Pubdate: Sun, 13 Apr 2008 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2008 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Bill Steigerwald, Tribune-Review Note: Bill Steigerwald is the Tribune-Review's associate editor. TOO MANY DUMB WARS Has anyone else noticed that most of the wars our federal government has waged lately haven't exactly been ending in victory? Or ending at all? Since 1953, when the Korean War ended in the stalemate we still enjoy, Washington's war record against real and imagined enemies -- at home and abroad -- has been, to put it positively, rather spotty. Sure, our government eventually won the Cold War. But it took 45 years, trillions of dollars and lots of dead people. Plus, it only ended in victory because our capitalist society is so rich and the Soviet government was so morally rotten, inept and broke. And yes, our bipartisan federal warmongers did whip Iraq and liberate Kuwait in 1991 -- a one-sided triumph almost as glorious as when we vanquished the mighty Grenadians in 1983. Of course victory in Grenada hardly compensated for our botched attempt in 1961 to liberate communist Cuba, which only guaranteed the Cuban people a 47-year prison sentence under warden Fidel. The big pre-Iraq whopper of our failed wars overseas, of course, was Vietnam. Its many non-monetary costs included the slaughter of at least 2 million humans, including 58,000 Americans, and the sociopolitical fragging of American society. Speaking of the home front, our federal government still hasn't come close to winning another war it should never have fought -- the war on poverty. In 40 years, it's cost us trillions. It's sabotaged black families and wrecked urban culture. It's left the percentage of Americans living below the official poverty line essentially unchanged since 1965. It's also created a permanent army of professional poverty warriors - -- poverty pimps, some folks call them -- who have a vested economic interest in making sure both poor people and the government's war on poverty will last forever. Ditto for the federal government's never-ending, equally failed but much more societally harmful war on drugs. Actually a war by the federal government on its own people, it's also a costly and complete failure, plus an affront to a supposedly free society. Unfortunately, the venerable wars on poverty and drugs at home are succeeding no better than the war in Iraq and the war on terror are abroad. Everyone knows how well the $3 trillion cakewalk in Iraq has turned out. Meanwhile, the global war on terror -- another criminal waste of money that does more harm than good to America -- may be the most perfect war ever invented by government. Launched by the horrible terror attacks on 9/11, fueled by government hysteria, vested security-industry hype and multimedia scare-mongering, the war on terror will not end as long as a single political or religious loon anywhere on Earth can get his hands on a grenade or a box-cutter. "War is the health of the state," said Randolph Bourne famously during World War I. Wars -- and other crises like natural disasters, depressions and drug "epidemics" -- have been exploited by our federal government to steadily ratchet up its power and scope for 200 years, as Robert Higgs showed in his 1987 book "Crisis and Leviathan." The Iraq war and the war on terror are just the latest examples that prove Bourne and Higgs right. Wars aren't nice, don't work very well and often never end, which is why even the best governments should make fewer of them. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake