Our mission is to join individuals and groups working in different ways to ensure that our children live in a rational, sustainable world.
When enough people abandon the belief that war is inevitable,it will become unthinkable.
War is conducted for corporate Empire. Therefore,the first step to ending war is ending corporate control of the US government.
All social justice efforts lead to the end of war, the ultimate injustice. Those who work for justice are Soldiers For Peace.
We’ve
all seen it: You walk into a convenience store and there on the counter, taped to a jar, is the
photo of a child. Scrawled on the picture is an appeal to
leave your change to finance a bone marrow transplant or some other treatment
the child’s family cannot afford. Or maybe you can help the victim of a fire or accident by buying a pizza
on the night that one dollar per sale goes to her medical expenses. Do you
feel good about being able to help, or are you outraged that these families
have to beg for desperately needed assistance?
If you don’t feel guilty passing up such chances to help, perhaps it is because
you realize the ultimate futility of such appeals. But if you don’t support
doing something about it, you should
feel guilty. These are neighbors in need. We can turn away from them now, but
what happens when we need medical care we cannot afford?
Chances are, you don’t have enough insurance to keep from going bankrupt if you
get an illness or injury requiring expensive treatment. 60% of bankruptcies are
due to medical bills, and 75% of those undergoing medical bankruptcy are
insured. In other words, simply having
insurance isn’t enough if you can’t afford to use it, or if you use it and go
broke anyway. Medical bankruptcies are
unheard of in other developed countries. There, risk sharing through universal
health care prevents the unlucky families who most need help from having
financial ruin added to their burden. Everyone contributes to the system so
that none need go without care when it is needed.
Aside from the humanitarian issue of having nearly 30 million Americans
uninsured, most of whom are the working poor, there are many practical
advantages to universal health care. When access to care is not tied to
employment, it is much easier to change jobs. People are free to work where
they want instead of keeping a job with medical benefits that doesn’t otherwise
fit their needs. If they want to start their own business, they don’t have to
worry about losing it due to unexpected illness or injury. Businesses are more
competitive with overseas competitors when they do not have to pay extortionate
rates for insurance and instead, have predictable costs. These costs are significantly less in
countries with universal health care than they are in the American system of
access through for-profit medical insurance.
The financial benefits of universal health care are well known, but since some continue
to claim that we cannot afford it in the US, it bears repeating: Other
countries provide universal, comprehensive care for as little as half the
amount per person that we pay in the US for care that is full of gaps even for
the insured. While it’s not estimated
that we will save that much under the plan recently introduced in Congress by
Bernie Sanders, his proposal for an improved system of Medicare for All would
provide comprehensive care to every American at less cost than the current
system.
Such as system would have built-in cost controls lacking in the Affordable Care
Act. Without such constraints, the system will ultimately become unsustainable
due to the familiar “death spiral” of medical insurance: As costs rise, fewer can afford it, leading
to premium increases to maintain profits, which leads to fewer being able to
afford it, thus causing a new cycle of price increases. Ultimately, most of us
will not be able to afford insurance without the subsidies offered under
Obamacare. These subsidies amount to a bailout of Wall Street investors in the
insurance industry for the sole purpose of maintaining their profits. They add
nothing of value to the system to justify their siphoning 30 cents out of every
health care dollar, when Medicare overhead is less than a tenth of that.
When you understand the economics of universal health care, it is hard to argue
that we cannot afford it. The question then becomes, do we really want to pay
more for less care for ourselves and our loved ones, just to deny it to those
we think may not be worthy?
When I was asked to speak to my local Unitarian Universalist congregation on a topic of my choosing, I opted to speak about how we are morally obligated to resist injustice in general and war in particular. Since this blogsite is a political one, it may seem inappropriate to some that I am choosing to publish a sermon here, but I do not apologize. Anyone who objects to the invocation of a higher power in the universe is welcome to skip past such references here, but the message is otherwise universal and entirely consistent with the stated aims of Soldiers For Peace International. I hope that it will provide some thought for those who battle for justice out of anger, and who forget that anger is but a response to the pain we feel when we see the powerful prey on the meek.
In his first inaugural address, with the nation on
the brink of civil war, Lincoln called on the nation to remember that
regardless of our differences, we are all bound by common ideals. Pointing out
that we had a choice to resolve our differences peacefully, he concluded with
an appeal to listen to “the better angels of our nature.” That’s a beautiful metaphor, but what does it
imply?
I believe it refers to the fact that Man has two natures that are often in
conflict: spiritual and animal. When we decide to act in a situation with moral
implications, we always face a choice between satisfying our physical and
psychological desires or acting according to the greater good. Lincoln was
pointing out that the coming war was not inevitable. War is always a choice.
In deciding on our actions, most of us try to balance the two types of
motivation, animal and spiritual. We want to serve our own interests, but not
at the expense of doing harm. But how deeply do we consider the effects of our
actions and just as importantly, our decisions not to act? We can’t all be
saints, but I believe if our needs are met it is a moral imperative that we do
what we can to align with our spiritual side. That requires consistent effort.
