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Waging Peace
By Marianne Williamson
11/17/06 "Boston
Globe" -- -- In the United States, 12 children
each day die from gun violence. Homicide was the second leading
cause of death for people ages 10 to 24 in 2001, with rates 10 times
that of other leading industrialized nations. In 2005, there were
more than 190,000 reported victims of rape, attempted rape, or
sexual assaults. Acts of terrorism worldwide are up since the start
of the Iraq war. War itself has killed more than half a million
Americans since World War II.
A bill before Congress would establish a US Department of Peace.
This measure would provide practical, nonviolent solutions for the
problems of domestic and international conflict. It would apply the
institutional heft of the US government to a serious effort not
merely at avoiding war or waging war more effectively. It would take
America to the next evolutionary step: It would proactively wage
peace. |
The problem of
violence is a many layered one, and its solution needs to be as well. . .
. While no one action -- governmental or otherwise -- will provide a
single solution to such an entrenched and deeply rooted problem, the
problem must be treated as an all-systems breakdown that requires an
all-systems response.
A Department of Peace would address the causal issues of violence -- from
human disenfranchisement to societal dysfunction -- thus saving money and
human heartache.
Domestically, the department would develop policies and allocate resources
to reduce the levels of domestic and gang violence, child abuse, and
various other forms of societal discord. The secretary of peace would work
with the secretary of education to develop curriculums to teach students
alternative conflict resolution techniques and strategies.
Internationally, the Department of Peace would advise the president and
Congress on the most innovative techniques and ideas for peace-creation
among nations. A peace academy, on par with the military service
academies, would train civilian peacekeepers and work with the military in
the latest nonviolent conflict resolution strategies and approaches. In
short, a Department of Peace would work hand in hand with existing
government agencies and structures to help ensure that conflict, when it
occurs, does not boil over into life-destroying behavior.
Last month, President George W. Bush said at a conference of school
officials, police officers, and youth advocates that communities need a
list of "best practices" to prevent and respond to the kinds of school
attacks that have occurred in recent weeks. "It seems to me, a lot of our
attention should be on preventing" such incidents, Bush said. That would
require, he said, "a mosaic of programs." The Department of Peace would
give structure and design to the mosaic, providing much-needed assistance
to city, county, and state governments in coordinating existing programs
as well as developing new programs based on best practices nationally.
Throughout America, there are countless peace-builders and peace-building
projects. Those skilled in ameliorating the effects of violence -- from
conflict resolution experts to nonviolent communicators -- have proven
their effectiveness at treating root causes of violence. Yet these
programs receive only pennies in comparison to the tremendous costs of
violence.
A 2004 World Health Report estimated the cost of interpersonal violence in
the United States (excluding war-related costs) at $300 billion per year.
We currently allocate more than $400 billion per year to the Department of
Defense, not including the cost of the war in Iraq. The financial cost
alone is enough to motivate many to support this bill, but the human
carnage is simply a cost that should never be permitted in a civilized
society.
Marianne Williamson is founder and chair of the board of The Peace
Alliance.
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