Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

Biden tries to show US as democracy beacon post-Capitol riot – The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) Less than two weeks in office, President Joe Biden is facing two critical tests of whether the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol has damaged Americas standing as a beacon for democracy.

Protests in Russia and a military coup in Myanmar come as American credibility on the world stage has plummeted after last months storming of the Capitol by a pro-Donald Trump mob looking to stop the certification of Bidens election victory.

That adds to the weight on Biden as he seeks to fulfill a campaign pledge to dramatically reposition the U.S. as a global leader following four years of a Trump foreign policy driven by an America First mantra. That policy was marked by the frequent disparagement of democratic allies and the occasional embrace of authoritarian leaders.

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Bidens top diplomat, Antony Blinken, acknowledged the difficulty.

I think theres no doubt that the attack on our own democracy on Jan. 6 creates an even greater challenge for us to be carrying the banner of democracy and freedom and human rights around the world because, for sure, people in other countries are saying to us, Well, why dont you look at yourselves first? the secretary of state said in an interview with NBC News.

Blinken added, The difference, though, between us and so many other countries is that when we are challenged, including when we challenge ourselves were doing it in full daylight with full transparency.

Biden, in the early days of his presidency, has sought to send the message in a series of calls with foreign leaders that America is back.

Hes reassured Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga that the U.S. has its support in an ongoing territorial dispute with China over islets in the East China Sea. Hes sought to reset the relationship with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was belittled by Trump as dishonest & weak. And hes told Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador that the U.S. would send $4 billion to help development in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala nations whose hardships have spawned tides of migration through Mexico toward the United States.

The United States remains a country in the world that is looked to for leadership, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters. Its going to take some time, but hes certainly committed to doing that.

But the crises in Myanmar and Russia present Biden with difficult tests of his promise to reestablish global leadership that are likely to be far more complicated than mending fences with traditional allies.

Biden on Monday threatened to slap new sanctions on Myanmar after a coup that saw the military arrest the civilian leaders of its government, calling the episode a direct assault on the countrys transition to democracy and the rule of law.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who for years has taken a special interest in Myanmar, on Tuesday complimented the Biden administrations initial response but urged it to quickly follow through with meaningful penalties against the nations military leaders. Later Tuesday, the State Department announced it had determined that the military takeover was a coup, setting the stage for the Biden administration to move forward with sanctions and other measures targeting military officials.

In his first call with Russian President Vladimir Putin as counterparts last week, Biden raised concerns about the detention of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and the crackdown on supporters backing his arrest. The mass arrests have only accelerated in the days since the two leaders spoke as protests have continued across the country.

For Putin, he looks at the Capitol riot and sees it as more evidence of his worldview, a continuation of the degradation of liberalism in the world, said Michael McFaul, who served as U.S. ambassador to Russia in the Obama administration. The Biden election doesnt mean much to him about his theory about liberal democracy. Whereas Putins opponents are very encouraged by the election of President Biden because it shows that American democratic institutions were resilient.

To that end, Navalnys supporters wrote to Biden over the weekend urging him to take meaningful action with sanctions against members of Putins inner circle to demonstrate that hes serious about reclaiming the U.S. role as a champion of democracy.

Their argument is, If you just sanction a bunch of no-name, low-level colonels ... thats exactly who Putin is expecting, McFaul said. They want the Biden administration to sanction the economic actors in the Putin regime, and theyve made it easy for the Biden administration in theyve named them all in their seven-page letter.

But Moscow chided the criticism of the Navalny verdict, with Russias deputy U.N. ambassador Dmitry Polyansky tweeting, A Russian citizen sentenced by Russian court in accordance with Russian laws. Who gave US the right to judge if it was wrongful or not? Wouldnt you mind your own business, gentlemen? Recent events show that there are a lot of things for you to mend!

Rep. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat and chair of the House Intelligence Committee, drew a line from Trump to the coup in Myanmar. Trump had made baseless accusations of widespread voter fraud that were rejected by multiple courts as well as Trumps own Justice Department.

An announcement read on Myanmars military-owned Myawaddy TV explained that the seizure was necessary because the government had not acted on the militarys unsubstantiated claims of fraud in the Southeast Asian nations recent elections. The military claimed the takeover was legal under the constitution

When America speaks and acts, the world watches, and when our leaders propagate conspiracy theories and subvert democracy here at home, it sets a dangerous example for the rest of the world, Schiff said.

