When these bills move through the Congress, they are so enormous and yet so routine that almost all attention is drawn to one or more peculiarly putrid or pretentiously benevolent little attachments. Either the bill simply must be passed because it contains hurricane relief or veterans aid or unemployment insurance or because it finally allows GLBT Americans to join in our crusades of mass murder. Or, alternatively, the bill desperately needs amending because it sanctions torture or lawless imprisonment or expands an especially hated war or an especially transparent investment in unwanted weaponry manufactured by some campaign donor. But the underlying insanity of the bill itself never makes it into the corporate conversation.
In the case of this latest National Defense Authorization Act, there has been a toothless rhetorical amendment passed asking the president to end his warmaking in Afghanistan in something less than three years if it’s not too much trouble. But that positive measure has been absolutely overwhelmed in what little discussion of the bill exists by a section of the bill giving presidents and the military the power to lock you away without any of the process guaranteed you by the U.S. Constitution. Now, President Obama may veto the bill because he would prefer that section to be even worse than it is. He has expressed concern that it limits, rather than expands, his options. He should veto it because it rips out the heart of our Bill of Rights and grinds it into the dirt.
But a bill like this should not be passed simply because the latest erosion of our civil liberties is removed and the even worse un-codified understanding and practice is left to continue. A bill like this one should be rejected in its entirety. This bill kills human beings in large numbers, endangers us all through encouragement of foreign hostility, contributes to the development and proliferation of genocidal weaponry, creates massive environmental destruction, advances a foreign policy built around an unsurvivable energy policy, funds both sides of an unending Afghan occupation, funds prisons where we already hold many hundreds of men behind bars without charge or trial, and gives presidents de facto power to ignore our rights for the duration of a global war that has no end. And this bill destroys our economy through unfathomable wasteful spending in the midst of a manufactured deficit crisis and an actual humanitarian crisis at home and abroad.
Military spending is worse for job creation and retention than any other kind of spending or even tax cuts. Jobs is not the silver lining in militarism. There is a choice that confronts us between militarism or jobs, militarism or human services, militarism or a safety net for the ill and the elderly and the impoverished. We’re dumping over a trillion dollars a year into “security” spending in “defense” and other bills combined, well over half of discretionary spending. The deficit “crisis” is not the creation of sick people getting old and multiplying without having had the decency to bribe their way into major government contracts or bailouts from the Federal Reserve. Single-payer health coverage, not cuts to Medicare, is the solution there. The deficit is not purely the result of the Obama tax cuts (sorry, Bush is gone now) or of the bad economy. There is a way to improve the actual economy by spending existing public dollars in different ways.
In 1963, Senator George McGovern and House members F. Bradford Morse and William Fitts Ryan introduced a bill that gained significant support and hearings and would have begun a process of economic conversion from a war economy to a peace economy, retraining and re-employing anyone thrown out of work in the process. Meanwhile, the military was secretly beginning a war in Vietnam, and certain elements were plotting to blow President Kennedy’s brains out of the back of his head. We took a turn for the worse, and economic conversion has never seriously begun. Yet, for decades members of Congress had the decency to at least propose it.
Here’s a bill introduced 20 years ago, in 1991. Do some of the names on the bill look familiar? Waters, Pelosi, Schumer, Slaughter, McDermott, Markey, Panetta (yes, Panetta), Lewis, Pallone, Towns, Berman, Payne, Waxman, Boxer, Wyden, etc. Here’s a solution backed by these people 20 years ago, more desperately needed now, and not under consideration. That’s not their fault. They are cogs in a money-marinated machine. It’s our fault.
