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A Falcon of Peace
Who Wants to Be a Dove? (They Always Lose.)
How come they get to be the hawks? And we get to be the doves? A hawk is a noble bird. A dove. Well, basically it's a pigeon. The sort of bird that, in New York City anyway, messes your building's window sills, is always underfoot, and, along with the city's rats, makes a hearty lunch for the red-tailed hawks which now populate our parks.
Even a turkey would be less of a turkey than a dove. We get to carry that olive twig -- okay, they call it a "branch" -- around in our beaks, but you can bet your bippy that they get the olives, or, more likely, the opportunity to trample the olive groves into oil.
They get to swoop and prey. We get to pace the sidelines, cooing our complaints. Their ideas -- it never matters how visibly dumb they are -- get tried. Ours never do. And when theirs fail miserably, they get to recalibrate and try again. We never get to try once.
That's because it's well accepted that they are "realists" and we are "dreamers," or "utopians," or maybe, like most doves, vegans. If you're not addicted to force (and so failure), you're simply not a part of the grand scheme of things, of the world as it is.
They get hundreds of billions of dollars to play with. We don't get bus fare to Washington. Oh, and then, at about the point when everything they've planned for has gone to hell, they suddenly turn to us and, claiming we're just so many naysayers, ask belligerently what the hell we'd do now. What's our plan anyway?
And to make matters worse, even though they have a dismal record when it comes to predicting what their plans will do, they don't hesitate to explain to us with complete confidence just what sort of catastrophes our ideas will surely lead to. If we force them to withdraw from such-and-such a country in such-and-such a way, we'll be responsible for nothing short of "genocide," or ensure that a nuclear weapon goes off in an American city, or worse. And the media believes them, despite the fact that they've been proven wrong time and again, and so gives them carte blanche as "experts."
I'm talking, of course, about the U.S. military's top brass (uniforms and all those medals are just so imposing!), the key civilians in the Pentagon, the rest of the national security establishment, the hordes of think-tank strategists in our capital, and the political leaders who go with them. Talk about failing upwards! Despite everything, hawks rule; doves never even get the chance to take off. And as the novelist Kurt Vonnegut used to say, so it goes.
Force as the Solution
And now for a tad of history...
After the attacks of September 11, 2001, those few who suggested that the appropriate response might be intensive, determined global police action, not the loosing of the might of the U.S. military on Afghanistan, were derisively hooted from the room. It was so obvious that an invasion was not only a necessity, but couldn't fail against the ragtag Taliban and their al-Qaedan allies, not given the military might of the planet's "sole superpower." Even now, when it comes to that invasion "lite" and the subsequent occupation of Afghanistan from which unending disaster ensued, no mea culpas have been offered; nor does anyone in the mainstream pay the slightest attention to those who worried about, or warned against, such an approach.
Nor was serious attention paid when, before the invasion of Iraq, millions of people worldwide poured into the streets of global cities to say loud and clear: Don't do it! It'll be a catastrophe!
Instead, they did it. It was a catastrophe and both the antiwar crowds and the critics of that moment have been largely forgotten -- those who weren't simply discredited -- while the enthusiasts for the invasion, military and civilian, now often transformed into "critics" of how it and its aftermath were handled, remain the "experts" on what the U.S. should do next. Counterintuitive as it might seem, they are the ones whose assessments still count -- and that's par for the course.
Once the invasion was over, doves said, okay, at least don't occupy the country long term. Don't build massive bases. Get out while you can -- and quickly. Of course, no one who mattered paid the slightest heed to such wrong-headedness in the wake of such a historic "victory." And so it went. And so it goes.
In our world as it is, force remains the essential arbiter. And when its application leads to catastrophe, the response is... simply more of the same.
Consider this conundrum logically. On the one hand, you have a method that, in our moment, has failed the United States repeatedly. On the other, you have something largely untried, an attempt to settle problems without resorting to force or, at least, with minimal force or the use of force as a genuine last resort in defense of nation, kin, and self. Yet, their efforts and our money go only into developing better ways of using force, and ever-more-powerful and eerie ways of delivering it.
