When
All the World’s a War...
And All the Men and Women Merely Soldiers
By Rebecca Gordon
August 15,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Since
September 11, 2001, the United States has been
fighting a “war on terror.” Real soldiers have
been deployed to distant lands; real cluster
bombs and white phosphorus have been used; real
cruise missiles have been launched; the first
MOAB, the
largest non-nuclear bomb in the U.S. arsenal,
has been dropped; and real cities have been
reduced to rubble.
In revenge for the deaths of
2,977 civilians
that day, real people --
in the millions
-- have died and millions more have
become refugees.
But is the war on terror actually a war at all
-- or is it only a metaphor?
In a
real war, nations or organized non-state actors
square off against each other. A metaphorical
war is like a real war -- after all,
that’s what a metaphor is, a way of saying that
one thing is like something else -- but the
enemy isn’t a country or even a single group of
Islamic jihadists. It’s some other kind of
threat: a disease, a social problem, or in the
case of the war on terror, an emotion.
In truth, it may not matter if the war on terror
is a real one, since metaphorical wars have a
striking way of killing real people in real
numbers, too. Take the U.S war on drugs, for
example. In Mexico, that war,
fueled by U.S. weapons,
using U.S. drones, and conducted with the
assistance of the Pentagon and the CIA, has
already led to the deaths of many thousands of
people. A 2015 U.S. Congressional Research
Service report estimates that organized crime
caused 80,000 deaths in Mexico between 2007 and
2015. Most of the guns used in what has
essentially been a mass murder spree
came from this
country, which is also the main market for the
marijuana, cocaine, and heroin that are the
identified enemy in this war of ours. As with
our more literal wars of recent years, the war
on drugs shows no sign of ending (nor does the
U.S. hunger for drugs show any sign of abating).
If anyone is winning this particular war, it’s
the drugs -- and, of course, the criminal
cartels that move them across the continent.
American metaphorical wars fought in my own
lifetime began with President Lyndon Johnson’s "war
on poverty,"
first announced in 1964 when I was 12 years old.
Indeed, my mother “served” in that war. We lived
in Washington, D.C., at the time and she worked
for the
United Planning Organization,
a community-based group funded under Johnson’s
Model Cities
program. It fought poverty in the slums of my
hometown, just a few blocks from the White
House. As with other similar groups around the
country, its personnel tested new “weapons” in
the war on poverty -- job training programs,
citizen advice bureaus, and community-organizing
efforts of various sorts. I was proud that my
mother was a “soldier” in that war, which for a
few brief years it even looked like we might be
winning.
And there were victories. After all,
the legacy of Johnson’s
Great Society
and the war that went with it included
Medicare for
older people -- I’ll be starting on it next
month myself -- and
Medicaid for
people of any age living in poverty. The
struggles, sacrifices, and deaths of civil
rights activists together with Johnson’s
political mastery gave us the 1964
Civil Rights Act
and the 1965
Voting Rights Act.
(Of course the Trump Justice Department is
doing its best
to
roll back both
of these victories.) Then, as now, poverty
touched the lives of many white people, but it
flourished most abundantly in black and brown
communities and so these new rights for people
of color, some of us believed, signaled a light
at the end of the tunnel when it came to the
genuine abatement of poverty.
By 1968, Martin Luther King and the Southern
Christian Leadership Council were addressing
poverty across racial divides, organizing a
Poor People’s Campaign.
It was to include a march on Washington and
culminate in the building on the Capitol Mall of
a “Resurrection
City,” which
was to serve as a model -- a metaphor -- for a
United States risen from the cross of poverty.
King was, however, murdered that April and so
didn’t live to see that city. It turned out, in
any case, to be a plywood encampment that would
be drowned in mud from days of torrential rain.
In the minds of those who still remember it,
Resurrection City became a sad metaphor for
Lyndon Johnson’s war. “The war on poverty,” as
the saying went, “is over. Poverty won.”
Meanwhile, much of the country was distracted
from that metaphorical war by an actual war in
Vietnam, where the only metaphor around was the
insistence of commander of U.S. forces
General William Westmoreland
that there was “light at the end of the tunnel”
when it came to that disastrous conflict.
What’s in
a Metaphor?
The war on poverty was hardly this country’s
first metaphorical war. In the 1930s, FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover
launched a “war
on crime,” anticipating by some 40 years Richard
Nixon’s war on drugs, which itself has lasted
another 40 years with no end in sight. Nixon
also gave us the “war on cancer” -- still
ongoing -- even as he continued to pursue the
actual war in Vietnam, a rare American conflict
in the second half of the twentieth century,
metaphorical or otherwise, that came to a
definitive end (even if in defeat).
