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Peacenik Warmongers
Ayn Rand Institute ^ | Dec. 9, 2002 | Alex Epstein

Posted on 03/09/2003 9:31:48 PM PST by Tamzee

Dec. 9, 2002

Peacenik Warmongers

Pacifism necessarily invites escalating acts of war against anyone who practices it.

By Alex Epstein

There is an increasingly vocal movement that seeks to engage America in ever longer, wider, and more costly wars—leading to thousands and perhaps millions of unnecessary deaths. This movement calls itself the "anti-war" movement.

Across America and throughout the world, "anti-war" groups are staging "peace rallies" that attract tens and sometimes hundreds of thousands of participants, who gather to voice their opposition to an invasion of Iraq and to any other U.S. military action in the War on Terrorism. The goal of these rallies, the protesters proclaim, is to promote peace. "You can bomb the world to pieces," they chant, "but you can't bomb it into peace."

If dropping bombs won't work, what should the United States do to obtain a peaceful relationship with the numerous hostile regimes, including Iraq, that seek to harm us with terrorism and weapons of mass destruction? The "peace advocates" offer no answer. The most one can coax out of them are vague platitudes (we should "make common cause with the people of the world," says the prominent "anti-war" group Not in Our Name) and agonized soul-searching ("Why do they hate us?").

The absence of a peacenik peace plan is no accident. Pacifism is inherently a negative doctrine—it merely says that military action is always bad. As one San Francisco protestor put the point: "I don't think it's right for our government to kill people." In practice, this leaves the government only two means of dealing with our enemies: to ignore their acts of aggression, or to appease them by capitulating to the aggressor's demands.

We do not need to predict or deduce the consequences of pacifism with regard to terrorism and the nations that sponsor it, because we experienced those consequences on September 11. Pacifism practically dictated the American response to terrorism for more than 23 years, beginning with our government's response to the first major act of Islamic terrorism against this country: when Iranian mobs held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days at the American embassy in Tehran. In response to that and later terrorist atrocities, American Presidents sought to avoid military action at all costs—by treating terrorists as isolated criminals and thereby ignoring the role of the governments that support them, or by offering diplomatic handouts to terrorist states in hopes that they would want to be our friends. With each pacifist response it became clearer that the most powerful nation on Earth was a paper tiger—and our enemies made the most of it.

After years of American politicians acting like peaceniks, Islamic terrorism had proliferated from a few gangs of thugs to a worldwide scourge—making possible the attacks of September 11.

It is an obvious evasion of history and logic for the advocates of pacifism to label themselves "anti-war," since the policies they advocate necessarily invite escalating acts of war against anyone who practices them. Military inaction sends the message to an aggressor—and to other, potential aggressors—that it will benefit by attacking the United States. To whatever extent "anti-war" protesters influence policy, they are not helping to prevent war; they are acting to make war more frequent and deadly, by making our enemies more aggressive, more plentiful, and more powerful.

The only way to deal with militant enemies is to show them unequivocally that aggression against the United States will lead to their destruction. The only means of imparting this lesson is overwhelming military force—enough to defeat and incapacitate the enemy. Had we annihilated the Iranian regime 23 years ago, we could have thwarted Islamic terrorism at the beginning, with far less cost than will be required to defeat terrorism today.

And if we fail to use our military against state sponsors of terrorism today, imagine the challenge we will face five years from now when Iraq and Iran possess nuclear weapons and are ready to disseminate them to their terrorist minions. Yet such a world is the goal of the "anti-war" movement.

The suicidal stance of peaceniks is no innocent error or mere overflow of youthful idealism. It is the product of a fundamentally immoral commitment: the commitment to ignore reality—from the historical evidence of the consequences of pacifism to the very existence of the violent threats that confront us today—in favor of the wish that laying down our arms will achieve peace somehow.

Those of us who are committed to facing the facts should condemn these peaceniks for what they really are: warmongers for our enemies.

------ Alex Epstein is a writer for the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, Calif. The Institute promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: antiwar; democrats; iraq; peace; saddam; warlist