While accepting our limitations, we must constantly strive to improve. We are
all creatures of habit, but the absence of change is death. Therefore, we must
make it a habit to question our actions as a means of growth.
This starts with questioning our motivations. The difference between the two
forms of motivation, spiritual and animal, is not always clear. Rationalization
is powerful and universal. For example, we may strongly believe that character
is built by being self-reliant. Does this mean that caring for others actually
harms them? Some say yes. Are they just justifying their desire to avoid paying
taxes to provide a social safety net? After all, most would feel differently if
someone close to them is afflicted. Until the question affects them personally,
such people suppress their innate compassion. I believe that this community
supports the right of each of us to health care, but how many of us are
standing up for the innocent victims of war. What interest does turning away
serve?
Rationalization is an unconscious process, so how do we decide what our
motivation is and whose interest our actions or inaction serves? The key is to
honestly consider where our self-interest lies, and put it aside when it
conflicts with what is best for all. Perhaps we avoid confronting the evil of war
because its horror is too overwhelming. That would serve to ease our anxiety
and avoid a sense of helplessness, but at the cost of our spiritual well-being.
Animal nature is not inherently bad. It
enables us to survive as individuals in hostile physical environments. However,
it is our spiritual side that connects us to the wider universe, including that
which is not seen. God, however we choose to define it, is within us as well as
outside of us. I believe that though we often forget it, love is what connects
us to each other and to the wider universe. We can call this universal,
all-pervasive love the Holy Spirit.
Love is not physical, yet nothing is more powerful. Love is the one thing that
could exist without its opposite, which is not hate but apathy. Unlike
darkness, which cannot exist without light, universal love fills the emptiness
of space. I believe that this is because it emanates from the Source of all
creation. It is our substance, in the most elemental sense. We cannot ever separate ourselves from that
Source or from each other, though we can become insensible of the connection.
That is what apathy is, willful blindness to our innate compassion.
Our beliefs do not define us. Our actions do. What we think we believe is
self-identity, but it is what we do establishes the identity that others see.
When our actions follow our beliefs, we are said to have integrity. If we never
examine our beliefs, we do not see inconsistency between our various beliefs or
between our beliefs and our actions. But we cannot honestly say we believe in
something if we are acting contrary to that belief. For example, “Christians”
who claim that life is sacred but support the death penalty clearly do not
believe what they profess.
We choose what we want to believe, often without thinking. In a very real
sense, we construct our own reality. That is why we have become divided by our
belief systems. We must strive to remember that in truth, we are one even with
those who seem to have nothing in common with us. We should try to persuade
others in a loving manner, not in one that promotes anger and conflict. Our goal should be to create a common reality
that is true to the loving nature of our spiritual selves.
So, if we want to become more the person we want to be, we have to make
decisions by looking at all choices, understanding our motivations, and
deciding to act according to the beliefs we wish to define us, such as thinking
that we are empathetic, engaged and altruistic.
We cannot allow superficial beliefs to guide us, if they conflict with our core
beliefs. For example, many of us believe that capitalism is literally God’s
gift to Man. That’s fine as far as it goes, but if we allow that belief to
justify acting in ways that do not reflect our spiritual beliefs, we have to
challenge those inconsistent beliefs. Again, only when we develop a coherent
system of spiritual beliefs and allow them to determine our actions can we
become the persons we want truly want to be.
If we consider ourselves spiritual and virtuous, how do our actions show it?
Are individual acts of kindness enough? If so, then what of the suffering of
those who are victims of the powerful? The working poor in America have no access to
affordable health care. Innocent civilians in targeted nations in the Mideast
and throughout the world are victims of US aggression cloaked as “humanitarian”
intervention in the name of liberty and security. These problems and many
others are not unconnected. They result from moral choices that we make as
individuals and as a society. As Franklin pointed out, if you sacrifice liberty
for security, you will have neither. If we believe in the principle of
self-rule, we have a duty to demand that our government serve the cause of
liberty and justice for all.
We fought a war that was ultimately about ending the institution of legal
slavery. Now we face the task of stopping our government from enslaving the
human race through war and economic coercion. We are all paying the price for
allowing our government to serve the selfish interests of the powerful. Whether
we are victims of austerity measures at home or of endless war abroad; whether
we are suffering from compassion overload or have become numb to our innate
compassion, none of us are spared.
Those of us who are comfortable have a duty to those who are not, both poor
Americans and victims of US aggression around the world. Doing nothing is a
choice, but those who make this choice should not try to excuse it by saying
that they cannot make a difference. It is only their efforts that can. Good
intentions are not enough. We cannot honestly call ourselves spiritual if we do
not face the evil that our government is perpetrating in the name of “freedom”
and “security” and demand justice. Standing
up for what is right often takes courage and sometimes requires sacrifice, but
the only hope for humanity in these dark times is for those of us who
understand that we are all part of an interdependent web of existence, bound
inextricably together only as strongly as our love for each other.