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December 12, 2005
Flickering Dreams of Peace All you have to do is wake up...
By ROBERT C. KOEHLER Tribune Media Services
December 8 , 2005
Ever try to shift a paradigm? I salute the brave souls scattered around the continent — some of them are in Congress — who are doing just that, who are daring, right now, to challenge the conventional wisdom of war and peace at the highest levels at which the game of geopolitics is played, and are calling for the establishment of a Cabinet-level Department of Peace.
When long-time correspondent Bill Bhaneja, a senior research fellow at the University of Ottawa and retired Canadian diplomat, recently e-mailed me the proposal he co-authored with Saul Arbess for such an addition to Canada's government — inspired by U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich's H.R. 3760 — I confess to a queasy skepticism that such a project was just too darn idealistic.
Then I thought about bird flu — and George Bush's wild musings two months ago about combating it with National Guard troops, that is, by implementing martial law to enforce quarantines. This from the man who has "degraded" (in the words of one high-level health official) the nation's public health system and underfunded and politicized every branch of government created to deal with national emergencies.
And it hit me with a jolt: The level of public awareness is deteriorating. We're now whelping leaders who haven't got a clue how to deal with complex social issues except to start shooting at them. And there's no adequate challenge to this in the media or from the opposition party, and apparently no public context big enough even to allow for debate.
For instance, there was Hillary Clinton the other day telling potential supporters of her run for the presidency, who I'd wager are against the war by a large margin, that the United States must "finish what it started" in Iraq, as though there's a consensus what, exactly, we started and what "finishing" it would mean, and how many more dead Iraqis and U.S. servicemen we might expect before we attain our unarticulated goal.
It was sheer politician-speak, in other words, betraying no courageous intelligence, no insight that our brutal occupation might be fueling the insurgency and creating the terrorists we're obliged to keeping fighting. But the media have already pegged Hillary a frontrunner, which means they're condemning America's anti-war majority, once again, to a campaign season without a presidential candidate who represents their ardent hopes.
This is intolerable. This is why I support and heartily endorse what is, in fact, a global movement to raise awareness by challenging the blood-myths of the nation-state and the inevitability of war, and the geopolitical canard extraordinaire that high-tech, high-kill, earth-poisoning modern wars have any chance of achieving controllable ends and do not spew incalculable suffering and future wars in their wake.
"What we seek," write Bhaneja and Arbess, "is a world in which peaceful relations between states are a systematically pursued norm and that the numerous non-aggression pacts between states become treaties of mutual support and collaboration. We envision a world in which a positive peace prevails as projected most recently in the U.N. International Decade for a Culture of Peace (2001-2010) Programme of Action."
The establishment of a peace academy, the training of peace workers, the promotion of nonviolent conflict resolution at every level of human interaction — there's no reason why such projects should be nothing more than the flickering dreams of protestors at candlelight vigils. There's no reason why they should not be the business of government. I have no doubt whatsoever that the public is ready to move beyond the barbarism history has bequeathed us, and would do so in an eye blink if enough respected voices said, "Now is the time."
And respected voices are saying this, if only we could hear them.
"What is quite clear — and would become clear as you go along with this campaign — is that you are trying, and I consider myself with you on this in every way . . . (to create) not only a massive but a basic change in our culture, in our entire approach to our relationships with other human beings. . . . It's not a matter of simply getting another department of government. You're speaking of an entire philosophical revolution."
This is Walter Cronkite, in conversation with Kucinich last September at a Department of Peace conference in Washington, D.C. Kucinich, the hero of this movement, first introduced Department of Peace legislation in 2001. The bill now has some 60 sponsors in the House and, in September, was introduced in the Senate (S. 1756) by Mark Dayton of Minnesota.
The architects of the war on terror have minds stuck in old paradigms of domination and conquest. Their enemy is always the same: Evil Incarnate. Today's jihadist was yesterday's Communist, playing the same game of dominos.
This war is doomed to create nothing but losers, and more and more people — including many who are in or close to the military, such as Jack Murtha — are grasping this. As they wake up, the Department of Peace will be waiting for them.
"Our world faces a crisis as yet unperceived by those possessing the power to make great decisions for good and evil. The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything save our modes of thinking, and thus we drift toward unparalleled catastrophe." — Albert Einstein
Posted by mwblog at December 12, 2005 01:44 PM
Comments
Dear Mr. Koehler and friends,
Your opening question is a fun one. While I've never, successfully, attempted to shift a paradigm, I would like to point out an earlier attempt to make the same shift you are pointing out in your article. You've probably heard of it.
"Resist not evil."
When you break it down this short statement is an attempt at achieving the same thing as integrating the concept of a Department of Peace to all countries. One would of course start with one's own first but I am glad to hear that Canadian efforts are being made too. I salute all efforts at the establishment in reality of this philosophy
.........
(Forgive me, I was thinking.)Some people, the Course in Miracles included, has another viewpoint on resist not evil, and that is that there is no evil. One is thinking like there is no evil and the other is behaving as if there is no evil. And if you think about it you will see that if it became reality, the current push for departments of peace would result in the world actually manifesting that there is no evil.
My point is twofold. First is that the effort probably is making Jesus very happy. Second is that you, and everyone else involved should take heart, because obviously you're not in this alone.
God be with you,
Marty B.
Posted by: goodofwar
at December 13, 2005 11:32 AM
I am always amazed to hear the president and politicians talk about peace. Don't they realize, we can never have peace until there is peace in our hearts?
And how can there be pece in our hearts, when there are millions dieing, and starving because we don't care. How can anyone be expected to live on disability, or Social Security Income fo 500 dollars? How can president Bush, or Congress sleep at night when they have cut so many of the programs that help these people?
How can anyof those who are rich, go on living with themselves, overspending and living without cares, when there are people and children starving in the world?
Let's face it, we are in need of a major soul overhaul. We need to look in our hearts and ask ourselves honestly, what are we, individually doing to contribute to creating peace in the world.
Mother Teresa, who has been our model for true love and charity in our century, said, "works of love, are works of peace".
Well, how about us? How much do we love each other, if we let our government keep taking away from the needy and elderly, our children, and everyone else in the world that dares to say "I need".
Have any of them ever been poor, or gone without anything? Has our president ever gone to fight a war, to qualify him for sending our children to die in yet another stupid war? Have any of our Congressman, who make the laws, ever experienced hardship, or been so poor, that they don't know where their next meal is coming from?
I am so tired of all this hypocrisy that we live with! I am ashamed to be an American, we don't care about anyone but ourselves.
life is so very precious, and we don't value it.
We show it with our lifestyles. If Gandhi were alive today, he sure would have alot to tell us.
If Jesus were alive today, we would probably crucify him again.
It is true, that the "Course of Miracles" says,
our only function in the world is to forgive",
what else could it be, if this world is as bad as it is. And how true, is the title ,"that all we have to do is wake up", because we have created this awful nightmare of a world we live in because of our own guilt.
Maria Moore age 51,
Laredo, Texas
Posted by: maria moore
at December 23, 2005 03:12 PM
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