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	<title>Grist: Wendell Berry</title>
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		<title>Grist: Wendell Berry</title>
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			<title>Join us March 2 as we protest a coal-fired power plant near Capitol Hill</title>
			<link>http://grist.org/article/coal-to-action/?utm_source=syndication&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=feed:wendellberry</link>
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			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Wendell Berry]]></dc:creator>			<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 05:01:01 +0000</pubDate>

					<category><![CDATA[Climate & Energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gristmill]]></category>

			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/?p=27305</guid>

			<description><![CDATA[There are moments in a nation&#8217;s &#8212; and a planet&#8217;s &#8212; history when it may be necessary for some to break the law in order to bear witness to an evil, bring it to wider attention, and push for its correction. We think such a time has arrived, and we are writing to say that we hope some of you will join us in Washington, D.C. on Monday, March 2, in order to take part in a civil act of civil disobedience outside a coal-fired power plant near Capitol Hill. We will be there to make several points: Coal-fired power &#8230;<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=27305&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>

			
									<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <p>There are moments in a  nation&#8217;s &#8212; and a planet&#8217;s &#8212; history when it may be necessary for some to break the  law in order to bear witness to an evil, bring it to wider attention, and push  for its correction. We think such a time has arrived, and we are writing to say  that we hope some of you will join us in Washington, D.C. on Monday, March 2, in  order to take part in a civil act of civil disobedience outside a coal-fired  power plant near Capitol Hill.</p>
<p>We will be there to make several  points:</p>
<ul>
<li>Coal-fired  power is driving climate change. Our foremost climatologist, NASA&#8217;s James  Hansen, has demonstrated that our only hope of getting our atmosphere back to a  safe level &#8212; below 350 parts per million CO2 &#8212; lies in stopping the use of coal to  generate electricity.</li>
<p> 
<li> Even  if climate change were not the urgent crisis that it is, we would still be  burning our fossil fuels too fast, wasting too much energy, and releasing too  much poison into the air and water. We would still need to slow down, and to  restore thrift to its old place as an economic virtue.</li>
<p> 
<li>Coal is  filthy at its source. Much of the coal used in this country comes from West  Virginia and Kentucky, where companies engage in &#8220;mountaintop  removal&#8221; to get at the stuff; they leave behind a leveled wasteland and  impoverished human communities. No technology better exemplifies the  out-of-control relationship between humans and the rest of creation.</li>
<p> 
<li>Coal smoke  makes children sick. Asthma rates in urban areas near coal-fired power plants  are high. Air pollution from burning coal is harmful to the health of grown-ups  too and to the health of everything that breathes, including forests.</li>
</ul>
<p>The industry claim that there is  something called &#8220;clean coal&#8221; is, put simply, a lie. But it&#8217;s a lie  told with tens of millions of dollars, which we do not have. We have our  bodies, and we are willing to use them to make our point. We don&#8217;t come to such  a step lightly. We have written and testified and organized politically to make  this point for many years, and while in recent months there has been real  progress against new coal-fired power plants, the daily business of providing  half our electricity from coal continues unabated. It&#8217;s time to make clear that  we can&#8217;t safely run this planet on coal at all. So we feel the time has come to  do more &#8212; we hear President-elect Barack Obama&#8217;s call for a movement for change that  continues past election day, and we hear Nobel Laureate Al Gore&#8217;s call for  creative non-violence outside coal plants. As part of the international  negotiations now underway on global warming, our nation will be asking China,  India, and others to limit their use of coal in the future to help save the  planet&#8217;s atmosphere. This is a hard thing to ask, because it&#8217;s their cheapest  fuel. Part of our witness in March will be to say that we&#8217;re willing to make  some sacrifices ourselves, even if it&#8217;s only a trip to the jail.</p>
<p>With any luck, this will be the  largest such protest yet, large enough that it may provide a real spark. If you  want to participate with us, you need to go through a short course of  non-violence training. This will be, to the extent it depends on us, an  entirely peaceful demonstration, carried out in a spirit of hope and not  rancor. We will be there in our dress clothes, and ask the same of you. There  will be young people, people from faith communities, people from the coal  fields of Appalachia, and from the neighborhoods in Washington that get to  breathe the smoke from the plant.</p>
<p>We will cross the legal boundary of  the power plant, and we expect to be arrested. After that we have no certainty  what will happen, but lawyers and such will be on hand. Our goal is not to shut  the plant down for the day &#8212; it is but one of many, and anyway its  operation for a day is not the point. The worldwide daily reliance on coal is  the danger; this is one small step to raise awareness of that ruinous habit and  hence help to break it.</p>
<p>Needless to say, we&#8217;re not handling  the logistics of this day. All the credit goes to a variety of groups,  especially the Energy Action Coalition (which is bringing thousands of young  people to Washington that weekend), Greenpeace, the Ruckus Society, and the  Rainforest Action Network. A website at that latter organization is serving as  a <a href="http://ran.org/get_involved/powershift_and_mass_civil_disobedience_updates">temporary organizing hub</a>.  If you visit, you will find a place to leave your name so that we&#8217;ll know  you want to join us.</p>
<br />Posted in Climate &amp; Energy, Politics  <img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=27305&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></content:encoded>
				