Adversaries such as China, Iran and Venezuela pointed to the Capitol riot as evidence of the fragility of U.S. democracy. Even some allies said the scene was unsettling and has caused them to reconsider the United States position as the self-proclaimed beacon of democracy.

After something like this, I believe it would be very difficult for the world to see the United States as a symbol of democracy, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskiy said in an interview with Axios on HBO.

___

Associated Press writer Darlene Superville contributed to this report.

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Biden tries to show US as democracy beacon post-Capitol riot - The Associated Press

Democracy or the white supremacist mob: which side is the Republican party on? – The Guardian

In 2001, nine days after terrorists attacked the United States and its federal government, a Republican president stood before Congress with the overwhelming support of a terrified nation, as he presented a stark choice to the world.

Every nation in every region now has a decision to make: either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists, said George W Bush to loud applause in September 2001. From this day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime.

Thus was born the post-9/11 era, which survived for the best part of two decades, costing trillions of dollars and tens of thousands of lives, and realigning American diplomacy and politics in stark terms.

Republicans fought and won two elections on the basis that they were strong and unequivocal in defending the nation, while Democrats were weak flip-floppers who tried to have it both ways.

Today Washington is staring at something like a new dawn the start of the post-Trump era and Republicans dont know which side of the war theyre on. Are they with the United States or with the insurrectionists?

The early answers are catastrophically weak in a world where the threats are not distant or abstract. This is not a risk posed to American officials halfway around the world, or a potential threat that might one day materialize in a foreign capital.

This is a clear and present danger for the very members of Congress who must now decide between protecting their own careers or protecting the lives of the people working down the hall. With the second impeachment trial of Donald J Trump starting next week, theres no escaping the moment of decision for at least 50 Republican senators: are you with the United States or not?

In every single other working environment, this would not be a hard choice. Given the chance to save your own job or save the lives of your co-workers even the ones you dislike the vast majority of decent people would save lives.

Just listen to the first-hand accounts of representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Katie Porter. Ocasio-Cortez gave a chilling account of hiding in her office bathroom to save her life as insurrectionists stormed the Capitol last month.

Theres no question that she, like many others, feared for her life. Porter recalled her friend desperately seeking refuge in her office. She gave Ocasio-Cortez a pair of sneakers in case they needed to run for their lives.

The mortal threat was not confined to high-profile Democrats. Mike Pence, the most toady of Trump loyalists, was hiding from the mob with his family, while terrorists chanted about hanging him. If anyone needed confirmation of their murderous intent, there was a makeshift gallows outside the Capitol.

It is long past time to admit the blindingly obvious: the Republican party has been hijacked by fascist extremists. It is now a far-right organization in league with neo-Nazis who have made it painfully clear they want to overthrow democracy and seize power, using violence if necessary.

Every decision the so-called leaders make at this point defines which side they are on: the United States as we know it, or the white supremacist mob.

In these few weeks since the mob trashed the Capitol, leading to five deaths, Republican leaders have bathed themselves less in glory than in the sewage of fascism. Given a choice between the conservative Liz Cheney and the fascist Marjorie Taylor Greene, House Republicans have shunned the former and hugged the latter.

Its Cheney whose position as part of the Republican leadership is under threat, while Greene is only coming under pressure from Democrats who for some reason find themselves alone in feeling horrified by Greenes advocacy for the execution of Democrats and white supremacy in general.

Republican leaders now find themselves in a prisoners dilemma of their own making. Both Mitch McConnell in the US Senate and Kevin McCarthy in the House of Representatives could escape the worst public punishment if they act together to take back their own party. Instead, they are ratting on each other.

McConnell said in a statement on Monday that Greene posed an existential threat to the party. Loony lies and conspiracy theories are cancer for the Republican party and our country, he said, while also supporting Cheneys leadership.

Technically this is McCarthys mess to clean up, in the House rather than the Senate. But McCarthy cant bring himself to say something in public about the QAnon cultist Greene, or what she represents.

Instead he traveled to Florida at the weekend to kiss the ring of the man who really stands at the center of this threat to our democracy: one Donald J Trump, who is supposedly a Greene fan, according to Greene herself.

There may be rational short-term reasons why McConnell and McCarthy have parted ways on this fascist thing.

