Apparently Bart was diagnosed (wrongfully?) as a sociopath in a recent episode of the Simpsons, "Paths of Glory". Spoilers follow.
In a play off of Ender's Game, Bart is sent to a special facility with other sociopathic children:
As all the kids there have no reactions, an army general says that they're perfect to test U.S. Air Force Drone Simulators. Bart manages to destroy all targets, but later the kids are informed that they were actually controlling a real drone, killing real people. Bart is the only kid who gets worried about it, so he's diagnosed as being sane and is free to go back home.
It makes you wonder who is actually running the drones currently.
Also on television, in the BBC's "Call the Midwife," Season 4, Episode 3, the show explores how homosexuals were handled in the late 1950s, early 1960s in the UK, with some interesting parallels. for this audience First gay people are criminals. Second, they're thought to be degenerates. Third, if caught they either end up in prison or undergoing "treatment" to "cure" them, apparently most commonly either electroshock therapy or feminine hormone treatments for the men.
Dr. Turner: You will be prescribed Stilbestrol by the hospital. You will be allowed to take this, largely in the privacy of your own home, but you will be monitored to make sure you’re taking it. There are other treatments. ECT, aversion therapy, but I’d say this is less brutal and more private.
Marie: That’s all right. You’re not funny about tablets, are you?
Dr. Turner: They contain a form of estrogen, the female hormone. It will stop your body from producing testosterone, which in turn will suppress your urges.
Marie: But he’ll be all right, otherwise?
Dr. Turner: Impotence occurs, as the testosterone reduces.
Marie: We’ll already have our child. Is that it?
Dr. Turner: There may also be gynecomastia, development of breast tissue, there is often a loss of muscle and body hair.
Tony: Dear God.
Marie: Well, it’s not prison. And that’s all that matters.
A parallel story line involves an infestation of rats, and the attempts of most to brutally kill them. One of the nun attempts to fight the brutality: "We are all God's creatures. It's just some are easier to love than others. It's the others that need us most.".
The end monologue talks about how important it is to have some place at which we can be truly ourselves despite the world's constant demand that we conform in some way or another:
A world is not just made of bricks and mortar, but of minds. We can rebuild cities, paint beautiful facades, invent new ways of living. We can protect all that we have. But that place which we call home must be the place in which we are ourselves with no facade, no foundations weak below us. Only then can we face outwards with our heads held high, playing the roles assigned to us with open, honest hearts.
In a play off of Ender's Game, Bart is sent to a special facility with other sociopathic children:
As all the kids there have no reactions, an army general says that they're perfect to test U.S. Air Force Drone Simulators. Bart manages to destroy all targets, but later the kids are informed that they were actually controlling a real drone, killing real people. Bart is the only kid who gets worried about it, so he's diagnosed as being sane and is free to go back home.
It makes you wonder who is actually running the drones currently.
Also on television, in the BBC's "Call the Midwife," Season 4, Episode 3, the show explores how homosexuals were handled in the late 1950s, early 1960s in the UK, with some interesting parallels. for this audience First gay people are criminals. Second, they're thought to be degenerates. Third, if caught they either end up in prison or undergoing "treatment" to "cure" them, apparently most commonly either electroshock therapy or feminine hormone treatments for the men.
Dr. Turner: You will be prescribed Stilbestrol by the hospital. You will be allowed to take this, largely in the privacy of your own home, but you will be monitored to make sure you’re taking it. There are other treatments. ECT, aversion therapy, but I’d say this is less brutal and more private.
Marie: That’s all right. You’re not funny about tablets, are you?
Dr. Turner: They contain a form of estrogen, the female hormone. It will stop your body from producing testosterone, which in turn will suppress your urges.
Marie: But he’ll be all right, otherwise?
Dr. Turner: Impotence occurs, as the testosterone reduces.
Marie: We’ll already have our child. Is that it?
Dr. Turner: There may also be gynecomastia, development of breast tissue, there is often a loss of muscle and body hair.
Tony: Dear God.
Marie: Well, it’s not prison. And that’s all that matters.
A parallel story line involves an infestation of rats, and the attempts of most to brutally kill them. One of the nun attempts to fight the brutality: "We are all God's creatures. It's just some are easier to love than others. It's the others that need us most.".
The end monologue talks about how important it is to have some place at which we can be truly ourselves despite the world's constant demand that we conform in some way or another:
A world is not just made of bricks and mortar, but of minds. We can rebuild cities, paint beautiful facades, invent new ways of living. We can protect all that we have. But that place which we call home must be the place in which we are ourselves with no facade, no foundations weak below us. Only then can we face outwards with our heads held high, playing the roles assigned to us with open, honest hearts.