handy
02-16-2012, 11:24 AM
Nice!
https://original.antiwar.com/lee-wrights/2012/02/15/why-peace-why-not/
Why Peace? Why Not!
by Lee Wrights (https://original.antiwar.com/author/lee-wrights/),
February 16, 2012
“Having seen the people of all other nations bowed down to the earth under the
wars and prodigalities of their rulers, I have cherished their opposites,
peace, economy, and riddance of public debt, believing that these were
the high road to public as well as private prosperity and happiness.”
- Thomas Jefferson
My most natural reaction to
the simply-put question “Why peace?” is puzzlement. My natural
response to the question would be “Why peace? Why not?” How
could peace possibly be a bad thing? Then I realize how aloof and self-righteous
simple questions and answers can sometimes seem. It is best, as is my
normal fashion, to treat even seemingly simple questions as serious
inquiries into fundamental freedom throughout the United States and
the world. I understand we must be able to demonstrate why peace is
beneficial to individuals, nations, and civilizations. So, let’s start
over: Why peace?
I think the clearest and simplest
answer is “Why not; we have tried war, over and over again, we
never win, and the problems we war against only get worse. As the old
’60s song goes: all we are saying is, give peace a chance.” Not
only that, but history proves that when there is no war, people prosper.
There have been economic booms, scientific advancements, and cultural
progress after every conflict American has fought, beginning with our
War of Independence.
War breeds war. That is all
it can do. War does nothing but devour valuable resources and destroy
precious lives for the sole purpose of perpetuating itself. As Randolph
Bourne wrote, “War is the health of the state.” War is a mechanism
used by the ruling elites of the state to coerce and control the people,
so it becomes essential that whenever one war is complete, another is
instigated elsewhere so that the mechanism keeps running.
On the other hand, peace breeds
prosperity. If war is indeed the “health of the state,” then peace can be nothing less than the “health of the people.”
Being at peace means valuable natural resources can be preserved and
used at home where we need them most. Being at peace means young fathers
and mothers can live and enjoy free trade, not only among themselves
but with the world, instead of dying capriciously and unnecessarily,
for political gain or to line the pockets of those who profit from their
sacrifice.
History teaches us that the
key elements to prosperity are freedom and peace. You don’t go to war
with people you like, or with people you know, or with people with whom
you are trading and doing business. Even after our fledgling republic
was nearly torn asunder in a civil war that literally pitted brother
against brother and nearly destroyed the South, our reunited nation
and all its people advanced and prospered after peace was restored.
After both the world wars of
the 20th century, there were advances in science, technology,
and culture that only ended when the nation again blundered or was
bamboozled
into war. The post–War War I economic boom saw the increased use of
machines and factories for mass production, which made goods faster
and cheaper to produce, thus lowering prices so the average American
could buy and enjoy them. The Roaring Twenties roared with more than
the music and dancing in the burgeoning commercial radio and movie
industry.
American homes roared with the sound of newfangled, labor-saving devices
like electric vacuum cleaners, toasters, washing machines, and
refrigerators.
Americans not only had more freedom to enjoy the fruits of their labor,
but they were also literally set free to travel when the automobile
became
affordable and part of every American household.
Despite common belief, World
War II did not end the Great Depression, but instead delayed recovery.
“Tanks, bombs, and helicopters have limited uses outside of military
applications,” writes (https://mises.org/daily/5069/World-War-II-Did-Not-End-the-Great-Depression) Art Carden, assistant professor of
economics and business at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., and an adjunct
fellow with the Oakland, California–based Independent Institute. “The
labor that was used to produce them was not available to produce consumer
goods and services; in fact, people went without consumer goods.”
The boom began after the war, when the troops came home. Again, there
was a great surge of economic expansion, technological invention and
innovation, and cultural change, including the birth of the Baby Boomer
Generation, of which I am a late entry. Even the nations devastated
by the war — France, Germany, and Japan — prospered. In the decade after
World War II, colonialism ended and dozens of new, free nations were
born. Many of the new countries of this Third World rejected taking
sides in the looming Cold War between the United States and the U.S.S.R.
that was dividing the world once again into warring factions, and they sought
to achieve freedom and prosperity peacefully, following a third way.
“War
is just one more big government program.”
