We Who Dared to Say No to War
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Opponents
of the war in Iraq sometimes give the impression that it is unusual
for Americans to be sold a war on false pretenses, with government
propaganda and a complicit media exploiting people’s patriotic sentiments.
But in fact there’s nothing unusual about it at all. That’s one
of the unavoidable conclusions of We
Who Dared to Say No to War, the new book I’ve just written
with Murray
Polner.
Murray (a man
of the left) and I come from opposite ends of the political spectrum.
Our aversion to mass murder was the common personality quirk that
drew us together, and we decided that that was a pretty good basis
for a fruitful collaboration. It’s a privilege to know Murray, and
I’m happy to say our joint efforts have borne some good fruit indeed.
We have brought together some of the best and most compelling antiwar
writing – articles, book excerpts, speeches, poetry, and more –
in American history, proceeding one major war at a time, from 1812
to the present.
We’ve chosen
the selections with an eye to making this a collection you can read
straight through. The contributors are all over the map. A sample:
Daniel Webster, John Randolph, John Quincy Adams, Charles Sumner,
Julia Ward Howe, Lysander Spooner, Stephen Crane, William Graham
Sumner, William Jennings Bryan, Robert La Follette, Randolph Bourne,
Helen Keller, Jeanette Rankin, David Dellinger, Robert Taft, Murray
Rothbard, Russell Kirk, George McGovern, Philip and Daniel Berrigan,
Butler Shaffer, Country Joe & the Fish, Andrew Bacevich, Pat
Buchanan, Bill Kauffman, Paul Craig Roberts, Howard Zinn, and Lew
Rockwell.
Diverse enough?
Ever read Congressman
Samuel Taggart’s speech against the War of 1812? Neither had we.
The arguments Taggart had to answer, though, have an eerily familiar
ring: the Canadians, who are terribly oppressed, will jump for joy
when their American liberators arrive – and if they don’t, they’re
a race of debased poltroons who deserve whatever American forces
choose to shell out to them, etc.
We
Who Dared to Say No to War consists of seventy selections,
along with LRC contributor Butler Shaffer’s list of great antiwar
films. William Goodell tells the truth about the Mexican War. Alexander
Campbell makes one of the most compelling Christian arguments against
war I’ve ever read. Antiwar abolitionists Ezra Heywood and Lysander
Spooner have their say, as does Clement Vallandigham, the Ohio congressman
who was exiled for his peace advocacy during the Civil War. Jeannette
Rankin, the first woman to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives,
was the only person to vote against American entry into both world
wars, and our pages feature her defense of those votes. If you’ve
never actually read Randolph Bourne (of "war is the health
of the state" fame) before, expect to be blown away. More recently,
Professor Andrew Bacevich writes about losing his son in the Iraq
war, a war he had opposed for years.
(Oh, and Anthony
Gregory, call your office: this is a book you can innocently give
to a left-liberal friend, who will enjoy it while being incidentally
exposed to some excellent libertarian arguments.)
Ever heard
of Elihu Burritt? I sure hadn’t until this project. This forgotten
nineteenth-century writer noted the great sympathy the human race
extended to those who have been the victims of misfortunes: famine,
shipwreck, railway accidents, whatever. He then invited his readers
to "compare the feeling with which the community hears of the
loss or peril of a few human lives by these accidents with which
the news of the death or mutilation of thousands of men, equally
precious, on the field of battle is received."
How different
is the valuation! How different in universal sympathy! War seems
to reverse our best and boasted civilization, to carry back human
society to the dark ages of barbarism, to cheapen the public appreciation
of human life almost to the standard of brute beasts….
And this
demoralization of sentiment is not confined to the two or three
nations engaged in war; it extends to the most distant and neutral
nations, and they read of thousands slain or mangled in a single
battle with but a little more human sensibility than they would
read the loss of so many pawns by a move on a chess-board. With
what deep sympathy the American nation, even to the very slaves,
heard of the suffering in Ireland by the potato famine! What ship-loads
of corn and provisions they sent over to relieve that suffering!
But how little of that benevolent sympathy and of that generous
aid would they have given to the same amount of suffering inflicted
by war upon the people of a foreign country! This…is one of the
very worst works of war. It is not only the demoralization, but
almost the transformation, of human nature. We can generally ascertain
how many lives have been lost in war. The tax-gatherer lets us
know how much money it costs. But no registry kept on earth can
tell us how much is lost to the world by this insensibility to
human suffering which a war produces in the whole family circle
of nations.
What
a devastating observation, the kind of insight Murray and I are
trying to rescue from undeserved obscurity. This one hits home for
me in particular, for in my brief neoconservative period (as a high
school and early college student), when I was too ill educated even
to realize I was a neocon, I never gave the human cost of war a
second thought, and became impatient with anyone who did. War was
like a video game I could enjoy from the comfort of my home. Devastation
and human suffering were quite beside the point: the righteous U.S.
government was dispensing justice to the bad guys, and that was
that. What are you, a liberal?
These
writings are so moving, so wise, so devastating to the propaganda
we’ve come to expect around war. They are the voices we rarely hear
in history classrooms, which cannot seem to tear themselves away
from the great war speeches of our heroic presidents. Do I agree
with everything in this book? No, and neither does Murray. But every
single one of these selections is morally serious and worth reading.
The classic oratory of war, the saccharine promises of war, the
myths and propaganda that have driven war – all these things have
enjoyed the spotlight long enough. The sane people deserve to have
their say.
And for 352
pages, they do.
September
2, 2008
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [view his
website; send
him mail] is senior fellow in American history
at the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
He is co-editor (with Murray Polner) of We
Who Dared to Say No to War: American Antiwar Writing from 1812 to
Now and co-author, most recently, of Who
Killed the Constitution? The Fate of American Liberty from World
War I to George W. Bush. His other books include Sacred
Then and Sacred Now: The Return of the Old Latin Mass, 33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask.
How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free
chapter here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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