Iuly 16. 2008 Page A4 Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views o f the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@portlandobserver.com. O pinio Running our Nation into the. Ground QX HEWS .. » /ILS0 ftlR. ahd BALANCEO' - we P ont ¿ just because the black ZA CArtOtDATÊ — the affairs o f 50 nations and has violated the laws o f G od and hu­ manity by designing, deploying, using, and threatening to use atomic- w eapons.” Carroll sees it in much the same light: "The Pentagon is now the dead center o f an open-ended m ar­ tial enterprise that no longer pre­ tends to be d efen se... the Penta­ gon has, more than ever, becom e a place to fear.” "W hat the Bush adm inistration has done,” Carroll writes, “is to lay bare the real character o f the ‘disas­ trous rise’ o f Pentagon pow er of which Eisenhow er warned in 1961. In Iraq, despite A m erica's over­ whelm ing military might, there will be no w inning ever.” Carrol I ' s words sound more pro­ phet ic each time another general testifies the Pentagon is “making progress" but the situation remains “fragile” and so we must stay on and on. Tw o years ago Carroll literally predicted Sen. John M cC ain’s com ­ m ent about staying in Iraq fo ra 100 y ears i f need be, wri ti ng, "there will be no winning ever. W hether the U .S. o c c u p atio n is term in ated abruptly or is m aintained for years, violence and m ayhem will define Iraq indefinitely, w hile the rest of the M iddle East copes with Iraqi- spaw ned waves o f chaos.” M cCain says, if elected, he will The bloated military- industrial complex S^NgRATE JWÇE. 9K? \v S hkkwdoii Ross O ne issue the A merican people likely are not going to hear about in this presidential cam paign is argu­ ments for slashing a bloated Penta­ gon down to size. No m atter that each passing day brings some new revelation o f gross m ism anagem ent, crony ism, waste, and extra-legal activity, it is a topic- no candidate for the W hite House dares to broach lest he or she be deem ed “naive” or “soft” on the subject o f defense. Yet, the m ilitary-industrial com ­ plex is here and it is running this nation into the ground, sucking trillions o f dollars out o f taxpayers’ w allets and, by starving other hu­ man services, laying w aste to civil­ ian sectors in urgent need o f repair and regeneration. W hen the Pentagon was under c o n s tru c tio n , m em b ers o f the Roosevelt cabinet questioned the w isdom o f bringing together under one roof the num erous m ilitary of- fices scattered around W ashing- by ' MÙSLÌ 'S£?> .— . People all over the World Starving to Death Globalized economy is not helping trition. Bringing it closer to home, the U.S. D epartm ent o f Agriculture es­ timates that in 2(X)6,35 million people in the U.S. lived in food- insecure households. In some countries w here the - problem has reached criti­ cal p ro p o rtio n s , rio ts have occurred as people W ally R yan K i koiwa Since the beginning of 2008, there have been d ra ­ m atic in creases in food shortages globally. A c­ cording to one estim ate, ap p ro x i­ m ately one billion people are liv ­ ing w ith and dying from chronic- hunger. In more stark terms, they are starving to death. This crisis is just the most recent m anifestation o f an ongoing crisis, brought on in great part because of desperately seek food. These statistics indicate at least a sharp increase in global food three important realities. First, this prices. Fred M ag d o ff o f the U n iv er­ is not a problem that just cam e upon sity o f V erm ont estim ates that us. It has been with us for a while. the num ber o f food insecure and Second, it is not a problem that m alnourished people in the w orld existsexclusi vely in heavily impov­ ap proaches 3 billion people, with erished countries. Third, this is not 18,000 ch ild ren dying daily as a a problem caused by the lack of direct or indirect result o f m alnu- food. The U.S. alone could provide bv a enough food to feed the world. Certain factors have accelerated the most recent intensification of hunger and malnutrition. The re­ cent spate o f natural disasters in food-producing regions of the U.S.. such as the floods in Iowa, has d rastically reduced production. O ther factors are a result o f human decisions, such as the decision to In the globalized economy, food is simply treated as another commodity, like cars, shoes, and other things to be purchased. No money: no food. diversity use corn and oth er g rain s for biofuels. M ore fundam entally, how ever, the lo n g -te rm c risis has been brought on by the present global food pro d u ctio n and trad in g sy s­ tem. O ver the past three decad es or so, co u n tries that d ep en d ed on su b sisten ce-lev el farm ers to pro- ‘"Print P a rtic ip a te in D e m o c ra c y V o te Return your ballot by mail or drop i f o ff at any designated voter drop site. Call I 866-673 8693 to find a location near you. (Ebe ^lurtlaiih COhseiTirr Istahkshrd >f » m . m m l l o j t , li/hr,»/ On XXXIV Week it. incReview wdMtfrVnun Wally Ryan Kurtnwa is a m in­ ister amt learn leader with Justice and Witness M inistries in the United Church of Christ. The hush regime is in Iraq to steal oil, to swindle taxpayers, and to give lucrative defense contracts to its friends. be out o f Iraq by 2013, but as Sen. Joseph