- Joseph Sobran
The other wars that American
politicians are so fond of creating over social and political issues
stifle prosperity too and hurt the very people they are designed to
help. We have been fighting the war against poverty since the Johnson
administration, and all we have done is spun a web of social programs
that somehow have locked poor people into poverty. We’ve been fighting
the war on ignorance since the ’70s, and our children, who were once
the envy of other nations, can no longer read. The War on Drugs, the
most devastating and destructive war in American history, has been
raging
for more than 40 years. In addition to killing thousands each year, it
has wasted billions of dollars and put more people in jail than
any other nation in the world. It has made it profitable for pushers
to infiltrate our schools to an extent that the legal vices, tobacco
and alcohol, have never been able to do.
The cost of America’s current
major wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has surpassed $1 trillion.
While this figure is staggering, the real cost of these conflicts to
our economy and our liberty is even more staggering. One trillion dollars
is an almost incomprehensible number, but what is even more incomprehensible
is the fact that most of that is borrowed money; the federal government
borrows about 43 cents of every dollar it spends, then uses it to
build schools, roads, and hospitals in countries where we’re partly responsible
for destroying the infrastructure. Borrowing money and going further
into debt to destroy, rebuild, and maybe destroy again is not only
insane, it’s immoral.
The military budget is more
than $700 billion and climbing each year. In real terms, defense spending
is more today than at any time during the Cold War, the Korean War,
or the Vietnam War. Our Founders would be appalled. They predicted
that war would be the most dreaded threat to our liberties. They told
us that from war would proceed debt, taxes, fraud, and degeneracy. They warned us that no nation could preserve its freedom in
the midst of continual warfare. As James Madison said:
Of all enemies to
public liberty, war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it
comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of
armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and
taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination
of the few.
With the Internet, the world
today is literally our marketplace. War shuts down part of that marketplace,
but peace allows that marketplace to thrive. The War on Terror declared
after the tragic events on Sept. 11, 2001, has led to one war right
after another. This caravan of conflict has plunged us deeper into debt
as we sacrifice our precious natural resources, not the least of which
are our brave men and women. In fact, those who volunteer to defend
and protect the Constitution are those we should be most concerned about.
They should be working in America, not dying in Afghanistan or Iraq
or Libya, or wherever the warmongers who control our government care
to send them.
Americans need to occupy Congress
and tell them to stop killing people all over the world, stop making
new enemies every chance they get, and get out of the way of creative
and productive entrepreneurs so that Americans can once again start
producing the best goods and services on the planet. Bring our job force
home, America! Open the world to trade by declaring peace! Maybe — just maybe — once again the “Made in America” tags you
see will begin to rival the number of tags that read “Made in China.”
Instead of teaching our young
people to kill, we should be teaching them about commerce and trade.
In a word: business. But because war has become America’s business,
some would even say its chief industry, all other business suffers.
Now any good accountant will tell you, in order to have a successful
business you must be able to show a profit, and the bottom line is that
war doesn’t pay. That is what makes it such a lousy business for our
nation to get into. With the one exception of defending the country
from foreign attack, war only takes, giving nothing in return, save
economic ruin and human heartaches. The natural resources and manpower
eaten up by an imperialistic war machine are lost forever to starving
job markets and industry at home.
The young people who have volunteered
to serve in our military, for what they were told and believed was a
noble cause, have sacrificed more than enough. It’s time for America
to end the deceit engineered to gain their loyalty and trust and to
stop dishonoring their sacrifice by wasting their lives in futile and
endless conflict. Bring them home where they can work for themselves
and their families, prospering in a peaceful country. The biggest favor
we could do for most of our troops would be to retire them so they can
come home and go to work. We need prosperous patriots more than we need
hallowed heroes. We can make this country great again, but it will require
peace. Peace breeds plentiful production, while war can only breed devastating
destruction.
As my friend Anthony Gregory
has written (https://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory209.html), “Libertarianism is the ultimate
antiwar philosophy.” Libertarians view aggressive war as the greatest
of government evils, as purely destructive and grossly immoral, not
just because of the killing, but because of “the expansion of state
power; the regimentation of the economy; the crackdowns on civil liberties;
the financing of it all through taxation and inflation….”
Government is force, and war
is the inevitable, ultimate and deadliest expression of that base characteristic.
