Anniversary of anti-war milestone cause for reflection

http://media.wildcat.arizona.edu/media/storage/paper997/news/2009/03/04/Opinions/Anniversary.Of.AntiWar.Milestone.Cause.For.Reflection-3658694.shtml

By: Gabriel Matthew Schivone
Issue date: 3/4/09

Forty years ago today, classes were suspended at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology surrounding disastrous circumstances which 
over a decade earlier Albert Einstein had warned as "stark, dreadful, 
and inescapable." The paroxysm that called the day off for students 
and scientists alike was not a snowstorm or natural disaster of 
sorts; it was a catastrophe that was utterly human in all its cruel 
dimensions and unnatural constructions.

On March 4, 1969, in efforts mainly organized and spearheaded by 
students, scientists at MIT and elsewhere throughout the country 
halted their research activities in a "practical and symbolic" 
expression of protest of U.S. government violence in Southeast Asia. 
At the time, America's war on Vietnam raged a terrible, though not 
yet exhaustive, campaign of atrocity and mass destruction that would 
eventually inflict more tons of firepower upon the area of Cambodia 
alone than all the bombing theaters by all sides during WWII. The 
line of technology and technical planning for the war was directly 
tied to America's finest minds of science and innovation, much of 
which came out of MIT.

At the insistence of the students, MIT Emeritus Professor Noam 
Chomsky was, in his own words, "quite centrally involved" in the 
negotiations with the administration while the planning of activities 
was going on. "(March 4) was the first time that these issues - uses 
of technology and the goals of science - had been discussed outside 
small groups at MIT," Professor Chomsky told me last week in a phone 
interview from his office at Cambridge.

A statement of purpose, known as the "March 4 Manifesto," originally 
written by students, and begins with the premise that through 
America's actions in Vietnam, the "misuse of scientific and technical 
knowledge presents a major threat to the existence of mankind."

There is a profound sense of urgency in the language and proposals of 
March 4 so striking as to appear as though they had been written 
earlier today.  One of the central themes was bent on "turning 
research applications away from the present emphasis on military 
technology toward the solution of pressing social and environmental problems."

Observing the state of the world today, eminent scientists, 
intellectuals, military specialists - and just common sense knowledge 
of our own behavior in the world - all remind us that we are by far 
the most violent and militaristic society on the face of the earth, 
and that serious alternatives are needed if we want to avert disaster.

Our way of life (a euphemism for "way of war and business") is a 
leading example after which many of the world's most terrifying 
elements are modeled, often with our training (called a "strategic 
partnership"), our provisions (euphemized as "direct aid"), and our 
direction (i.e. "U.S. blessing").

Quite apart from the fact that our military expenditures outweigh all 
the militaries of the world combined, the way we've arranged as open 
for business what George H.W. Bush called the "new world order" 
demonstrates the unparalleled levels of organized crime which we 
command and profit from on a world scale.

The New America Foundation reports that "U.S. arms and military 
training played a role in 20 of the world's 27 major wars in 2007," 
raking in $23 billion in receipts. Investments in violence and terror 
proved even more profitable in 2008 with $32 billion. The "best guys" 
for the job include Pakistan ($3.7 billion), Turkey ($3.0 billion) 
and Colombia ($575 million) - all of whose depraved human rights 
records are consistently deplored by groups like Amnesty 
International along with denouncing our crucial support base for them.

Like a smart but ruthless bully, America rules the neighborhood of 
the world. And the array of brute thugs, such as the above, who are 
in our service follow orders, whether by extending our power in their 
assigned regions, or paying tributes for our protection, as in the 
case of Saudi Arabia.

The racket is well-packaged. The mafia boss - in our case the leading 
minds of science, the business and policy planners - organizes the 
world web of crime while continually staking supreme legitimacy 
through fear, and by force when necessary.

This kind of racket is wonderful business and a virtual golden age 
for the small group of people who own and run the U.S., but for the 
rest of the world, and for the American people by and large, starkly 
dreadful prospects and enraged fears are not exaggerated as they 
demand world safety and security away from that of "a few big 
interests looking out for themselves" (to quote a standard Times/CBS 
public poll) who continue to increasingly and vitally threaten to 
bring about what Einstein and others in the years following WWII 
gravely warned as an imminent extinction of the species.

March 4 critically demonstrated that these destructive prospects are 
tendencies only. As the privileged segments of the United States, 
particularly as students at the threshold of professional development 
and social and cultural management of the nation, these alarming 
prospects are dependent on our will and choice whether we will, again 
to paraphrase Einstein, embrace our own destruction, or renounce war 
and conquest.
--

Gabriel Matthew Schivone is a junior majoring in art, literature, and 
media studies. He can be reached at [email protected].

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