A Call To Action
washingtonpost.com
By Uwe E. Reinhardt
Monday, August 1, 2005; A17
President Bush assures us that the ongoing twin wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are worth the sacrifices they entail. Editorialists around the nation agree and say that a steadfast American public was willing to stay the course.
Should anyone be surprised by this national resolve, given that these wars visit no sacrifice of any sort -- neither blood nor angst nor taxes -- on well over 95 percent of the American people?
At most, 500,000 American troops are at risk of being deployed to these war theaters at some time. Assume that for each of them some 20 members of the wider family sweat with fear when they hear that a helicopter crashed in Afghanistan or that X number of soldiers or Marines were killed or seriously wounded in Iraq. It implies that no more than 10 million Americans have any real emotional connection to these wars.
The administration and Congress have gone to extraordinary lengths to insulate voters from the money cost of the wars -- to the point even of excluding outlays for them from the regular budget process. Furthermore, they have financed the wars not with taxes but by borrowing abroad.
The strategic shielding of most voters from any emotional or financial sacrifice for these wars cannot but trigger the analogue of what is called "moral hazard" in the context of health insurance, a field in which I've done a lot of scholarly work. There, moral hazard refers to the tendency of well-insured patients to use health care with complete indifference to the cost they visit on others. It has prompted President Bush to advocate health insurance with very high deductibles. But if all but a handful of Americans are completely insulated against the emotional -- and financial -- cost of war, is it not natural to suspect moral hazard will be at work in that context as well?
A policymaking elite whose families and purses are shielded from the sacrifices war entails may rush into it hastily and ill prepared, as surely was the case of the Iraq war. Moral hazard in this context can explain why a nation that once built a Liberty Ship every two weeks and thousands of newly designed airplanes in the span of a few years now takes years merely to properly arm and armor its troops with conventional equipment. Moral hazard can explain why, in wartime, the TV anchors on the morning and evening shows barely make time to report on the wars, lest the reports displace the silly banter with which they seek to humor their viewers. Do they ever wonder how military families with loved ones in the fray might feel after hearing ever so briefly of mayhem in Iraq or Afghanistan?
Moral hazard also can explain why the general public is so noticeably indifferent to the plight of our troops and their families. To be sure, we paste cheap magnetic ribbons on our cars to proclaim our support for the troops. But at the same time, we allow families of reservists and National Guard members to slide into deep financial distress as their loved ones stand tall for us on lethal battlefields and the family is deprived of these troops' typically higher civilian salaries. We offer a pittance in disability pay to seriously wounded soldiers who have not served the full 20 years that entitles them to a regular pension. And our legislative representatives make a disgraceful spectacle of themselves bickering over a mere $1 billion or so in added health care spending by the Department of Veterans Affairs -- in a nation with a $13 trillion economy!
Last year kind-hearted folks in New Jersey collected $12,000 at a pancake feed to help stock pantries for financially hard-pressed families of the National Guard. Food pantries for American military families? The state of Illinois now allows taxpayers to donate their tax refunds to such families. For the entire year 2004, slightly more than $400,000 was collected in this way, or 3 cents per capita. It is the equivalent of about 100,000 cups of Starbucks coffee. With a similar program Rhode Island collected about 1 cent per capita. Is this what we mean by "supporting our troops"?
When our son, then a recent Princeton graduate, decided to join the Marine Corps in 2001, I advised him thus: "Do what you must, but be advised that, flourishing rhetoric notwithstanding, this nation will never truly honor your service, and it will condemn you to the bottom of the economic scrap heap should you ever get seriously wounded." The intervening years have not changed my views; they have reaffirmed them.
Unlike the editors of the nation's newspapers, I am not at all impressed by people who resolve to have others stay the course in Iraq and in Afghanistan. At zero sacrifice, who would not have that resolve?
The writer is James Madison professor of political economy at Princeton University.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
Contributors
Links
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2005
(896)
-
▼
August
(138)
- United Shi"ites of Arabia?
- Hillary CLinton, President: - Miriam V.
- Bush Gives New Reason for Iraq War
- Day-After Pill Decision Prompts a Resignation
- Fw: [Norton AntiSpam] New FactCheck Article: A Hal...
- Study: No Link Between Cell Phones, Tumors
- When the levee breaks
- The Gipper, Part 2
- American Family VOices - Miriam V.
