Public Health, War, and Militarism Martin Donohoe Am I Stoned? A 1999 Utah anti-drug pamphlet warns: “Danger signs that your child may be smoking marijuana include.

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Transcript Public Health, War, and Militarism Martin Donohoe Am I Stoned? A 1999 Utah anti-drug pamphlet warns: “Danger signs that your child may be smoking marijuana include.

Public Health, War, and
Militarism
Martin Donohoe
Am I Stoned?
A 1999 Utah anti-drug pamphlet
warns:
“Danger signs that your child may be
smoking marijuana include excessive
preoccupation with social causes,
race relations, and environmental
issues”
Perspective
• The earth spins at 1,038 mph at the equator,
between 700 mph and 900 mph at midlatitudes
• The earth rotates around sun at 18.5 miles/sec
• The solar system orbits the center of the Milky
Way Galaxy at 137 miles/sec
– One rotation per 225 million years
Perspective
• The sun is one of hundreds of billions of
stars in the Milky Way Galaxy
• The Milky Way is one of over one
hundred billion galaxies in the known
universe
• The universe may be one of an infinite
number of universes
The Planets
Our Solar System
Jupiter = one pixel, Earth = invisible
Sun = one pixel, Jupiter = invisible
History of war
• 10,000 yrs ago – agriculture
–Stable populations, division of labor,
warrior class
• 3500 yrs ago – bronze weapons and
armor
• 2200 yrs ago – iron
• 1900 yrs ago – widespread use of horses
History of war
• Ninth Century China - bombs
• Thirteenth Century China – rockets
–Forgotten until the 19th Century
• 1783 – Balloon (Montgolfier brothers)
History of War
• 1803-1814 (Napoleonic Wars): English
General Henry Shrapnel fills cannonballs
with bullets and exploding charges to
increase killing capacity
• 1903 – airplane (Wright Brothers)
• 20th Century – nuclear weapons,
increasingly sophisticated chemical and
biological weapons
Atomic Weapons - History
• Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
–15 kiloton bomb, 140,000 deaths
• Nagasaki, August 9, 1945
–22 kiloton bomb, 70,000 casualties
Atomic Weapons Today
• Approximately 17,300 nuclear weapons in at least 9
countries
– Down from over 71,000 at height of Cold War
• 4,300 active U.S./Russian warheads today
– 1,800 on hair-trigger alert
– Several thousand megatons (100,000 Hiroshimas)
History of War
• Violent conflict ubiquitous in the animal
kingdom:
– Interspecies conflict – food, territory
– Intraspecies conflict – food, territory, mates
(usually not directly fatal)
• Violence among non-human primates
– Gorilla infanticide
– Chimps vs. Bonobos
Origins of War
• Foragers vs. Agriculturalists
• Agriculture
– Hierarchical society
– Private property
– Money
– Subjugation of women
– Infectious/chronic diseases
Origins of War
• Violence Today
–Link with poverty, oppression, fueled
by desire for wealth/power
–Familial vs. Societal
–Gun culture
–Media Violence
Militarism
• The deliberate extension of military objectives
and rationale into shaping the culture, politics
and economics of civilian life so that war and
the prepapration for war is normalized, and
the development and maintenance of strong
military institutions is prioritized
• An excessive reliance on military power and
the threat of force in pursuing policy goals in
international relations
Militarism
• Positively correlated with:
– Conservatism
– Nationalism
– Religiosity
– Patriotism
– Authoritarianism
Militarism
• Negatively correlated with:
– Respect for civil liberties
– Tolerance of dissent
– Democratic principles
– Sympathy and welfare toward the troubled and
poor
– Foreign aid for poorer nations
• Subverts other societal interests (health,
environment, education, social programs)
History of War
• 20th Century:
• Small arms
• 90% of the 300,000 yearly deaths from violent
conflict
• Land mines
• 110 million planted since 1960 in 70 countries
• 24,000 deaths/yr (est.), tens of thousands more
disabled
History of War
• 20th Century:
• Predator drones
• Weaponization of Arctic/space
• Nanotech weapons
• Cyberwar
History of War
• Belief that each new invention would
eliminate warfare
• Instead - increased casualties, killing at a
distance
Epidemiology of Warfare
• Deaths in war:
– 17th Century = 19/million population
– 18th Century = 19/million population
– 19th Century = 11/million population
– 20th Century = 183/million population
• Increasing casualties to civilians
– 85-90% in 20th Century (vs. 10% late 19th
Century)
Contemporary Wars
• 250 wars in the 20th Century
• 72 million lives lost in 20th Century wars,
another 52 million through genocides
– 190 million deaths in 20th Century directly or
indirectly related to war
• Incidence of war rising since 1950
War Deaths, 1945-2010
Contemporary War Deaths
Worldwide Violence (2013)
• 526,000 killed by armed violence/yr
– 396,000 intentional homicides
– 55,000 direct conflict deaths
– 54,000 unintentional homicides
– 21,000 killed during legal interventions
• 7.9 violent deaths/100,000 persons/yr
Gun Violence
• U.S. death toll for all wars from the
Revolutionary War to Afghanistan: 1.2 million
(Congressional Research Service)
• Number killed by firearms since 1968
(suicides, homicides, and accidental
shootings): 1.4 million (CDC)
– More than from all wars in the nation’s history
combined (1.2 million)
War Deaths
•
•
•
•
•
•
Revolutionary War: 25,000
Civil War: 625,000
World War I: 17 million
World War II: 60 million
Korean War: 2.9 million
Vietnam War: 3.8 million
War Deaths
•
•
•
•
Iran-Iraq War: 700,000
Soviet War in Afghanistan: 1.5 million
Second Congo War: 3.8 million
Second Sudanese Civil War: 1.9 million
Gulf War I
• 105,000 military and 110,000 civilian
deaths (almost all Iraqis)
–Over 2.25 million refugees
• 2/3 of US casualties from “friendly fire”
• Cost $61 billion ($82 billion in 2003
dollars)
• Environmental devastation
War Deaths (as of 6/14)
• Second Iraq War:
– 4,486 U.S. soldiers
– 17,000 Iraqi military
– Estimates of civilian deaths range from 150,000 violent
deaths to 1 million deaths
• U.S. Afghan War:
– Over 2,000 U.S. soldiers; 1,200 coalition forces
– Estimated 20,000 civilians
Costs of Iraq/Afghanistan Wars
• Financial cost of these two wars: $1.5-5
trillion (est.)
• Higher estimate includes fighting,
rebuilding, veterans’ health care,
economic losses, etc.
Casualties Among Soldiers and
Civilians Continue
• More US soldiers have committed suicide than have
died in Afghan War
• Veteran health care needs massive (TBI, psychiatric
disorders, etc.)
– 26% of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are uninsured and
not part of the VA health care system
– VA access limited for those who are insured
– Providers being pressured not to diagnose PTSD
• Young veterans: ½ believe war in Afghanistan was not
worth fighting; 60% for Iraq War
Josef Stalin
“The
death of one man is a
tragedy. The death of millions is a
statistic.”
Colonial Exploitation
• Christopher Columbus’ log entry upon
meeting the Arawaks of the Bahamas:
“They…brought us…many…things…They
willingly traded everything they owned…They
do not bear arms…They would make fine
servants…With fifty men we could subjugate
them all and make them do whatever we
want.”
Colonial Exploitation
• Cecil Rhodes (Rhodesia, Rhodes Scholarship,
DeBeers Mining Company):
“We must find new lands from which we can
easily obtain raw materials and at the same
time exploit the cheap slave labour that is
available from the natives of the colonies. The
colonies would also provide a dumping ground
for the surplus goods produced in our
factories.”
Exploitation leads to:
• Maldistribution of wealth and resources
• Environmental degradation
• Wars
Consequences of War
• Deaths, injuries, physical and
psychological sequelae
• Collapse of health care system (affecting
those with acute and chronic illnesses)
• Famine
Consequences of War
• 51 million forcibly displaced persons
worldwide
– 16.7 million refugees (50% are children
under 18)
– 33 million internally displaced persons
– 1.2 million asylum seekers
• 86% of world’s refugees are hosted by
developing countries
Consequences of War
• Environmental degradation
• Increasing poverty and debt
• All lead to recurrent cycles of violence
Environmental Consequences of
Militarization
•
•
•
•
World’s single largest polluter
8% of global air pollution
2-11% of raw material use
Almost all high and low level radioactive
waste
Violence Against Women
• Common among U.S. servicewomen
• A deployed female soldier is more likely
to be raped by a fellow soldier than killed
by enemy fire
• Rape in war widespread, often genocidal
–Some refugee camps unsafe
“Comfort Women”
• Japanese soldiers forced between
100,000 and 200,000 women into sexual
slavery (“comfort women”)
• Some underwent forced hysterectomies
to prevent menstruation, make them
constantly “available”
• More than half died due to mistreatment
“Comfort Women”
• 3-5 year detention
• 5-20 rapes per day
• For 3 yrs of enslavement, low estimate is
7500 rapes per woman
• Japan has not compensated any victims
–Historical blindness to atrocities
Violence and Rape in War
• Occurs against backdrop of ongoing
societal forms of violence against women
–Legal, educational, social, and political
marginalization
Economic Disparities
• Women 79 cents/$1 Men
• Median income of black U.S.
families as a percent of white U.S.
families 62%
–60% in 1968
• 63% for Hispanic families
Status of Women
• Women do 67% of the world’s
work
• Receive 10% of global income
• Own 1% of all property
Worldwide, every minute
• 380 women become pregnant (190 unplanned or
unwanted)
• 110 women experience pregnancy-related
complications
• 40 women have unsafe abortions
• 1 woman dies from childbirth or unsafe abortion
• Reason: Lack of access to reproductive health
services
“Mother’s Day Proclamation, 1870”
Julia Ward Howe
Arise then...women of this day!
Arise, all women who have hearts!
…
Say firmly:
"We will not have questions answered by
irrelevant agencies,
Our husbands will not come to us, reeking
with carnage,
For caresses and applause.
“Mother’s Day Proclamation, 1870”
Julia Ward Howe
Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn
All that we have been able to teach them of
charity, mercy and patience.”
…
From the bosom of a devastated Earth a voice
goes up with
Our own. It says: "Disarm! Disarm!
“Mother’s Day Proclamation, 1870”
Julia Ward Howe
Let women
…
…promote the alliance of the different
nationalities,
The amicable settlement of international
questions,
The great and general interests of peace.
Critical Public Health Issues
Poverty and Hunger
• US: 15% of residents and 22% of
children live in poverty
• Rates of poverty in Blacks and
Hispanics = 2X Whites
• Poverty associated with worse
physical and mental health
Jacob Riis
Dorothea Lange
Worldwide Poverty
• 1 billion people lack access to clean
drinking water
• 3 billion lack adequate sanitation
services
• Hunger-related causes kill as many
people in 8 days as the atomic bomb
killed at Hiroshima
James Nachtwey
Maldistribution of Wealth
• Top 85 billionaires worldwide worth $1.7
trillion, the combined income of bottom
3.5 billion people (1/2 of world’s
population)
• U.S: Richest 1% of the population owns
40% of the country’s wealth
-poorest 80% own 7%
-widest gap of any industrialized nation
Overconsumption (“Affluenza”)
• U.S. = 6.3% of world’s population
–Owns 50% of the world’s wealth
• U.S. responsible for:
–25% of world’s energy consumption
–33% of paper use
–72% of hazardous waste production
Income Inequality Kills
Higher income inequality is
associated with increased
morbidity and mortality at all per
capita income levels
Maldistribution of Wealth is Deadly
• 880,000 deaths/yr in U.S. would be
averted if the country had an income
gap like Western European nations,
with their stronger social safety nets
–BMJ 2009;339:b4471
Voltaire
“The comfort of the rich rests
upon an abundance of the
poor”
Hudson River, 2009
Primo Levi
“A country is considered the
more civilized the more the
wisdom and efficiency of its laws
hinder a weak man from
becoming too weak or a powerful
one too powerful.”
The State of U.S. Health Care
• 49 million uninsured patients
• Millions more underinsured
–Remain in dead-end jobs
–Go without needed prescriptions
due to skyrocketing drug prices
Headline from The Onion
Uninsured Man Hopes His
Symptoms Diagnosed This
Week On House
The State of U.S. Health Care
• US ranks near the bottom among
westernized nations in life
expectancy and infant mortality
• Est. 51,000 deaths/year due to lack
of health insurance
• Racial disparities in coverage,
processes, and outcomes of care
Racial Disparities in Health Care:
African-Americans
• Equalizing the mortality rates of
whites and African-Americans would
have averted 686,202 deaths between
1991 and 2000
–Whereas medical advances averted
176,633 deaths
• AJPH 2004;94:2078-2081
Environmental Degradation and Social Injustice
(Causes)
• Overpopulation
•
•
•
•
Pollution
Deforestation
Global Warming
Unsustainable Agricultural/Fishing
Practices
– Pesticides, indoor cooking with biomass
Environmental Degradation and Social Injustice
(Causes)
•
•
•
•
Overconsumption / Affluenza
Militarization
Maldistribution of Wealth
National and Global Political and Economic
Institutions
• Exploitation
• Corporate Profiteering
Environmental Degradation and Social Injustice
(Causes)
•
•
•
•
Poor education
Media manipulation and inaccurate reporting
Money in politics
Citizen apathy
Environmental Degradation and Social Injustice
(Consequences)
•
•
•
•
•
•
Increased poverty and overcrowding
Famine
Global Warming
Weather extremes
Species loss
Human morbidity and mortality
– 40% of world’s yearly deaths linked to water, air, and soil
pollution
• War
• Malthusian chaos and disaster
Consequences of Global Warming
• 300,000 deaths and 5.5 million disabilityadjusted life years lost per year
–WHO, UN Environment Program
–Expected to double by 2020
• Pentagon calls global warming an
immediate national security threat
Costs of Wars (2010 dollars, inflationadjusted)
•
•
•
•
•
American Revolution: $2.4 billion
War of 1812: $1.6 billion
Mexican War: $2.4 billion
Civil War (both sides): $79.8 billion
Spanish American War: $9 billion
Costs of Wars (2010 dollars, inflationadjusted)
•
•
•
•
•
•
World War I: $334 billion
World War II: $4.1 trillion
Korean War: $341 billion
Vietnam War: $738 billion
Gulf War I: $102 billion
Iraq/Afghanistan Wars likely to cost $4-5
trillion
World Military Spending (2012)
Discretionary Federal Spending (2013)
War and Peace
• World military budget
– 230X what the UN spends on peacekeeping
• US:
– Largest arms supplier
• $66 billion in annual sales (2011) = ¾ of global market
• Russia second with $5 billion in annual sales
– Profits at top 5 defense firms up 450% since 2002
– Greatest debtor to U.N. (including U.N.
peacekeeping fund)
Military Spending and Jobs
• $1 billion in military spending generates
11,200 jobs
–15,1000 in consumer goods production
–16,800 in green energy development
–17,200 in health care
–26,700 in education
Skewed Priorities
• The world spends $1.8 trillion/year on military
goods and services
• For 25% of this, we could:
– Eliminate starvation and malnutrition
– Provide shelter for all
– Eliminate illiteracy
– Provide clean and safe water
– Prevent soil erosion
Skewed Priorities
–Prevent global warming
–Stop deforestation
–Aid all refugees
–Retire developing nations’ debt
–Provide clean, safe energy (through
efficiency and renewables)
Skewed Priorities
–Prevent acid rain
–Fix the ozone hole
–Stabilize world population
–Provide basic universal health care and
AIDS control
–Eliminate nuclear weapons and land
mines
DOD Announcement
(September, 2011)
“Pentagon Lacks Funding to Fix
Public Schools on Military
Bases”
Dwight Eisenhower
“Every gun that is made, every rocket
fired, signifies in the final sense a theft
from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and not clothed”
Martin Luther King
“A nation that continues year after year
to spend more money on military
defense than on programs of social uplift
is approaching spiritual death.”
Worldwide Economic Impact of
Violence
• $10 trillion/yr
–1% of global GDP
• $1,350/U.S. citizen
Health Costs of Militarization
• 3 hours of world arms spending = annual
WHO budget
• ½ day of world arms spending = immunization
for all the world’s children
• 3 days of US arms spending = amount spent
on health, education and welfare programs for
US children in one year
Health Costs of Militarization
• 3 weeks of world arms spending = primary
health care for all in poor countries, including
safe drinking water and full immunizations
• Brain drain: 2/3 of US scientists work in
military-industrial complex (although much
work has widespread applicability)
Foreign Aid
• In total dollars: U.S. #1
• As a % of GDP, U.S. ranks 21st among
the world’s wealthiest nations
• U.S. Aid: Over 1/3 military, 1/4
economic, 1/3 for food and
development
• Most U.S. aid benefits U.S.
corporations
Foreign Aid
• Americans think that 24% of the
federal budget goes toward foreign
aid
• 0.19% of the total federal budget, vs.
UN target of 0.7%
U.S. Charitable Giving
• 2.5% of income
• 2.9% at height of Great Depression
The US: Rogue Nation
• History: Native Americans, slavery, current excesses,
disparities and injustices
• Co-opting Nazi and Japanese WWII scientists
• Minimum 277 troop deployments by the US in its
225+ year history
• Over 1,000 bases worldwide today (737 in 69 other
countries)
• 54 countries helped facilitate CIA’s secret detention,
rendition, and interrogation program
The US: Rogue Nation
• Since the end of WWII, the US has bombed:
– China, Korea, Indonesia, Cuba, Guatemala,
Congo, Peru, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia,
Nicaragua, El Salvador, Grenada, Libya,
Panama, Afghanistan, Sudan, Yugoslavia,
and Iraq
The US: Rogue Nation
• Conservative estimate = 8 million killed
• US invasions/bombings often largely at behest
of corporate interests
• Drone strikes on allied/other nations and on
U.S. citizens
– AI, HRW condemn as extrajudicial
executions/war crimes
The US: Rogue Nation
• Continued funding of the Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation
– Formerly the School of the Americas
– Over 60,000 graduates, including many of
the worst human rights abusers in Latin
America (e.g., Manuel Noriega, Omar
Torrijos, and the assassins of Archbishop
Oscar Romero)
The US: Rogue Nation
• “Which country is the greatest threat to
peace?”
