We're Always At War. You Just Have To Find The Battlefield' | BMNT Get this image on: rawpixel.com | Creator: rawpixel.com / U.S. Department of Defense (Source) | Credit: rawpixel.com
“In the 21st century, the United States has spent almost $8 trillion on foreign wars, with nearly 5 million lives lost.”
And we’re only a quarter of the way into the century. Are we aiming for 20 million dead civilians by 2100? Here’s a recent Truth Social post from the current president: “For Iran, the Clock is Ticking, and they better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them.”
There’s a moral insanity to these words, hiding behind a ho-hum collective shrug. People either brush it off as “just talk” or, even more ominously, nod their heads and smile in agreement. Yeah, he’s keeping us safe. War, the planet’s great, lethal abstraction, is necessary. It keeps us safe. It eliminates evil. Yada, yada. No matter it does none of those things – indeed, does just the opposite. Public acceptance of the inevitability and necessity of war has been expanding throughout my lifetime.
The quote at the top of the column, tossing out a few incomprehensible statistics, is one of the findings included in the 2025 bill presented before Congress to establish a , introduced by Rep. Ilhan Omar. It’s the most recent of in a long, long line of bills and proposals over the years, meant to establish peace – whatever that is – as a matter of national significance and responsibility. No such bill has ever been passed; all have remained marginal . . . and no doubt cynically dismissed.
Politically, war and militarism, as well as armed policing and the prison-industrial complex – all of which are funded annually by multi-trillions of dollars of the federal and other public budgets – are taken utterly for granted. But the “creation of peace” is controversial. Why?
Of all the questions buzzing around in my mind, this is perhaps the largest – and most predatory. Here are some more findings from the 2025 Department of Peacebuilding bill:
“According to the Centre for Global Research, the United States has been at war for more than 90 percent of its existence. Many of our citizens today have never known a peaceful year in their lifetimes. . . .
“Suicide is the second leading cause of death among Native Americans aged 10 to 34. Approximately 17 veterans a day commit suicide nationwide. About 12 young people in the United States die from homicides each day. . .”
“Each day, an average of 132 people died from gun violence — one death every 11 minutes. In 2024, there were more than 500 mass shootings. . . . Young people go to school wondering where to hide when a shooter enters their classroom.”
And on and on. The bill also notes:
“The preamble of the Earth Charter provides, ‘To move forward we must recognize that in the midst of a magnificent diversity of cultures and life forms we are one human family and one Earth community with a common destiny. We must join together to bring forth a sustainable global society founded on respect for nature, universal human rights, economic justice, and a culture of peace.’”
Which country would you rather live in? That country or this one, as summed up by “Secretary of War” Pete Hegseth:
“America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history. B-2s, fighters, drones, missiles, and of course classified effects. All on our terms with maximum authorities. No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars. We fight to win, and we don't waste time or lives.”
Can peacebuilding even be acknowledged as legitimate in such a culture? The ever-present necessity of war not only unites the nation state – it’s us vs. the bad guys, the commies, the terrorist or whoever – it provides moral protection for those who have already committed or supported murder of “the other,” including the murder of children. Including genocide. The vet suicide rate is an example of what happens when this moral protection vanishes.
What a complex reality faced by those of us who believe – with all our hearts – in the recognition and establishment of peacebuilding at the national level. Probably the only way to gain political traction is to focus on peace not as political or ideological, but as structurally logical. Peacebuilding works! Restorative Justice is certainly one example: creating a structure of healing for people harmed by a crime, rather than simply hunting down and punishing the “offender,” changing nothing.
Of course, another problem faced by peacebuilders is that the current violence-based, non-functional system is lucrative for investors – in weaponry, prisons, etc. How dare those peaceniks challenge this!
All we can do is refuse to give up – and refuse to look at “peace” as an us-vs.-them problem, easy (and tempting) as that is to do. The powerful will, and should, also benefit from peacebuilding, though not perhaps in a way they can understand. Power comes with connection, not domination.
Note: I’ll continue to address this issue and, indeed, continue writing my column, even though this is the last one being syndicated by the Chicago Tribune, after 27 years.