“…Complex dynamics and ever‐changing assemblages of the machineries of power at play during COVID‐19, whether between the social, personal, medical, economic, and professional, or between the formal regulative or informal sociocultural, created a major state of affective confusion. Combining the militarized framings with nurses’ experiences that ranged between heroism and horrorism, attest to what Tanous ( 2020 ) revealed in his study on the healthcare system as a foundational pillar of governance, and what critical scholars suggested—that medical language is deeply militarized (Fuks, 2010 ). The intensified use of militarized language during the COVID‐19 pandemic (Kanji, 2020 ), calls for further engagement with questions of affects, economic and cultural contexts, nature of pandemic, sociopolitical reforms and policies, and more.…”