– U.S. - 24%
– Pakistan - 8%
– China - 6%
– Afghanistan - 5%
– 2014 Gallup poll, 66,000 worldwide
participants
Hermann Goering
(at the Nuremberg Trials, shortly before being sentenced to death)
“Of course the people don't want war.
But…it is the leaders of the country who
determine the policy, and it is always a
simple matter to drag the people along,
whether it is a democracy, or a fascist
dictatorship, or a parliament, or a
communist dictatorship . . .
Hermann Goering
Voice or no voice, the people can always
be brought to the bidding of the
leaders…All you have to do is to tell them
they are being attacked, and denounce
the pacifists for lack of patriotism and
exposing the country to danger.”
Horace
Odes (III.2.13)
Dulce et decorum est pro patria
mori
It is sweet and fitting to die for
one’s country
"Dulce Et Decorum Est"
Wilfred Owen, 1917-18
…
In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking,
drowning.
If in some smothering dreams you too could
pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;
"Dulce Et Decorum Est"
Wilfred Owen
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,My friend, you would not tell with such high
zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.
International NonCooperation/Isolationism
• Failure to sign or approve:
–Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change
–Convention on the Prohibition of AntiPersonnel Land Mines
–Convention on Cluster Munitions
–Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban
Treaty
International NonCooperation/Isolationism
• Failure to sign or approve:
–Convention on the Rights of the Child
–Convention on the Elimination of
Discrimination Against Women
–Convention on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights
International NonCooperation/Isolationism
• Failure to sign or approve:
–Convention for the Suppression of
Traffic in Persons
–UN Convention on the Rights of
Disabled Persons
–UN Declaration of the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples
International NonCooperation/Isolationism
• Failure to sign or approve:
– Protocol 1, Article 55 of the Geneva
Conventions, which bans methods of
warfare which can cause severe
environmental damage
– The Basel Convention on the Control of
Transboundary Movements of Hazardous
Wastes
The US: Rogue Nation
• Domestic Spying (e.g., NSA)
• Torture (involving health care professionals)
• Death Penalty:
– US executes more of its citizens than any other
country except China, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Iran
– Until recently, the US was the only country to
execute both juveniles and the mentally ill
The US: Rogue Nation
• Failure to follow World Court Decisions
• Failure to recognize International
Criminal Court
International WIN/Gallup Poll,
2014
• Which country is the greatest threat to peace?
– U.S. – 24%
– Pakistan – 8%
– China – 6%
– Afghanistan – 5%
– 66,000 surveyed worldwide
Solutions
• Activism (PSR, IPPNW, etc.)
• Education (APHA Militarism
Education Group)
• Tolerance and appreciation of
diversity
• Redirect money towards social
justice and environmental
preservation
• Eliminate WMDs
Solutions
• Eliminate military
recruiting in public schools
– APHA Resolution
• Increase foreign aid
• Create Dept. of Peace
• Assist victims of war (PHR,
MSF, etc.)
• Treaties
The role of the doctor in society
• World Health Organization:
–“The role of physicians and other
health professionals in the
preservation and promotion of peace
is the most significant factor for the
attainment of health for all.”
Speak Up for the Disenfranchised
“The first job of a citizen is to keep
your mouth open.”
- Günter Grass
“First they came for the Jews”
by Pastor Niemoller
“First they came for the Jews, and I did not speak up,
for I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the communists, and I did not
speak up for I was not a communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not
speak up, for I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me, and there was no one left to
speak up for me.”
Have Faith in Your Ability to Affect
Change
"If you think you are too small to
have an impact, try going to bed with
a mosquito in your tent“
- African Proverb
Act Out of Love
• People
• Environment
• Earth
Our Home
Earth/Moon Seen by Voyager Spacecraft
through Saturn’s Rings
Reference
The Role of Public Health in the Prevention of
War:
Rationale and Competencies
Am J Public Health 2014;104:e34–e47.
Available at
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/pdf/10.21
05/AJPH.2013.301778
Public Health and Social Justice
Website
http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org
http://www.phsj.org
[email protected]