Or have I missed a sudden proliferation of peace task forces and think tanks in Washington? Has anyone seen the suggestion, first made in 1792 by signer of the Declaration of Independence Benjamin Rush, and more recently by Congressman Dennis Kucinich, for the establishment of a cabinet level Department of Peace go anywhere -- other than into the bottom drawer where the dossier on Kucinich's sighting of a UFO is stored?
On the one hand, failure; on the other, the unknown. You would think that, every now and then, the "opposites" principle the character George on Seinfeld applies to his failed life would hold. As Jerry Seinfeld tells him: "If every instinct you have is wrong, then the opposite would have to be right."
In Washington, though, what our former Secretary of Defense called the "known knowns" are invariably preferred, and so war rooms, not peace rooms, prevail and, as in Afghanistan today, military commanders remain our ultimate experts for whom every day is a potential do-over.
Force as Religion
In these last years in Washington, force became something close to an American religion. The Bush administration's top officials were all fundamentalists in their singular belief in the efficacy of force. In fact, they arrived convinced that an all-powerful, techno-wondrous military, unrivaled on the planet, left them with the ability to project force in ways no other power ever had. When it came to remaking the world, anything seemed possible.
What this meant was that an extreme version of military fundamentalism went hand-in-hand with an extreme version of economic fundamentalism. Today, both of these fundamentalisms are collapsing, even if a pared down version of the military half of the equation is anything but dead.
In those same years, Americans also began to genuflect before the idea of our military in ways previously unimaginable. They pledged their unending support for "our troops," now commonly referred to as "warriors," who were repeatedly hailed as the bravest, most valiant, most successful fighters around, part of the most awesome military ever. It -- and they -- simply could do no wrong. Given this faith, when things did go wrong, mistakes would never be blamed on the military.
As a result, while actual American soldiers were sent halfway across the planet in a distinctly unreverential way on their third, fourth, and fifth tours of duty (with few here giving much of a damn), Americans treated the idea of those "warriors" and their "mission" with ritualistic fervor.
A
cold-eyed look at the record of the U.S. military in these last years,
however, tells quite a different tale. It's no small thing, after all,
that U.S. military actions in two disastrous wars managed to burnish
the reputation of one of the uglier fallen dictators on the planet and
pave the way for the return, as a national resistance force, of a
brutish, retrograde, failed regime almost universally rejected by its
own people when it fled in November 2001. I'm speaking, of course,
about Iraq's Saddam Hussein and the Taliban of Afghanistan. Worse yet,
the ever greater application of force, including recently the repeated firing
of missiles from CIA-operated drone aircraft into the Pashtun
borderlands of Pakistan, has resulted in the spread of the Taliban,
religious extremism, terrorism, and war into the heartland of Pakistan, a nuclear-armed country now being destabilized.
What makes all this more remarkable is that, unlike the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s, twenty-first century America had no impressive enemies to face in September 2001. In losing its brutal Afghan War, the Soviets confronted a superpower that was more than its match -- us. In Afghanistan today, it's estimated that the Taliban consists of but 10,000-15,000 relatively lightly armed guerrillas. The Iraq insurgency was probably only marginally larger than that at its height. Al-Qaeda, with a capability for major operations every couple of years, was even less impressive, despite the 9/11 televisual spectacular it put on.
You would have to go back to Spain at the beginning of the nineteenth century to find the match for this moment. Then, the most advanced military in Europe, Napoleon's army, an imperial force advancing (like the American military in recent years) under the banner of liberty, ran into a meat grinder of an insurgency from the Sunni fundamentalists of that day -- enraged Catholic peasants, often led by their priests. (If you want to know what that was like, check out Goya's unforgettable series of prints, The Disasters of War.)
