AMERICAN CHRONICLE
OUR CHILDHOOD'S END
THE NEXT GREAT EVOLUTION
Published by: October
24, 2007 --- Opinion
by Douglas Mattern
The age of nations has passed. It remains
for us now, if we do not wish to perish,to set aside the ancient
prejudices and build the earth.
- Teilhard de Chardin
It has been less than a decade since all
the hopes and dreams that were demonstrated around the world
on the first day of the new millennium have virtually evaporated
due to continuing violence, war, and misguided priorities. One
problem for the lack of progress is that wishing and hoping for
a better and safer world is not the answer. It is only by working
with a total commitment to overcome the obstacles that impede
progress, and, at the same time, have a vision and realistic
program that a better and safer world can be achieved, as it
must if our civilization is to survive and progress.
A good starting point is to recall the
stern and unequivocal warnings made to the American people (and
relevant to the world community) by two presidents that have
been basically ignored with potentially grave consequences. The
first these warnings came from President Dwight Eisenhower in
his Farewell Address to the American People on January 17, 1961:
In the councils of government we must guard
against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought
or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential
for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
In the succeeding years this complex has
extended its influence far beyond what President Eisenhower could
envision. The U.S. fiscal 2006 military budget was an astounding
$419 billion, and this does not include billions of dollars appropriated
for nuclear weapons contained in the Department of Energy (DOE)
budget, as it is every year, or funding for the conflicts in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Now compare this astronomical spending
on the military to what other major countries are spending. The
following figures are compiled for 2006 (or 2005 for some countries)
by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI):
U.S.: $419 billion
China: $62.5 billion
Russia: $61.9 billion
UK: $51.billion
Japan: $44.7 billion
France: $41.6 billion
Germany: $30.2 billion.
The United States accounts for nearly 50
percent of total world military expenditures and it is scheduled
to increase over the coming years. The Center for Arms Control
in Washington D.C. reports the Bush administration request on
military spending for fiscal year 2008 is $481.4 billion, and,
again, this does not include the cost of nuclear weapons or the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Office of Management and Budget estimates
total Pentagon spending, not including nuclear weapons or combat
operations, for the period of fiscal 2008 through fiscal 2012
will exceed $2.3 trillion. These figures should help everyone
understand that there is simply no business like war business
as the permanent war economy has become a central pillar of the
U.S. economy. While the U.S. now imports an enormous amount of
goods, this nation continues to be the leading exporter of weapons
around the world.
The cost and profit from manufacturing
weapons is huge as the following examples reveal:
The F/A-18EF jet fighter: $95 million each
The F-22 jet fighter: $338 million each
The F-35 Jet fighter: $112 million each
The B-2 bomber: $2.1 Billion each
The cost for one CVN-21 aircraft carrier
is $11.9 Billion
The cost for each DDG-1000 (DDx) surface
combat ship is $3.1 billion
The cost for each Trident II D-5 missile
for the Trident submarine is $67 million.
The Trident submarine is the biggest killing
machine ever built. This submarine carries twenty-four ballistic
missiles, each missile capable of carrying eight nuclear warheads,
each warhead over five times the power of the Hiroshima bomb.
One Trident submarine has the destructive power of over one thousand
Hiroshima bombs and can strike 192 separate targets. There are
eighteen Trident submarines.
THE WAR BUSINESS Lockheed-Martin is the
world's largest weapons company so it is not surprising that
all Trident missiles are built by Lockheed-Martin as part of
its vast array of military products, including jet fighters.
The New York Times reports that Lockheed-Martin had sales totaling
$32 billion in 2003. The company is located in cities throughout
the U.S., and has business locations in nations around the world.
The Pentagon's Top 10 Prime Contact award
winners for 2006:
1. Lockheed Martin: $26.6 billion.
2. Boeing: $20.3 billion.
3. Northrop Grumman: $16.6 billion.
4. General Dynamics: $10.5 billion.
5. Raytheon: $10.1 billion.
6. Halliburton: $6.1 billion.
7. L-3 Communications Holdings: $5.2 billion.
8. BAE Systems: $4.7 billion.
9. United Technologies: $4.5 billion.
10. Science Applications Int'l: $3.2 billion.
Source: AOL Money & Finance
The Vietnam War cost the United States
over $600 billion. At least three million people were killed,
including 58,000 young American servicemen. The war ended the
same way it could have had the U.S. accepted elections back in
1954 and averted over ten years of extreme violence and human
suffering. Now, with the new budget request by President Bush,
the cost of the war in Iraq will exceed $600 billion. This is
another war created by deception and run with extreme incompetence
that has turned Iraq from a difficult situation, but were the
majority of people led reasonably normal lives, into an utter
nightmare. Contrary to all the false statements about the justification
for the war, it is actually about three letters: OIL. If there
were no large reserves of oil in Iraq there would be no U.S.
soldiers in Iraq today. The entity that gains most from the war
is the war business by profiting from the sale of weapons.
