Remember
all the talk of a peace dividend at the end of the Cold
War? Seems like a long time ago, hasn’t it? Since that
time, U.S. defense spending has ballooned, nearly doubling since 2001.
Now that Osama bin Laden is dead, it will be hard for the
war hawks to defend keeping American troops in Afghanistan.
But they will, even as a majority of people want to cut
military spending in order to reduce the deficit, rather
than cut important social programs such as Social Security,
Medicaid and Medicare. There’s lots
of money in the Pentagon, and a group of experts has recommended
cutting almost $1 trillion from defense over the next decade. People know that the military-industrial-complex
is a drain on the nation’s economy - a threat to economic
security, and a parasite that is eating its host bit by
bit.
It is hard to shake off bad habits, and the U.S. has a number
of them. This addiction to remaining in a permanent state
of war is one of the largest and most problematic. There
is the war on terror and the war on drugs. The former is
used to justify the behemoth that is the national security
apparatus. Meanwhile, the latter facilitates the growth
of the prison-industrial-complex, and the incarceration
of predominantly poor, uneducated black and Latino men,
in a country with no jobs for them. These two systems are
equally exploitative and destructive to human lives, and
corporations have found their niche in profiting from the
suffering of others.
And while profiting in such a manner is an unsustainable
model for the long-term success of a nation, some remain
undeterred from pursuing this path. America spends about
as much on military as the rest of the world - combined. We imprison more people than
any other nation, including the most repressive dictatorships
you can imagine. In fact, the land of the free is home
to only 5 percent of the world’s population, but 25 percent of the world’s prisoners.
Here, we lock ‘em up and shoot ‘em up. And we’ll go visit
someone else’s backyard and lock ‘em up and shoot ‘em up
too. And our voracious appetite for guns at home perversely
complements our lust for senseless war abroad. With 90
guns for nearly every 100 people, the U.S. is the most armed nation on the planet, and we have shocking homicide statistics to prove it. The Second Amendment is used as a pretext for an astounding level
of gun proliferation that is unheard of in— and incompatible
with— a stable democratic society. But we know that the
NRA, which, by the way, is increasingly allied with right-wing
extremists, militias and domestic terrorists, is funded by the gun industry to the tune of millions of dollars. This, as illegal firearms ravage
our urban communities
If
so-called American exceptionalism is to be found in war,
then Americans are in deeper trouble than they realize.
The U.S. has the most advanced military weaponry and high-tech
toys for its soldiers to kill and destroy, while American
cities crumble under the weight of their low-grade, early-twentieth
century infrastructure. Europe and Asia is decades ahead
in high-speed rail because they actually have it, and this
nation elects politicians who attack high-speed rail as
some big government welfare giveaway program. And the
rest of the world laughs, as we wage war on ourselves, with
culture wars, a war on intelligence and progress, and assaults
on women’s rights, workers and immigrants. Sounds like
a winning strategy, if your goal is to fail miserably—exceptionally
miserably.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, 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.
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