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Dear Mr. President: Make This a Real Peace Prize

October 9th, 2009

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An air of pleased embarrassment is emanating from the White House today. It may be seen that this was really the Nobel Speech Prize. The Oslo committee clearly wanted to jog some elbows, particularly European ones. President Obama has made all the right moves on many fronts — nuclear disarmament, global warming, a reach-out to the Muslim world.

This might alternatively be called the Nobel Relief Prize, as the rest of the world breathes a sigh that the U.S. is no longer a unilateral, belligerent power.  Simply to back away from the military overreach of the Bush era is reason to celebrate.

But a shadow hangs over the Nobel, thanks to its record of futility.  A glaring example would be all the prizes given for negotiating a peace in the Middle East that never came. Attempts at peace are laudable, and perhaps they are the best we can do much of the time, but Obama should aim higher.

It’s in is power to make this a real peace prize.

Because he’s a sitting President, he’s the first recipient with global power. And he sits atop a massive — mega-massive, if you will — military budget. The two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan should be object lessons in peace-making. If he has learned anything from these two conflicts, which are futile, impoverishing, and seemingly endless, Obama could lay down the following policies:

– Cutting America’s nuclear stockpile immediately by 90%.

– fighting no wars without a strong array of wiling allies.

– Turning any conflict into a peacekeeping mission.

– Initiating a draft for future wars so that a tiny slice of the American population, generally the poorest and least educated, doesn’t bear the burden of sacrifice alone.

– Dramatically curtailing future defense budgets.

– Ending America’s supremacy in arms dealing.

A book could be written about each point; many have been.  the toxic embrace of the military-industrial complex has made us a Jekyll-and-Hyde country. We see ourselves as agents of peace, but we have been on a war footing since Pearl Harbor. We call for disarmament while selling more advanced weapons systems than any other nation in the world. We lead the world, too, in developing new means of mechanized death. And we have been embroiled in more foreign adventures, by far, than any other country.

Peace begins with those who have the power to make peace.  Pres. Obama stands in a unique position in this regard.  Even though we’ve turned the corner from Bush’s reckless belligerence, avowing peace isn’t the same as action.  The bald truth is that much of the world fears America, and our politicians and generals like it that way. But in an age of globalism, it’s not feasible to want worldwide cooperation on climate change while holding all the cards in weapons. Fear doesn’t fit well with cooperation.

At a personal level, each citizen is responsible for being a unit of peace. Without a shift in collective consciousness, we will sleepwalk into another war. It’s inevitable when there’s a massive military establishment and a passive citizenry. One productive step, I believe, is to disavow all forms of violence today, making your own stand for peace. If enough people do that, awareness can shift on a mass scale.

Peace is a silent campaign of the heart. Why not join, since noisy protest against war don’t work? They just strengthen the hand of the warmakers in the end. I’ve been involved in www.takethevow.com, which is about individuals renouncing violence in their lives at the levels of thoughts, speech, and action.  But there are many other initiatives that donate time, money, and heart to ending the reign of war.

Rest assured, the war machinery that exists in this country has inertia on its side. It has grown in power every day since 1941, when America entered the war against Japan.  The only way to end two generations of military dominance is from the grass roots level. Obama showed that grass roots can elect a President against all odds. The same is true here, even against far greater odds.  It might even happen that this most conscientious of Presidents will listen and learn, not taking his Nobel as a reward but as a wakeup call.

Posted in:

Default, People, Spirituality, consciousness


6 COMMENTS
  • Gyanama says:

    This “is” the beginning of a Real Peace Prize, It is the best of the best we have experienced so far in reclaiming the Original Pattern………..

  • Brad says:

    The “take the vow” link should be, I believe, http://itakethevow.com/ .

  • Sonya T says:

    Why the Nobel to Obama? Who has created an arms race in Latin-American
    The Nobel Committee said it decided to honor Obama for his “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples. (CNN) That is not what Obama is doing in Latin-American but exactly the opposite. His policies (US military bases in Colombia, position taken in Honduran crisis, etc.) have jeopardized even more the US and Latin- America relations and have created an arms race in the region.
    The Arab world is also against the decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to Obama because although he promised a solution to the
    Arab-Israel conflict he is caving in to Israeli intransigence.
    He is escalating the war in Afghanistan, and reports say he may be thinking of invading Iran. In summary, he is a man of war, not peace as a Nobel Peace Prize should be.
    I don’t think that he deserves to share that honor with such people as Martin Luther King or Gandhi who indeed were peacemakers

  • Sonya T says:

    Why the Nobel Prize to somebody who allows human rights violations in Guantanamo base, Cuba although he promised during his campaign to close it?
    He also promised to stop the harassment against illegal immigrants started by the Bush administration and to legalize them; 9 months later they are still promises.

  • Vladimir says:

    @ Hackman: with all due respect, why are you commenting on a blog posting you didn’t read? It is extremely disrespectful to the author. Please refrain from coming here for the sole purpose of spreading negativity. If that is indeed your intention, there are plenty of right-wing sites where such behavior is enthusiastically welcomed.

  • mieke says:

    Perhaps the Nobel Committee has really thought this through.

    My first reaction was also: hey, isn’t this a bit early, Obama hasn’t yet accomplished anything.

    But Obama has already accomplished a very important thing: a worldwide SHIFT in attitude of many people in the whole wide world who will not idly stand by to be ‘sleep-walked’ into another war.

    This is a time of controversy, many in and out the U.S support Obama in his efforts, but we just do not take anything for granted anymore.

    There is a large awareness growing worldwide to work together instead of polarizing, whether it is on problems inside one’s country or on problems outside concerning every one.

    We just will have to in order to be able to rescue our own species.
    And otherwise, we will all go down together.

    Your choice !!

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