In Iraq, over nearly six years, the U.S. military has recalibrated so many times it's dizzying. Who now recalls the "revolution in military affairs" that created the "lite," high-tech military which launched a "decapitation" campaign that killed plenty of Iraqi civilians but left all of that country's leaders with their heads still firmly on their shoulders; or the "shock and awe" campaign, which mainly awed Washington -- and that was before the occupation, the Sunni insurgency, and a civil war took root, after which tactical changes came and went with names like "get tough," "oil spot" and "ink blot," the "Salvador option," "clear and hold," and "the surge" as well as the "clear, hold, and build" counterinsurgency strategy which is now supposedly being transferred to Afghanistan.
Today, Iraq, still one of the most dangerous places on the planet, is far quieter than at the height of the civil violence of 2005-2006 and so the "surge," overseen by Generals David Petraeus and Ray Odierno, is said in Washington to have worked, even if it hasn't succeeded in resolving the underlying ethnic, political, and religious tensions let loose by the American invasion. A recent article on the inside pages of the New York Times, however, offers a somewhat different perspective on the effectiveness of military force in Iraq in these last years. Little aid, Times journalist Timothy Williams reports, is now available to Iraq's estimated 740,000 widows, most made so, it seems, by years of war and violence; and that figure, he indicates, may be an undercount, given the chaos in which that country remains.
If you were capable of adding to the dead husbands of those hundreds of thousands of "war widows," the dead wives, dead sisters, dead daughters, dead grandmothers and grandfathers, as well as the children who died thanks, in one way or another, to the violence of those years, not to speak of the large group of dead young men who were not yet married, you would surely have a staggering figure, a toll of perhaps a million or more Iraqis from an estimated prewar population of perhaps 26 million. That level of slaughter might qualify in scale as near genocidal. (It's worth adding that, as in the Vietnam era so many decades ago, mainstream critics of antiwar critics continue to regularly suggest that any kind of "precipitous" withdrawal of American troops would almost certainly result in a genocidal slaughter, even as such a slaughter has taken place with the troops there.)
If the staggering numbers of dead civilians in Iraq's post-2003 killing fields, and those who are still dying, are a measure of Washington's "success," it's the success of the undertaker.
Taking Options Off the Table
Let's face it, the U.S. is addicted to force, and when force fails to achieve its purposes (for failure, too, is addictive), yet more force is applied in marginally different ways under radically different names.
Now much of Washington and the media have indeed reached a consensus that the Bush administration's use of force was a disaster of the first order. As a result, they have generally concluded that, in Iraq, we must be especially careful not to stop applying it too quickly lest we destabilize what's left of that country and, in Afghanistan, that achieving "stability" calls for the deployment of significantly more forces which, of course, will use significantly more force.
In Iraq, where President Obama is indeed talking about a withdrawal that would remove all U.S. forces by the end of 2011, we also know, thanks to Thomas Ricks's latest book The Gamble, that America's top generals, including Centcom commander Petraeus and General Odierno, the top commander in Iraq, believe we'll still be fighting in that country in 2015. In the meantime, the general who commands U.S. forces in Afghanistan, David McKiernan, is already talking about years more of fighting at surge levels -- and suggesting that yet more U.S. troops will be needed. ("I think... that this is not a temporary force uplift, that it's going to need to be sustained for some period of time. I can't give you an exact number of -- the year that it would be. But I've said I'm trying to look out for the next three to four or five years.")
In the meantime, the Obama administration is hoping to find some extra help by calling together a regional conference of interested countries, possibly including Iran, and by using the military to negotiate with and peel off "moderate" Taliban backers, while it sends in at least 17,000 more troops. This is what passes for new foreign policy thinking in Washington.
In the meantime, the Afghan chain of command has been further militarized. It now stretches from retired Marine General Jim Jones, the new national security advisor, through Centcom commander Petraeus and Afghan commander McKiernan to a soon-to-retire Army general, Karl Eikenberry, who reportedly will be appointed U.S. ambassador in Kabul. Meanwhile, in southern Afghanistan, as well as along the Pakistani border, peace and stabilization will involve the further application of force with results that shouldn't surprise us.
