Fast Track the Good Stuff
Fast Track the Good Stuff
By David
Swanson
http://davidswanson.org/node/4747
The
U.S. Senate has been very concerned not to let peace with
Iran slip into place too easily, even while a new war in
Iraq and Syria proceeds without the formal pretense of
Congress "authorizing" or rejecting it.
Both houses of
Congress are interested in ramming through the TPP
(Trans-Pacific Partnership) on a fast track. The fast track
procedure of rushing things through Congress or creating
them without Congress seems to be reserved for the least
popular ideas our government produces.
What if, instead,
a fast track were set up for those items favored by a vast
majority of the public, or required for the future
habitability of the planet, but which meet resistance from
campaign funders, lobbyists, and the corporate media?
Of
course I'd rather have clean elections and a publicly
accountable Congress if we can't have public initiatives and
direct democracy. But in the absence of such utopias, why
not use extreme anti-democratic measures to ram through the
things people want rather than the things we'd protest if we
found out about them? Why not slip one past the plutocrats
rather than slipping one past the people? Why not go with
voice votes, no debate, and no time to read the details on
measures to demilitarize and protect the planet rather than
on "trade" agreements that empower corporate lawyers to
overturn laws?
I recently read this in an email
newsletter from peace advocate Michael Nagler: "The other
day I went to test-drive an electric car. When we got
through some of the technicalities and were waiting for a
red light the salesperson coming with me said, 'So what do
you do?' Here it comes, I thought: 'I work with a nonprofit;
(gulp, and) we're promoting nonviolence.' After a reflective
pause she said quietly, 'Thank you.'"
I've often had that
same experience, but increasingly I eagerly reply: "I work
on abolishing war." That's what I replied recently in a
sandwich shop here in Charlottesville called Baggby's. I
didn't get a "thank you," but I got a question as to whether
I had known Jack Kidd. I had never heard of Jack Kidd, but
Jack Kidd, a retired two-star Air Force general who lived in
Charlottesville, had been in Baggby's in the past debating
the need to abolish war with some other bigwig general who
favored keeping war and militarism going.
So, I read
Kidd's book, Prevent War: A New Strategy for America.
Of course, I think we need a strategy for earth, not for the
United States, if we are going to end war. Kidd, who died in
2013, believed in 2000, when the book was published, that
only the United States could lead the way toward peace, that
the United States had always meant well, that war could be
used to end war, and all sorts of things I can't bring
myself to take seriously. And yet, believing everything he
still believed, after "waking up" in the early 1980s, as he
describes it, Kidd came to recognize the insanity of failing
to work for the abolition of war.
This was a man who had
bombed German cities in World War II; who believed he'd
survived a particularly difficult mission during which he'd
shot down lots of German planes, because he'd prayed to God
who'd answered his prayer; who'd flown secret nuclear attack
plans from Washington to Korea during the Korean war; who'd
"served" as Chief of the Joint War Plans Branch and worked
on plans for World War III; who believed in the Gulf of
Tonkin attack; who had obeyed orders to knowingly fly his
plane through nuclear clouds moments after bomb tests -- as
self-human experimentation; and yet . . . and yet! And yet
Jack Kidd organized retired U.S. and Soviet generals to work
for disarmament at the height of the Cold War.
Kidd's
book contains numerous proposals to move us away from war.
One of them is to fast track disarmament agreements. For
that idea alone, his book is worth reading. It's also worth
giving to the most hard-core war supporters as a sort of a
gentle nudge. It's also worth asking, I think, why
Charlottesville has no memorial to this former General who's
layed out a plan for peace when it has so many to those
whose only accomplishment was losing the U.S. Civil
War.
--
David Swanson is an
author, activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director
of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign
coordinator for RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include
War Is A
Lie. He blogs at DavidSwanson.org and WarIsACrime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. He
is a 2015 Nobel Peace Prize
Nominee.
Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson and FaceBook.