The terrorist attack against the United States on
September 11 momentarily united the world behind an effort to bring the
guilty to justice and secure the whole of humanity against future
terrorist violence. It also focused attention on a defining human
choice between justice and vengeance, compassion and violence, and
freedom and suppression that may well determine whether we will have a
world that works for all—or a world that works for no one.
Those
who rule the United States in our name have responded by dropping bombs
on one of the world's most remote and devastated countries, pushing
through new subsidies and tax breaks for the wealthy, rolling back
civil liberties, and gutting environmental regulations while demanding
that we yield to them our unquestioned obedience in the name of
patriotism. It is a compelling teachable moment, for the gap between
the actions of those who rule and the needs of a deeply troubled world
could hardly be more stark. The true patriots are those who speak
openly of the gap and draw attention to real needs.
If
we are to have real security we must at once reduce our vulnerability
to terrorist disruption and eliminate the conditions of exclusion,
hopelessness, and loss of meaning that give rise to it. It isn't rocket
science.
Our economic system features long
supply-lines, concentrated supplies of volatile fuels, toxic chemicals,
and radioactive materials, disposable workers subject to instant
dismissal in a moment of disruption, core industries such as air travel
subject to extreme swings of consumer confidence, and an unstable
financial system built on debt and speculation. It is a disaster
waiting to happen.
We become less vulnerable to the
extent we favor local production and procurement to shorten supply
lines. Replace volatile with nonvolatile fuels, such as hydrogen.
Reduce or eliminate the use of toxic chemicals and radioactive
materials. Increase employee rights and encourage stable employment
relations. Orient the economy toward meeting real, enduring needs that
generate stable demand. Bring integrity to the financial system by
limiting speculation and the pyramiding of debt. Take appropriate
measures to increase environmental security by reducing the human
burden on nature.
Steps toward eliminating the
primary causes of terrorism are equally straightforward. Strengthen
political democracy to assure every person a meaningful voice. Advance
economic democracy to assure equitable participation in the ownership
of productive assets. Build strong local economies that meet real needs
and guarantee every person's right to a secure, fulfilling livelihood.
Introduce financial reforms to increase financial stability. Nurture
cultural diversity by breaking up media monopolies and supporting local
artists. Many of these actions will also contribute to environmental
security by eliminating extremes of wealth and poverty that encourage
the fortunate few to indulge themselves in wasteful excess and the
desperate many to produce more children in a search for economic
security.
Perhaps you noticed. It makes no
difference whether our priority is physical security, the well-being of
all, or the health of the environment. The action agenda is virtually
identical. It is our time to choose between the false security of
military and police suppression and the true security of a world that
works for all. Let us embrace it fully as a moment of hope and
opportunity— and as an act of true patriotism.
David C. Korten is board chair of the Positive Futures Network and author of When Corporations Rule the World. www.pcdf.org
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