The United States is a nation in crisis. Its once-promising experiment in democracy has devolved into an imperial overreach that prioritizes war, militarism, and corporate interests over the well-being of its citizens.
The country's leaders have lost sight of the principles of civilian control, war as a last resort, and a commitment to peace and diplomacy. Instead, they celebrate a culture of belligerence, glorifying warriors and profiting from the global arms trade.
Washington's policy of perpetual war has created an aura of dominance through military spending, which is tantamount to saying "war is peace." The Pentagon's solution to address emerging threats lies in further militarization, with little investment in low-cost drone technology that could have countered rising tensions with China.
The recent administration's stance on trade and diplomacy towards China only exacerbates the situation. Trump's tariffs, bombastic rhetoric, and extensive military exercises in the Pacific fuel escalating tensions, rather than de-escalation and rapprochement.
The defense industry has become an untouchable force, driving profits that dwarf other government priorities. Lockheed Martin, Boeing, RTX, and Northrop Grumman reap enormous rewards from war, while public services such as education, healthcare, and infrastructure languish.
As the U.S. military becomes increasingly ill-suited for modern warfare, with a focus on ultra-expensive systems like the F-35 and Sentinel ICBM, it poses an existential risk to its own survival. America's addiction to militarism may drive it into catastrophic conflicts that would be unrecognizable from its founding ideals.
To avoid such calamity, the fight against militarism must go on. Citizens must rise up and reclaim their ideals by putting pressure on leaders who fail to uphold their constitutional oaths. Resisting illegal orders, reasserting Congressional authority to declare war, and resisting corporate influence over government policy are essential steps towards restoring America's democratic core.
Ultimately, courage is needed from the people, not just from a select few. The American experiment can recover its ideals and rediscover its purpose by remembering that power resides in the hands of citizens, who must demand better from their leaders.
The country's leaders have lost sight of the principles of civilian control, war as a last resort, and a commitment to peace and diplomacy. Instead, they celebrate a culture of belligerence, glorifying warriors and profiting from the global arms trade.
Washington's policy of perpetual war has created an aura of dominance through military spending, which is tantamount to saying "war is peace." The Pentagon's solution to address emerging threats lies in further militarization, with little investment in low-cost drone technology that could have countered rising tensions with China.
The recent administration's stance on trade and diplomacy towards China only exacerbates the situation. Trump's tariffs, bombastic rhetoric, and extensive military exercises in the Pacific fuel escalating tensions, rather than de-escalation and rapprochement.
The defense industry has become an untouchable force, driving profits that dwarf other government priorities. Lockheed Martin, Boeing, RTX, and Northrop Grumman reap enormous rewards from war, while public services such as education, healthcare, and infrastructure languish.
As the U.S. military becomes increasingly ill-suited for modern warfare, with a focus on ultra-expensive systems like the F-35 and Sentinel ICBM, it poses an existential risk to its own survival. America's addiction to militarism may drive it into catastrophic conflicts that would be unrecognizable from its founding ideals.
To avoid such calamity, the fight against militarism must go on. Citizens must rise up and reclaim their ideals by putting pressure on leaders who fail to uphold their constitutional oaths. Resisting illegal orders, reasserting Congressional authority to declare war, and resisting corporate influence over government policy are essential steps towards restoring America's democratic core.
Ultimately, courage is needed from the people, not just from a select few. The American experiment can recover its ideals and rediscover its purpose by remembering that power resides in the hands of citizens, who must demand better from their leaders.