McConnell just lost control of the Senate because its challenging to win statewide contests even in conservative places like Georgia when youre trying to overthrow democracy at the same time. McCarthy, meanwhile, deludes himself that he can get closer to power because House districts are so gerrymandered that Republicans are only threatened by the cannibalizing power of the mob.

But in reality, there is no choice. This isnt about loony lies or conspiracy theories, as McConnell suggests. Its not about Republican primaries or Trumps disapproval, as McCarthy fears.

The choice in front of Republicans is whether they support democracy or not; whether they want to live and work in fear of the mob, or not. QAnon may be loony but its goals are to murder elected officials, and its supporters include heavily armed insurrectionists. The 1930s fascists were also unhinged and proved themselves deadly serious about mass murder.

Next week Republicans in Washington have one more chance to turn their backs on fascism. They could reject the laughable claims from Trumps lawyers that he was merely exercising his free speech rights by telling his mob to march on Congress and fight like hell. Apparently such conduct does not constitute incitement to riot, because the word incitement has lost all relationship to reality.

Nobody expects Republican senators to vote in enough numbers to convict Trump of the obvious charges that played out on television. Nobody expects enough of them to reject the violent overthrow of the democracy that put them in the Senate.

They represent, to use Bushs language, a hostile regime inside the nations capital. Until Republicans split with the insurrectionists by ejecting them from their party or forming their own democracy itself is unsafe.

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Democracy or the white supremacist mob: which side is the Republican party on? - The Guardian

Biden urged to create commission on trust in democracy – The Fulcrum

At a time when democracy feels most fragile, in the wake of a divisive election fueled by disinformation and an insurrection at the Capitol, two good-government groups have a new proposal for restoring trust in democracy.

The Alliance for Securing Democracy and the Center for Democracy and Technology released a report Tuesday urging President Biden to establish a bipartisan commission dedicated to restoring the public's trust in elections and democracy. It would build off work done by a similar election commission created in 2013 under President Barack Obama.

Ideally the Biden administration would form this new commission as soon as possible so its members could make recommendations ahead of the 2022 midterms. The report suggests allowing at least six months for the commission to collect its findings, although more time may be needed given the Covid-19 pandemic.

"Our elections last year were remarkably well run considering the circumstances and yet there is a large segment of the population that feels, without evidence, that the election was not legitimate, so we can't afford to dither. We need to get to work right away," said David Levine, co-author of the report and elections integrity fellow at the Alliance for Securing Democracy.

The report urges Biden to issue an executive order to create the Presidential Commission on Election Resilience and Trust, charged with identifying best practices "to improve understanding of the electoral process and promote voter confidence so that more people across the political spectrum recognize elections as legitimate."

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The commission's membership would be bipartisan and include representatives from both the public and private sectors. Members would also reflect a diverse set of racial and ethnic groups since marginalized communities are disproportionately affected by election disinformation and voter intimidation, according to the report. It doesn't specify how many people should serve on the commission. (Obama's Presidential Commission on Election Administration had 10 members.)

The report recommends the commission focus on three topics to start:

The proposed commission should also hold publicly accessible meetings, available via livestream amid the pandemic, so that stakeholders and members of the public can provide feedback and testimony, the report says.

Restoring the public's faith and trust in elections won't be an easy feat, but "there are plenty of reforms that we already know we need, like the expanded use of risk-limiting audits," said William T. Adler, co-author of the report and senior technologist on elections and democracy at the Center for Democracy and Technology. "There are other reforms that we need to study and build consensus around. That will take time, and we need to get started right now."

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Biden urged to create commission on trust in democracy - The Fulcrum

Arts Project ONLINE continues Essence of Democracy Series with ‘Dying to Dream’ | Penn State University – Penn State News

The Essence of Democracy is anArts Project ONLINE virtual event series featuring conversations with artists whose work gives voice to those often unheard. AnnLalik, gallery director and arts coordinator at Penn State Lehigh Valley (PSU-LV), will moderate the panel consisting of the artist, PSU-LV faculty or staff and a student whose discipline, life experiences and interests align with the artists message and concept.

Ify Chiejina's "Thrown Off The Boat" acrylic painting.

The webinar series amplifiesvoices that are often stifled throughracism, gender discrimination, homophobia, ableism, etc.Oftenfear or ignorance allowthe perpetuation of suppression through systemic oppression.