To summarize: They can be wrong a hundred times and when they are, they get to try every cockamamie scheme and call it anything they want. We don't even have names for whatever peace strategies might be used. And while Iran is, however grudgingly, however imperially, being invited to the Afghan table, antiwar activists and critics, no matter how on the mark they might have been, remain the equivalent of an American Hamas.
On the other hand, if you've been a "hawk" and a pundit, or one of those retired generals who talked us, however ineptly, through our latest wars (like the TV financial analysts who, in mid-meltdown, were still calling on us to buy more stocks and assuring us of the solidity of A.I.G. and Citigroup), you can't be wrong often enough to be asked to leave the table at which the Great Game is played.
Oh, and with this in mind, a small tip for prospective "doves" within the Obama administration: Be careful not to be too on the mark in your analysis or, at least, too loud about proclaiming it. On this subject, history is a suicide bomber and it's coming for you. After all, the worst thing in any administration is to be a dove and be right.
As David Halberstam memorably wrote in his history of the Vietnam War, The Best and the Brightest, of hawkish future Secretary of State Dean Rusk, "So [he] was once again promoted (the best people, who had correctly predicted the fall of China, would see their careers destroyed, but Dean Rusk, who had failed to predict the Chinese entry into the Korean War, would see his career accelerate.) There had to be a moral for him here: if you are wrong on the hawkish side of an event you are all right; if you are accurate on the dovish side you are in trouble."
Leaving the Comfort Zone
Let's be clear here. In our world, any application of imperial force is part of the problem, not part of the solution. It doesn't work. We can't afford it. It's not in "the national interest." The last seven years have made this abundantly clear for those who care to look.
Let's be clear on this, too: If we keep sending military people in to solve our problems, they will, not surprisingly, turn to military solutions. Whatever lip service they offer to diplomacy and other possible paths, they will, in the end, prefer force by whatever label. It's what they know. However uncomfortable its results, it's still their comfort zone.
That's why the American president is commander-in-chief -- exactly so that military men aren't left to "solve" our problems for us.
Let's be clear on this as well: Nobody knows what antiwar solutions would make sense, no less succeed, since so little effort or money or time or experimentation has gone into them, but we know a lot about what force can't do in our world.
Wouldn't it make sense to put a small percentage of the long-term effort and money that the Pentagon now profligately invests in force and the means to deliver it into strategies for peace, and into the de-escalation of the use of force as a solution (and of the global imperial mission that goes with it)? Shouldn't somebody consider, for instance, whether the principle found in so many individual martial arts -- that defense, and even striking reserves of power, can be found not in meeting force with blunt force, but in giving way before force -- might apply to more collective situations? Don't such groups as the Taliban and al-Qaeda feed off of, thrive and recruit off of, military action against them as well as the human destruction and the attention that goes with it?
Isn't it time for us to begin to take force off that "table" on which, officials in Washington always insist, lie "all options," but especially smash-mouth ones? Isn't it time to suggest that there can be no national interest when it comes to military action in Iraq or Afghanistan, only an imperial interest? Isn't it time to suggest that, as bad as things are, as little as we know how to do anything else, simply fighting on in Iraq or Afghanistan until 2015 or 2020, as our economic system collapses around our ears, can't be a solution to anything?
Decades ago, after visiting American troops in Vietnam, singer Johnny Cash was asked by a reporter whether that didn't make him a hawk. "No, no, that don't make me a hawk," he responded. "But I said if you watch the helicopters bring in the wounded boys, and then you go into the wards and sing for 'em and try and do your best to cheer 'em up, so they can get back home, it might make you a dove with claws." Later, he would call that image "stupid." Maybe that's because he didn't go all the way. Maybe he meant "a falcon of peace."
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16 Comments so far
Show AllThank you Tom Englehardt!
This is fully connected to questions of perspective that valorize matters such as single payer health care. Create some heft on the demand side by demanding military funding be rechanneled to something other than a shortcircuit of human societies.
Seeking one million signatures: Single Payer Action
http://www.singlepayeraction.org/index.php
PUSH!!
