Killing Families
by
Mark
G. Brennan
by Mark G. Brennan
In
arguing with my friends who are liberal, as well as those who are
"conservative," I inevitably encounter an unbridgeable
chasm when the topic of "public goods" arises. My liberal
friends see every government expenditure as generating a public
good. Even outlays that generally are not considered public goods
take on that mystique as in the contorted response, "Welfare
checks keep down crime so you involuntarily benefit." Left
out of that equation is the involuntary contribution that I as a
taxpayer make to fund what is arguably a public good. But that is
a debate for a later time. My "conservative" friends imagine
public goods in two cases. The first case is when one of their constituents
directly benefits from a government transfer payment, like a paving
company laying down the latest extension of interstate highway.
I am scratching my head too. The second case occurs when, "Dadgummit,
President Bush said so and he should know." While that argument
could not withstand a freshman logic course, let alone the peer
review process, "conservatives" offer it as unquestionable
truth. Looking to either wing of the War Party will never prove
enlightening when searching for the truth as both the tax-and-spend
Democrats and the tax-and-spend Republicans deviously rationalize
any expenditure to fit their statist agendas. The only thing we
can know for certain is that national defense in the United States
of 2006 is no longer a public good.
In Crisis
and Leviathan, Robert Higgs provides an excellent definition
of a "public good" when he writes, "[A public good]
has the peculiar property of nonrivalry in consumption [emphasis
added]: its enjoyment by one customer does not diminish its availability
for the enjoyment of another. Once the public good has been produced,
its use has no marginal cost, because its enjoyment by additional
users requires no further sacrifice of valuable alternatives."
As with almost every economics textbook, Higgs goes on to add that,
"National defense is the most familiar example." Perhaps
this statement was true when Higgs penned it in 1987. Unfortunately,
these texts will now have to undergo revision as "national
defense" today has next to nothing to do with "defense"
and is no longer a net "good."
Yesterday’s
events in Iraq vividly illustrate the preceding proposition. Wednesday
afternoon the Associated Press reported that U.S. forces had killed
two Iraqi women when the car in which they were riding failed to
stop at an American "observation point" near the city
of Samarra. One of the women, 35 year-old Nabiha Nisaif Jassim,
was about to give birth and her brother, Khalid, was rushing her
to the hospital for the delivery. The article quoted the distraught
brother as saying, "I was driving my car at full speed because I
did not see any sign or warning from the Americans. It was not until
they shot the two bullets that killed my sister and cousin that
I stopped." Granted, in the heat of the moment, those with
guns fire them without perfect information. We occasionally see
it happen here when a police officer shoots an unarmed citizen.
It is terribly unfortunate but it happens. What we don’t usually
hear from the victim’s surviving relatives is how Mr. Jassim finished
his anguished testimony: "God take revenge on the Americans
and those who brought them here. They have no regard for our lives."
And by the way, the baby died too.
So Mr.
Taxpayer, you and I just made a mortal enemy while we were consuming,
in a nonrivaling manner, our most basic public good,
a.k.a. national defense. Mr. Jassim’s blood must be boiling. I imagine
his thoughts are running along the lines of dedicating the rest
of his life to killing as many Americans as he can before he gets
caught or killed himself. The military’s explanation and pseudo
apology will only serve to further enrage him. A military spokesman
said of the incident (and added insult to injury by using imperfect
perfect grammar), "The loss of life is regrettable and coalition
forces go to great lengths to prevent them (sic)." Remember,
his sister, his cousin and his unborn niece or nephew were all just
murdered and he himself barely escaped dying in a hail of gunfire.
This terrorist was made not born and the American taxpayer holds
the copyright.
Here is
a quick thought experiment. The Chinese military occupies your city
and sets up roadblocks that make DWI checkpoints seem fun by comparison.
Each and every time you approach a checkpoint the soldiers signal
to you in a strange (that is to say, foreign) manner which not only
confuses you but inevitably leads to them further reprimanding you.
