Monday, May 3, 2010

The Military Defends My Freedom?

This Sunday, an unfortunate event took place at the church I attended. At the end of the sermon, in the midst of the call to ministry and prayer, the pastor called for prayer for a particular couple who are moving out of state. The reason for this move is that the husband is in the military and is being transferred to a new base.

The pastor mentioned that this church member has done more than one tour in some "hot zones", and is likely to be deployed again after the move. The pastor told the congregation, "these are the kind of men you honor," and, "no matter what your views are on the wars, you can have that freedom of opinion because of guys like this that have fought to protect your freedoms." At this, I heard 4 or 5 "amens" from around the sanctuary; 4 or 5 more, by the way, than I had heard during the entirety of the passionate, inspired, and challenging sermon. The pastor then had the rest of the membership stretch out their hands and join in corporate prayer for this soldier and his family.

One may wonder why I would find such a thing "unfortunate." (In fact I find it more than unfortunate; more like disturbing and tragic.) There are two main issues here that I'd like to deal with. One is the idea of special recognition and honor for members of the military within the church. The other has to do with the idea that freedoms unique to Americans have been won and are continuously preserved by the military and through war. I'd like to deal with this second idea first.

There are few more deeply and widely held American beliefs than the one that we owe our freedoms (which are unique among all nations on earth), and therefore our allegiance and reverence to the mighty U.S. military. Laurence Vance, who regularly contributes antiwar articles from a Christian perspective to LewRockwell.com, recently received a response from a reader parroting this grand American fallacy. There are several layers of error contained in this view, and I'll try to take them on as systematically as possible in an informal blog.

1) The military does nothing to protect our freedoms

Most military apologists seem to concentrate on freedom of speech as the quintessential right that the military has secured and is securing. I've heard things like, "you antiwar people only have the freedom to speak out against wars because of the wars that have protected your right to free speech." Which wars are these? The Iraqis and Afghans have never done anything to limit my right of free speech, much less any other right. Do we honestly think that if we weren't slaughtering hundreds of thousands, even millions of Middle Easterners that we would be in dire threat of being conquered by a Shiite caliphate?

A common retort is, "you'd be speaking German if it wasn't for the military." Well, since the Third Reich couldn't cross the English Channel, it's a pretty hard sell to convince me they could have crossed the Atlantic Ocean. For some crucial alternate views on WWII, please read these indispensable works by Nicholson Baker and Pat Buchanan. WWII, after all, was little more than a continuation of WWI, which was completely unnecessary and irrelevant to American freedoms. In fact, during WWI, dissenters were imprisoned by the Woodrow Wilson administration for speaking out against the war. So much for American wars protecting freedom of speech.

The same occurred during the Civil War, which freed slaves only as an unintended consequence of war strategy. The Spanish-American War, the Mexican War, the War of 1812; none of these achieved anything positive in the way of preserving American rights. One would have to go all the way back to the War for Independence to find any war in our history that could remotely be said to expand American freedoms, and even that is debatable. A reasonably sober-minded survey of our history reveals little if any correlation between U.S. military action and the preservation of essential American freedoms.

2) Our freedoms aren't all they're cracked up to be

What is it exactly that these heroes are preserving anyway? An opponent of war can count on the fact that at some point they will hear something like (as in the case of the letter to Vance), "if you don't like America (erroneously conflating government/military and country), then leave." This can only lead one to conclude that free speech really isn't all that important to supporters of militarism. In fact, it's more of a nuisance than a fundamental natural right. They'd just as soon have a monolithic militaristic state with no dissent allowed.

Of course, without the freedom of dissent, there really isn't any freedom at all. And during times of war, dissent, if not directly outlawed, suffers from intense social persecution. It's difficult to survey history and not recognize a correlation between war and loss of individual freedom. This brings me to my next point.

3) The military undermines and endangers what freedoms we do have

First there is the indirect way that times of military action, even when acting abroad, tend to limit and restrict the freedoms we enjoy here on the home front, as referred to above. One only needs to take the most cursory look at the expansion of the domestic American security state during the last 8 years to recognize this phenomenon. The Department of Homeland Security, the Patriot Act, the Banking Secrecy Act, the TSA and their body scanners, expanded executive power, illegal wiretapping and monitoring of citizens' phones and emails, illegal detention and torture of citizens; all these and more are justified and supported solely on the basis that we are in a time of war.

But there is the even more pernicious direct method of freedom-destroying power employed on the military's victims abroad. If the rights we hold so dearly as Americans are in fact natural rights granted to us by God, by virtue of our humanity, then those same rights must extend to all of humanity across the globe. This means that to the extent that the U.S. military kills, wounds, or destroys the property of noncombatants (and combatants if they are acting in self defense against aggressive invasion), they are acting as agents of destruction of those very rights they purport to be defending.

None of the current wars are in any way legitimate actions on the part of the U.S. military. The invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the unofficial missions in Pakistan and Yemen have all been aggressive proactive actions on the part of the U.S. military. This means that anyone retaliating against U.S. forces is acting in defense. This effectively makes every U.S. victim an unjustified death. But even if we consider combatant deaths as legitimate targets, the American military has still managed to kill 40 times as many noncombatants. Millions have also been displaced from their homes and live as refugees. The level of crime this commits against natural human rights is almost inconceivable.

Noncombatant deaths made up approximately 43% of total deaths during WWI; about two-thirds of WWII deaths were suffered by noncombatants. Now, over 95% of deaths inflicted by the U.S. military fall on noncombatants. These figures scream of the injustice of the American cause.

4) It doesn't take an empire (or constant wars) to protect freedoms

The simple fact is that the citizens of many countries around the world enjoy a similar level of freedom without the burden of maintaining a gargantuan network of over 730 worldwide military bases. Switzerland, New Zealand, Canada, Hong Kong. These are just a few samples. Each nation in some ways is more free than America, and in some ways less free. The crucial point is that freedom is achievable and maintainable without a huge military spread across the globe.

Well, that turned out longer than I thought it would. I'll continue in an additional post with my views on church militarism.

UPDATE: Click here to read Part 2

4 comments:

  1. I saw you at church but I didn't get a chance to say hi. Good article.

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  2. Well said, Lukus. I witnessed a prayer this weekend at our congregation that prayed for the "safety of mean and women in the military" -- note the lack of "soldier" or "armed forces" -- while completely ignoring the millions of Muslims and Christians in Iraq who are suffering. They just got some generic words for "peace" while the oppressors were lauded.

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  3. Really well said, Lukus. The pastor certainly has a good heart, but unfortunately he's just repeating the same lines we've all been taught. I appreciate what you told me, that you did pray for the soldier during the prayer time yesterday, but that you prayed that his eyes would be opened. It's important that people know that we hold no maliciousness toward those working in the military, that we can appreciate the desire of their hearts to serve others in what they perceive to be the cause of freedom, but they are simply misguided in their efforts, and for THAT, they truly need our prayers.

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  4. Lukus, thank you for your clarity and insight, and for sharing it without being overawed by the size of the opposition.

    After experience of the Underground Church behind the Iron Curtain in the sixties, I left the Church of England ... the contrast was so clear.
    That was when my spiritual life began to take off.
    My personal view now, is that formal religion is used to control, not to enlighten.

    If your Pastor filled his house and his church with the sort of people Jesus went amongst, how long would he keep his job?
    If you can't bring him, and his Church along with you, are you prepared to leave them behind?

    You sound like you are moving forward, it can be difficult as you well know.
    Your thoughts will inspire and reassure readers everywhere ... may you feel their love and support at all times.

    Kerry.
    England.

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