There's just no business like the war business
and it is ruining our society and much of the world community
by stealing from those in need and exhausting our intellectual
and financial resources
Every gun that is made, every warship
launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a
theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold
and are not clothed. The world in arms is not spending money
alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of
its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way
of life at all in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening
war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.
- President Eisenhower - From a speech
before the American Society of Newspaper Editors, April 16, 1953
NUCLEAR MADNESS
Today at least 27,000 nuclear weapons are stockpiled worldwide,
enough to vanquish civilization several times over. The U.S.
and Russia possess over 90 percent of these weapons, including
several thousand strategic nuclear warheads that are continuous
a hair-trigger alert, ready for a launch in a few minutes notice.
A report by the Rand Corporation declared these weapons could
destroy both countries in an hour. Such a doomsday scenario could
result from an accidental missile launch, an early warning system
error, or miscalculation. There have been many close calls to
a nuclear war starting by accident over the years; therefore,
to retain thousands of nuclear warheads on a hair-trigger alert,
only minutes from launch, is criminal, if not utter madness.
Moreover, conditions are worsening with
the Bush Administration planning to install missiles for the
anti-ballistic missile system (ABM) in countries that border
Russia. President Putin has responded with threats to aim Russian
missiles at nations accepting U.S. missiles on their land. In
addition, Russia is threatening to respond by building a new
series of powerful missiles.
WARNING NUMBER TWO
The second warning from a U.S. president that has also been virtually
ignored is from President Kennedy in a 1963 address to the American
People on the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty:
I ask you to stop and think for a moment
what it would mean to have nuclear weapons in so many hands,
in the hands of countries large and small, stable and unstable,
responsible and irresponsible, scattered throughout the world.
There would be no rest for anyone then, no stability, no real
security, and no chance of effective disarmament. There would
only be the increased chance of accidental war.
President Kennedy's warning has come to
pass with at least eight nations now possessing nuclear weapons
and the United Nations reporting that over 30 countries have
the ability to produce them. It doesn't require brilliance to
understand that unless there is dramatic change in the current
trend of political events, it is only a matter of time until
a nuclear weapon is used in some regional conflict that could
rapidly spiral out of control to a nuclear war that would decimate
civilization.
After such a long journey for civilization
that extends back for millenniums we have come to the critical
fork in the road, and the path we choose will determine if there
is a future for the great human drama or if this is the last
act, at least for civilization. As the great playwright Anton
Chekov wrote, if there is a gun on the wall in the first act
of a play, it will be fired in the third act. We are in the third
act of the nuclear era and the gun on the wall comprises the
27,000 nuclear weapons stockpiled, including 12,000 that are
ready for delivery.
Clearly, a new call to political action
is imperative to push the fools and their folly that never learn
from history to the sidelines before they invoke a global tragedy.
High on the list of priorities is election campaign reform to
end the political corruption through huge donations the weapons
industry and other corporation contribute to political candidates
and then expect, and usually receive, favorable voting in congress.
Consider this shocking statement by Senator Ernest F. Hollings
(D-S.C.) that fundraising for all senators: "distracts us
from the people's business 'It corrupts and degrades the entire
political process' Fundraisers used to be arranged so they didn't
conflict with the Senate schedule; nowadays, the Senate schedule
is regularly shifted to accommodate fundraisers."
Like most of corporate America the weapons
industry employs hundreds of lobbyists whose job is to convince
our elected officials to authorize and fund new weapons and increased
military spending. The consequence is the astronomical military
budget by the U.S. every year. Under these conditions a continuous
armament buildup is assured, for as long as billions of dollars
are allocated every year to develop new weapons, the scientists
and engineers employed by the armament industry will produce
the weapons, even the most complex, including weapons for space,
as long as they are provided enough money and time.
THE WAR BUSINESS IN ORBIT
The next frontier for the war business is space with the Commander-in-Chief
of the U.S. Space Command, General Joseph Ashy, concisely stating
its overall purpose:
It's politically sensitive, but it's
going to happen. Some people don't want to hear this and it sure
isn't in vogue, but-absolutely-we're going to fight in space.
We're going to fight form space and we're going to fight into
space. That's why the U.S. has development programs in directed
energy and hit-to-kill mechanisms. We will engage terrestrial
targets someday-ships, airplanes, land targets from space.
(From Aviation Week and Space Technology).
Today, scientists and engineers in the
weapons industry are working with Pentagon contracts to develop
space-based weapons scheduled for deployment 10 and more years
from now. The Rand think tank reports weapons under development
include space-based lasers, microwave guns, particle beam weapons,
and kinetic-energy weapons.
Just imagine our world with weapons orbiting
the planet 24-hours every day blocking our last frontier. Is
this the end of freedom and human dignity as we gaze to the stars
and mystery of the universe, and, at the same time, see orbiting
lights that are platforms loaded with weapons?
FIRST PRIORITIES
There are many difficult issues confronting humanity today, including
very serious environmental problems. The good news, at least
with the issue of global warming, is that vast numbers of people,
and most governments, now accept and understand this crisis with
many implementing programs to alleviate it. The response by young
and old to the problem with climate change is impressive and
encouraging.
It is in the area of militarization and
weapons that apathy and seemingly indifference is prevalent and
dangerous. People must accept our top priority is to eliminate
all nuclear weapons from the face of the earth. We can never
make real progress and hope for a better future unless humanity
is liberated from this terrorism, for a nuclear war would erase
the past, destroy the present, and ruin the future.
The existence of nuclear weapons presents
a clear and present danger to life on Earth. Nuclear arms cannot
bolster the security of any nation because they represent a threat
to the security of the human race. These incredibly destructive
weapons are an affront to our common humanity, and the tens of
billions of dollars that are dedicated to their development and
maintenance should be used instead to alleviate human need and
suffering.
- Oscar Arias, President of Costa Rica and Nobel Peace Laureate
The second priority is the elimination
of the war system itself with all of its political, economic,
and cultural manifestations. Even without nuclear weapons, civilization
cannot really progress, or perhaps even endure the destruction
and atrocity of modern warfare. At the beginning of the 20th
century about 90 percent of casualties were military and 10 percent
civilian. By the end of the century, and in today's world, these
figures are reversed.
War should belong to the tragic past,
to history: it should find no place on humanity's agenda for
the future.
- Pope John Paul II
The only realistic and workable alternative
to continuing war and an eventual global catastrophe is to create
conditions in which disputes between nations and peoples, and
dealing with terrorists and the causes of terrorism, are settled
through the framework of enforceable world law. This is the same
principle of law through which we settle disputes within our
communities and nations, and now it must be extended to the global
level. The day must come when people accept international disputes
are settled through enforceable world law the same as they accept
disputes within their countries are settled through enforceable
law by state and federal courts. There is no alternative to end
the cycle of war and organized violence. The United Nations,
with its universal membership, which is one of the great accomplishments
in history, is the obvious institution through which international
law must be implemented and global governance achieved.
This consists of a transformation of the
UN to a limited global government that is not intrusive in national
affairs, but is provided with the authority by the Member States
to enforce settlement through legal decisions of international
disputes. Prior efforts to convince people on the need for a
limited world government have failed because no significant social/political
advance is possible unless the time and conditions are right.
Now, in this first decade of the new millennium, with the dangerous
proliferation of nations possessing nuclear weapons, and with
serious environmental problems extending across all national
borders, the time and the conditions are right and necessary
to move forward to global governance.
It will be just as easy for nations
to get along in a republic of the world as it is for you to get
along in the republic of the United States. [If] Kansas and Colorado
have a quarrel over the water in the Arkansas River they don't
call out the national guard in each state and go to war over
it. They bring suit in the Supreme Court of the United States
and abide by the decision. There isn't a reason in the world
why we can't do that internationally.
- President Harry S. Truman
There is an increasing awareness of
the need for some form of global government.
- Mikhail Gorbachev
The international community should support
a system of laws to regularize international relations and maintain
the peace in the same manner that law governs national order.
- Pope John Paul II
A world government with powers adequate
to guarantee security is not a remote ideal for the distant future.
It is an urgent necessity if our civilization is to survive.
- Albert Einstein
A major obstacle in the United States is
that the vast majority of Americans have an appalling lack of
knowledge about the United Nations and its accomplishments. The
June 2007 issue of Parade Magazine, which is an insert in the
Sunday edition of newspapers around the country, carried a front
page article questioning whether the United Nations still matters.
This issue provided a poll for people to respond to this question.
After receiving the response from 25,000 people, 71% said the
UN did not matter, and only 20% cast their vote in favor of the
UN.
It's common in the United States for people
and the media to consistently condemn the UN for actions it takes
as if the UN were a separate organization divorced from national
governments. This is not the case. The UN is composed of national
governments and they make the decisions for the UN to carry out.
When people are displeased with UN voting, they should vent their
anger at the governments that cast the vote and not the staff
of the UN.
