the similarities between the "Department of International Assistance" and the already proposed "Department of Peace". But I must say, I admire your enthusiasm and joy over this! Thanks for sharing it.
All the foreign aid will be consolidated into a department that can create actual changes in the world with a concerted vision. The goal will be to use this department as an alternative to the DoD to change tyrannical regimes into democracies.I'm missing something here. There's already a proposal, sponsored in the House by Dennis Kucinich, for something called a Department of Peace and co-sponsored by the people at the end of this post. Its notion seems quite different from that of the "Department of International Assistance".
Check out Kucinich's Department of Peace and then let's nicely compare the two. I know you won't have as many details but a general idea would be great if you can get one.
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DiamondSoul put this together on Kucinich's Department of Peace:
The Department of Peace is not being proposed to deal strictly with foreign relations issues, which seems to be the impression most people have on hearing of it. Kucinich gets a little more in depth on the subject on his issues page covering it, but even that isn't quite detailed enough for the average citizen to comprehend the scope of the Department.
The Department of Peace would be charged with a number of things-
1. addressing nonviolent resolution of conflicts across the United States-
such as in our schools, as part of protest training seminars, in domestic relationships, parenting, etc. The people staffing it would be charged with developing teaching tools for educating the public that violence is rarely the correct response to conflict and showing how there are better ways to address those conflicts.
2. addressing nonviolent conflict resolution in international affairs-
such as diplomacy training, negotiation skills, reinforcing the notion that violence should not be threatened for any but the most extreme circumstances (i.e. direct threat to our nation or one of our allies), etc.
3. examining the United States' role in the arms race and deterining where and how it is wise to scale down our weapons development systems in the interests of promoting Peace across the globe. Hopefully gathering the information needed to convince our DoD to lead the race to nuclear disarmament.
4. examining human rights problems in other nations and how the US can influence those problems without resorting to violence or military force, IOW, instead of threatening Afghanistan, we offer humanitarian assistance in exchange for a change in Afghan National policy toward women, allowing women to be educated for example.
5. determining when peaceful efforts at conflict resolution have been exhausted and when military strength should be applied to a conflict. Generally speaking this would be in conjunction with the UN and other International organizations devoted to global peace.
Now having given you some of what I understand to be the purpose of the Department of Peace, let me explain why I believe it is a valid and even needed proposal-
First, I'm a strong proponent of nuclear disarmament. I don't believe nuclear weapons should EVER be used on anyone for any reason. They are the most heinous weapons ever developed and I'm appalled that the United States resorted to using them at any time given their lasting impact on innocent people. Charging the DoD with any sort of disarmament is like telling an oil mogul we have enough oil and not to drill anymore. It ain't gonna happen. The entire goal of the DoD is to see to it that the US has the biggest, baddest, scariest weapons in existance. They will not back down from that goal without some serious pressure from the Presidential administration. A Department of Peace working in unison with the DoD would exert that pressure.
Additionally, the DoD is not going to scale back weapons production of any sort, nor focus it's energies on the security of the United States. Why? Because there's too much money to be made in war. It IS a racket and our DoD is right in the midst of it. We need a Department determined to pull the United States back from the profiteering of war and war planning to counter the corporate pressure on the DoD. As a Federal Department under the control of the President and his cabinet, the Department of Peace would fulfill that role.
Once established, the Department of Peace could easily be turned loose from the President himself, and his cabinet, and allowed to function on its own with the prime directive being exhaust ALL means of peaceful resolution and determine when that has been done with no result. At that point it would answer to Federal auditors and the Ways and Means comittee like any other Federal Department.
On a domestic level, surely we've all watched the nightly news and been sickened at all the violence happening in our own neighborhoods. Our children are taking guns to school and killing each other. Teens are shooting each other over clothing, over drugs, over a simple hurled insult! People are shooting each other or attacking each other because somebody ran a red light for pity's sake!
The violence we see daily MUST be addressed at both the top and bottm of our society in order to be brought under control. We must deal with the propensity of our DoD to resort to violent force inconflict resolution, AND simultaneously train our citizens how to deal with conflict without resorting to violence. That begins with education, and in order to implement something like that, nationwide, we need a special department dedicated to the concept of Peace itself. The ducation can't just be in schools, it has to be in schools, workplaces, social services efforts, prisons, everywhere. Everyone has to be exposed to this at some point.
Now some people will say that's socialist or communist idealism. I disagree. I'm just an ordinary person who has seen enough violence that these days I can barely stand to watch the news or read the paper. I would much rather attend courses on peaceful resolution of conflict than to see another funeral because nobody cared enough to address the problem of violence within this country. People CAN improve, but only if we all decide to give each other the means to do so. That starts with education and example. Dennis Kucinich is offering the education and the example, and I am prepared to take him up on it. I can't weigh the cost in human lives as a result of violence against the cost of a new federal Department dedicated to ending it, sorry, but I can't put a price-tag on the death and destruction I've seen in my scant 35 years of life. It's worth the cost if it prevents just one person from dying needlessly.
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And you can find tons more information here:
http://www.dopcampaign.org/---
Co-sponsors:
Abercrombie, Neil (D-HI, 1st)
Baldwin , Tammy (D-WI, 2nd)
Brown, Sherrod (D-OH, 13th)
Carson, Julia (D-IN, 7th)
Clay William (D-MO, 1st)
Conyers, John (D-MI, 14th)
Cummings, Elijah (D-MD, 7th)
Davis, Danny (D-IL, 7th)
DeFazio, Peter (D-OR, 4th)
Evans, Lane (D-IL, 17th)
Farr, Sam (D-CA, 17th)
Filner, Bob (D-CA, 51st)
Grijalva , Raol (D-AZ, 7th)
Gutierrez, Luis (D-IL, 4th)
Hinchey, Maurice (D-NY, 22nd)
Holt, Rush D. (D- NJ)
Honda, Michael (D-CA, 15th)
Jackson, Jesse (D-IL, 2nd)
Jackson-Lee (D-TX, 18th)
Johnson, Eddie Bernice (D-TX, 30th)
Kucinich, Dennis (D-OH, 10th)
Lee, Barbara (D-CA, 9th)
Lewis, John (D-GA, 5th)
Maloney, Carolyn (D-NY, 14th)
McDermott, Jim (D-WA, 7th)
McGovern, James (D-MA, 3rd)
Meeks, Gregory (D-NY, 6th)
Miller, George (D-CA, 7th)
Nadler, Jerrold (D-NY, 8th)
Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC)
Oberstar, James (D-MN, 8th)
Olver, John (D-MA, 1st)
Owens, Major (D-NY, 14th)
Payne, Donald (D-NJ,10th)
Rahall, Nick (D-WV, 3rd)
Rangel, Charles (D-NY,15th)
Ryan, Tim (D-OH, 17th)
Sanders, Bernard (I-VT, At Large)
Schakowsky, Janice (D-IL, 9th)
Scott, Bobby (D-VA, 3rd)
Serrano, Jose (D-NY, 16th)
Solis, Hilda (D-CA, 32nd)
Stark, Fortney (D-CA,13th)
Thompson, Bennie (D- MS 2nd)
Towns, Edolphus (D-NY, 10th)
Tubbs Jones, Stephanie (D-OH, 11th)
Udall, Mark (D-CO,2nd)
Velazquez, Nydia (D-NY,12th)
Waters, Maxine (D-CA,35th)
Watson, Diane (D-CA, 33rd)
Woolsey, Lynn (D-CA,6th)