			
			
			
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			<title>Environmentalists have given up too much by not being radical enough</title>
			<link>http://grist.org/article/berry/?utm_source=syndication&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=feed:wendellberry</link>
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			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Wendell Berry]]></dc:creator>			<pubDate>Thu, 21 Oct 2004 03:00:12 +0000</pubDate>

					<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[land stewardship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>

			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/berry/</guid>

			<description><![CDATA[Photo: &#169; 2000 David-Lorne Photographic We are destroying our country &#8212; I mean our country itself, our land. This is a terrible thing to know, but it is not a reason for despair unless we decide to continue the destruction. If we decide to continue the destruction, that will not be because we have no other choice. This destruction is not necessary. It is not inevitable, except that by our submissiveness we make it so. We Americans are not usually thought to be a submissive people, but of course we are. Why else would we allow our country to be &#8230;<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=7784&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>

			
									<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <div class="media alignright"><img src="http://grist.files.wordpress.com/2004/10/logging.jpg" alt="" width="px" />
<p class="credit">Photo: &copy; 2000 David-Lorne Photographic</p>
</p></div>
<p>We are destroying our country &#8212; I mean our country itself, our land. This is a terrible thing to know, but it is not a reason for despair unless we decide to continue the destruction. If we decide to continue the destruction, that will not be because we have no other choice. This destruction is not necessary. It is not inevitable, except that by our submissiveness we make it so.</p>
<p>We Americans are not usually thought to be a submissive people, but of course we are. Why else would we allow our country to be destroyed? Why else would we be rewarding its destroyers? Why else would we all &#8212; by proxies we have given to greedy corporations and corrupt politicians &#8212; be participating in its destruction? Most of us are still too sane to piss in our own cistern, but we allow others to do so and we reward them for it. We reward them so well, in fact, that those who piss in our cistern are wealthier than the rest of us.</p>
<p>How do we submit? By not being radical enough. Or by not being thorough enough, which is the same thing.</p>
<h3>Protection to the People</h3>
<p>Since the beginning of the conservation effort in our country, conservationists have too often believed that we could protect the land without protecting the people. This has begun to change, but for a while yet we will have to reckon with the old assumption that we can preserve the natural world by protecting wilderness areas while we neglect or destroy the economic landscapes &#8212; the farms and ranches and working forests &#8212; and the people who use them. That assumption is understandable in view of the worsening threats to wilderness areas, but it is wrong. If conservationists hope to save even the wild lands and wild creatures, they are going to have to address issues of economy, which is to say issues of the health of the landscapes and the towns and cities where we do our work, and the quality of that work, and the well-being of the people who do the work.</p>
<p>Governments seem to be making the opposite error, believing that the people can be adequately protected without protecting the land. And here I am not talking about parties or party doctrines, but about the dominant political assumption. Sooner or later, governments will have to recognize that if the land does not prosper, nothing else can prosper for very long. We can have no industry or trade or wealth or security if we don&#8217;t uphold the health of the land and the people and the people&#8217;s work.</p>
<p>It is merely a fact that the land, here and everywhere, is suffering. We have the &#8220;dead zone&#8221; in the Gulf of Mexico and undrinkable water to attest to the toxicity of our agriculture. We know that we are carelessly and wastefully logging our forests. We know that soil erosion, air and water pollution, urban sprawl, the proliferation of highways and garbage are making our lives always less pleasant, less healthful, less sustainable, and our dwelling places more ugly.</p>
<div class="media alignright"><img src="http://grist.files.wordpress.com/2004/10/strip_mine.jpg" alt="" width="px" /></div>
<p>Nearly 40 years ago, my state of Kentucky, like other coal-producing states, began an effort to regulate strip mining. While that effort has continued, and has imposed certain requirements of &#8220;reclamation,&#8221; strip mining has become steadily more destructive of the land and the land&#8217;s future. We are now permitting the destruction of entire mountains and entire watersheds. No war, so far, has done such extensive or such permanent damage. If we know that coal is an exhaustible resource, whereas the forests over it are with proper use inexhaustible, and that strip mining destroys the forest virtually forever, how can we permit this destruction? If we honor at all that fragile creature the topsoil, so long in the making, so miraculously made, so indispensable to all life, how can we destroy it? If we believe, as so many of us profess to do, that the earth is God&#8217;s property and is full of His glory, how can we do harm to any part of it?</p>