Force and coercion are not only incompatible with freedom and liberty,
they are destructive of them. Freedom and liberty can only survive and
flourish in a society where peaceful exchange of goods, services, and
ideas is preserved and protected by the respect of everyone involved,
by mutual consent. Just as freedom and responsibility are said to be
two sides of the same coin, so are peace and prosperity.
“Everything
that is really great and inspiring is created
by the individual who can labor in freedom.”
- Albert Einstein
Why peace? Because war wastes,
destroys, and kills. It wastes money and resources, it destroys liberty
and property, and worst of all, it kills what we should value the most.
The greatest cost of these endless and needless wars cannot be measured
in dollars and cents but in the waste of our most precious resource —
the lives of our young people. As a U.S. Air Force veteran, it pains
me every time I hear a report of another young man or woman killed in
some faraway land. Every time a young American soldier, sailor, airman,
or Marine is killed, another dream dies, another possibility dies,
another
prospect dies. Every time a young American is killed, another hope dies.
The men and women who volunteer
for our armed forces take an oath to defend our country and our Constitution.
Our elected leaders then dishonor and betray that loyalty and commitment
when they send them to fight and die on foreign battlefields to support
dictators and corrupt governments or to serve some false ideal of “humanitarian
assistance” or nebulous goal of nation-building. Politicians piously
praise the dedication and sacrifice made by America’s young men and
women in uniform, yet they continue to promote policies that will cause
them, and their families, to suffer and sacrifice even more. Our
military deserves a commander in chief who will honor and respect their
devotion to duty by calling on them to fight and die only to defend
America when we have been directly attacked.
Why peace? Because the world
needs the goods and services Americans can potentially produce more
than it needs some planetary protection from evil that America can’t
possibly provide. War is waste. Peace is production. War breeds war.
Peace breeds prosperity. What do you believe America needs more of right
now? Which could you use more of right now?
Why peace? Because America
should be a nation teaming with free, living, and prosperous patriots,
not a country of cemeteries filled with dead heroes. The greatest honor
we can bestow on these young people is to stop asking them to sacrifice
themselves in endless and needless wars. America is indeed the home
of the brave — and we should bring the brave home and keep them here.
“War
is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest,
easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious.”
- U.S. Marine Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler, two-time Medal of Honor winner
https://original.antiwar.com/lee-wrights/2012/02/15/why-peace-why-not/
Why Peace? Why Not!
by Lee Wrights (https://original.antiwar.com/author/lee-wrights/),
February 16, 2012
“Having seen the people of all other nations bowed down to the earth under the
wars and prodigalities of their rulers, I have cherished their opposites,
peace, economy, and riddance of public debt, believing that these were
the high road to public as well as private prosperity and happiness.”
- Thomas Jefferson
My most natural reaction to
the simply-put question “Why peace?” is puzzlement. My natural
response to the question would be “Why peace? Why not?” How
could peace possibly be a bad thing? Then I realize how aloof and self-righteous
simple questions and answers can sometimes seem. It is best, as is my
normal fashion, to treat even seemingly simple questions as serious
inquiries into fundamental freedom throughout the United States and
the world. I understand we must be able to demonstrate why peace is
beneficial to individuals, nations, and civilizations. So, let’s start
over: Why peace?
I think the clearest and simplest
answer is “Why not; we have tried war, over and over again, we
never win, and the problems we war against only get worse. As the old
’60s song goes: all we are saying is, give peace a chance.” Not
only that, but history proves that when there is no war, people prosper.
There have been economic booms, scientific advancements, and cultural
progress after every conflict American has fought, beginning with our
War of Independence.
War breeds war. That is all
it can do. War does nothing but devour valuable resources and destroy
precious lives for the sole purpose of perpetuating itself. As Randolph
Bourne wrote, “War is the health of the state.” War is a mechanism
used by the ruling elites of the state to coerce and control the people,
so it becomes essential that whenever one war is complete, another is
instigated elsewhere so that the mechanism keeps running.
On the other hand, peace breeds
prosperity. If war is indeed the “health of the state,” then peace can be nothing less than the “health of the people.”
Being at peace means valuable natural resources can be preserved and
used at home where we need them most. Being at peace means young fathers
and mothers can live and enjoy free trade, not only among themselves
but with the world, instead of dying capriciously and unnecessarily,
for political gain or to line the pockets of those who profit from their
sacrifice.
History teaches us that the
key elements to prosperity are freedom and peace. You don’t go to war
with people you like, or with people you know, or with people with whom
you are trading and doing business. Even after our fledgling republic
was nearly torn asunder in a civil war that literally pitted brother
against brother and nearly destroyed the South, our reunited nation
and all its people advanced and prospered after peace was restored.
After both the world wars of
the 20th century, there were advances in science, technology,
and culture that only ended when the nation again blundered or was
bamboozled
into war. The post–War War I economic boom saw the increased use of
machines and factories for mass production, which made goods faster
and cheaper to produce, thus lowering prices so the average American
could buy and enjoy them. The Roaring Twenties roared with more than
the music and dancing in the burgeoning commercial radio and movie
industry.
American homes roared with the sound of newfangled, labor-saving devices
like electric vacuum cleaners, toasters, washing machines, and
refrigerators.
Americans not only had more freedom to enjoy the fruits of their labor,
but they were also literally set free to travel when the automobile
became
affordable and part of every American household.
Despite common belief, World
War II did not end the Great Depression, but instead delayed recovery.
“Tanks, bombs, and helicopters have limited uses outside of military
applications,” writes (https://mises.org/daily/5069/World-War-II-Did-Not-End-the-Great-Depression) Art Carden, assistant professor of
economics and business at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., and an adjunct
fellow with the Oakland, California–based Independent Institute. “The
labor that was used to produce them was not available to produce consumer
goods and services; in fact, people went without consumer goods.”
The boom began after the war, when the troops came home. Again, there
was a great surge of economic expansion, technological invention and
innovation, and cultural change, including the birth of the Baby Boomer
Generation, of which I am a late entry. Even the nations devastated
by the war — France, Germany, and Japan — prospered. In the decade after
World War II, colonialism ended and dozens of new, free nations were
born. Many of the new countries of this Third World rejected taking
sides in the looming Cold War between the United States and the U.S.S.R.
that was dividing the world once again into warring factions, and they sought
to achieve freedom and prosperity peacefully, following a third way.
“War
is just one more big government program.”
- Joseph Sobran
The other wars that American
politicians are so fond of creating over social and political issues
stifle prosperity too and hurt the very people they are designed to
help. We have been fighting the war against poverty since the Johnson
administration, and all we have done is spun a web of social programs
that somehow have locked poor people into poverty. We’ve been fighting
the war on ignorance since the ’70s, and our children, who were once
the envy of other nations, can no longer read. The War on Drugs, the
most devastating and destructive war in American history, has been
raging
for more than 40 years. In addition to killing thousands each year, it
has wasted billions of dollars and put more people in jail than
any other nation in the world. It has made it profitable for pushers
to infiltrate our schools to an extent that the legal vices, tobacco
and alcohol, have never been able to do.
The cost of America’s current
major wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has surpassed $1 trillion.
While this figure is staggering, the real cost of these conflicts to
our economy and our liberty is even more staggering. One trillion dollars
is an almost incomprehensible number, but what is even more incomprehensible
is the fact that most of that is borrowed money; the federal government
borrows about 43 cents of every dollar it spends, then uses it to
build schools, roads, and hospitals in countries where we’re partly responsible
for destroying the infrastructure. Borrowing money and going further
into debt to destroy, rebuild, and maybe destroy again is not only
insane, it’s immoral.
The military budget is more
than $700 billion and climbing each year. In real terms, defense spending
is more today than at any time during the Cold War, the Korean War,
or the Vietnam War. Our Founders would be appalled. They predicted
that war would be the most dreaded threat to our liberties. They told
us that from war would proceed debt, taxes, fraud, and degeneracy. They warned us that no nation could preserve its freedom in
the midst of continual warfare. As James Madison said:
Of all enemies to
public liberty, war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it
comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of
armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and
taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination
of the few.
With the Internet, the world
today is literally our marketplace. War shuts down part of that marketplace,
but peace allows that marketplace to thrive. The War on Terror declared
after the tragic events on Sept. 11, 2001, has led to one war right
after another. This caravan of conflict has plunged us deeper into debt
as we sacrifice our precious natural resources, not the least of which
are our brave men and women. In fact, those who volunteer to defend
and protect the Constitution are those we should be most concerned about.
They should be working in America, not dying in Afghanistan or Iraq
or Libya, or wherever the warmongers who control our government care
to send them.