Nor is the United States alone in fighting
“wars” against nonhuman enemies. The World Bank,
for example, ran a seven-year “total war” on
AIDS in Kenya. The project ended in 2014, by
which time
1.6 million people,
or 6% of the population, were infected with HIV.
Perhaps the bank was smarter than the U.S. in
choosing to declare victory and go home, as at
one point Vermont Governor George Aiken famously
suggested we
should do in relation to Vietnam.
What, you might wonder, is the problem in using
the metaphor of war to represent a collective
effort to battle and overcome some social evil?
Certainly, fighting a war often requires from
whole populations a special kind of heroic
focus, a willingness to mobilize and sacrifice,
a commitment to community or country, and for
those in uniform, loyalty to one’s fellow
soldiers. It also requires people to relinquish
their own petty interests in the service of a
greater whole. Correspondent Chris Hedges caught
this aspect of war in the title of his powerful
book
War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning.
Aren’t such qualities useful ones to bring to
the struggle to solve urgent, life-destroying
problems like disease, poverty, or addiction?
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if human beings could
confront those horrors with the same kind of
passion, intensity, and funding we bring to
actual wars?
Yes and no. A metaphor is, of course, an implied
comparison in which two things share enough
qualities in common that calling one by the
other’s name will be illuminating. If, for
instance, you said, “Donald Trump is a giant
Cheeto,” you
wouldn’t be suggesting that the president is
actually a large, puffy piece of junk food. You
would be highlighting the way he shares with
that particular delicacy a certain orange
coloration, as well as an airy structure that
crumbles when
you try to get your teeth into it -- as so many
of Trump's statements crumble in the jaws of
truth.
Metaphors only work when the similarity between
two things is striking enough that you learn
something about one by comparing it to the
other. Those two things must also, however, be
different in crucial ways, or what you have
isn't a metaphor but an equation. For instance,
Trump as Cheeto works exactly because you and I
are unlikely to transfer to Donald J. Trump the
feelings and attitudes we have toward Cheetos.
We know enough about the nature of both never to
want to eat the president, however much we may
love the salty crunch of that snack food. When,
however, you know less about at least one of the
terms of comparison -- or less than you think
you do -- then a powerful metaphor can be a
deceiver, making us think we understand a
phenomenon that actually goes over our heads
(another metaphor). A bad metaphor can affect
how we act individually and as a society and in
some grim cases even whether we, or others, live
or die.
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And the
use of war as a metaphor -- the treating of
every human ill as if it were an enemy that
could be defeated by a battle plan -- works just
that way. When we declare war on phenomena like
crime, drugs, or terror, instantly militarizing
such problems, we severely limit our means for
understanding and dealing with them.
The Power
of Metaphor
What
happens, for example, when we transform the
problem of human addiction into a war on drugs?
For one thing, fighting a war requires an enemy,
at least one group that, given the logic of war,
we can imagine as not quite human as well as an
existential danger to the rest of us. It’s easy
to forget that the ultimate aim of the war on
drugs is not, or at least should not be, to
destroy drug users but to release them from the
prison of addiction (to mix metaphors
dangerously). Instead, not just drugs but drug
users often become the enemy.
One consequence of militarizing the problem of
drugs -- a lesson from the war on terror, too --
is that our survival comes to seem dependent on
ensuring that captured enemies be detained until
the end of hostilities. And since such
hostilities never seem to end, that means
essentially forever. In other words, as soon as
you make war on drugs (and so on those who use
them), the urge to end the real human suffering
that drug addiction causes quickly devolves
into, in Trumpian terms, “winning.” That, in
turn, means ensuring vastly more suffering
through actual violence and the endless
incarceration of millions of people,
a startling number of them for drug offenses, or
what might be thought of as the Guantanamo-ization
of America.
Can a metaphor really do all that? It can indeed
when it so limits our vision that any other
approach becomes unthinkable, unimaginable. In
the war on drugs, as in all wars, there must be
good guys and bad guys, good citizens who are to
be mobilized (at least in their sympathies)
against not-quite-human drug users. Similarly,
when we declare war on a disease, like cancer,
we risk limiting understanding of the disease
process to models like invasion, or territorial
aggression, and so limit imaginable treatments
to therapies that eradicate the invaders with
poison or radiation. In effect, we accept that
in the case of cancer, as in the case of the
Vietnamese village of
Ben Tre, it may
be necessary to destroy the patient in order to
save her. (This is not to say that chemotherapy
and radiation don’t save lives; they do. Rather,
it suggests that a military approach to disease
can cause doctors to think of patients as
battlefields, rather than as people.)