THE SPARROW IN THE ZOO, a poem by Howard Nemerov
No bars are set too close, no mesh too fine
To keep me from the eagle and the lion,
Whom keepers feed that I may freely dine.
This goes to show that if you have the wit
To be small, common, cute, and live on shit,
Though the cage fret kings, you may make free with it.
Great piece! Thanks for the apt metaphor packed with the awful facts. How can a culture become so delusional that recipes for force are tried over and over with similar sickening result?
The belief system remains closed to examination in a closed cultural ideology. It's hubris.
I've read that Ben Franklin wanted the national bird to be the turkey but that the eagle won out. Wasn't the eagle the national bird of Imperial Rome?
I feel like I'm living in a bad dream when I look at my american cultural ocean that I've been swimming in like a fish for 56 years.... so much has been nutso from family life, education, work... yet I LIKE being an american, most americans are great people, but our government and many social systems are zombie systems... no wonder "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" was such a huge hit. And many other zombie metaphors.
We need a new Department of Peace, we need to shrink the military to a purely defensive force and shrink all those nasty spy departments, too. Too damn many spooks keeping their jobs going by fear-mongering. Where is the "peace-mongering?"
Keep writing, Tom, you're an inspiration.
In Obama's new budget, more money goes to Pentagon than Bush's.
I repeat, Mr. Change, Mr. anti-war is pledging to spend MORE on military than Bush.
How long will the naive American electorate continue to fall for the annointed Demican/Republicrat stooges who deliver, after election, nothing but goodies to Wall ST.?
Tom's right, to really start being effective, doves need to grow some claws. But a Dept of Peace is hardly the answer.
A costly new bureaucratic monolith is only as good as the politicians who strategically manipulate it. Considering the Dems and Reps still clearly serve the Zionists and big corporations, the proposed new department would be little more than a gigantic sanctioned "protest pen."
Just look at the United Nations, an enormous "Dept of Peace" if you will, but little more than a puppet providing cover for American/Israeli wars.
Like our charming new "peace train" hawk president, who's buying time for the hard-core hawks' next wave, planning and building a DOP would effectively distract many doves from the real claw-like action required to halt the world's current murderous empire.
"Be careful not to be too on the mark in your analysis or, at least, too loud about proclaiming it...... After all, the worst thing in any administration is to be a dove and be right."
The latest dove to be served up on a silver platter to the DC beltway hawks is Charles Freeman, the former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia and a rare unconventional thinker on American foreign policy who has a reputation for speaking truth to power. This morning the news broke that Freeman had withdrawn his name from being appointed to head the National Security Council.
Glenn Greenwald and pretty much everybody else analyzing this development sees Freeman's demise as a huge victory for the AIPAC right wing Zionist lobby. There is no question Obama rolled over, and did not defend his own "dove" nominee. The key player in sabotaging Freeman's appointment apparently was none other than Senator Charles Schumer, liberal Democrat of New York.
Tom Englehardt's imagery captures the moment perfectly: once again, the hawks swoop and prey, while the doves pace in frustration and coo their complaints on the sidelines. Charles Freeman was an outspoken realist when it came to recognizing the inherent limits of militarism, a would-be advisor slated to join Obama's inner circle who was already on record strongly questioning the wisdom of the planned escalation of US troop levels into Afghanistan/Pakistan.
So RIP, one more loser, one more dove.
The hawks are still firmly in charge, circling over the Potomac like drones.
With friends and allies like Chuck Schumer and Rahm Emmanuel on your side, you got to watch your back at all times.
Bill from Saginaw
Good comments, Bill. So much for the "Team of Rivals". Any criticism of Israeli policies is political suicide. I applaud Charles Freeman for not backing down with some mild statement meant to leave an opening for later positions. He told it like it is.
Unfortunately for us, he lost the job and Rahm Emanuel still has his.
Pester Schumer and Obama with letters, emails, calls. Send pictures of Palestinian children to Michelle.
