In
the George Orwell classic 1984,
there is a state of perpetual war among the nations of Oceania,
Eurasia and Eastasia. The enemy is vague, and the battlefield is
located in some elusive, distant land. The enemy could be Eurasia
one day, and Eastasia the next, but that is really beside the point.
The purpose of perpetual war by these superpowers is to justify
psychological and physical control over their populations, to keep
their people busy, fearful and hateful towards the enemy. The perpetual
war also helps to excuse a nation�s failings and shortcomings. The
economy, the labor force and industry are all centered around war
rather than consumer goods. People live a miserable existence with
poverty and no hope of improving their standard of living.����
War.� What is it good for?� Absolutely nothing!�
That is what soul singer Edwin Starr said, but it is also what Major
General Smedley D. Butler, a two-time Congressional Medal of Honor
recipient, believed as well.� In fact, he called war a racket.�
�A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not
what it seems to the majority of the people,� he said. �Only a small
�inside� group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit
of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few
people make huge fortunes.� The answer to ending war, Butler concluded,
is not through disarmament conferences or peace talks, but by taking
the profit out of war.
And upon his departure from office, President Dwight
D. Eisenhower, a former general, warned of the prison-industrial
complex and its threat to democracy and liberty. �In the councils
of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial
complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power
exists and will persist,� he said.
America
is in a state of perpetual war. Before it was the Cold War, and
now it is the War on Terror. And the boogeyman du jour is
Al Qaeda and Islamic terrorism rather than Communism. And it doesn�t
seem to matter whether the government is controlled by Democrats
or Republicans. This is the nature of the beast. There were wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan under Bush, and these wars have not abated
under Obama. Add to that Pakistan, perhaps Yemen, who knows, and
any other nation that comes up in the future. Things were supposed
to be different under an Obama presidency, as people did not vote
for more war when they voted for �change� in November. After all,
the huge, costly, senseless and deadly mess called the Iraq war
made people yearn for a better way. But in all fairness, Obama had
pledged in the presidential campaign to step things up in Afghanistan.
We are told that the real threat to the United States
comes from foreign terrorism, with the latest example brought to
us in the form of a B-list al Qaeda groupie from Nigeria, with explosive
airline undergarments no less. He follows in the footsteps of another
misguided soul, a Jamaican-British terrorist wannabe who tried to
blow up his shoes on an airplane several years ago. Such incidents
have resulted in reactionary security measures by the government
that are ostensibly designed to make us safer, such as the ban on
liquids on the plane, or pat downs, or taking off your shoes at
the airport. In the end, these measures only make us neurotic and
fearful, fail to make us safer, and render air travel an impractical
and unpleasant prison-like experience. Meanwhile, while it seems
impossible to prevent every potential act of terrorism, the systems
that should keep such undesirables off the plane in the first place
are not working.
My goal is not to make light of terrorism and the
threat it may or may not pose. At the same time, there are many
domestic threats that seem to pose a greater risk to national security,
including the U.S. economic system itself. Consider, for example,
the massive loss of wealth precipitated by the housing crisis, disproportionately
felt in the black and Latino communities. Or, take a look at the
jobless numbers, and the deplorable 20 percent unemployment rate
for working-age men. A nation that claims to be a superpower, yet
has one out of every four of its children dependent on food stamps,
has far larger issues than a Nigerian with combustible drawers.
And
should we not concern ourselves with the daily acts or terror committed
in this violent society, the proliferation of firearms, the mass
shootings and the school shootings? Every year, on average, more than
100,000 people are
shot with a gun in America, and over 30,000 of them die. This level
of violence and killing is not tolerated in a truly free and democratic
society.
If we are to have a perpetual war, it must be a war
against injustice and deprivation at home and abroad. We need to
get our own house in order, rather than demolish and rebuild other
nations that did not invite us there. And as far as the so-called
terrorism problem is concerned, maybe we should stay out of other
folks� backyards and it will go away.���
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, David A. Love, JD is a journalist
and human rights advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor
to The Huffington
Post, theGrio,
The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times
and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com,
NewsOne,
Daily Kos,
and Open Salon.
Click here
to contact Mr. Love. |