Americans need to occupy Congress
and tell them to stop killing people all over the world, stop making
new enemies every chance they get, and get out of the way of creative
and productive entrepreneurs so that Americans can once again start
producing the best goods and services on the planet. Bring our job force
home, America! Open the world to trade by declaring peace! Maybe — just maybe — once again the “Made in America” tags you
see will begin to rival the number of tags that read “Made in China.”
Instead of teaching our young
people to kill, we should be teaching them about commerce and trade.
In a word: business. But because war has become America’s business,
some would even say its chief industry, all other business suffers.
Now any good accountant will tell you, in order to have a successful
business you must be able to show a profit, and the bottom line is that
war doesn’t pay. That is what makes it such a lousy business for our
nation to get into. With the one exception of defending the country
from foreign attack, war only takes, giving nothing in return, save
economic ruin and human heartaches. The natural resources and manpower
eaten up by an imperialistic war machine are lost forever to starving
job markets and industry at home.
The young people who have volunteered
to serve in our military, for what they were told and believed was a
noble cause, have sacrificed more than enough. It’s time for America
to end the deceit engineered to gain their loyalty and trust and to
stop dishonoring their sacrifice by wasting their lives in futile and
endless conflict. Bring them home where they can work for themselves
and their families, prospering in a peaceful country. The biggest favor
we could do for most of our troops would be to retire them so they can
come home and go to work. We need prosperous patriots more than we need
hallowed heroes. We can make this country great again, but it will require
peace. Peace breeds plentiful production, while war can only breed devastating
destruction.
As my friend Anthony Gregory
has written (https://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory209.html), “Libertarianism is the ultimate
antiwar philosophy.” Libertarians view aggressive war as the greatest
of government evils, as purely destructive and grossly immoral, not
just because of the killing, but because of “the expansion of state
power; the regimentation of the economy; the crackdowns on civil liberties;
the financing of it all through taxation and inflation….”
Government is force, and war
is the inevitable, ultimate and deadliest expression of that base characteristic.
Force and coercion are not only incompatible with freedom and liberty,
they are destructive of them. Freedom and liberty can only survive and
flourish in a society where peaceful exchange of goods, services, and
ideas is preserved and protected by the respect of everyone involved,
by mutual consent. Just as freedom and responsibility are said to be
two sides of the same coin, so are peace and prosperity.
“Everything
that is really great and inspiring is created
by the individual who can labor in freedom.”
- Albert Einstein
Why peace? Because war wastes,
destroys, and kills. It wastes money and resources, it destroys liberty
and property, and worst of all, it kills what we should value the most.
The greatest cost of these endless and needless wars cannot be measured
in dollars and cents but in the waste of our most precious resource —
the lives of our young people. As a U.S. Air Force veteran, it pains
me every time I hear a report of another young man or woman killed in
some faraway land. Every time a young American soldier, sailor, airman,
or Marine is killed, another dream dies, another possibility dies,
another
prospect dies. Every time a young American is killed, another hope dies.
The men and women who volunteer
for our armed forces take an oath to defend our country and our Constitution.
Our elected leaders then dishonor and betray that loyalty and commitment
when they send them to fight and die on foreign battlefields to support
dictators and corrupt governments or to serve some false ideal of “humanitarian
assistance” or nebulous goal of nation-building. Politicians piously
praise the dedication and sacrifice made by America’s young men and
women in uniform, yet they continue to promote policies that will cause
them, and their families, to suffer and sacrifice even more. Our
military deserves a commander in chief who will honor and respect their
devotion to duty by calling on them to fight and die only to defend
America when we have been directly attacked.
Why peace? Because the world
needs the goods and services Americans can potentially produce more
than it needs some planetary protection from evil that America can’t
possibly provide. War is waste. Peace is production. War breeds war.
Peace breeds prosperity. What do you believe America needs more of right
now? Which could you use more of right now?
Why peace? Because America
should be a nation teaming with free, living, and prosperous patriots,
not a country of cemeteries filled with dead heroes. The greatest honor
we can bestow on these young people is to stop asking them to sacrifice
themselves in endless and needless wars. America is indeed the home
of the brave — and we should bring the brave home and keep them here.
“War
is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest,
easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious.”
- U.S. Marine Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler, two-time Medal of Honor winner