Joe
Could Education be part of the answer? We have Annapolis, West Point, the Air Force Academy to train young persons the ways of warfare and to promote officers to follow through in any given war. Dennis Kucinich is right that we need a Department of Peace, one staffed with diplomats and negotiators, a first response team to altercations. In order to do that you would need persons trained in those fields. Perhaps a university devoted to training young persons in the ways of Peace would be an alternative to universities devoted to war.
Excellent article.
"Who Wants to Be a Dove? (They Always Lose.)"
Mayber we're not all hawks (conservatives) or doves (liberals). Many of us are just sheeple who react instinctively and tend to vote for and appoint conservative fear-mongers, war-mongers, end timers, racists, greedheads, dictators, and all kinds of reactionary loudmouths and their paymasters instead of people who study all the issues.
Conservatives, authoritarians all, are decisive. Whether right or wrong and usually wrong, decisiveness is what counts. Sheeple will vote for the loudest mouth, the most intense, the best bridge salesman and the one who blames everything on liberals. No wishy washy, namby pamby, effete intellectual bleeding hearts need apply. Or what was that conservatives called Kerry?
The animal instincts that helped us to survive by fight or flight still rule. In a complex world on the brink, we follow the conservative beast at our peril.
Nazi Germany operated with the same ideology - fascism. It doesn't work - never did and never will. Americans will get what they deserve.
Sioux Rose
The origin of "force first" comes from a deep and profound subliminal homage to Mars. The "God" of Abraham is a God of vengeance, and the Bible is all about fighting and groups intentionally set into conflict with other groups.
When polytheism was forced away to make room (at veritable gunpoint, heretics of those days came up against their own right wing hit squads, frequently those assembled by or otherwise blessed by the church) for monotheism, the deity that came to be understood as God had many attributes of Mars, angry jealous god and warrior. That so much blood has been shed by those who thought they were on missions for God itself suggests the species of deity being worshipped.
This homage is so much a part of Judeo-Christian culture that we see it in movies where good overcomes evil, but largely "good" uses the same tactics (police violence, Clint as callous killer but on the "side of the law" in all the Dirty Harry episodes as one example) as its adversary. Team sports, and singing the national anthem ("The bombs bursting in air..."), I mean it's centuries of CONDITIONING.
A recent article on CD explained that Darwin's research and findings were cherry picked to establish a "survival of the fittest" ethos that was then utilized by economic theorists to justify the most antisocial of notions; but that is NOT entirely what Darwin's unique studies concluded or validated.
Human beings have been taught to compete, taught to see war as something inevitable, taught to suppress their feelings so that anger and depression are left in the wake of what's been subsumed, and taught to see economic hierarchy (painful tension between the haves and have nots) as the way of the world. All of these are LIES, but when LIES are conditioned over generations, become programmed (also through education and media) over the centuries, the vast majority loses any conception that another way, another world is possible.
Our present time frame, THE collapse may give rise to what is next. Let us hope enough enlightened persons act as the ideological seeds to plant new visions in the fledging epoch just ahead.
Sioux Rose
In addition, the aversion to PEACE is in large measure due to its association with being weak, soft, feminine, a pussy. Until an equal reverence/respect for the Divine Feminine is established on a worldwide basis, the attraction to force will continue.
I remember the old movies where men had CHARACTER, and THAT was their strength. They had the courage of their convictions. Gregory Peck in "To Kill a Mockingbird" comes to mind, or some of the Jimmy Stewart films where he showed a capacity to overcome his own moral weaknesses to DO the RIGHT thing. We need these types of heroic depictions.
When the "decency" rules were relaxed and TV and movies began to show more skin and sex, they also began to show more violence. In my college feminist studies courses the corelation was identified and unmistakable. An incredible amount of vicarious violence is portrayed against women in movies, and this, too, becomes a subliminal thread in the fabric of actual life away from the screen. In any case, films began to use more and more force, and generally depicted the hero as the person who either became a lethal force (Arnold in Terminator and its follow-ups) or used incredible firepower. This in turn has created a normalization of these tactics.