The third event in the series will be held from 2 to3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 11. Featured New York City artistIfeatuanyaChiejina(Ify)will be joined byPSU-LV ChancellorTina Richardsonand PSU-LV student Makayla Brown-Paul, in this event. Titled Dying to Dream,the subject mattersymbolically illustrates the black experience through times of slavery, colonialism and racial discrimination.

Ify Chiejina, New York City artist, will speak at the next virtual Arts project online event.

Chiejina is a visual artist born and raised in Queens, New York. Chiejina is a black Igbo female with ideas, thoughts, and truths that are rooted and reflective of different customs and traditions. As a Nigerian-American, Chiejina considers the tensions and complexities that come with being brought up in an African household, in a western society. Chiejina has completed a certificate program from the Caribbean Cultural Center of African Diaspora Institutes Community Arts University Without Walls in 2015. She has participated in residencies at Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. Chiejina has showcased her art for SMO Contemporary Art, Prizm Art Fair, Penn State Lehigh Valleyand her paintings are in the Petrucci Family Foundation Collection.Chiejinahas also completed cover art for the Criterion Collectionand isone of the founding membersofthe Southeast Queens Artist Alliance, (SEQAA).

All Arts Project ONLINE events will be hosted via Zoom and are free and open to the public. Each session will be in webinar format witha Q&A opportunityat the end of the program.Visit theEssence of Democracy registration pagetosign upand receive the zoominformation.

This series is supported by the Dr. Ann Williams Visiting Innovator Program Endowment, Student Activity Fee and the PA Council on the Arts.

Contact AnnLalikwith questions at aal13@psu.edu or by calling 610-285-5261.

Last Updated February 02, 2021

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Arts Project ONLINE continues Essence of Democracy Series with 'Dying to Dream' | Penn State University - Penn State News

Its Time to Demilitarize Our Democracy – The Nation

A member of the Minnesota National Guard stands watch on the grounds of the Minnesota state capitol on June 1, 2020. (Sgt. Linsey Williams, CC BY 2.0)

EDITORS NOTE: This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on top of important articles like these, sign up to receive the latest updates from TomDispatch.

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This months insurrection at the Capitol revealed the dismal failure of the Capitol Police and the Department of Defense to use their expertise and resources to thwart a clear and present danger to our democracy. As the government reform group Public Citizen tweeted, If youre spending $740,000,000,000 annually on defense but fascists dressed for the renaissance fair can still storm the Capitol as they please, maybe its time to rethink national security?

At a time of acute concern about the health of our democracy, any such rethinking must, among other things, focus on strengthening the authority of civilians and civilian institutions over the military in an American world where almost the only subject the two parties in Congress can agree on is putting up ever more money for the Pentagon. This means so many in our political system need to wean themselves from the counterproductive habit of reflexively seeking out military or retired military voices to validate them on issues ranging from public health to border security that should be quite outside the militarys purview.

Its certainly one of the stranger phenomena of our era: After 20 years of endless war in which trillions of dollars were spent and hundreds of thousands died on all sides without the US military achieving anything approaching victory, the Pentagon continues to be funded at staggering levels, while funding to deal with the greatest threats to our safety and national securityfrom the pandemic to climate change to white supremacyproves woefully inadequate. In good times and bad, the US military and the industrial complex that surrounds it, which President Dwight D. Eisenhower first warned us about in 1961, continue to maintain a central role in Washington, even though theyre remarkably irrelevant to the biggest challenges facing our democracy.

These days, its completely normal for military and defense officials to weigh in endlessly on what once would have been civilian matters. As the Biden years begin, its time to give some serious thought to how to demilitarize our democracy.

Unfortunately, in the America of 2021, the short-term benefit of relying on the widely accepted credibility of military figures to promote policies of every sort is obvious indeed. Who in the political class in the nations capital wouldnt want a stamp of approval from dozens of generals, active or retired, endorsing their favorite initiative or candidate? (Its something in years past the authors of this piece have been guilty of as well.) As it happens, though, such approval comes at a high price, undermining as it does the authority of civilian officials and agencies, while skewing resources toward the Pentagon that should be invested elsewhere to keep us truly safe.

Its an essential attribute of the American system that the military remains under civilian authority. These days, however, given the number of current or retired military officers who have become key arbiters of what we should do on a dizzying array of critical issues, civilian control is the policy equivalent of an endangered species.