Biden pointed out in a re­ cent talk carried on C-Span, McCain gave no specifics. And so one be­ gins to suspect the goal in Iraq is not necessarily to win a war but to make w ar again and again, forever and a day. so the m ilitary-industrial com plex can prosper while non­ d efen se sectors starv e, so that governm ent contractors can erect a m onster em bassy in Baghdad and huge, perm anent m ilitary bases nearby to dom inate the oil-rich M iddle East. Carroll w rites the U.S. under President Bush has "norm alized" war: “Not noted by most A m eri­ cans, a new archipelago o f U.S. m ilitary bases stretched across the M iddle East into the heart o f the former SovietU nion.. .Suchforward basing o f forces was designed to co n tro l, by m ean s o f ‘reg im e ch an g e’ and ‘prevention.’ em erg­ ing political trends around the globe, with the unabashed goal of guaranteeing U.S. dom inance ev ­ e ry w h e re ." (A m e ric a o p era tes about I .(XX) m ilitary bases at home and more than 700 overseas.) “Such a strategy," Carroll goes on to write, “assum es not only the possession o f unparalleled military pow er but the display o f it and the ready use o f it. U nder G eorge W. ton. D.C. They feared the im pend­ ing consolidation o f aw esom e m ar­ tial pow ers into one o f the greatest structures on earth; they w orried, too, that the w ar m achine might take on a life o f its own. Tragically, their fears have been realized. Today, the military is a beast without a heart, without com pas­ sion. It will w age w ar anyw here in the w orld, on any lie or pretext, sending thousands or m illions to their deaths. It is devoid of m oral­ ity; it has learned nothing from re­ ligious teachings except lip-service; and its civilian em ployees go to their jobs each day m anufacturing nuclear w eapons and aircraft carri­ ers as though they w ere planting apple orchards or raising flowers. As Ja m es C a rro ll w rites in "H ouse o f W ar." by 1965 nearly 6 million Am ericans were em ployed in Pentagon-run enterprises. After all. in the 2()years following World W ar II. "the Pentagon spent nearly & 100 billion. It) times the federal expenditures devoted to all aspects o f health, education, and welfare in the same period.” By 1997. Father Philip Berrigan, hum anitarian and anti-w ar activist, could tell the judge who would shortly sentence him to two years in prison for spilling blood on a U.S. warship: "The United States has spent S14 tri 11 ion on arms si nee 1946. O ur governm ent has intervened in Have you seen me? * 17-)«« «M S»«tfc prl -«VR"»-) >10« «X h« (« «MM »-t M*M XM I fcx !■»«•< ts, • r»/t» un .M h n n 4 » r« W -M i»t « *»!’ w*v«<*4 tk» «f «bfeo4 < X« » h« >»«».. 4a< «<«' Lavt M»L t o il. >•1 d u i «> fr« -4* Ml d u ce food locally w ere en c o u r­ aged and som etim es coerced into an ex p o rt-b ased ag ricu ltu re. As a co n seq u en ce, th ese co u n tries becam e m ore v u ln erab le to the volatility o f the global food tra d ­ ing system . The right to nourishing food has long been accepted univer­ sally as a human right. In contrast, in the globalized econom y, food is simply treated as another co m ­ modity, like cars, shoes, and other things to be purchased. No money: no food. In such an understanding, poor people are shut out and denied. As food prices soar, those living in poverty becom e more and more vulnerable to hunger. For people o f faith and good will, such a system ic problem is m orally unacceptable. In the A braham ic faith traditions, soci­ ety has an obligation to provide for the basic needs o f the poor. For exam ple, farm ers are com m anded in the M osaic code to leave the outer boundaries o f their farms unharvested, so that the poor and aliens may use that food for their needs. In light o f the catastrophic- n atu re o f the food crisis today, people o f faith are urged to call atten tio n to this hum an problem and to urge m ajo r shifts in the w ay w e co n sid er food. For m ore inform ation on this m obilization and how y o u r faith gro u p can p a rtic ip a te , go to w w w .trad ew eek .o rg. Food is a human right! continued ' y f on page A9 Endangered Missing ¿© L * ‘ ' ? t * uiilarC- H"»»- dl>»« «0 »,«*M «•« 0 h * T«*t»4 Toynu C « n 4 « i "«>J«h»t .* ■ » » «K» M «n Amrricam 0u«0h«i O»a> «A«ytk» 0 S io»wp«r I m « «K . I pw«»y frul 1« > tor. J» « « * » , • ■yiuty Sy «»»»»f. «•»«• tt <6 »« Ferait» Prom». TY» r »10 •«•>□»•« !•«»{. nnraïc»- « Oufr»«* WnuUm« Atixt. '««,•■ k«Mx & utlfr» 'frii !<«■«• *M*vk*m Tanya Chivas Joshua Bland Age: 14 Missing: J u n e 2, 2008 From: Dolton, IE I kiMwn (or frtlk i» « Robert Johnson Age: 15 Age: 14 ‘Missing: J u n e 16. 2008 Missing: J u n e 4, 2008 Front: A lex an d ria, VA From: L akeland, EE Josh was last seen at his Last seen wearing blue Raheim amt Robert are brothers; they were last seen jeans and a t-shirt. home. at their home. «n» « • « tu ®» 'L u • le « « »toi « « pfrd '«H BMrvvtrUfr >•••«<4. fri«*« Raheim Johnson Age: 14 Ifr. To c o n ta c t 11,1 ^Llnrtlauh ODhscrricr Call 503-288-0033 or email ads@ porti andob servcr.com 1-8O0-THE-LOST I f you have any inform ation please contact: The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children 1-8(10-1 TIE-LOST (1-800-843-5678) this public service announcement provided by the Portland Observer Newspaper. I