Before proceeding you must come to a complete stop while they search
your car. As a result your daily commute is 20 minutes longer each
way. After they wave you through while barking at you in Chinese
or broken English you remain uncertain if they deem you a threat
or merely the harmless starched-shirt business drone that in fact
you are. This annoyance persists for 3 years and while you detest
the process and the occupying force, there is not a whole lot you
can do to stop it. Life goes on and this is just a major inconvenience.
Then one day
while watching TV at home, your wife, who is in the ninth month
of her pregnancy screams, "My water just broke!" You jump
in the car to make a mad dash to the hospital for the eagerly awaited
birth of your first child whose name you have already selected and
whose room you lovingly decorated. You remember that there is a
Chinese checkpoint on the main road to the hospital but in your
glee you errantly think that the Chinese soldiers will remember
you from your daily transit and quickly wave you through. Forgetting
the rigor of their procedure, you drive at a greater than usual
speed considering the urgent circumstances. One of the Chinese soldiers,
nervous about protecting himself while in enemy territory, opens
fire on your car for not slowing down soon enough and your wife
takes it in the chest. You storm past the barricades to get her
to the hospital all the while watching the bloodstain on her chest
grow. You finally get her to the hospital and carry her into the
emergency room while screaming for help. After the nurses escort
you from the table on which your wife lays mortally wounded, you
collapse in the waiting area praying that the staff can save her.
Twenty minutes later a doctor comes out of the emergency room, his
scrubs covered in blood and his brow heavy with sweat. Without introducing
himself, he shakes your hand, looks down and says "I’m sorry."
You shriek, "But what about the baby?" The doctor apologizes
again and adds, "We could not save her either."
What kind of
anger or hatred would that generate in the average expectant American
father? I can safely say that in my case I would dedicate the rest
of my life to maiming, attacking and killing the occupying forces.
Mr. Jassim might think the same way. Our public good of national
defense has likely created at least one mortal enemy.
Today’s
bad news, coming on the heels of the alleged massacre in Haditha
and the anti-American riots in Afghanistan, points to the fact that
while war is indeed ugly, subsequent occupations can be even uglier.
In a war civilians inevitably die. We can euphemistically call their
deaths "collateral damage." Even in a just war civilians
are slaughtered. However, when the Commander-in-Chief lands on the
deck of an aircraft carrier to announce the successful completion
of wartime hostilities we reasonably expect the slaughter of innocents
to subside. Today we still have American troops killing Iraqis several
years after our leader told us the war was effectively over. Even
the most diehard proponents of preemptive war, unjust war, or even
murder, should pause for a second to reflect on how this "accident"
will make them any safer. In fact it will make all of us less safe
as Mr. Jassim, his friends, and fellow countrymen deepen their hatred
of the occupying forces for killing the next Iraqi generation represented
by the child who died before being born.
In their
growing resentment of the occupying US forces, Iraqi anger will
first be directed at soldiers from places like Girard, Kansas and
Irving, Texas, both cities which lost servicemen fighting there
over the past week. US soldiers must now toe the microscopic line
that separates their need to defend themselves against deadly attack
from the mandate not to shoot innocent civilians. We can thank the
Cheneys and Rumsfelds of the world for putting these GIs in this
lose-lose situation. If they don’t shoot at a suspicious car approaching
their checkpoint they might pay the ultimate price when the driver
detonates himself. Shoot too soon and they risk court martial and
murder charges for killing an innocent civilian just trying to live
his life in his occupied homeland.
If the perpetually
adolescent Bush twins, the Oxford-educated management consultant
Chelsea Clinton, or the "sexually proud" Mary Cheney does
not have to make this life or death choice on a daily basis, then
no American GI should have to do the same thing. In theory we send
our military in to win wars, not to perpetually occupy foreign lands.
In reality this is exactly what our government does. And in so doing,
national defense is becoming less and less of a benefit to the American
taxpayer.
June
2, 2006
Mark
G. Brennan [send him email]
writes from New York City.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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