<p>In Kentucky, as in other unfortunate states, and again at great public cost, we have allowed &#8212; in fact we have officially encouraged &#8212; the establishment of the confined animal-feeding industry, which exploits and abuses everything involved: the land, the people, the animals, and the consumers. If we love our country, as so many of us profess to do, how can we so desecrate it?</p>
<p>But the economic damage is not confined just to our farms and forests. For the sake of &#8220;job creation,&#8221; in Kentucky, and in other backward states, we have lavished public money on corporations that come in and stay only so long as they can exploit people here more cheaply than elsewhere. The general purpose of the present economy is to exploit, not to foster or conserve.</p>
<p>Look carefully, if you doubt me, at the centers of the larger towns in virtually every part of our country. You will find that they are economically dead or dying. Good buildings that used to house needful, useful, locally owned small businesses of all kinds are now empty or have evolved into junk stores or antique shops. But look at the houses, the churches, the commercial buildings, the courthouse, and you will see that more often than not they are comely and well made. And then go look at the corporate outskirts: the chain stores, the fast-food joints, the food-and-fuel stores that no longer can be called service stations, the motels. Try to find something comely or well made there.</p>
<p>What is the difference? The difference is that the old town centers were built by people who were proud of their place and who realized a particular value in living there. The old buildings look good because they were built by people who respected themselves and wanted the respect of their neighbors. The corporate outskirts, on the contrary, were built by people who manifestly take no pride in the place, see no value in lives lived there, and recognize no neighbors. The only value they see in the place is the money that can be siphoned out of it to more fortunate places &#8212; that is, to the wealthier suburbs of the larger cities.</p>
<div class="media alignleft"><img src="http://grist.files.wordpress.com/2004/10/country_development.jpg" alt="" width="px" /></div>
<p>Can we actually suppose that we are wasting, polluting, and making ugly this beautiful land for the sake of patriotism and the love of God? Perhaps some of us would like to think so, but in fact this destruction is taking place because we have allowed ourselves to believe, and to live, a mated pair of economic lies: that nothing has a value that is not assigned to it by the market; and that the economic life of our communities can safely be handed over to the great corporations.</p>
<p>We citizens have a large responsibility for our delusion and our destructiveness, and I don&#8217;t want to minimize that. But I don&#8217;t want to minimize, either, the large responsibility that is borne by government.</p>
<h3>The Dissent of the Governed</h3>
<p>It is commonly understood that governments are instituted to provide certain protections that citizens individually cannot provide for themselves. But governments have tended to assume that this responsibility can be fulfilled mainly by the police and the military. They have used their regulatory powers reluctantly and often poorly. Our governments have only occasionally recognized the need of land and people to be protected against economic violence. It is true that economic violence is not always as swift, and is rarely as bloody, as the violence of war, but it can be devastating nonetheless. Acts of economic aggression can destroy a landscape or a community or the center of a town or city, and they routinely do so.</p>
<p>Such damage is justified by its corporate perpetrators and their political abettors in the name of the &#8220;free market&#8221; and &#8220;free enterprise,&#8221; but this is a freedom that makes greed the dominant economic virtue, and it destroys the freedom of other people along with their communities and livelihoods. There are such things as economic weapons of massive destruction. We have allowed them to be used against us, not just by public submission and regulatory malfeasance, but also by public subsidies, incentives, and sufferances impossible to justify.</p>
<p>We have failed to acknowledge this threat and to act in our own defense. As a result, our once-beautiful and bountiful countryside has long been a colony of the coal, timber, and agribusiness corporations, yielding an immense wealth of energy and raw materials at an immense cost to our land and our land&#8217;s people. Because of that failure also, our towns and cities have been gutted by the likes of Wal-Mart, which have had the permitted luxury of destroying locally owned small businesses by means of volume discounts.</p>
<div class="media alignleft"><img src="http://grist.files.wordpress.com/2004/10/farm.jpg" alt="" width="px" /></div>
<p>Because as individuals or even as communities we cannot protect ourselves against these aggressions, we need our state and national governments to protect us. As the poor deserve as much justice from our courts as the rich, so the small farmer and the small merchant deserve the same economic justice, the same freedom in the market, as big farmers and chain stores. They should not suffer ruin merely because their rich competitors can afford (for a while) to undersell them.</p>