- Democrats Still Backing Senseless War
- From American Family Voices - Miriam V
- Hugo Chavez: A Walk in the Footsteps of Arbenz, Al...
- The children of the chickenhawks
- Greenspan and the Bubble
- Leave it to Hagel
- Karol Rove, Alternet - Miriam V
- A Call To Action
- "We just don't like him."
- 'What They Died For' in Iraq is a Mystery
- The Vietnamization of Bush's Vacation
- More from Alternet - Miriam V
- Alternet, John BoltonMiriam V
- Alternet, Rest of Story - Miriam V
- Alternet - Miriam V
- Oil Fat Cats vs. Hugo Chavez
- Marijuana - Miriam V
- No holds barred as Rangel bashes veep
- Who Will Say 'No More'?
- The Kremlin was a bunch of amatuers next to this A...
- We Owe Pat Robertson and Ann Coulter a Big Thank You
- Don't miss today on CNN: Dead Wrong: Inside an Int...
- Preventing Aids in 3rd World Countries - Miriam V
- From Fact Check . Org - Miriam V
- Iraq constitution talks deadlocked
- Why Not Hillary?
- Roberts Knew He Was Acting Unethically
- The Dead-enders Club
- Fw: Emergency Petition to Save Fair Taxes
- American Family VOices from Miriam V
- Help Stop Conservative Hate Speech on Public Airwaves
- Fw: Indian Families Due Billions; Repayment Possib...
- Petition from Democracy for America - Miriam V
- Ask John Roberts a Question
- ORIGINALISM....
- from Am Feed - Miriam V
- Partial Text of the Iraqi Constitution
- Don't Give Bush An Exit Strategy
- Roberts Looks Like Early Archie Bunker
- My Private Idaho
- CNN's Dead Wrong was right on
- from Alternet - Miriam V
- Robertson urges U.S. to kill Chavez
- Preaching Justice, Slaying Demons
- Bush: Less Popular Than Nixon During Watergate
- The Angry Right remains oddly quiet about desecrat...
- Democrats Split Over Position on Iraq War
- Intelligent Design - Miriam V
- Rumsfeld Attacks Hugo Chavez
- Army Planning for Four More Years in Iraq
- Moral Authority
- The Strategic Class
- Judith Miller's Husband Goes on Cruise
- Mortgaged to the House of Saud
- Feingold Tunes in to Antiwar Sentiment
- American Working Families - Miriam V
- The Onion: Rumsfeld Makes Suprise Visit To Wife's ...
- Sheehan Protest Grows
- Cindy Sheehan Address Veterans For Peace Conventio...
- How Old Friends of Israel Gave $14 Million to Help...
- Working Families - Miriam V
- Fw: PATRIOT Act Being Finalized: Act Now - FCNL
- Fw: What are they hiding?
- Iraq: Is Dick Cheney a "Flip-Flopper"?
- Another LI soldier lost
- This is Eyeballing the Bush Ranch Protest part 3.
- THE UNFEELING PRESIDENT by E.L. Doctorow
- When the War Won't Stay at Bay
- When the War Won't Stay at Bay
- Fw: Urge Congress to Support Cindy Sheehan - FCNL
- Working Families from Miriam V
- The outing of Valerie Plame a "crappy little crime?"
- 'He Did Not Die For Your Freedom'
- U.S. Lowers Sights On What Can Be Achieved in Iraq
- Democratic bloggers aim to reshape campaigns
- anti-war petitio from Miriam Vn
- Sheehan plays 'Hardball' with Matthews
- Excerpt: None Dare Call It Stolen
- High-tech voting accessory: Paper
- Is the Iran Crisis for Real?
- Bush on Sheehan: "I've got a life to live"
- Thousands of Toads Hop Into Montana Town
- Death in Stockwell: the unanswered questions
- The Earth is flat, pigs were invented by Monsanto,
- The Da Vinci gamble
- U.S. Struggling to Get Soldiers Updated Armor
- Congress don't need no stinkin' ethics
- Experimental Hybrid Cars Get Up to 250 Mpg
- Eco-Friendly Burial Sites Give a Chance to Be Gree...
- Tabloid's Deal With Woman Shielded Schwarzenegger
- Bush raises option of using force against Iran
-
▼
August
(138)
No comments:
Post a Comment