« In the Media Today- Earthquake of Astronomical Proportions | Main | Earth Day, 2005 »
April 21, 2005
Modern War and Civilization
By:
The last time I wrote something like this, we weren't at war. Our environment wasn't being overrun by a tyrannical administration headed by a puppet president whose only real job is to pretend that he thinks hes doing the right thing. I hadn't read all that I have now, and I hadn't sent a cousin off to Iraq to risk his life for something that doesn't actually affect anyone in this country. We weren't in dire need of a change.
Today, I see that there is a severe cause for alarm. We've initiated an attack on a country that did nothing to us, based on false intelligence of weapons of mass destruction that likely didn't exist in that country for almost a decade. People in every corner of the planet have, many times over the last year, demonstrated their anger with the United States by the millions in simultaneous, global protests. We are, in simple terms, pissing off the world. The world only takes this kind of crap for so long.
Of course, the war itself isn't the actual problem. Its not a pretty situation, but its far from being something that will cause widespread devastation. Instead, what I think this war represents is the result of the very thing thats been haunting civilization since its inception.
That thing is civilization itself.
Civilization, which is something thats only existed as we know it for about 8,000 to 10,000 years, is dependent on agriculture and hierarchical authority to exist. In any civilization, from Mesopotamia to ancient Egypt and from the Roman Empire to the United States of modern day, you will see that this is the case. Governments headed by a single person or a small group of people in a top-down fashion, fed on agriculture, usually created and expanded through warfare and domination, changed through violent revolution by a group of people who simply build it back up to almost the exact same system. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
Of course, today we don't come out and say that were going to war over resources or ideological differences. We cite United Nations guidelines, mass graves and weapons of mass destruction, national threats, connections to terrorists, and the like. You'l rarely anymore see a nation-state say we want your land, so were going to take it, or We don't like your religious beliefs, so were going to enslave your people and convert you. No, today that is considered barbaric and simply wrong in the eyes of the public. At least, thats what we tell ourselves.
But is there really any difference between todays wars and the wars of old? Only on the surface. Today, its necessary to equate or connect your so-called enemy with terrorists in order to gain support for an attack. This becomes very obvious when we see who is being attacked by governments today: Basque separatists in France, Chechens in Russia, Papuan separatists in the Polynesian Islands, Al-Queda, Kashmir, Taiwan, Tibet, Cyprus theres really no need to continue, because the list goes on pretty long.
Of course, I'm not saying that these people have never committed any terrorist acts, or that terrorists among them haven't ever committed violent acts in the name of separation. In fact, Al-Queda is obviously mostly a terrorist group, and many of the Chechens are terrorists as well. However, there are civilian supporters many of them involved with all of these groups. Many of these supporters never instigate or call for any violence at all. Mostly, these people just want to separate from the societies they've been alienated from.
What follows when separatists make their demands clear is a typical response from a social entity it revolts against the separation, and violence begins. Just think about it, what is the phrase so often used by President Bush and his administration to describe the terrorists?
"Enemies of Civilization"
Posted by George at April 21, 2005 3:59 AM Category: Culture & Ideology
Trackback Pings
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.radnoesis.info/mt33/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/1569
Comments
Thank you George for sharing these insights. The creation of "monsters" seems to be a primary method of stimulating public support for atrocity. Today's "monsters" in the US are "terrorists." That label is so vague and applied so widely that the process itself should generate fear.
Posted by: Rowan at April 21, 2005 7:34 AM
After taking Rowan's class on terrorism, I view the subject in a very different light.
When it takes an entire SWAT team to arrest a little bitty woman who stands barely 5 feet tall and weighs 100lbs soaking wet at 2 am...when the neighbor across the street poses a more imminent danger, I think we have "homefront terrorists" in uniform. [This really happened. A modern day Gestapo stormed an apartment near mine at 2 am. My first thought was, "Where was Kimberly (her six year old daughter)?" I pray she was not home that night.]
We have women and children fleeing for their lives from abusive men who use scare tactics to control and possess. We have immigrants fleeing from war torn countries only to live in fear of retribution/discrimination wherever they end up. So much for the safety and welcome of the "huddled masses."
I received this little pocket info card from the ACLU that tells people how to respond (or how not to respond) to police should they be stopped. People are not only scared of what is OUT THERE... somewhere; they are also scared of what is really HERE. Fear is a powerful weapon that has been used for centuries. Trust is something that is so hard to come by.
It appears that no world power is guiltless.
My opinion on current jargon:
Colonialism is colonialism regardless of what you call it or how you justify it. "Kingdoms" still exist. Though they have taken on a different form, they still serve the same purpose. Instead of using marriage or treaties to obtain control of 'new lands,' we use international debt and 'free trade.' Someone gets richer; someone starves to death and loses the ability to sustain life. Many social ills have resulted from "civilization," which is in my opinion another misnomer. The only 'civilized' people are the indigenous tribes that have the ability to respect the beliefs and lifestyles of their neighbors without hostility, and hold true to their own at the same time.
Posted by: Shawna at April 21, 2005 8:09 PM