, crude as their methods were, they were doing the best they could.

Would you criticise a middle-1800s surgeon for amputating a limb without anaesthetic or antiseptics? They didn't know about those things. And psychiatrists in the 1940s and 1950s (and 60s and 70s and 80s) didn't have the understanding of the brain and mind or the tools available today.

They were also colossally arrogant, but that goes with the territory with medicos.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I can't imagine how harrowing it must have been for that one poor guy to know what they'd intended, fight it, succeed only to have them come at him again. To know that you use to be different, better and to know you're not right because of it

You fight for your country. You're prepared to give up your life to defend others freedom only to have your freedom removed by the very institution you were helping to protect.

When I was a young man I wanted to join the Canadian Army and drive tanks over small villages defendeing the freedom of the people back home paying for the gas.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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Minnesota: Gopher State
This actually is no surprise as the government has long had a record of experimenting on soldiers and veterans. We will never know how many died or became incapacitated for life. Such a shame that so many dedicated to serving this country have been pawns in this type of game.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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Minnesota: Gopher State
You can find MANY similar reports throughout the Internet:


Uncle Sam's Human Lab Rats | Mother Jones



survivors of classified government tests conducted at the Army's Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland between 1950 and 1975. "I get a lot of calls," he says. "There are a lot of crazy people out there who think that somebody from Mars is controlling their behavior via radio waves." But when it comes to Edgewood, "I'm finding that more and more of those stories are true!"

That government scientists conducted human experiments at Edgewood is not in question. "The program involved testing of nerve agents, nerve agent antidotes, psychochemicals, and irritants," according to a 1994 General Accounting Office (now the Government Accountability Office) report (PDF). At least 7,800 US servicemen served "as laboratory rats or guinea pigs" at Edgewood, alleges Erspamer's complaint, filed in January in a federal district court in California. The Department of Veterans Affairs has reported that military scientists tested hundreds of chemical and biological substances on them, including VX, tabun, soman, sarin, cyanide, LSD, PCP, and World War I-era blister agents like phosgene and mustard. The full scope of the tests, however, may never be known. As a CIA official explained to the GAO, referring to the agency's infamous MKULTRA mind-control experiments, "The names of those involved in the tests are not available because names were not recorded or the records were subsequently destroyed." Besides, said the official, some of the tests involving LSD and other psychochemical drugs "were administered to an undetermined number of people without their knowledge."





And we will never know the full truth of these horrible actions.

So sad.