As the American public slowly lumbers toward apathy about the current political situation, both domestic and abroad, there are folks wholly dedicated to protesting the military-industrial complex before it can rend asunder all the values it intends to protect.
People often ask questions about the seeming hopelessness of the current situation as though the same practical obstacles didn’t exist in the past. It may be true that given the ongoing fragmentation of American political life that it’s become harder to organize around watershed events. But criminal wars conducted by scandal-plagued administrations, rubber-stamped by a Know-Nothing Congress must be confronted.
Recently, Doug Henwood’s radio program featured a segment on practical response to organizing an opposition as well as giving voice to soldiers returned from Afghanistan and Iraq. The New Yorker’s Guide to Military Recruitment in the 5 Boroughs offers much needed insight into the insidious marketing practices and unrealistic offers being made would-be soldiers as recruiters maraud at high school’s and neighborhoods looking for cannon fodder. Although it seems that the internet is the only way, everything about this effort speaks to the common sense undergirding America’s rich history of pamphleteering.
Jose Vasquez illuminates the enlisted side as a activist with Iraq Veterans Against the War, giving voice to disillusioned veterans as well as countering the notion that America’s military stands wholeheartedly behind the Commander-in-Chief and his cronies. Some veterans spoke at January’s screening of Occupation: Dreamland, making clearer the confusion that reigns for soldiers torn between duty and conviction.
This week’s program also featured a brief conversation with Republican consultant turned author Kevin Phillips on the uneasy confluence of militant business and religious practice that animate American politics in his new book American Theocracy. His is a tale of a declining superpower, a trope in American political commentary dating back to the Carter Administration and one he sought to cultivate. Looking back on his success can best be described as bittersweet, if not deeply troubling as the party changed hands from one war mongerer to another. From the interview it was clear that Phillips is clearheaded on current American politics and like most of us sees no easy solution from either major party.
In short, if you haven’t already subscribed to Doug Henwood’s radio show podcast, Behind the News, then you should hurry up and do so immediately. Thought provoking…and portable!