In the absence of an overall conversion-to-sanity-and-sustainability bill, there is a related bill that has been introduced in the current Congress: “The Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act of 2011″ introduced by Eleanor Holmes Norton. This bill is a concise thing of beauty which says:
“(a) In General- The United States Government shall–
(1) by the date that is three years after the date of the enactment of this Act, provide leadership to negotiate a multilateral treaty or other international agreement that provides for–
(A) the dismantlement and elimination of all nuclear weapons in every country by not later than 2020; and
(B) strict and effective international control of such dismantlement and elimination;
(2) redirect resources that are being used for nuclear weapons programs to use–
(A) in converting all nuclear weapons industry employees, processes, plants, and programs smoothly to constructive, ecologically beneficial peacetime activities, including strict control of all fissile material and radioactive waste, during the period in which nuclear weapons must be dismantled and eliminated pursuant to the treaty or other international agreement described in paragraph (1); and
(B) in addressing human and infrastructure needs, including development and deployment of sustainable carbon-free and nuclear-free energy sources, health care, housing, education, agriculture, and environmental restoration, including long-term radioactive waste monitoring;
(3) undertake vigorous, good-faith efforts to eliminate war, armed conflict, and all military operations; and
(4) actively promote policies to induce all other countries to join in the commitments described in this subsection to create a more peaceful and secure world.
(b) Effective Date- Subsection (a)(2) shall take effect on the date on which the President certifies to Congress that all countries possessing nuclear weapons have–
(1) eliminated such weapons; or
(2) begun such elimination under established legal requirements comparable to those described in subsection (a).”
If you’re going to begin conversion with one sector, why not start with the worst? The answer does not ultimately lie in backing a particular bill so much as in educating, mobilizing, changing the public discourse, and applying nonviolent pressure. But there are bills that exist or could easily be made to exist that merit our unqualified support.
Either we will move the money from where it destroys to where is sustains life, or our civilization will meet the fate Kennedy met in Dallas.
[photo: Eugene Berman/Shutterstock.com]




33 Comments

I am grateful for your perspective and suggestions.
We are led to believe that we can’t afford to lose the arms race with the Soviet Union Al Qaeda the Chinese. The reality is that US “security” spending exceeds $1.2 trillion every year while combined Chinese and Russian military spending is under $200 billion per year. Add in the NATO budgets and the military budgets of other US allies and the ratio is even more lopsided.
With this amount of unnecessary military spending, the US becomes economically uncompetitive. Instead of investing in our national infrastructure, we pad the pockets of military contractors and their stockholders. Instead of investing in highways, instead of building competitive computer infrastructure, instead of investing in education, instead of investing in national health care, we allow a narrow few to walk away with America’s future.
The US needs to invest in its people and it needs to invest in productive assets. That’s just not going to happen as long as the military-industrial complex is able to sell fear to maintain its stranglehold in Washington.
You’re talking about undoing generations of propaganda in support of the current status quo. The general mass of people in this country are accustomed to the idea of endless war and generally believe that we have many enemies around us. Add to that, the insecurity generated by post-Fordian capitalism, people have little time or motivation to be educated. In fact, the culture encourages and celebrates ignorance, as a method of identity and social currency.
And this is a pattern repeated online. The internet allows for more random chance encounters with ideas that go against your personal ideology, but few, if any, of those encounters actually lead to any kind of change in beliefs, which includes someone’s personal politics. And with that, there is a level of vitriol that reinforces a lot of people’s certainty about their beliefs.
That’s why I think the Alinsky model of organizing is so critically important. People change their beliefs based on the actions of others. Actual social interaction encourages people to actually test their ideologies as they are confronted with the logic of power on whatever level. And most politicians, or people with power, fail that personal test.
My point is, yes you and I and the commentors on FDL are aware of the BS of defense budget and appropriations, to various degrees, but the full-time single mother of two, living on processed industrial crap, scraping by, does not have the time or the inclination to get into the nitty-gritty details of budgeting and implications for foreign policy. And, honestly, they don’t care. How do you engage people like that so that they become politically involved and do things beyond voting for a certain candidate. And, I believe, that takes a willingness of people to talk to their neighbors and co-workers and whoever and encourage democratic action. Anyway, my two cents
Direct democratic and radically decentralized, “inefficient” new forms of social and economic life are required to dismantle assassination, imprisonment & mass murder made easy with powerful automation and technologies:
With all due respect to Eleanor Holmes-Norton, such a treaty was just rejected by the world body. I wrote two diaries about the proposal, reposted one of them, and collected a grand total of 3 comments from the FDL readers. Nobody is seriously interested at FDL in treaties ending nuclear weapons except as a propaganda bludgeon like in your current article, and that’s the proof. And from my own limited experience, I tabled a proposal for job transitions that would have qualified for her (2)A to the government several years ago and it was ignored. It was 10 pages long, contained patentable material, and was given to the government for its use to create a hedge against global warming gratis, no strings attached, and got ignored. Saw similar proposals show up without the crucial ingredients for megabucks though, courtesy of some universities more than a year later.
It’s very hard to come up with such proposals if they are to produce jobs, cf. Louis Uchitelle’s article in the NYT a couple of years ago about job retraining programs: They don’t actually know how to “convert all nuclear weapons industry employees” or all defense employees “smoothly to constructive, ecologically beneficial peacetime activities.” Do you?
They’ve so far been unable to “convert” all non-defense previously employed employees of a vast number of industries to employed employees of any industries whatsoever, ecologically beneficial or otherwise.
Thanks, David.
We’ve already lost the democracy race. And it should be called the American Gulag bill.
You may not be able to stop it, but you can stop voting for it. If you aren’t willing to do that, don’t expect anything else to work.
It isn’t necessary to pass new legislation. This already on the books: The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928.
If we simply acted within the confines of this treaty, signed by the principals after WW I, most of what is happening now would be rendered moot.
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Kellogg-Briand+Treaty
Eventually, the US will fall into second place (assuming it’s not a 1000 year Reich). It make sense to start planning for that eventuality now. Not even god can prevent it.
High unemployment does create a supply of applicants for jobs in the Security State. It also creates a supply of potential recruits for the war machine.
Second place economically, with the euro and dollar about to tumble, I think is correct. Though that needn’t be permanent. And why we’re building rockets to bomb non-existent threats instead of to explore planets, building army bases instead of houses for the poor, I have no idea — oh, wait, I guess I do. :-(
It seems we’ve reached the point where the national security state is prepared to unleash police–and now military–force against its own citizens without restraint.
#OWS protesters have not been protected by the Constitution. While plenty of violence has come from the other side.
It’s not a good time. Have democracy and freedom become quaint?
It is heartening to hear someone speak so bluntly about what happened to JFK.
If the #Occupiers have not been protected by the Constitution, even as they have been subjected to state-sanctioned violence, where does that leave us, the United States, as a democracy?
All the progress in the 20th century was due to improvement in working conditions and workers rights and regulations to control corporations. Dismember those and there is no democracy.
Um, endless war in U.S. started after 9/11, 1/2 generation.
DFHs are the post-war baby bulge generation. Plenty of us around who remember VN.
I’d be curious about your age that you state that ‘generations’ have been exposed to war propaganda.
Reagan was so hard up (hard on?) for war that he had to invade tee-insy Granada on no provocation whatsoever. And that was after he ran away from Lebanon.
Create sustainability in your community and be more self reliant. Develop local networks of friends to support one another as much as possible. Develop contingency plans for water food and energy. Make your community (or block)bike accessible. Recycle compost into garden. Have community garden for those who have none. Keep a lending library to teach sustainable living. We have to develop lifestyles to match the conditions. Neighborhood watch is a great way to develop good relations with law enforcement.
“In 1963, Senator George McGovern and House members F. Bradford Morse and William Fitts Ryan introduced a bill that gained significant support and hearings and would have begun a process of economic conversion from a war economy to a peace economy, retraining and re-employing anyone thrown out of work in the process.”
The early 1960s were the height of American civilization, a time of great social and civil rights progress backed by a truly liberal Supreme Court. This era was ruined when the militarists began the Vietnam War with, in my view, the explicit goal of turning the country in a backward direction. Attitudes were so much more enlightened then. I learned, visiting the LBJ Museum in Austin, that there were no executions anywhere in the nation in 1969.
We have never recovered from the mid-1960s turn to militarism. In a sense, the Vietnam War, which began in earnest in 1965, has still not ended.
“None dare call it treason” expressed that well. The Warren Report buried the facts and were challenged.
“Endless War” MIC is addicted.
Complete BS.
The latter 1960s, 1970s were a citizens’ rebellion against war.
