The
Costs Of Being No. 1
by
James Ostrowski
The
New York Post is the official newspaper of neoconservatives.
Another term for neoconservative is big government conservative
(big-gov-con). On Tuesday, the Post's opinion page contained
two apparently complementary articles about our military: "World's
Greatest Military. . .", by Jack Kelly, and ". . . But
It Doesn't Come Cheap", by Lawrence Kudlow. These thought-provoking
articles provoked some thoughts with this writer that the authors
and editors probably did not intend.
Kelly thinks the United States has the strongest military in the
world, able to "conquer the world." Kudlow thinks we need
to increase defense spending. I guess the Post wants us to
experience cognitive dissonance and hold two contradictory thoughts
at one time: our military can conquer the entire world but is starved
for resources. The scary thing is, I bet virtually all neoconservative
writers believe all these propositions are true:
1. Bill Clinton eviscerated the military;
2. Our (Clintonian) military could conquer the world;
3. Our military needs a lot more money.
Personally, I am not qualified to discuss these matters, according
to Jack Kelly, that is. He describes "the chattering classes"
as "know[ing] absolutely nothing about matters military, and
show[ing] little inclination to learn." This is the standard
militarist line: unless you have been in the trenches, you are incapable
of saying anything intelligent about defense policy and should just
shut up. Like there's something extraordinarily complicated about
pumping lead into the enemy faster and more accurately than the
enemy can pump lead into your people. I am getting a headache already.
Has anyone come up with anything new since Nathan Bedford Forrest
advised, "Get there first with the most."? If you think
military strategy is complex, try reading Heidegger.
Strange it is that so few neoconservatives have donned military
fatigues outside of costume parties. They worship the use of force
from afar. As for Jack Kelly, a quick Google search did not disclose
his military service, if any. I suppose he gets his unique military
insights the way the rest of us do: sitting safely in front of a
computer screen. But readers be warned. Mr. Kelly would probably
say I am not qualified to comment on military matters.
In my defense, I am a member of the militia of the United States.
What, some crazy far-right legal theory? No, federal law, 10 U.S.C.
§311. Also, they do allow me to vote for Commander-in-Chief
every four years. I must admit, however, that no one I ever voted
for, won. But even that fact bolsters my credentials. It means I
bear no vicarious responsibility for such military blunders as having
no fighters ready to protect vital civilian and military targets
on September 11. Ultimately, though, I am just another middle-aged
peacenik who avoided service in Viet Nam by being chronologically
challenged (b. 1957).
Back to Kudlow. He cavalierly proposes defense "spending hikes
of $75 billion a year." We already live in a country where
most mothers must work, with the salaries of mothers in two-income
families going almost entirely to the taxman. As a result, millions
of children are being raised by day care and television-and it shows.
Nevertheless, Kudlow wants to vastly increase defense spending on
a military his partner Kelly says can unilaterally conquer the world.
Engaging in the fallacy of the broken window for the second time
since September 11th, he promises that such increased spending will
have a "salutary impact" on the economy. Previously, he
opined that September 11th would stimulate the economy. Did he have
in mind gun dealers, psychiatrists and the makers of anti-depressants?
Why do we have a military that can conquer the world? How about
a military that Washington or Jefferson might have imagined: one
strong enough to deter invasion and strong enough to repel invasion?
Having a Herculean military is far from cost-free. The out-of-pocket
cost alone is enormous. As Henry Hazlitt taught us, it is difficult
to see the costs of government spending. If you look closely, the
costs of our military machine can be seen in poor and working class
neighborhoods where millions of Americans struggle to survive financially,
maxed-out on credit cards, with no health insurance or retirement
savings, living in run-down housing and driving beat-up cars.
There are other costs. U. S. military spending sets the pace and
forces all major powers to spend more just to stay in the same century
as the Americans. Ever-increasing resources in poorer nations are
plowed into the military. There is an increased focus on developing
those sickeningly dangerous weapons that even the vaunted American
military cannot stop: chemical, biological and nuclear. Finally,
of course, military power cannot prevent terrorist attacks. Quite
the contrary: military might engenders terrorism. Military superiority
breeds arrogance; arrogance leads to foreign intervention; foreign
intervention provokes terrorism. Terrorism is precisely that strategy
adopted by those who wish to strike governments whose policies they
find intolerable, but whose militaries are invincible.
Why do we have a military that can conquer the world? It is not
because our power elite literally wishes to conquer the world. Rather,
it is because they wish to have the final say about most things
in most places most of the time around the world. They want to call
the shots. This is a very expensive and very dangerous whim to indulge.
Ordinary Americans have paid the price for this power lust, in treasure,
and, more recently, with their lives. The tag-team of Kelly and
Kudlow want us to pay even more. It's just another Big-Gov-Con.
December
22, 2001
James
Ostrowski is an attorney practicing at 984 Ellicott Square, Buffalo,
New York 14203; (716) 854-1440; FAX 853-1303. See his website at
http://jimostrowski.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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