Giving thanks for peace

Loud voices are claiming that peace is impossible, that peace agreements don’t last, and that there will always be war. War profiteers may scoff at the feasibility of peace but here are some examples of lasting peace for which we can be thankful.

Thanksgiving Square Beacon symbolizing regeneration, reconciliation, peace, and aspiration
Thanksgiving Square Beacon symbolizing regeneration, reconciliation, peace, and aspiration. Photo by David Baird, used under CC Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 license.

The Webster-Ashburton Treaty, 1842: The U.K. and U.S. settled boundary disputes remaining from the Treaty of Paris (which concluded the Revolutionary War) and ended the (non-violent) Aroostok War over Maine’s border. The Treaty produced what became the longest (still) undefended border in the world.

Treaty of the Triple Alliance, 1876: At the end of a long and bloody war, the Triple Alliance (Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay) wanted to divide up large portions of the defeated Paraguay. U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes, playing a positive role that might amaze today’s world, was asked to arbitrate a dispute over Paraguay’s final borders. His ruling that a contested area remain with Paraguay prevailed without further warfare.

Dissolution of the Norway-Sweden Union, 1905: This nugget is not a treaty but a non-violent peace settlement to a threatened war. Norwegian feelings favoring full independence from Sweden were so high in 1905 that Norway assembled an army to fight Sweden. Cooler heads prevailed and both sides agreed to go to a Court of Arbitration at The Hague instead. The result: no war and Norway achieved its full independence.

Paris Peace Treaties, 1947: Although some of the victorious Allies (particularly the U.S. and U.K.) have been extensively involved in warfare since the end of WWII, it is not with their former enemies, the Axis Powers. Indeed, that peace agreement has been so successful that a recent U.S. President felt compelled to invent a new “Axis” (“of evil”).

Michael Corgan and Kathie Malley-Morrison

Revolutionize society with revolutionary peace

Millions of Americans celebrate the Fourth of July, honoring the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the subsequent Revolutionary War by waving flags and marching in parades.

"Peace is Patriotic" button
Image in public domain.

Swept up in patriotic fever, many celebrate by getting drunk and harassing people perceived as less than “red-blooded Americans.”

There must be better ways to honor the goals of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” A new revolution is painfully overdue. It’s once again time to confront distant and out-of-touch power structures with the demands of a new age and a new frontier.

A peace revolution is already underway:

Don’t be left behind.  Join the REVOLUTIONARIES.

R=Rightfully revolt against raging reactionary rhetoric

E=Enthusiastically endorse enlightening programs for peace

V=Valiantly voice views against violence

O=Obdurately occupy oppressive institutions

L=Lovingly learn lessons in lessening violence

U=Universally unite under peace’s umbrella

T=Tactfully tailor tactics towards tolerance

I=Intelligently invest in innovative peace

O=Openly oppose onerous taxes for war

N=Nicely nurture the pathways to peace

A=Adamantly advocate apology and forgiveness

R=Rigorously restore routes to reconciliation

I=Imperturbably initiate ideologies of peace

E=Energetically embark on ensuring social justice

S=Solicitously support efforts of engagingpeace*

*Small donations will  help; we need your support to maintain our status as a non-profit.

Peace riding in triumphal chariot
Peace riding in a triumphal chariot. Image in public domain.

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology

Heeding the Declaration of Independence

Declaration of Independence
Declaration of Independence. Image in public domain.

Many Americans are familiar with the following words, which ring out near the beginning of the Declaration of Independence:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

That document, and the Revolutionary War that followed it, gave rise on this continent to a new nation, but it is not a nation that has acknowledged the equality of all men nor has it afforded life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness to all. More than 200 years have passed since that famous signing, yet these independent and united states  still do not ensure equal rights and self-determination for all.

If successive governments since those revolutionary times had consistently heeded the values expressed in that document, and had used those values to guide their own behavior at home and abroad, how different the world might be today.

For example, to justify revolting against British rule, the signers of the Declaration accused the King of the following “abuses and usurpations”:

  • “depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury”
  • ”transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences”
  • “transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation, and tyranny.”

Consider how the U.S. government could be accused of similar “abuses and usurpations,” and ask yourself, is this who we want to be?

Tortured Abu Ghraib prisoner
Tortured Abu Ghraib prisoner. Image in public domain.

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology

Uncle Sam wants YOUR money!

Correction: Uncle Sam wants your money unless you are among the country’s largest U.S. corporations (e.g., GE, Microsoft, IBM, Exxon, Chevron). As reported in that radical rag, the Wall Street Journal, 60 of those large corporations “parked a total of $166 billion offshore last year” shielding anywhere from 40 percent to 100% of their profits from U.S. taxes.

It takes taxes and bonds poster
Image in public domain

While avoiding payment of taxes in the U.S., these corporations relied on the U.S. government to protect their interests from, for example, those who object to extraction of their natural resources by American companies.

Today is April 15. You have probably filed your 2012 income tax return, but in the coming year it would be wise to attend to proposals being made by the President and Congress regarding who will pay taxes and how the money will be spent.

You may have heard about proposed cuts in Social Security and medical and social welfare programs. Do you also know that President Obama is proposing a half billion dollar shift of funds from nuclear nonproliferation programs to upgrading the U.S. nuclear program?

Are your priorities the same as the government’s?

Historically, Americans have found many nonviolent ways to protest or rebel against taxes they judged to be unfair or immoral.

  • In 1773, to protest the tea tax imposed by the English government to finance its wars, colonists in Boston dumped English tea into Boston Harbor;
  • During and after the Revolutionary War, many Quakers, Mennonites, and members of other peace-oriented religious denominations refused to pay taxes intended for military expenditures;
  • Henry David Thoreau refused to pay a toll tax levied to support the Mexican War, spent a night in jail, and wrote about it in the essay “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience.”
  • Since World War II, many individuals (e.g., Noam Chomsky) have formed groups to protest using tax dollars to finance war. You can learn more from the National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee  (http://www.nwtrcc.org/ ).

War tax resistance may not be the right choice for you, but do consider this question: Are the issues raised here important enough so that you will make your own voice heard?

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology