The troubled souls (generally known in the media as “monsters” and “lunatics”) who keep shooting up schools and shopping centers, believe they are solving deeper problems. We all know, of course, that in reality they are making things dramatically worse.
This is not an easy problem for us to solve. We could make it harder to obtain guns, and especially guns designed specifically for mass killings. We could take on the problem with our entertainment: we have movies, television shows, video games, books, and toys promoting killing as the way to fix what ails us. We could take on the problem of our news media: we have newspapers and broadcast chatterers promoting killing as a necessary tool of public policy. We could reverse the past 40 years of rising inequality, poverty, and plutocracy — a trend that correlates with violence in whatever country it’s found.
What we can’t do is stop arming, training, funding, and supporting the mass murderers in our towns and cities, because of course we haven’t been supporting them. They aren’t acting in our name as our representatives. When our children run in horror from classrooms strewn with their classmates’ bloody corpses, they are running from killers never authorized by us or elected by us.
This situation changes when we look abroad.
Picture a family in a house in Pakistan. There’s a little dot very high up in the sky above. It’s making a buzzing noise. The dot is an unmanned airplane, a drone. It’s being flown from a desk in Nevada. The family knows what it is. The children know what it is. They know their lives may be ended at any moment. And they are traumatized. They are in a constant state of terror. And then, one bright clear morning, they are torn limb from limb, bleeding, screaming, groaning out their last breaths as their home collapses into smoking rubble.
Picture a family in a house in Afghanistan. They’re asleep in their beds. A door is kicked in. Incomprehensible words are shouted. Bullets fly. Loved ones are grabbed and dragged away, kicking and screaming with horror — never to be seen again.
The troubled souls (generally known in the media as “tax-payers”) who keep this far greater volume of violence going, believe they are solving deeper problems. But when we look closely, we see that in reality we are making things dramatically worse.
That is the good news. There is violence that we can much more easily stop, because it is our violence. The U.S. Army last week said that targeting children in Afghanistan was perfectly acceptable. The U.S. President maintains a list of men, women, and children to be killed, and he kills them — but the vast majority of the people killed through that program are people not on the list, people in the wrong place at the wrong time (just like the people in our shopping malls and schools).
In fact, the vast majority of the people killed in our foreign wars are simply bystanders. And they are killed in their homes, their stores, their schools, their weddings. The violence that we can easily end looks very much like the violence we find so difficult to address at home. It doesn’t take place between a pair of armies on a battlefield. It happens where its victims live.
Were we to stop pouring $1.2 trillion each year into war preparations, we would also be stopping the public funding of the manufacturers of the weapons that rip open our loved ones and neighbors in our schools and parking lots. We would be altering dramatically the context in which we generate public policy, public entertainment, and public myths about how problems can be solved. We would be saving lives every bit as precious as any other lives, while learning how to go on to saving more.
One place to start, I believe, would be in withdrawing U.S. troops from over 1,000 bases in other people’s countries — an imperial presence that costs us $170 billion each year while building hostility and tensions, not peace. There’s a reason why, at this time of year, we don’t sing about “Peace in My Backyard.” If we want peace on Earth, we must stop and consider how to get it.
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David Swanson’s books include “War Is A Lie.” He blogs at http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works as Campaign Coordinator for the online activist organization http://rootsaction.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson and FaceBook.
Drawing from Christopher Dombres licensed under Creative Commons




15 Comments

Spot on.
Recommended.
DW
Amen.
Thanks. Recommended
Recommended. Thank you.
Left this over ats david’s pst also,
When the president shows that much emotion for dead children in Afghanistan or regret for rescuers slaughtered with secondary drone strikes will this end.
War is not the answer, killing is not the answer, violence is not the answer until we reverse the course the military has driven us down for the last forty years, starting with the violence of blowing a President’s brains out in broad daylight , this type of killing will increase. We do it every day over there to our brothers and sisters don’t we think they ache for their dead kids too.
thanks for the sanity injection,this country is rotten to the core
how to fix it.
find a REAL pro life party
Gun control is one of the many answers:
http://act.rootsaction.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=7039
Your final paragraph sums up our societal problem with violence. Thanks for pointing us un the right direction.
The vast organized violence of US foreign policy over two hundred+ years is a social poison. Domestically – political, social and labor movements have been met with deadly force.
That this madness occasionally manifests in our own communities should not surprise us.
Thanks for this, David, rec’d of course.
It’s hard to find individual crazy in time to stop it, but national crazy, crazy as policy, (should be) easy to identify and to stop.
We could, say, make it a mission.
Exactly, including the whole range of adoring the military and furnishing the obscene funding that keeps all the the personel and hardware going often/usually for the known purpose of supporting the MIC. Insanity in the extreme….and a little less glory to bloodletting sports may be another element to paint with scorn….who needs bloodied bodies in boxing rings and fb fields or days spent hunting/shooting animals in the wild. A broad condemnation of blood sport in all its forms could be the beginning of wisdom and a step toward prevention.
Recc’d. This is exactly why much of the rest of the world considers Americans to be sanctimonious hypocrites. We starve Iraqi children, then invade and occupy the country and turn it into a killing zone. We kill Afghan and Pakistani women, children, and soldiers who are supposed to be our allies and most of us don’t care. We blindly support the brutal repression of the Palestinians, but that’s OK because Israel cannot be questioned.
So some Arab kids got killed. So what? They would just grow up to be terrorists, anyway, about sums up the attitude behind our government’s actions.
Then a bunch of American school children get mowed down, the President sheds a tear, the media puts on a circus, and millions of us blog and tweet about how awful and inexplicable it was.
Is it any wonder that America is resented?
I believe bin Laden said this very thing about our society in a video interview found after 11Sep01.
We reap what we sow.
Sorry, can’t leave it alone.
I read in the media where people are trying to “justify” the gunman’s motivation by saying he had mental problems, alluding to the idea that he was mentally unstable. In fact, most, if not all such issues seem to have been dismissed as “mentally unstable”.
If so, what does that say about our own government, a government that regularly kills children in the middle east with apparent media impunity? Perhaps, a mental issue in our halls of power and fourth estate?
I really do think it is a mental issue that folks can love a gun in some over-the-top, favorite, lustful kind of way….what other inanimate object do we love? Or somehow treat as an extension of oneself? Pathological, imho. And Lethal, by the way.