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Policies of Mass Destruction
By Joseph
P. Firmage, September 28, 2002
http://www.wagingpeace.org/articles/02.10/1011firmage_destruction.htm
There is a force - a secret force hidden wisely from our view
- that makes you and me, this newspaper, our planet, our sun and the
Milky Way galaxy stretching trillions of miles around us. This force
is omnipresent, coursing through every particle of your body.
Indeed, this force IS you. It is the most powerful force we know, a
force that makes the Universe we see, by the balance - the
equilibrium - in its eternal action.
57
years ago, this equilibrium was shattered when human beings split
atoms within a primitive nuclear weapon. Through intervening
decades, the phrase "weapon of mass destruction" has become all too
well known in our lexicon.
I
became familiar with the controversy surrounding weapons of mass
destruction in the late 1970s, when my father and mother organized
Utahns United Against the Nuclear Arms race, an activist movement
that confronted the United States military and ultimately helped to
defeat the monstrous MX missile "shell game" basing plan. Before and
since that era, other historic visionaries have battled the nuclear
weapon insanity and its obscene policy fig leaf, mutually assured
destruction.
But life took me in other directions. into business,
investment, and the technology breakthroughs of Silicon Valley. For
more than a decade I pursued the American entrepreneurial dream as a
CEO, driven by innovation and measured by profit. I was successful
and content in this pursuit. That is, until I came to appreciate
that there are other kinds of weapons of mass destruction than those
launched from bunkers, subs and planes.
Since 1998, I have come to realize that weapons of mass
destruction come in many forms.
A
global economic program that rapes the natural world is a weapon of
mass destruction far more lethal than any device in any arsenal of
this world.
An
energy policy that invests in destructive rather than benign
production is a weapon of mass destruction.
Copyright and patent laws that artificially inflate the cost
of sharing stories, songs, and science are weapons of mass
destruction.
Education systems that fail our children are weapons of mass
destruction.
Media that places ratings over truth is a weapon of mass
destruction.
A
national security policy that shreds the sacred civil liberties
within our democracy, and which sheds the international obligations
between democracies, is a weapon of mass destruction.
Indeed, a nation - our nation - whose high-school history
teacher has a deeper grasp of world affairs than the man it entrusts
with the future history of the world... is a weapon of mass
destruction.
To
be sure, Saddam Hussein's attempts to develop devices of mass
destruction must be halted by the community of nations. But at the
same time, we must ask ourselves: how can such devices best be
eliminated from every nation's arsenal? Shall it be by the
development, testing and deployment of more such devices by a 21st
century empire? Or rather by the global abolition of them, and a
global program of verification, catalyzed by the greatest democracy
the world has ever known?
To
me, one thing seems certain: we will not succeed in eliminating
devices of mass destruction while we fail in eliminating policies of
mass destruction. I find myself in rare agreement with George Bush
in saying that we cannot allow the world's worst leaders to use the
world's most dangerous weapons. I am hard pressed to identify a
single major policy initiative of the Bush administration that is
not a weapon of mass destruction.
The elections of 2002 and 2004 are our opportunities for
regime change. Let us use them wisely. |