All we have to do to understand is go one step further. Suppose somehow Swanson gets his way and the country cuts military spending by over $200 billion. Doing so would open a discussion of what to do, domestically, or to help others, with all that loot. Some would perhaps propose creating huge playgrounds for the rich. Others would propose Swanson’s list. Swanson’s list would win. Just imagine a vote – enlarge gluttony for a few, correct social ills and advance social gains throughout society. So, some variant on Swanson’s list wins. It is done. Isn’t this terrific?
Yes, for most people it would be, of course. But what about for the very rich and powerful. What would be the impact on them. Don’t jump to answer too fast. It would still be their businesses that get the government payments to build the railways, develop solar, rebuild infrastructure, build houses, and so on. So it isn’t that military spending yields short term corporate profits and rebuilding cities wouldn’t do so. In this thought experiment we aren’t proposing a whole new system, but just redirecting $200 billion a year from military waste and violence to sane and worthy ends.
So what is the problem with doing that? If it benefits people, doesn’t interfere with defense, and earns corporations the same kinds of profits that war spending does (even more, in fact, I suspect), why is there so much incredible resistance. Are people just insane?
Envision society with this redirection occurring and then having effects on folks. There is a social safety net that really protects against unemployment and poverty. There is better housing. There are cleaner and repaired neighborhoods, with new parks. There is much better education, open, free. There is better health care, without fear. All that and more is in place, $200 billion worth each new year.
What happens to the relative well being of working people, to their ability to fight for a larger share, even? What happens to their fear of unemployment, to their levels of awareness, to their confidence? What happens, then, to the relative balance of power between elites, on the one hand, and those who finally get serious benefits from the country’s productive capacity? The balance shifts in a major way. And, worse, in a way that could easily snowball into continuing gains for the poor as against the rich.
And that is the heart of it. The reason that military expenditures are sacrosanct – until very powerful movements displace them – is because the pain and suffering maintained by spending the funds on military ends is considered, however implicitly, vastly better for the “system” and its main beneficiaries than would be the growing security, confidence, knowledge, and means of beneficiaries of social expenditures.
The harm that Swanson points to as a result of our militaristic budget priorities is not just a nasty byproduct. It is a very large part of the reason for the priorities in the first place. Declining infrastructure, etc. etc. isn’t a bit of collateral damage for undertaking military spending in such massive amounts only for military reasons. Beyond rather modest outlays, it is, instead, the reason for military spending – social spending, the only alternative, is anathema to the powers that be.
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All true, but I think it misses the unique point. The really teachable point.
The companies that build military hardware, that put up military bases, and on and on, could produce socially worthy items, instead of military stuff. The government could be the buyer, as with military expenditures. There could be as much, indeed, more product and it would all be transacting on the market, like now, or just by fiat – via government contracts.
Building schools, hospitals, infrastructure like trains, or vast solar and wind facilities – could be done. And the private corporations could still be beneficiaries – though of course they shouldn’t be.
So what makes military spending so attractive to the powers that be, and social spending anathema?
Partly the product has utility for imperial ventures, but, if you look, that is really only part of it. Tons of military expenditure is waste, not used, hopefully not used, etc.
So, what then distinguishes it?
The answer is totally front and center. Military products benefit the corporations, elites, etc., and NO ONE ELSE, other than maniacs who manage to grab some of it and then use it. In contrast social spending on highways, schools, hospitals, housing, and so on – does benefit those who consume the product, which is largely the population as a whole and, particularly, its least wealthy sectors.
Am I saying the powers that be are literally sadistic? That they literally want to hurt the population as their purpose? No. That isn’t the aim per se. If the population could be better off at no loss for elites, they would say sure, why not? But that isn’t how it works. IF the working population is made more secure, more healthy, less at risk, more knowledgeable and so on, their ability to bargain for a piece of the social product – higher wages – increases. IF there is a discussion of what to do with our productive capacity that isn’t cur short by military constraints, there is again, a trend dangerous for elites.
So their motive isn’t sadistic – it is to serve and advance their own interests. Of course, in our society that is little different than sadistic in its implication – because it means pouring productive potential into useless and pointless, or, even worse, useful and utilized military production – and away from production that could enhance life for the many.
This is the heart of it – and much more damning, sadly, than the idea that there are some centers of power and wealth that are directly involved in military profiteering and they are hard to overcome….
You might mention that militarism is also an ideological construct embraced by those most negatively affected. And an embedded profit infrastructure that reaches into every community in the country, making them “beneficiaries”. This ideological/economic infrastructure, like fossil fuel infrastructure, cannot be reversed with a “rational” election and any “powerful movement” will have to understand this dynamic.