Should We Feed Hungry Children, Or The War Machine?

War is a Racket - protest sign

By Medea Benjamin, September 4, 2019

From OpenDemocracy

On August 21, the Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen, Lise Grande, put out a heartbreaking call for nations to make good on their pledges to send humanitarian aid to feed destitute families in war-torn Yemen. Unless the funds promised are received soon, she warned, food rations for 12 million people would be reduced and at least 2.5 million malnourished children would be cut-off from the services that keep them alive. “When money doesn’t come,” Grande said bluntly, “people die.”

The total UN appeal is $4 billion. While this is the largest country appeal the UN has ever put out, the entire bill represents only two days of the 2019 US military budget of almost $700 billion. Lacking generosity, the US offered a mere $300 million—less than four hours of Pentagon spending. Meanwhile, US companies rake in billions of dollars selling the weapons to Saudi Arabia that are in large part responsible for this humanitarian crisis.

The wild disparity between money for feeding people and money for arming the military is reflected here at home. In 2018, the federal government spent $68 billion on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which provided food to 40 million people. It would take only ten days of the Pentagon budget to cover that tab, but this administration says it’s too expensive and is trying to cut eligibility for food to the poor.

What if, instead of military interventions, the US decided to fight global poverty?

Columbia University’s Jeffrey Sachs, one of the world’s leading experts on economic development, has estimated that the cost to end world poverty is $195 billion per year. With the upcoming 2020 military budget proposed at $750 billion, the US could feed the world’s hungry and still spend twice as much on its military than the number two spender: China. It would also serve our national interests. Feeding the poor would certainly win us more friends around the world than deploying another aircraft carrier.

If we decided that we’d rather focus on education, a portion of our military budget could finance the College for All program proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders, which would eliminate existing student loan debt and make all public colleges and universities tuition-free for $47 billion a year. In fact, we could implement this program 14 times on this year’s military budget alone. Despite this reality, as weapons manufacturers get billions in handouts and contracts with the US military, some of those same educational institutions losing out in the federal budget are investing their funds back into the weapons manufacturers lobbying to divert public money towards war.

The trend of military spending outpacing the cost of even our most ambitious social programs continues for just about every cause you can name. We could house every homeless person in the country, give the Department of Transportation a budget nine times as large as its current one, or vastly expand programs like Medicare and Medicaid. Every dollar of public money that goes to finance US militarism abroad is a dollar that could go to fighting hunger, homelessness, or climate change.

Our elected officials have chosen to prioritize the pursuit of military hegemony over the wellbeing of our people. What’s more, they treat military spending as an inevitability while programs that might improve the lives of students in crippling education debt or the sick in crippling medical debt are portrayed as luxuries. Advocates for Medicare for All and the Green New Deal must constantly justify their high price tags for saving lives and our planet, while the military receives an ever-growing check to destroy them.

In 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave a profound speech about the grotesque spending on weapons. “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.”

As he was about to leave office in 1961, he issued a warning against “the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex.” Today that complex is often referred to as the military-industrial-security complex, or simply the national security state. To understand the enormity of its reach, you have to start with the $750 billion proposed for 2020 Pentagon and war-related activities and add the money for nuclear weapons, veterans, homeland security, intelligence and the military share of the national debt. The total comes to an obscene $1.25 trillion.

Senator Bernie Sanders, railing against this runaway spending in a speech at Johns Hopkins, called on people to stand up and say: “There is a better way to use our wealth.” Sanders, along with Elizabeth Warren, have outlined visionary plans for fixing our broken healthcare, education, infrastructure and ailing planet, but they have yet to propose a sweeping reform of our military spending. The only way we will see a shift to a more just and sustainable world is if we shift the way we spend – or squander – our nation’s wealth.

7 Responses

  1. Et as fir vill Leit schwéier, Lëtzebuergesch ze liesen, a wann et dann och nach mat esou ville Feeler an der Saatzkonstruktioun as, kënnt ee kaum nach mat. Sidd Dir Holländer? Et as jo eng gudd Iddi, eng Welt ouni Krich, ech sin och dofir. Awer déi meescht Leit hun net genuch Mënscheverstand. Als Ersatz für den Krich kréien se elo Krankheet an doduerch Wirtschaftsënnergank an Honger ugebueden.

  2. Your automatic translations are catastrophically wrong and make you look ridiculous. When I write in perfect Luxembourgish “a world without war is desirable” and I find a “corrected” that is not understandable, and the German translation is: “a world war is desirable”, what is then the sense of translating? As every a little educated person in the world understands English!

    1. You might be thinking of GTranslate which is the best translation program we’ve found. We would be delighted with any recommendation for a better one. We don’t pretend to have found a human, much less an automatic, translator of anything that will actually please any native speaker of any language. I can’t imagine what Akismet has to do with anything?

  3. You are spending money for transforming our comments to nonsense by Akismet! I wrote a perfect text in Luxembourgish and it became nonsense after moderation. The German translation brought up even the contrary of what I had written. ” A world without war would be desirable” became: ” A world war would be desirable”.

    1. You might be thinking of GTranslate which is the best translation program we’ve found. We would be delighted with any recommendation for a better one. We don’t pretend to have found a human, much less an automatic, translator of anything that will actually please any native speaker of any language. I can’t imagine what Akismet has to do with anything?

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