There’s another problem with declaring “wars” on
threats to human well-being: a tendency to
conflate the threat and the victim of the
threat. A war on AIDS becomes a campaign to
protect “society” from “AIDS carriers,” as
happened in 1986 when California voters were
asked to approve
Proposition 64,
which would have made it possible to quarantine
everyone in the state with HIV. Proposition 64
was soundly defeated, but by then almost 30% of
that state’s voters had been convinced that the
enemy they confronted wasn’t AIDS, but people
living with AIDS.
Suppose we were to think about the struggle to
deal with drug abuse not as a metaphorical war,
but as a real public health problem (as
seems to be happening
in the case of the opioid crisis that presently
affects mainly white people). What might
change? For one thing, we might be able to
separate the concepts of drug use and
criminality in our minds. Not automatically
identifying drug use with crime might make it
possible to imagine adopting a program similar
to Portugal’s
decriminalization
of drug possession. In 2001, that country
stopped prosecuting
simple possession of all illegal drugs and made
government-run drug treatment easily available.
Unlike the rest of Europe, let alone the United
States, Portugal’s addiction rates have
plummeted since decriminalization took effect
and that country began putting funds that would
previously have gone into incarceration into
treatment instead. With Americans stuck on the
idea of fighting a drug war, however, the
Portuguese example remains beyond imagining
here. It would be the moral equivalent of
surrender.
Another problem with war as a metaphor for
social ills is that warring and caring call upon
very different moral qualities. While both share
characteristics like courage, persistence, and
often the need to endure real hardship, the
prosecution of war also requires other
qualities: obedience, indifference to the
suffering of oneself and others, and the
necessity of viewing the world in black and
white. War requires that we recognize in
ourselves only virtue and, in our foe, only
inhuman evil. We should not be surprised when
President Trump informs us that, in his wars on
crime and drugs, the human enemies -- gang
members, and by extension immigrants in general
-- are not people, but “animals.”
And to be good soldiers, the rest of us are
expected to practice dehumanizing the enemy,
too.
When,
in the twentieth century, the United States
began fighting metaphorical wars against social
ills, most Americans understood actual war as
something with a beginning (requiring a
congressional declaration) and an end (the
surrender of one side, with a peace treaty to
follow). However, the American wars of the
second half of that century turned out to lack
such clear demarcations. With the exception of
outright defeat in Vietnam, starting with the
Korean War, our military conflicts have lacked
endings. We now have a
generation of young people who have never known
a time when the United States was not involved
in war, whether in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Somalia, Syria, or Yemen.
In a 2001 essay, “The War Metaphor in Public
Policy: Some Moral Reflections,” the philosopher
James Childress argued that, like real wars,
metaphorical wars against social evils ought to
be just wars. In the tradition of what
ethicists call “just
war theory,”
legitimate wars begin for just reasons
(primarily defense against direct aggression),
are necessary and proportionate (military action
taken is in proportion to the aggression
suffered), and have a reasonable expectation of
success.
Most crucially, just war theory imagines wars
with beginnings and ends. But in the
twenty-first century, Washington’s wars have
essentially become endless, or as the Pentagon
has
taken to
saying, “generational.”
Former CIA head Michael Hayden is typical these
days in
predicting that
the fight against ISIS alone will last 30 years.
And the country’s metaphorical wars have
followed an eerily similar pattern.
War
metaphors mainly have the effect of distorting
legitimate efforts to resolve real social
problems, while at the same time cheapening our
understanding of actual war. We misunderstand
the complexities of a problem like poverty when
we approach it as if it were an enemy to be
defeated. We also fail to appreciate the
horrors of actual war when we equate the
destruction of entire nations with attempts to
end the suffering of impoverished people. A bad
metaphor obscures at least as much as it
illumines. Unlike attempts to improve people’s
lives by eradicating poverty or curing disease,
actual war involves the imposition of the will
of one group on another, through acts causing
injury, pain, destruction, and death.
Of
course, as we’ve seen with recent Republican
attempts to repeal Obamacare, policy proposals
can kill, too, but they are not wars. It’s
important to maintain that distinction.
Rebecca Gordon, a
TomDispatch regular,
teaches in the philosophy department at the
University of San Francisco. She is the author
of
American Nuremberg: The U.S. Officials Who
Should Stand Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes.
Her previous books include Mainstreaming
Torture: Ethical Approaches in the Post-9/11
United States and Letters from
Nicaragua.
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Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2017 Rebecca Gordon
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.