In the last election season, long before the attack on the Capitol, there was already an intense national discussion about how to prevent violence at the polls, a conversation that all too quickly (and disturbingly) focused on what role the military should play in the process. Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was repeatedly asked to provide assurances that it would have no role in determining the outcome of the election, something that in another America would have been a given.Current Issue

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Meanwhile, some actually sought more military involvement. For example, in a widely debated open letter to Milley, retired Army officers John Nagl and Paul Yingling stated that if Donald Trump refuses to leave office at the expiration of his constitutional term, the United States military must remove him by force, and you must give that order. Proposals of this sort undermine the integrity of the many laws Congress and the states have put in place to prevent the military or armed vigilantes from playing any role in the electoral process.

Similarly, both former President Trump and President Joe Biden have identified the military as a key future player in distributing the Covid-19 vaccine, something that could and should be handled by public health institutions, if only they, like the Pentagon, had adequate resources.

During and after the attack on the Capitol, officials from the military and national security worlds were given pride of place in discussions about the future of our democracy. Their opinions were sought out by the media and others on a wide range of issues that fell well outside their primary areas of expertise. A letter from 10 former secretaries of defense calling on the Republican caucus to respect the results of the election was given headline attention, while political figures pressed to have retired military officers involved in the January 6 assault tried in military, not civilian, courts.

Before pursuing the second impeachment of Trump, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi typically turned to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs (who isnt even in the civilian chain of command) to seek assurance that he could stop the president from starting a last-minute nuclear war. And none of this was faintly unusual, given that retired military officers have regularly been asked to weigh in on subjects as varied as abortion rights, climate change, and childhood obesity. Its not, of course, that such figures shouldnt be able, like anyone else, to offer their opinions or support on matters of public health and safety, but that their voices shouldnt matter more than those of public health experts, scientists, medical professionals, or other civilians.

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Despite its failure to win a war in decades, the military remains one of Americas most respected institutions, getting the kind of appreciation that generally doesnt extend to other more successful public servants. After almost 20 years of forever wars, its hard, at this point, to accept that the militarys reputation for wisdom is deserved. In fact, continually relying on retired generals and other present or former national security officials as validators effectively erodes the credibility of, and the publics trust in, other institutions that are meant to keep us healthy and safe.

In the Covid-19 moment, it should be clear that relying on narrowly defined notions of national security harms our democracy, a subject that none of those military or former military figures are likely to deal with. In addition, in all too many cases, current and retired military officials have abused the public trust in ways that call into question their right to serve as judges of whats important, or even to imagine that they could provide objective advice. For one thing, a striking number of high-ranking officers on leaving the military pass through the infamous revolving door of the military-industrial complex into positions as executives, lobbyists, board members, or consultants for the defense industry. They work on behalf of firms like Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and General Dynamics that receive a combined $100 billion annually in Pentagon contracts with little accountability, even as they remain key go-to media figures.

They then use their former rank and the prestige attached to it to lobby Congress and influence the media on the need for endless wars and an ever-increasing military budget to support major weapons programs like Lockheed Martins troubled F-35 Joint Strike Fighterall without bothering to disclose that they stand to gain financially from the positions theyre taking. And the prospect of a big, fat salary in the weapons sector upon retirement also exerts an unhealthy influence on officers still serving in the military who are often loath to anger, or in any way alienate, their potential future employers.

This revolving-door phenomenon is widespread. A study by the Project on Government Oversight found that, in 2018 alone, there were 645 cases in which the top 20 defense contractors hired former government officials, military officers, members of Congress, and senior congressional legislative staff as lobbyists, board members, or executives. This should hardly inspire public trust in their opinions.

In some cases, ex-military officers have even taken to the airwaves and the op-ed pages of newspapers to advocate for war without disclosing their ties to the arms industry. A 2008 New York Times investigation, for example, revealed that a number of retired officers turned media pundits with continuing defense industry ties had, for years, advocated for the Iraq War at the Pentagons behest. Ex-generals like former Trump administration Defense Secretary James Mattis, who served on the board of General Dynamics before taking the helm of the Pentagon and returned there shortly after stepping down, too often use their stature to refrain from providing basic information to the media while befogging the transparency and accountability that should be a pillar of democracy.

