When will they ever learn?

by Kathie MM

I cannot even say those words (“When will they ever learn?”) without Pete Seeger’s ballad, “Where have all the flowers gone,” flooding my brain. We had such optimism in the sixties, despite the vile and catastrophic assassinations of JFK , MLK,, and RFK, such hope that people would study war no more.  But the current era is more bloodthirsty and terrifying than ever as the government, the people behind the government, the arms industry, the NRA, and other war profiteers promote and benefit from deadly weapons and the sacking of lands far from our shores.

As is typical of bullies, those responsible for sending our young men and women to kill civilians (that’s who almost all the victims are) refuse to take responsibility for their devastating assaults on human beings and environments.  If the power brokers learned any lessons from Vietnam, it was how better to cover up dirty deeds and blame their victims for the violence unleashed upon them.

The Sacking of Falujah: A People’s History by Ross Caputi (a frequent guest author on Engaging Peace), Richard Hil, and  Donna Mulhearn takes you behind the scenes of a more recent major bloodletting by the U.S. The book  is not only engrossing, but dares to speak truth to power, to describe events as experienced at Falujah not only by the three authors but by dozens of Iraqis who suffered from the second invasion of Iraq and its endlessly deadly aftermath.

Reading this book will not only provide you with hitherto unavailable information about the sacking of Falujah by the US and “Coalition Forces” but also about the events that led up to it—events that the US government is not eager to share or take responsibility for—and the role of that sacking and related events in the rise of ISIS. It will get you thinking about sociocide and urbacide, and information wars. It may also motivate you to think more about our government’s current rhetoric concerning “enemies” in other parts of the world and its threats regarding the selected enemies of today’s regime. You know who the current targets are. Can you ask your Congresspeople to resist complicity?

To view a video of my interview with Ross Caputi about The Sacking of Falujah, go to https://youtu.be/H7KatbFAI6U and send us your comments on this and all engaging peace posts.

May Pete rest in peace

Peace and social justice are what Pete Seeger tirelessly worked for and sang for throughout his life.

Seeger was the consummate activist, hounded by the FBI because he would not name names during Senator Joseph McCarthy’s reign as Chief Bully of the United States.

We should remember that terrifying reign well today, as we see once again how Big Brother’s henchmen can threaten all who support world peace and social justice.

The video at the beginning of this post highlights many of the causes to which he dedicated his life.

Pete’s songs have inspired and engaged people around the world on behalf of peace and justice. One internet site has versions of his songs in 33 different languages. His grandson carries on his tradition.

We cannot fill his shoes but we can follow in his footsteps.

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology

Memorial Day 2013: Remembering Vietnam

Vietnam War protesters
Image in public domain.

Memorial Day is the ideal day for remembering both the costs of war and the valiant efforts of anti-war activists to resist war. Today’s post focuses on the Vietnam War, which is worth memorializing for three reasons:

  • It showed the power of a diminutive David (North Vietnam) against a gigantic Goliath (the United States).
  • It showed the moral power of anti-war civilians against the political power of the military industrial complex.
  • It reminds us that you can fool some of the people some of the time with lies and propaganda (e.g., the Bay of Tonkin) but you can’t fool all the people all the time because so many will seek and share the truth.

The costs of that war were momentous: 58,220 American deaths.

And that figure represents just the tip of the iceberg: it does not include the post-war suicides, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), drug and alcohol abuse, and family violence stemming from military service in Vietnam.

Moreover, it does not include the millions of Vietnamese lives lost and the additional millions irretrievably damaged. Of the thousands of books written about the Vietnam War, Nick Turse says, “The main problem with most of those books is the complete lack of Vietnamese voices…. Millions of Vietnamese suffered: injuries and deaths, loss, privation, hunger, dislocation, house burnings, detention, imprisonment, and torture.”

Today I remember with gratitude the brave Americans who struggled to end that devastating, unjust and immoral war—sometimes at the cost of their lives or their freedom. Here are just a few: Martin Luther King, Jr., Father Daniel Berrigan, Daniel Ellsberg, Mohammed Ali, Angela Davis, Jane Fonda, Pete Seeger, and Walter Cronkite.

I pray we continue to be blessed with moral leaders who will resist the political calls to wage war.

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology