September 07, 2010
Skeptic
Propaganda Posters > Imperialism and a War Economy
(0 votes, average 0 out of 5)

Imperialism and a War Economy
Imperialism and a War Economy

Image © Austin Cline

The contrast probably couldn't be more stark and depressing: on the one hand the American government is spending billions to wage a war overseas while at home taxes are cut and basic maintenance is withheld on vital infrastructure that eventually crumbles and falls. In both cases, people are killed for no good reason — but military contractors keep getting richer. What's wrong with this picture?

It's not as though military spending is entirely illegitimate, but America's military spending has been more in alignment with a war economy than a peace economy since the end of World War II. Massive amounts of funding go into the Defense Department and defense contractors, all to pay for equipment and training that proves worthless unless used in a war. So, unless we get involved in wars, people will start to think that all the money is just being wasted — and who wants to waste money?

This state of perpetual war is incompatible with the preservation of civil liberties because in war, nearly all other considerations are consistently subordinated to the interests of national security and/or victory in the war. This is true even in metaphorical wars, like the War on Drugs. The state of perpetual war is also incompatible with friendly relations with other nations — if we can't be involved in an actual shooting conflict, then we'll be using our military for imperialistic goals of one sort or another.

There were reasons for maintaining a war economy during the Cold War, but once that ended people were worried about what would come next. Those getting rich off of defense contracts certainly didn't want the gravy train to end, but without an enemy to fight and justify the need for military spending, what would they all do? The War on Terrorism provided the perfect excuse for maintaining the war economy rather than transforming into something else. Of course this will be an open-ended war with no exit strategy or end in sight — those in charge don't want it to end.

If we dangle billions in front of corporate boards, they'll come up with all sorts of ways to kill our enemies. Since we had to create enemies in order to justify that sort of spending, in the end we'll possess both enemies that need killing and effective means for achieving that goal. Given all that, how can we justify not moving forward? Any argument we make will undermine everything we've done up to that point. Eventually, we will go to war — and perhaps on a regular basis, too. We can't build an economy on war and never fight anyone.

I say "we" because it's not just large defense contractors and their corporate boards who are complicit in this,. They've managed to make all of society complicit to varying degrees — it's a war economy precisely because so many people make their living off of preparations for war. Some do so directly by working for defense contractors to build tanks and bombers; some do so indirectly by servicing military bases filled with thousands of soldiers and their dependents.

Look at the outcry that ensues when defense contracts are dropped, when munitions factories might close, and when military bases might shut down. The common-sense decision to vote to end funding of the occupation of Iraq is undermined by the fact that this would imperil funding of war production which voters directly benefit from. Rather than celebrate the reduction of our war posture, people complain about the loss of jobs and money — understandable, since people have to eat and pay the rent, but it's still a sign of how many have been drawn into the web of our war economy. People's short-term economic interests are being used to subvert society's long-term best interests.

Would it really be so difficult to move spending away from defense contracts and towards other projects, like infrastructure? I recognize that less spending generally, and spending on things like medical care, might make even more sense but contracts to build things might be an easier move to make. If the war economy is being driven by profit motives, we can't imagine that we'll be able to eliminate those motives with a stroke of the pen. Redirecting them towards less dangerous pursuits, however, is a lot more plausible and we all might benefit a bit from it. One of the key features of the philosophy of America's founders was to accept the persistence of flaws and vices in humans and rather than try to snuff them out, they tried to find ways to redirect them and make use of them. We should learn from this.

Now, I don't necessarily favor the replacement of our Military Industrial Complex with a Transportation Industrial Complex, but if faced with a choice between risking the construction of too many tanks and bombs that someone will want to use rather than waste, and risking the construction of too many bridges and tunnels that someone will want to use rather than waste, I think I'll take the latter risk. I don't like to sit in traffic any more than the next person, but unnecessary roadwork and bridge replacements are preferable to unnecessary wars and fighter replacements.

Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img]   
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

Most Popular Posters

Obama's Department of Pre-Crime

by Austin Cline Sunday, 31 May 2009
Obama's Department of Pre-CrimeImage © Austin ClineThe Obama presidency has been filled with disappointments already, but the biggest and most dramatic may be his reversal on basic questions of morality and law. Most recently, this has involved his proposal to detain people indefinitely on the suspicion that they may pose...

Barack Obama's Injustice Department Strikes Again

by Austin Cline Saturday, 28 February 2009
Barack Obama's Injustice Department Strikes AgainImage © Austin ClineJust in case you hoped that the Obama administration's decision to defend and continue practices like rendition and detention without charges were just aberrations, it has been revealed that his Justice Department will defend and continue another Bush-era injustice: oppos...

Warfare vs. Health Care: What Do Americans Value?

by Austin Cline Sunday, 15 November 2009
Warfare vs. Health Care: What Do Americans Value?Image © Austin ClineActions speak louder than words, which means you can tell a lot more about what a person truly values by looking at what they do rather than merely at what they say. We can, though, also learn a lot by looking at a person's contradictions. No one is perfectly consistent, ...

Latest Posters

Obama Leaks More of His True Values

by Austin Cline Saturday, 17 July 2010
Obama Leaks More of His True Values Leaking the Truth: Obama Reveals More of His True Values© Austin ClineThe real values of Barack Obama and the Obama administration have become clear: if you commit war crimes you will receive immunity and won’t even be investigated; if you tell the public about American war crimes you will be ...

Squatters in the Fourth Estate

by Austin Cline Saturday, 26 June 2010
Squatters in the Fourth Estate Squatters in the Fourth Estate© Austin ClineEvery time I assume that my opinion of American “journalism” has bottomed out, some putz does something so outrageous or stupid that I’m forced to revise my opinion downward by several notches — notches so low that I didn’t even know they could exist...

Clean Up the Oil Industry

by Austin Cline Thursday, 10 June 2010
Clean Up the Oil Industry  Clean Up the Oil Industry© Austin ClineThe understandable focus on cleaning up the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico must not distract us from the need to also clean up the oil industry itself. Indeed, we should get used to thinking that no matter how successful the efforts to clean up ...