<p>Furthermore, to permit the smaller enterprises always to be ruined by false advantages, either at home or in the global economy, is ultimately to destroy local, regional, and even national capabilities of producing vital supplies such as food and textiles. It is impossible to understand, let alone justify, a government&#8217;s willingness to allow the human sources of necessary goods to be destroyed by the &#8220;freedom&#8221; of this corporate anarchy. It is equally impossible to understand how a government can permit, and even subsidize, the destruction of the land and the land&#8217;s productivity. Somehow we have lost or discarded any controlling sense of the interdependence of the earth and the human capacity to use it well. The governmental obligation to protect these economic resources, inseparably human and natural, is the same as the obligation to protect us from hunger or from foreign invaders. In result, there is no difference between a domestic threat to the sources of our life and a foreign one.</p>
<p>It appears that we have fallen into the habit of compromising on issues that should not, and in fact cannot, be compromised. I have an idea that a large number of us, including even a large number of politicians, believe that it is wrong to destroy the earth. But we have powerful political opponents who insist that an earth-destroying economy is justified by freedom and profit. And so we compromise by agreeing to permit the destruction only of parts of the earth, or to permit the earth to be destroyed a little at a time &#8212; like the famous three-legged pig that was too well-loved to be slaughtered all at once.</p>
<p>The logic of this sort of compromising is clear, and it is clearly fatal. If we continue to be economically dependent on destroying parts of the earth, then eventually we will destroy it all.</p>
<h3>Hope Notes</h3>
<p>So long a complaint accumulates a debt to hope, and I would like to end with hope. To do so I need only repeat something I said at the beginning: Our destructiveness has not been, and it is not, inevitable. People who use that excuse are morally incompetent, they are cowardly, and they are lazy. Humans don&#8217;t have to live by destroying the sources of their life. People can change; they can learn to do better. All of us, regardless of party, can be moved by love of our land to rise above the greed and contempt of our land&#8217;s exploiters. This of course leads to practical problems, and I will offer a short list of practical suggestions.</p>
<p>We have got to learn better to respect ourselves and our dwelling places. We need to quit thinking of rural America as a colony. Too much of the economic history of our land has been that of the export of fuel, food, and raw materials that have been destructively and too cheaply produced. We must reaffirm the economic value of good stewardship and good work. For that we will need better accounting than we have had so far.</p>
<p>We need to reconsider the idea of solving our economic problems by &#8220;bringing in industry.&#8221; Every state government appears to be scheming to lure in a large corporation from somewhere else by &#8220;tax incentives&#8221; and other squanderings of the people&#8217;s money. We ought to suspend that practice until we are sure that in every state we have made the most and the best of what is already there. We need to build the local economies of our communities and regions by adding value to local products and marketing them locally before we seek markets elsewhere.</p>
<p>We need to confront honestly the issue of scale. Bigness has a charm and a drama that are seductive, especially to politicians and financiers; but bigness promotes greed, indifference, and damage, and often bigness is not necessary. You may need a large corporation to run an airline or to manufacture cars, but you don&#8217;t need a large corporation to raise a chicken or a hog. You don&#8217;t need a large corporation to process local food or local timber and market it locally.</p>
<p>And, finally, we need to give an absolute priority to caring well for our land &#8212; for every bit of it. There should be no compromise with the destruction of the land or of anything else that we cannot replace. We have been too tolerant of politicians who, entrusted with our country&#8217;s defense, become the agents of our country&#8217;s destroyers, compromising on its ruin.</p>
<p>And so I will end this by quoting my fellow Kentuckian, a great patriot and an indomitable foe of strip-mining, Joe Begley of Blackey: &#8220;Compromise, hell!&#8221;</p>
<p><span class="disclaimer">This article originally appeared in <a href="http://www.oriononline.org" target="new"><em>Orion</em></a>, 187 Main St., Great Barrington, MA 01230, 888.909.6568 ($35/year for six issues).  Printed with permission of Shoemaker &amp; Hoard, Publishers.</span></p>
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			<title>A post-Sept. 11 manifesto for environmentalists</title>
			<link>http://grist.org/article/of8/?utm_source=syndication&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=feed:wendellberry</link>
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			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Wendell Berry]]></dc:creator>			<pubDate>Fri, 12 Oct 2001 02:10:00 +0000</pubDate>

					<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[international politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[national security]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technology]]></category>

			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/of8/</guid>

			<description><![CDATA[I. The time will soon come when we will not be able to remember the horrors of Sept. 11 without remembering also the unquestioning technological and economic optimism that ended on that day. II. This optimism rested on the proposition that we were living in a &#8220;new world order&#8221; and a &#8220;new economy&#8221; that would &#8220;grow&#8221; on and on, bringing a prosperity of which every new increment would be &#8220;unprecedented.&#8221; III. The dominant politicians, corporate officers, and investors who believed this proposition did not acknowledge that the prosperity was limited to a tiny percent of the world&#8217;s people, and to &#8230;<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=3822&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>

			
									<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <p>  <b>I.</b> The time will soon come when we will not be able to remember the horrors of Sept. 11 without remembering also the unquestioning technological and economic optimism that ended on that day.</p>
<div class="media alignright"></div>
<p> <b>II.</b> This optimism rested on the proposition that we were living in a &#8220;new world order&#8221; and a &#8220;new economy&#8221; that would &#8220;grow&#8221; on and on, bringing a prosperity of which every new increment would be &#8220;unprecedented.&#8221;</p>
<p> <b>III.</b> The dominant politicians, corporate officers, and investors who believed this proposition did not acknowledge that the prosperity was limited to a tiny percent of the world&#8217;s people, and to an ever smaller number of people even in the United States; that it was founded upon the oppressive labor of poor people all over the world; and that its ecological costs increasingly threatened all life, including the lives of the supposedly prosperous.</p>
<p> <b>IV.</b> The &#8220;developed&#8221; nations had given to the &#8220;free market&#8221; the status of a god, and were sacrificing to it their farmers, farmlands, and communities, their forests, wetlands, and prairies, their ecosystems and watersheds. They had accepted universal pollution and global warming as normal costs of doing business.</p>
<p> <b>V.</b> There was, as a consequence, a growing worldwide effort on behalf of economic decentralization, economic justice, and ecological responsibility. We must recognize that the events of Sept. 11 make this effort more necessary than ever. We citizens of the industrial countries must continue the labor of self-criticism and self-correction. We must recognize our mistakes.</p>
<p> <b>VI.</b> The paramount doctrine of the economic and technological euphoria of recent decades has been that everything depends on innovation. It was understood as desirable, and even necessary, that we should go on and on from one technological innovation to the next, which would cause the economy to &#8220;grow&#8221; and make everything better and better. This of course implied at every point a hatred of the past, of all things inherited and free. All things superceded in our progress of innovations, whatever their value might have been, were discounted as of no value at all.</p>
<p> <b>VII.</b> We did not anticipate anything like what has now happened. We did not foresee that all our sequence of innovations might be at once overridden by a greater one: the invention of a new kind of war that would turn our previous innovations against us, discovering and exploiting the debits and the dangers that we had ignored. We never considered the possibility that we might be trapped in the webwork of communication and transport that was supposed to make us free.</p>