In spiritual teachings it's understood that what one fills their mind with becomes their quality of life, inasmuch as what one eats influences their physical well-being. Film and media could be seen as a nation's brain or thought pattern. Is there any question OURS is SICK? The focus on things that SHOULD disgust, SHOULD repel our sensibilities instead acts to normalize what should revult us. There is not just a dumbing down of minds, there is a diminishment of healthy sensory response to the truly depraved. I am firmly of the belief that this type of conditioning plays a MAJOR role in our nation's status as # 1 purveyor of weapons, trafficker in arms around the globe; and also the nation that has used a vast number of weapons of destruction. And the fact this nation clammors that it's very religious, when THIS violence is the outcome, when the budget bleeds for weapons, is as earlier stated ABSOLUTE PROOF that Mars rules; and when Mars rules, it places VENUS (all things peaceful, creative, beautiful, harmonious, fair and just) at a distinct disadvantage. The metaphor can be likened to a balance scale with Mars on one side and Venus on the other. These Divine counterparts, inclusive of what they represent, SHOULD balance... that is the way our world is designed to work, that is the way our genetics (half the sum of EACH gender) are designed, and the list goes on. Venus and Mars like Eve and Adam are the great celestial LOVERS, but having been turned on one another, the entire world reflects a state of divorce. Love is scarce but arms are everywhere... mankind has been seduced by a snake all right, it has been led off its Divine course, and only an embrace of the lovers, an equality between the genders can even begin to repair the broken template.
Peaceman
Another insightful article by Tom.
Also, two excellent posts by Sioux Rose, which if combined, could be an article on Common Dreams as well. I certainly agree with your assessment. Thank you, Sioux!
Bill From Saginaw: You hit the bulls eye!
We do need Kucinich's "Department of Peace." I'll say, "Yes we can" to that.
Realistically, we are becoming more of a military police state and believe that guns and bombs and threats are the way to solve problems. Alliances are forming to take on the world's only "super bully" and it won't be pretty.
Sioux Rose
PEACEMAN: Nice to see you back, and thank you for the validation! I have noticed the premise that Mars rules is finding its way into numerous articles, even if cast in a slightly different idiom.
Peaceman
Sioux Rose: The wisdom and understanding of universal law and principals which you have elaborated on over the years validates itself. Our country is addicted to a culture of violence, greed, selfishness, and as I've said before, willful ignorance. The information is out there for all who seek it. I'm spending more time in community activities and less time on the internet, but I thank you for your comments on CD. You are a positive force for good in this world. Many thanks for YOUR insight on things.
The absolute best way for the activist community to move things forward to a sustainable future is to invent it in the present, to build it now, to do an end-run around the opposition. Allow the opposition to fall on its face, which it is doing rather rapidly. The culture of violence is crumbling, collapsing.
The end-run is the campaign to establish a U.S. Department of Peace, no matter if it succeeds or not. Let the cynics say it's impossible, impractical, useless. People by the thousands are proving them wrong, right now, today. The people involved in the campaign are making a great discovery and sharing it with anyone willing to listen.
We live in a time of great change, when it has become more and more obvious with every passing day that power over others through aggression wastes energy and produces repeating cycles. Nothing is now more important than breaking that cycle by learning how to create the joy, wonder, and power of people working together in community. Nothing is more important for our economy and peace of mind than creating a secure environment for creativity to flourish.
The revolution, the nonviolence revolution, in my opinion, has already occurred, and most people haven't seen it coming. At the beginning of this United States, John Adams wrote to Thomas Jefferson, and I quote:
“What do we mean by revolution? The war? That was no part of the revolution; it was only an effect and consequence of it. The revolution was in the minds of the people, and this was effected from 1760 to 1775, in the course of fifteen years, before a drop of blood was shed at Lexington.”
This time, there will be no blood. I think the military-industrial complex will simply dry up and blow away, useless and unwanted. Tears will be shed, many tears of regret, many tears of joy.