The thing people miss is that this isn’t just about the methods—it’s about the normalization of trauma as a tool for "understanding." Think about how we still treat pain as a necessary evil in medicine, even when it’s not. Cameron’s work was a bridge between that mindset and the cold, clinical dehumanization of the 20th century. It wasn’t just that the patients were harmed; it was that the system was built to prioritize control over care. That’s why it still feels so relevant today.