<p> <b>VIII.</b> Nor did we foresee that the weaponry and the war science that we marketed and taught to the world would become available, not just to recognized national governments, which possess so uncannily the power to legitimate large-scale violence, but also to &#8220;rogue nations,&#8221; dissident or fanatical groups and individuals &#8212; whose violence, though never worse than that of nations, is judged by the nations to be illegitimate.</p>
<p> <b>IX.</b> We had accepted uncritically the belief that technology is only good; that it cannot serve evil as well as good; that it cannot serve our enemies as well as ourselves; that it cannot be used to destroy what is good, including our homelands and our lives.</p>
<p> <b>X.</b> We had accepted, too, the corollary belief that an economy (either as a money economy or as a life-support system) that is global in extent, technologically complex, and centralized is invulnerable to terrorism, sabotage, or war, and that it is protectable by &#8220;national defense.&#8221;</p>
<p> <b>XI.</b> We now have a clear, inescapable choice that we must make. We can continue to promote a global economic system of unlimited &#8220;free trade&#8221; among corporations, held together by long and highly vulnerable lines of communication and supply, but now recognizing that such a system will have to be protected by a hugely expensive police force that will be worldwide, whether maintained by one nation or several or all, and that such a police force will be effective precisely to the extent that it oversways the freedom and privacy of the citizens of every nation.</p>
<p> <b>XII.</b> Or we can promote a decentralized world economy which would have the aim of assuring to every nation and region a local self-sufficiency in life-supporting goods. This would not eliminate international trade, but it would tend toward a trade in surpluses after local needs had been met.</p>
<p> <b>XIII.</b> One of the gravest dangers to us now, second only to further terrorist attacks against our people, is that we will attempt to go on as before with the corporate program of global &#8220;free trade,&#8221; whatever the cost in freedom and civil rights, without self-questioning or self-criticism or public debate.</p>
<p> <b>XIV.</b> This is why the substitution of rhetoric for thought, always a temptation in a national crisis, must be resisted by officials and citizens alike. It is hard for ordinary citizens to know what is actually happening in Washington in a time of such great trouble; for we all know, serious and difficult thought may be taking place there. But the talk that we are hearing from politicians, bureaucrats, and commentators has so far tended to reduce the complex problems now facing us to issues of unity, security, normality, and retaliation.</p>
<p> <b>XV.</b> National self-righteousness, like personal self-righteousness, is a mistake. It is misleading. It is a sign of weakness. Any war that we may make now against terrorism will come as a new installment in a history of war in which we have fully participated. We are not innocent of making war against civilian populations. The modern doctrine of such warfare was set forth and enacted by General William Tecumseh Sherman, who held that a civilian population could be declared guilty and rightly subjected to military punishment. We have never repudiated that doctrine.</p>
<p> <b>XVI.</b> It is a mistake also &#8212; as events since Sept. 11 have shown &#8212; to suppose that a government can promote and participate in a global economy and at the same time act exclusively in its own interest by abrogating its international treaties and standing apart from international cooperation on moral issues.</p>
<p> <b>XVII.</b> And surely, in our country, under our Constitution, it is a fundamental error to suppose that any crisis or emergency can justify any form of political oppression. Since Sept. 11, far too many public voices have presumed to &#8220;speak for us&#8221; in saying that Americans will gladly accept a reduction of freedom in exchange for greater &#8220;security.&#8221; Some would, maybe. But some others would accept a reduction in security (and in global trade) far more willingly than they would accept any abridgement of our Constitutional rights.</p>