In the 1950s and early 1960s, Ike, Dulles Bros, and JFK, were huge war mongers, without any opposition. Anti-war movements at later dates, which resulted in LBJ resignation, may not have impressed you with their effectiveness, but consider what the outcome might have been without them.
Carroll’s House of War is one of the better books that puts the relentless U.S. PTB push toward endless war & MIC into a reasonable context, without either demonizing or praising.
Read it.
I hadn’t really thought of this in detail before. You make a good point. We went from the new found freedoms of the 60′s to Kent State in less than a decade. War is given as the reason to curtail freedom over and over again, and it works every time.
Maybe Obama reelection strategy wave the flag, wrap in it a war…who can oppose you? The MIC will love it.
As Bob Dylan sand Freedom’s a word I rarely use when I am thinking…or close
Dissent challenges power…power uses propaganda…when that fails force works.
“The latter 1960s, 1970s were a citizens’ rebellion against war.”
Agree. This people’s rebellion stopped the shooting Vietnam conflict. But with that, the great progressive impetus of the late 1950s and early to mid-1960s was exhausted, and the progressive impulse was lost for a generation. The Reagan revolution actually had its beginnings in the Carter years, with the beginnings of deregulation (telephones, airlines) and mass factory closings. Ford’s pardon of Nixon in 1976 was perhaps the beginning date of the counterrevolution.
We have been in a war economy without interruption since pearl harbor in 1941. We have gone from a country that spent about 7% of it’s budget on the military and wielded considerable clout around the world with a naval fleet thaqt was only the 27th largest in the world to a nation that is losing all it’s clout not despite, but because it wastes more than half it’s budget on an arsenal that far from being a shield, has become a cage, with our entire nation trapped in it, shackled by bankers and war profiteers who’ll happliy shift to china as soon as we go bankrupt, which if any judge will be any minute now.
http://occupyyourbrain.tumblr.com
And by the same Burning BUSHS!
“Either we will move the money from where it destroys to where is sustains life, or our civilization will meet the fate Kennedy met in Dallas.”
I’d argue we have LONG passed that point, Mr. Swanson.
Long ago.
It was passed in DallasNov ’63 . . . as you allude to.
Perhaps even when the Big Boy was ordered to drop on Hiroshima . . . and another one on Nagasaki.
That’s when our humanity and civil discourse disappeared, at home and abroad.
N life has never been the same, despite the middle class growth of the 50′s/60′s.
hey good point and i have a book on this that is just out and i’ll be discussing it in an upcoming FDL book salon in January :-)
http://davidswanson.org/outlawry
pearl harbor is the turning point
http://my.firedoglake.com/davidswanson/2011/12/04/70-years-of-lying-about-pearl-harbor/
OWSt. millions v. 0bamanable minions*. The world is their* 0WSt.er!
Where have you been, wimperbang? We already undid those generations of propoganda, and you can bet your bottom dollar (may be far down in the pile) that single mom you talk about knows darn well the money is going where it shouldn’t. Just because the poohbahs still have complete control of the media is no reason to suppose that the masses are still being brainwashed. They are not. Grim reality trumps even Dancing with the Stars.
David says “…the underlying insanity of the bill itself never makes it into the corporate conversation.” This is very true and one of the reasons that I will NOT vote for any of these charlatans in 2012. The perceptions within this recommended post give the purpose for all the highly paid think tank operatives sprinkled around the country – they craft this confection precisely so that the conversation never gets to the nub of the problem. This is what is making Occupy Wall Street so popular – POPULAR I say. The Occupiers know this is going on, and they reject that false dichotomy. They reject the confection. They say, debate the real issues, not the phony flimflam – which latter will be real enough if it gets enacted, but as David points out, the scurrillous beat beneath goes on. As with the flimflam on “60 Minutes” last night – right enough in what it had to say about deception and nonresponse on the part of the Justice Department but woefully derelict in pointing out the rot that pretends to be the system of mortgage slicing and dicing and desperate need of the PTB for any likely bubble to profit fromreaching far into the world economy today. Now, that’s the story.
If they could make Occupy into a bubble, you can bet they would.