The United Nations has produced international
law that greatly benefits humanity every day. UN agencies such
as UNICEF conduct programs that save the lives of millions of
children every year. UNESCO provides training for teachers and
builds schools, protects our human heritage, and conducts important
scientific conferences. There are over 30 of these UN agencies
that perform a vital role every day for the world community.
And don't forget the UN Peacekeeping forces that have maintained
peace in many regions for decades that otherwise would have erupted
into war.
One thing is clear: The United Nations
has a vital role to perform in the crucial years ahead. It is
the only international institution that, with full support, can
realistically be reformed and structured with sufficient authority
and power to create the global governance that is imperative
for the very survival of civilization. But to succeed the UN
needs to be more representative such as providing non-government
organizations (NGOs) with a larger role in political activities
and support. One idea is a Peoples Parliament composed of NGOs
consulting with and supporting the General Assembly as several
former high ranking UN officials have suggested.
RECLAIMING DEMOCRACY -- MOVING FORWARD
July 4 is the annual celebration of one of history's great documents,
the Declaration of Independence that was adopted in 1776. This
Declaration has been an inspiration not only for this nation,
but also for governments and people around the world. Today,
however, at home there is serious erosion of the Declaration's
basic principles that must be corrected, and this could be a
long struggle. It begins with the arduous task of regaining our
democracy from the emerging plutocracy that rules our country
today through a massive concentration of national wealth in the
hands of a small minority. In 2004 the congressional budget office
reported the income gap in the United States was the worst since
just before the Great Depression. The top one percent of households
has nearly 40 percent of the wealth. The top five percent have
over 50 percent of the total wealth, and the top 20 percent have
over 80 percent of the wealth.
It's shocking to learn that the United
States has the widest discrepancy between rich and poor among
Western industrialized countries. This dramatic change is a betrayal
of the American democracy that much of the world used to admire
and envy. It is an even greater betrayal to the American workers
who fought, and sometimes died, so that their children and grandchildren
could have a better life.
It's also evident that democracy cannot
function when the media, which should operate for the benefit
of the people, is owned and run by a handful of corporations.
This guarantees the suppression of ideas, cleverly accomplished
by the corporate-run media simply ignoring people with progressive
ideas, keeping them off the airwaves, and thus restricting their
exposure to the public.
CORPORATE GLOBALIZATION - WHEN CORPORATIONS
RULE
Globalization should mean movement toward a global community.
The problem is that the corporate world has co-opted this term
and uses it as a means to serve the multi-nationals and political/economic
policies that make the rich even richer. Corporate globalization
is unjust, undemocratic, self-destructive, and an environmental
nightmare due to its dependency on mass consumption and waste.
While corporate globalization rules the
world, hunger and poverty remain extreme. The statistics collected
by the United Nations are truly staggering:
* Number of people living in poverty on
$2 a day: 2.7 billion
* Number of people living in abject poverty
existing on less than $1 a day: 1 billion so poor they live in
garbage dumps and shantytowns, virtually without hope. Not surprisingly,
70 percent of the world's poor are the most defenseless: women
and children.
* Number of people who die every day from
hunger: 24,000
* Number of children under five who die
every day from preventable causes: 30,000
* 2.4 billion people live without decent
sanitation, and 4 billion are without wastewater disposal.
The 1998 Human Development Report revealed
that just over 200 billionaires had a combined wealth equal to
the annual incomes of just under half the global population (2.7
billion). The report found that the combined wealth of the world's
three richest people was greater than the total income of the
poorest forty-eight nations. Other UN figures show that only
20 percent of the world's people have over 80 percent of the
wealth and consume over 85 percent of the world's resources.
This inequality is a disgrace to our civilization, and it is
the source of ongoing violence and war.
We cannot have a world where corporations
rule. Corporations cannot provide what government supplies to
society: education, security, law, environmental and other regulations,
democratic safeguards, and the like. Corporations exist solely
for profit and acquisition. Moreover, corporations are totalitarian
to the extreme and the CEOs of major corporations have been in
the forefront of the new value system in this country, which
is Greed. Business Week reports the average salary for the CEOs
was 42 times the average worker's salary in 1980. By 1990 it
increased to 85 times, and by 2000 it reached over 500 times
the average worker's salary. Next in line are the ludicrous salaries
and compensation paid to entertainers and athletes that makes
a mockery of our social values and the worth of work.
The mantra of those who are benefiting
from corporate rule is "the market rules." The market,
however, has no conscience, no responsibility, no anything. It
is a giant gambling casino for the rich while the rest of us
are hostage to the whims or greed of investors. Our national
culture has become "marketing," with the goal to make
the entire country, and the world if possible, into a giant shopping
mall where the only thing that counts, including our culture,
is what sells. Even people are told they must "sell themselves"
to get ahead, a phrase formerly confined to prostitutes.
