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A Commonsense Solar Defense: A New Form of Defense, In Defense of Empathy
31 December 2010 By Jeff Gates
Three days before Christmas, the
U.S. Congress authorized $725 billion in defense
spending for 2011. Adjusted for inflation, that’s the
most since 1945, the last year of World War II.
With numbers that large, making
comparisons is difficult. Yet consider this. The
United Nations reports that 1.5 billion people still
live without electricity. For less than $100, a solar
panel can power a cell phone charger and four
high-efficiency LED lights.
At that price, 1.5 billion people
could become partially electrified for $150 billion.
Defense-wise, which taxpayer outlay offers better
long-term security?
With the U.S. humbled in Iraq,
mired in Afghanistan and in danger of being drawn into
Iran, is it time to replace aggression with
development and firepower with solar power?
With extremism the new enemy,
what’s our best defense? What if the U.S. projected
its power by defending against the indignities of
energy poverty and illiteracy?
Absent a strategy for addressing
the roots of human indignity, it’s not clear that the
war on terrorism can be won. Energy poverty is a war
we know how to win.
Parents of children using
solar-powered LED lights report how their grades
improve when they have light for studying. While
that’s not enough, it’s a good start.
Can the U.S. afford not to
embrace a solar defense? If not literacy, what is the
best long-term defense against extremism? For $12, a
solar-powered LED system can power a desk lamp and a
phone charger.
As yet, there is no business
model for home-scale solar systems scattered across a
continent. Large-scale solar projects are far easier
to finance. Community-scale is where the Pentagon can
play an immediate role.
A New Form of
Defense
Women living in the Pashtun area
between Pakistan and Afghanistan share similar goals.
They want to charge their cell phones, power a few
light bulbs and refrigerate their food.
That’s a challenge the Pentagon
can meet. Solar panels can handle part of that task
though not all. But again, that’s a good start.
Widespread access to cell phones is also helpful.
Cell phones are fast becoming a
key tool for transferring money in developing
countries. Transactions seldom exceed $20. By
improving personal communications, they also provide
another incentive to electrify in order to recharge
the phone.
Phones now feature applications
able to facilitate distance education, coordinate
testing and track student progress. What would be the
impact of literacy and electrification on the
long-term need for weapons-based defense spending? Is
the enemy terrorism or indignity?
Cold War defense outlays totaled
$20 trillion (in 2010 dollars) from 1948 until the
fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The Clinton
administration spent roughly $4 trillion. Republican
G.W. Bush spent another $4.65 trillion and Democrat
Barack Obama is on track to spend $5 trillion. That’s
a 63-year bipartisan total of at least
$33,650,000,000,000 ($33.65 trillion).
How many educations could that
have financed? How many homes electrified? How many
schools built? How much poverty eradicated? U.S.
defense spending from 1998 through 2011 will total
$7.2 trillion. What will we have to show for it?
In Defense of
Empathy
Conventional defense strategy
assumes we are hard-wired for aggression, violence and
a radical self-interest. Yet research suggests we’re
soft-wired for sociability, empathy and a drive to
belong.
What is the best long-term
defense against those who view us as The Other?
Answer: a strategy that demonstrates U.S. sincerity in
enhancing the capacity of others to flourish.
Community is the relevant scale for such an
initiative.
Though national governments can
help coordinate, the impact must be felt at the level
of the family and the neighborhood. Address unmet
needs there and the impact will suppress secondary
drives such as violence and aggression.
To ensure extremism, fail to
address the insecurity of poverty and the
vulnerability of illiteracy. An empathy strategy is
the missing piece in the national security puzzle.
By demonstrating that America
sees others as sojourners rather than enemies, the
U.S. prepares the groundwork for lasting peace. To win
at The Clash of Civilizations, Americans must
show by their conduct how to create a truly empathetic
civilization.
You can’t fake it. Either people
have electricity or not. Their children can read and
write or they cannot. Either commerce is enabled in
ways relevant to communities—or not.
While it’s easy to kill, creation
requires a long-term commitment. Absent an empathy
component, what will change at the end of the next six
decades of defense expenditures?
The U.S. can no longer afford
$725 billion each year for defense, much of it
borrowed. Given the poor return on our investment,
it’s clear we need another strategy, one free of
Zionist goals that advance behind serial conflicts and
the debt incurred to fund them.
We know what to do. What’s
required is the leadership to do it.
Jeff Gates is author of Guilt
By Association – How Deception and Self-Deceit Took
America to War. See www.criminalstate.com
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