Citizens
as Soldiers, Citizens as Prey
by Robert Jensen
In what could be one of the final steps toward the
permanent militarization of U.S. society, we all are being recruited as
soldiers in the Bush administration's unlimited war against endless enemies
(also known as the "war on terrorism").
Last December, highway workers were enlisted as
"foot soldiers in the war on terrorism," watching for suspicious
people. This summer, truck drivers became "the latest soldiers in the war
on terrorism" under a program to train them to watch for terrorist
activity.
There's nothing wrong, of course, with reporting
information that could prevent attacks (though we should be nervous about how
"suspicious" behavior can lead to harassment in a climate of fear).
But there is a difference between being alert and being -- even metaphorically
-- a solider.
Respectfully, I must refuse orders to be a soldier and remain
a citizen in a democracy.
The reason is simple: Soldiers follow orders given by
commanders; citizens engage in discussions about what the policy should be. I
won't give up my right to be part of policy formation -- even in a political
process that is dominated by money and power -- and simply accept policies
determined by others. That's not democracy but authoritarianism, coming not
from the barrel of a gun but through propaganda from the tip of a
speechwriter's pen.
The president set the tone on Sept. 20, 2001, when he
said "you are with us, or you are with the terrorists," a warning
aimed at other nations, but which quickly became an instruction for Americans.
The most extreme expression came on Dec. 6, when Attorney General John Ashcroft
said critics "only aid terrorists" and "erode our national unity
and diminish our resolve." In his hypermilitarized formulation, words
become bullets: Critics "give ammunition to America's enemies."
Even much of the so-called opposition party lined up
behind this view, with Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle voting for a war
resolution he claimed he didn't really like, so that America could "speak
in one voice."
But what if the one voice is the voice of madness? What
if the war is not, as the president tells us, about protecting people from
terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, but is really about projecting power,
in the service not of people but of corporations and a small privileged sector?
(For a detailed critique of Bush's motives and argument, see
http://www.accuracy.org/bush/)
Armies march behind one voice of authority. Democracies
rise to greatness on the many voices of the people. Contrary to the
conventional wisdom, it is at the moment when a nation ponders going to war
that multiple voices -- citizens engaging in debate -- are most crucial, as
lives hang in the balance.
Beyond the immediate question of a war to extend and
deepen U.S. power in the Middle East (also known as the war on Iraq) lies the
long-term question of what is routinely referred to as the American empire. The
militarization of U.S. society in support of the empire is material, not simply
metaphorical; this is a perpetual war that will require perpetual wartime
funding. The administration's National Security Strategy released last month
talks of "a particularly elusive
enemy" fought "over an extended period of time" in which we mark
progress "through the persistent accumulation of successes -- some seen,
some unseen."
In other words: The war is over when we say it's over,
and don't ask about details.
As war becomes normalized, so do increased military
budgets. We now spend almost $400 billion a year on the military, more than the
next 25 nations combined. The strategy document outlines a vision not of a
world of nations engaged in a search for coexistence but of one dominant nation
issuing orders. Such an empire requires big guns and a public afraid to
critique; the powerful don't care if we agree, as long as we don't object.
Critiques of this militarization are not aimed at
ordinary people who make up the military's rank-and-file but at people who
issue the orders, which they tell us are in the "national interest."
But is this in the interests of the many people of the nation? Or the people of
the world? Who benefits from a permanently militarized society, besides defense
contractors and politicians playing on people's fears?
Are we, as foot soldiers in Bush's war, allowed to ask
such questions? Or is our job to line up, shut up and pay the bills?
The answer matters, for the sake of our democracy and the
safety of the world.
Robert
Jensen, an associate
professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, is the author of Writing Dissent: Taking
Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream and a member of the Nowar Collective. Email: rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu. Other articles are
available at http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/home.htm.
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