1 posted on 03/09/2003 9:31:49 PM PST by Tamzee
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To: Tamsey
Excellent!!
2 posted on 03/09/2003 9:38:32 PM PST by maranatha
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To: maranatha
Atlas Shrugged should be required reading.
3 posted on 03/09/2003 9:41:34 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (chIRAQ & sadDAM are bedfellows & clinton is a raping traitor!)
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To: Tamsey
bump
4 posted on 03/09/2003 9:42:56 PM PST by chasio649
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
All Ayn's books should be required. And we really don't care about that little fling with Nathaniel Branden. His stuff is good reading too.
5 posted on 03/09/2003 9:44:55 PM PST by donmeaker (Time is Relative, at least in my family.)
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To: *war_list; Ernest_at_the_Beach
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
6 posted on 03/09/2003 9:44:58 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: Libertarianize the GOP; Ernest_at_the_Beach
We've got some dip-stick running around here with a bumper sticker that says: "Peace Monger"
7 posted on 03/09/2003 9:57:55 PM PST by SierraWasp (Like, hey man, SHIFT_HAPPENS!!! Besides, who wants to be scared SHIFTLESS???)
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To: Tamsey
The suicidal stance of peaceniks is no innocent error or mere overflow of youthful idealism. It is the product of a fundamentally immoral commitment: the commitment to ignore reality—from the historical evidence of the consequences of pacifism to the very existence of the violent threats that confront us today—in favor of the wish that laying down our arms will achieve peace somehow.

Those of us who are committed to facing the facts should condemn these peaceniks for what they really are: warmongers for our enemies.

These two paragraphs pretty much sum up what this entire Iraq thing is really all about.

8 posted on 03/09/2003 10:01:51 PM PST by kesg
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To: SierraWasp
BTTT!
9 posted on 03/09/2003 10:06:21 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: Libertarianize the GOP
The "peace movement" is a battered woman who still loves her batterer despite all the evidence of his hatred and acted out aggression in the hope he might really change this time and even if it his next assault on her might end up killing her.
10 posted on 03/09/2003 10:09:08 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: kesg; maranatha
Thought the same myself :-)
11 posted on 03/09/2003 10:16:08 PM PST by Tamzee (There are 10 types of people... those who read binary, and those who don't.)
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To: goldstategop
Here I have to disagree - a woman who clings to her batterer shows symptoms of pathology. The 'peace acvtvists' we see today are the aiders and abettors of evil, and their motivation is hatred of the good for being good. So I draw the distinction between pathology and evil.
12 posted on 03/09/2003 11:03:29 PM PST by Noumenon
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To: Tamsey
Had we annihilated the Iranian regime 23 years ago, we could have thwarted Islamic terrorism at the beginning, with far less cost than will be required to defeat terrorism today.

Calling Jimmy Carter. Mr. Carter. Please pick up the white "get a clue" phone.
13 posted on 03/09/2003 11:49:17 PM PST by polemikos
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To: polemikos
parasite

\Par"a*site\, n. [F., fr. L. parasitus, Gr. ?, lit., eating beside, or at the table of, another; ? beside + ? to feed, from ? wheat, grain, food.] 1. One who frequents the tables of the rich, or who lives at another's expense, and earns his welcome by flattery; a hanger-on; a toady; a sycophant.

Thou, with trembling fear, Or like a fawning parasite, obey'st. --Milton.

Parasites were called such smell-feasts as would seek to be free guests at rich men's tables. --Udall.

Pacifists are the parasites of Liberty --FreeRepublic

2. (Bot.) (a) A plant obtaining nourishment immediately from other plants to which it attaches itself, and whose juices it absorbs; -- sometimes, but erroneously, called epiphyte. (b) A plant living on or within an animal, and supported at its expense, as many species of fungi of the genus Torrubia.

3. (Zo["o]l.) (a) An animal which lives during the whole or part of its existence on or in the body of some other animal, feeding upon its food, blood, or tissues, as lice, tapeworms, etc. (b) An animal which steals the food of another, as the parasitic jager. (c) An animal which habitually uses the nest of another, as the cowbird and the European cuckoo.

14 posted on 03/10/2003 4:38:46 AM PST by Samurai_Jack
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To: Tamsey
THE "Paper Tiger"
That is exactly what the lib politicians have done to our country, and their past responses to threats have brought about the situation we now find ourselves in. It is no accident that G.W. Bush is our President. I firmly believe that there is indeed a God of the universe who is Rightous and Good. I also believe that he has placed G.W. in this place and time: not as a savior, but as an instrument he will use to his purpose in the leading of our nation. May God Bless President Bush And the U.S.A.!

Free the oppressed, destroy evil, protect the defenseless, tear down the strongholds of the enemey! Who in their right mind could be against anyone who that advocates these principals? What would you call anyone who does?
15 posted on 03/10/2003 7:10:39 AM PST by Hillarys nightmare
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To: Tamsey
Had we annihilated the Iranian regime 23 years ago, we could have thwarted Islamic terrorism at the beginning, with far less cost than will be required to defeat terrorism today.

Amazingly, even if you could get the pacifists to agree with this, they would still have opposed it. After all, the overwhelming evidence that using nuclear weapons to end WWII resulted in far fewer casualties on both sides doesn't prevent them from bemoaning the bombings.

16 posted on 03/10/2003 7:28:39 AM PST by laredo44
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