The American Dream: Designed by War Planners
The American Dream: Designed by War Planners
by John
Stanton
“It is wrong to believe that
postwar American suburbanization prevailed because the
public chose it...Suburbanization prevailed because of the
decisions of large operators and powerful economic
institutions supported by federal government
programmes…ordinary consumers had little real choice in
the basic pattern that resulted...Essentially city planners
saw the atomic threat as a means to accelerate the trend of
suburbanization. Plans to circle American cities with open
spaces, highways and circumferential life belts was long
overdue…The federal government played a more effective
role in reducing urban vulnerability [to atomic attack] in
future residential development by working through the
Federal Housing Administration [FHA], The Housing and Home
Finance Agency and the Federal National Mortgage Association
[FNMA]. As the FHA and the FNMA annually guaranteed federal
liability for hundreds of thousands of dwelling units, the
federal government could mandate that in the future they all
be subject to urban defense standards." The Reduction of
Urban Vulnerability: Revisiting 1950s American
Suburbanization as Civil Defence, Kathleen A.
Tobin
Turns out the “American Dream” of owning a
couple of automobiles and a home with cable television in
the greener pastures of the suburbs was/is, in good measure,
a national security matter. The homes beyond the city center
that Americans live in and the highways they cruise are all
the result, directly or indirectly, of a national defense
program that planers hoped would ensure the existential
survivability of America.
Making it tougher for the
“Reds”, or these days’ terrorists, to figure out how
to vaporize the critical functional elements of America’s
national power by dispersing centralized
populations/industries to the suburbs was deemed critical to
US Cold-War federal, state and local planners, and their
counterparts in industry.
The United States government
actively promoted the long term urban dispersal of its
populations and industries because of the threat of nuclear
annihilation by the, then, USSR. Immediately following World
War II and throughout the 1950’s, publications like the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists carried
the views of prominent officials/academicians who vigorously
argued for the dispersal of populations and industries
located in major cities throughout the United States. The
idea was not to eliminate the urban center but to expand and
stretch its radius to such an extent that it would make it
more difficult for the “Godless Commies” to pick and
choose targets that mattered. In short, city limits would
become meaningless.
As a result of the largely successful
national defense efforts at urban dispersal in the 1950’s,
today’s opponents (Russia, China, terrorists) planning a
nuclear attack on, say, the Pentagon in Arlington County,
Virginia--and defense industrial base office sites that
surround it—know that it would be merely a symbolic act as
US military command and control functions, and defense
manufacturing sites, are not centralized but scattered all
over the Washington, DC—Baltimore Metropolitan Region;
indeed, all over the country. Deborah Natsios’ National Security SPRAWL: Washington, DC
provides one of the premier studies of the after-effect of
urban dispersal/suburbanization planning based on national
defense requirements.
The threat of nuclear war and the
argument for urban dispersal/suburbanization of the American
populace had other positive aspects accruing to the US
homeland. According to Tobin’s work, “Indirectly the
atomic bomb offered a rare opportunity for greatly improving
the living conditions of millions of our citizens. Our large
cities have been growing larger, resulting in more crowded
streets and tenement homes…If [dispersal] is done
properly, we will at the same time greatly increase our
urban attractiveness.”
Who knew that urban renewal
and building codes were based, in part, on the need for
defense against nuclear weapons?
Dream On: No
Free Will, No Free Market
There is a lot of
bluster about the free and open market that is supposed to
exist in the Western World, in particular in the United
States. Senior officials revolving in and out of the federal
government and the commercial sector are very fond of
promoting the benefits of privatization, deregulation and
the invisible hand of the free market which, allegedly,
magically sets prices, encourages or discourages
competition, and provides consumers free choice in the
selection of hard and soft goods.
That is a really big
lie.
It is the US federal government, and its national
defense dollars, that has stimulated the development of
nearly every single technological innovation during and
since World War II. It was federal tax breaks/subsidies,
federal low interest or secured loans, and federal funding
for research and development that prompted an otherwise risk
averse, stodgy US private sector to commercialize and
produce the products that American war-makers, warfighters
and consumers now take for granted.
The
lives--individually and collectively--that Americans lead
have, in many ways, been planned and designed for them by
the realities of war and the necessity to prepare for it.
That life has been sold to them through slick
advertising/marketing campaigns equating freedom with
consumption and production. Such are the foundations of
American capitalist democracy along with the necessity to
pry open—and exploit-- new global markets with a military
can opener. These harsh realities must be buried in
distracting consumption of things that distract citizens
from recognizing reality.
According to American Capitalism and its Effects,
“People in consumerist societies live by the influence of
advertisements, and often methodically buy things they do
not need, and in most cases, cannot afford. This, in turn,
leads to greater economic disparity, and despite having the
most or latest products, consumerists have a feeling of
unfulfillment due to spending a lot of money, yet having
nothing of personal importance.”
It is a tough thought
for any American to bear in mind. At least it should be.
Less than six degrees of separation removes an American from
some product or service that originated from the national
defense imperative.
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles/Drones, The
Internet, the World Wide Web, Radar and Laser technology, Synthetic Rubber/Oil/Nylon, Digital
Computers, Nuclear Power, Cell Phones, Jet Engines,
Rocket/Launch technology and dozens of other innovations
were born thanks to the US federal government. In
War Play by Corey Mead (an
essential read!) we learn that video games and distance
learning were also born of national defense needs, not some
geek or guru tinkering in a garage in America’s
hinterlands. Mead’s work also shows how much America’s
elite universities depend on US federal/military funds:
Harvard, MIT and Johns Hopkins among them.
No wonder the
US national security community, most recognizably the
uniformed military services, are increasingly deified by the
American public and viewed with the awe reserved for the
Gods. As organized religion has faded in America, the new
religion of militarism has ascended.
It makes perfect
sense as it was programmed by national defense planners long
ago into the sequence that is the American
Dream.
John Stanton is a writer from Virginia.
Reach him at captainkong22@gmail.com. His latest book
is Media Trolls, Technology Shamans available at
Amazon.