Sallust's description of Rome in 80
B.C.--a government controlled by wealth, a ruling-class numb
to the repetitions of political scandal, a public diverted by
chariot races and gladiatorial shows--stands as a fair summary
of some of our own circumstances.
- Lewis Lapham, Waiting for the Barbarians
The decline of American culture is astonishing
on one hand, but on the other it was inevitable when corporate
America managed to gain the power to set the standard, which,
for the highest profit, is to the lowest common nominator. Corporate
greed seems to have no bounds as demonstrated in the obnoxious
increase of commercials in television programs and sporting events.
This is possible because our Congress has abrogated its responsibility
to set reasonable regulations to protect the public from the
outrageous commercialization of our society. A high culture does
exist, but in relatively small enclaves. Few citizens in our
society, for example, could name a great classical composer or
symphonic conductor, the stars of today's opera or ballet, great
writers, Nobel Laureates with their great accomplishments, etc.
The majority, however, can quickly name the celebrity seekers
that corporate America cultivates and promotes because it sells.
If people are fed garbage as culture long enough they come to
believe it is art.
ENDING THE DECLINE
The U.S. has sadly declined from the noble democratic ideals
so eloquently expressed by President Roosevelt on the role of
government:
The pace of our progress is not whether
we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether
we provide enough to those who have too little.
We need to return to this concept of government,
and, in this first and second decade of this new millennium,
develop new economic models that are not based on arcane and
failed dogmas or those that rape the environment for profit or
guarantee a deep division between rich and poor. And the only
globalization we must accept is democratic globalization that
is designed for all people and where it would be unthinkable
for a few hundred billionaires to possess as much wealth as over
two billion poor people.
NEW POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
To move ahead requires better political
leadership across the world community and this clearly includes
the United States. The irony is that we have an abundance of
highly intelligent and capable people. The problem is convincing
them to run for political office. But this problem must be overcome
if we are to place individuals of wisdom in positions of power
and influence. It is the only way to end the folly that is driving
our nation backwards at an astonishing rate. The kind of leadership
we need was eloquently described by Senator William Fulbright
in his book The Price of Power:
The age of warrior kings and of warrior
presidents has passed. The nuclear age calls for a different
kind of leadership-a leadership of intellect, judgment, tolerance
and rationality, a leadership committed to human values, to world
peace, and to the improvement of the human condition. The attributes
upon which we must draw are the human attributes of compassion
and understanding between cultures.
Individuals of this quality running for
political office would draw legions of people, particularly the
young, to work for their election with great hope and enthusiasm.
This must take high priority, for a major component of the equation
to build a better society and safer and better world is electing
this quality of leadership to office.
THE ROAD AHEAD
At this decisive moment in history, with
the danger posed by a rapid proliferation of countries with nuclear
weapons, we must act together to move the fools, the dictators,
the dreamers of empire, the militarists, the arms merchants and
their architects of destruction to the sideline of history. We
can no long afford their destructive folly. Our unyielding task
is to build a world community with law and justice, the sharing
of resources, and the creation of a new civilization based on
respect for life, respect for the environment, and respect for
each other.
TIME TO BEGIN
To achieve the change and the goals may appear revolutionary;
however, it is not violent revolution, but evolution to be fought
and achieved with ideas and vision.
An invasion of armies can be resisted,
but not an idea whose time has come.
- Victor Hugo
The idea whose time has come is rapid change
to create a safer and better world for the 21st century. Education
is the key component to convince people to think and to act as
responsible Citizens of the World in all of their endeavors.
This is not a replacement for national and regional citizenship
duties, but rather a new individual responsibility to work together
across all barriers to achieve our common fate. Revolutions may
come and go, whether just or unjust, but they are not part of
the Next Great Evolution that must remain non-violent, but strong
and unyielding. While eliminating nuclear and other weapons of
mass destruction must be achieved rapidly, it may take decades
to finally free humanity from the scourge of war and organized
violence, achieve full social and economic justice, and construct
global governance where lasting peace can prevail. Only then
will the goal of the Next Great Evolution be achieved, and, as
the visionary Arthur C. Clarke would contend,
THE LONG CHILDHOOD OF OUR SPECIES WILL
FINALLY END
Douglas Mattern is President of the Association
of World Citizens and author of LOOKING FOR SQUARE TWO - To a
Better and Safer World, Published by Jones Harvest
worldcit@best.com
www.worldcitizens.org
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