<p> <b>XVIII.</b> In a time such as this, when we have been seriously and most cruelly hurt by those who hate us, and when we must consider ourselves to be gravely threatened by those same people, it is hard to speak of the ways of peace and to remember that Christ enjoined us to love our enemies, but this is no less necessary for being difficult.</p>
<p> <b>XIX.</b> Even now we dare not forget that since the attack of Pearl Harbor &#8212; to which the present attack has been often and not usefully compared &#8212; we humans have suffered an almost uninterrupted sequence of wars, none of which has brought peace or made us more peaceable.</p>
<p> <b>XX.</b> The aim and result of war necessarily is not peace but victory, and any victory won by violence necessarily justifies the violence that won it and leads to further violence. If we are serious about innovation, must we not conclude that we need something new to replace our perpetual &#8220;war to end war&#8221;?</p>
<p> <b>XXI.</b> What leads to peace is not violence but peaceableness, which is not passivity, but an alert, informed, practiced, and active state of being. We should recognize that while we have extravagantly subsidized the means o<br />
f war, we have almost totally neglected the ways of peaceableness. We have, for example, several national military academies, but not one peace academy. We have ignored the teachings and the examples of Christ, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and other peaceable leaders. And here we have an inescapable duty to notice also that war is profitable, whereas the means of peaceableness, being cheap or free, make no money.</p>
<p> <b>XXII.</b> The key to peaceableness is continuous practice. It is wrong to suppose that we can exploit and impoverish the poorer countries, while arming them and instructing them in the newest means of war, and then reasonably expect them to be peaceable.</p>
<p> <b>XXIII.</b> We must not again allow public emotion or the public media to caricature our enemies. If our enemies are now to be some nations of Islam, then we should undertake to know those enemies. Our schools should begin to teach the histories, cultures, arts, and language of the Islamic nations. And our leaders should have the humility and the wisdom to ask the reasons some of those people have for hating us.</p>
<p> <b>XXIV.</b> Starting with the economies of food and farming, we should promote at home, and encourage abroad, the ideal of local self-sufficiency. We should recognize that this is the surest, the safest, and the cheapest way for the world to live. We should not countenance the loss or destruction of any local capacity to produce necessary goods</p>
<p> <b>XXV.</b> We should reconsider and renew and extend our efforts to protect the natural foundations of the human economy: soil, water, and air. We should protect every intact ecosystem and watershed that we have left, and begin restoration of those that have been damaged.</p>
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<p> <b>XXVI.</b> The complexity of our present trouble suggests as never before that we need to change our present concept of education. Education is not properly an industry, and its proper use in not to serve industries, neither by job-training nor by industry-subsidized research. Its proper use is to enable citizens to live lives that are economically, politically, socially, and culturally responsible. This cannot be done by gathering or &#8220;accessing&#8221; what we now call &#8220;information&#8221; &#8212; which is to say facts without context and therefore without priority. A proper education enables young people to put their lives in order, which means knowing what things are more important than other things; it means putting first things first.</p>
<p> <b>XXVII.</b> The first thing we must begin to teach our children (and learn ourselves) is that we cannot spend and consume endlessly. We have got to learn to save and conserve. We do need a &#8220;new economy,&#8221; but one that is founded on thrift and care, on saving and conserving, not on excess and waste. An economy based on waste is inherently and hopelessly violent, and war is its inevitable by-product. We need a peaceable economy.</p>
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