When civilian voices and policies are eclipsed as the central determinants in how our democracy should operate, a larger dilemma arises: continuing to rely on the military as a primary source of judgment for whats right or wrong in the civilian world risks politicizing the armed forces, too. From retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn leading chants of Lock her up! at the 2016 Republican National Convention to the competition between Hillary Clinton and Trump as well as, in the 2020 election campaign, between Joe Biden and Trump to see who could get more retired generals to endorse him or her only helps militarize the civilian election process and politicizes what should be a nonpartisan institution.

Given the more than a trillion dollars Americans annually invest in the national security state, its striking to note, for instance, how such institutions let us down when it came to addressing the threats of white nationalism. Last summer, The Intercept uncovered a buried FBI report on the shortcomings of various federal agencies when it came to dealing with domestic terrorism. Before the 2020 election, the bureau refused to release that report on the domestic threat of white supremacy. Last year, in a similar fashion, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) withheld for months its assessment of the same lethal threat of racist extremism in this country.

While there must be a full investigation of what happened at the Capitol on January 6, reports seem to indicate a striking blindness in the national security state to the possibility of such an attack. Its not that the DHS, the FBI, or the military needs an influx of new funds to face the problem. Rather, whats needed at this moment in history is a clearer focus on the real risks to our country, which have little to do with foreign terrorists, the Taliban, or other such groups the United States has been fighting abroad for years on end. The Department of Defense typically did itself and the rest of us no favors by burying a report on widespread racism in the ranks of the military, which, though completed in 2017, didnt see the light of day until this January. Only in the aftermath of the riot at the Capitol did that organization finally begin to truly address its own white-supremacy problems.

The military, like so many other American institutions, has failed to reckon seriously with deep-seated racism in its ranks. Even before the January 6 insurrection, it was clear that such racism made it nearly impossible for Black officers to be promoted. And while many questioned the naming of key military bases after Confederate generals, the issue has only recently been addressed (over a presidential veto at that) with the creation of a new commission to rename them. Reports of active duty, reserve, and veteran members of the military aiding the Capitol insurrection only bring into stark relief the inexcusable costs of not having addressed the problem earlier.

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There are also high costs to be paid for relying on the Department of Defense to handle problems that have nothing to do with its primary mission. Using the armed forces as key players in addressing crises that arent military in nature only further undermines civilian institutions and is often counterproductive as well.

In the initial stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, a number of politicians called for President Trump to use the Defense Production Act (as it seems Biden will indeed soon do) and the Department of Defense to ramp up the production of N95 masks, ventilators, and other personal protective equipment. The story of what happened to such funds in the Trump years should be telling. The Washington Post discovered that $1 billion in supposed pandemic relief money was instead funneled directly to defense contractors and $70 million of the funds the Pentagon spent went to ventilators that proved unfit for Covid-19 patients. While some of that money did go to bolster mask supply chains, another Post investigation discovered that such efforts did not come close to addressing national shortfalls and amounted to less than the department spends on instruments, uniforms, and travel for military bands.

Perhaps the most disturbing cost of our overreliance on the military can be found in Congresss budget and policy priorities. In December of last year, a bill to authorize nearly $740 billion in Pentagon spending garnered enough votes to easily overcome President Trumps veto (motivated mainly by his refusal to condone renaming military bases named after Confederate generals) at the very moment when Congress was blocking legislation to give $2,000 relief checks directly to Covid-embattled Americans.

By now, two decades into the 21st century, its clear that more money for the Pentagon hasnt made this country safer. It has, however, helped give the military an ever more central role in our previously civilian political world. Bidens selection of retired Gen. Lloyd Austin III to be secretary of defense only emphasizes this point. While its certainly laudatory to appoint the first Black leader to that position, Austin has retired so recently that he needed a congressional waiver from a law requiring a seven-year cooling off period before taking up such a civilian post (just as Mattis did four years ago)another sign that civilian control of the military is continuing to weaken. In addition, now that he has retired from his role in private industry, Austin stands to make a small fortune, up to $1.7 million, when he divests his stock holdings in Raytheon Technologies.

In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex, President Eisenhower warned Americans in his 1961 farewell address. How right he proved to be! Sixty years later, its become all too clear that more must be done to deal with that very unwarranted influence. The immediate crises of the American republic should be clear enough right now: responding to the pandemic and restoring our civilian democracy. Certainly, military leaders like Milley should be appreciated for agreeing on the need to prioritize the pandemic and oppose sedition. However, more Pentagon spending and more military influence will not, in the end, make us any safer.

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Its Time to Demilitarize Our Democracy - The Nation