The headline on the front page of the January 14, 2004,
edition of the New York Times read,
Bush Plans $1.5 Billion Drive for Promotion of
Marriage. According to administration officials,
the money would be used to train couples to develop
interpersonal skills in order to sustain healthy
marriages. This from a president who belongs to the
Republican Party, the party that once claimed to stand
for limited government and fiscal discipline. Bushs
proposal is further proof that compassionate
conservatism is just a euphemism for big-government
conservatism. With federal budget deficits spiraling out
of control, the amount Bush wants to spend on his latest
initiative brings to mind the late Sen. Everett Dirksen,
who once remarked, A billion here and a billion
there, and soon youre talking real money.
But one need not read the Times article much
further before learning the raison dêtre for
Bushs interest in using the resources of the
federal government to bestow the blessings of healthy
marriages on the American people. This is a way for
the president to address the concerns of conservatives
and to solidify his conservative base, a
presidential advisor is quoted as saying. In other words,
President Bush wants to use tax dollars forcibly taken
from American citizens to fund programs whose
effectiveness cannot be measured, in order to mollify the
family values wing of the Republican Party.
It is a classic example of robbing Peter to buy the votes
of Paul.
One does not have to be a seer to predict what will
happen with Bushs marriage initiative if it is
implemented. If divorce rates begin to decline a few
years from now and out-of-wedlock births continue their
downward trend, conservatives will point to the
statistics as proof that the programs work and are a good
use of taxpayer money and that spending even more money
will bring even better results. But if the stats show
very little change, supporters can be counted on to argue
that it demonstrates the need for even more money to
surmount the problem.
If the Democrats call for abolishing federally funded
marriage programs because of their ineffectiveness,
conservative Republicans will predictably respond by
accusing the Democrats of being against marriage and
traditional families. Thus, federal programs to
strengthen marriage will become sanctified, just as Bush
and big-government conservatives have already sanctified
Bill Clintons AmeriCorps program as exemplifying
the spirit of national service in America.
Left unsaid by the Times article, and
probably even overlooked by those who might oppose
Bushs marriage initiative, is the tremendous damage
already inflicted on the marriages of those serving in
the U.S. armed forces by the presidents greatest
policy blunder his decision to invade Iraq nearly a
year ago. It is no secret that the terrible weapons of
mass destruction that Bush used as his fig leaf for
justifying the invasion of Iraq have not been found and
probably did not even exist. No concrete evidence has
turned up that Saddam Hussein provided any support to
al-Qaeda or had anything to do with 9/11. The degraded
condition of Iraqs infrastructure and the fact that
the Iraqi army, with the exception of the Fedayeen Saddam
fighters, largely melted away in the face of the U.S.
armys advance make ludicrous the claim that Iraq
posed a threat to the United States and the world, let
alone to Saddam Husseins neighbors.
There are approximately 130,000 American military
personnel in Iraq currently overseeing the occupation of
that country and its transition to a postSaddam
Hussein Iraqi government. Anyone who reads the newspapers
or watches the news programs on television knows that
American soldiers are under attack on a daily basis.
Since the war began, 500 American soldiers have been
killed and at least several thousand wounded, with most
of the casualties inflicted after President Bush declared
an end to major combat operations on May 1, 2003. Some of
those who were killed or seriously wounded were men who
had wives and children.
It takes only a few minutes to search the Internet to put
faces and names on the dead and maimed. Anyone can go to
the website for the Atlanta Journal-
Constitution to read the profiles of the dead.
Among the fallen who were married and had children are:
Army Pvt. Shawn Pahnke, killed by a sniper on June 16,
2003. Private Pahnke was able to listen over the phone as
his wife gave birth to their son on March 20, 2003. That
is the closest Private Pahnke ever got to being in the
same room with little Dean Pahnke.
Marine Lance Cpl. Donald John Cline was killed in combat
on March 23, 2003. Though only 21 years old at the time
of his death, he left behind a wife and two sons, one 2
years old and the other 7 months old.
Army Staff Sgt. Daniel Bader, 28 years old, was one 16
soldiers killed on November 2, 2003 when the helicopter
he was riding in was downed. Ironically, the chopper was
carrying troops who were to be sent home on leave from
Iraq. Sergeant Bader had a wife and a daughter, who is
now 14 months old.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution quotes
Baders wife, Tiffany: It hasnt hit me
yet, that Im not going to have a husband. That
Im a widow at 30. That my little girl is going to
be raised without a father.
Then there are those who have been wounded. They include
Sgt. John Adams of Florida, who was wounded during an
ambush on August 29, 2003. Sergeant Adams was featured in
a segment on ABCs Nightline. Before
his injuries, he was a part-time soldier who worked in
the lawn-care business. An explosion left pieces of
shrapnel and fragments of bone in his brain. As a result,
his speech is halting and garbled, and his wife, Summer,
must help him with the most basic of tasks. Sergeant
Adams says the fragments cannot be removed, because
if they operate then they will have to take half the
brain out. Summer Adams admits, Im so
tired. Im lucky if I get a full nights sleep
now. I cant. Its very stressful.
Supporters of the war in Iraq would very likely say that
while these examples are tragic, they are no different
than what happens in any war. But what if these soldiers
were killed or wounded in a war that did not need to be
fought? The latest addition to the arsenal of opponents
of Bushs decision to invade Iraq is a report
published by Jeffrey Record for the Army War College.
Professor Record concludes that Iraq was a
war-of-choice distraction from the war of necessity against
al-Qaeda.
Since all of the justifications put forth by the Bush
administration and its supporters have been proven
baseless, at least in the minds of those who believe the
invasion of Iraq was a bad idea, the one argument the
Iraq hawks have left to fall back on is that Saddam
Hussein was an evil despot who oppressed his people. One
need not be a supporter of Bushs Iraq policy to
agree that Saddam Hussein is a monster. But that does not
provide sufficient justification for the United States to
shoulder the burden in lives, money, and squandered
international goodwill, to forcibly remove him from
power. The United States military exists to protect the
American people. Its phone number is not
1-800-DEPOSE-A-DICTATOR.
After having committed the United States to spending
hundreds of billions of dollars to transform Iraq into a
democracy, President Bush wants to spend another $1.5
billion to strengthen the institution of marriage here in
America. It is doubtful that any of that money will be
spent to ease the burden of Summer Adams in taking care
of her wounded husband or to recompense Tiffany Bader and
her daughter, who will grow up never having known her
father. Who can say what positive impact that $1.5 billion
will have on anyones marriage in the
future? What we do know is that there have been many
marriages already destroyed by President Bushs
reckless decision to send 130,000 American men and women in
uniform to invade Iraq and fight an unnecessary war.
Thomas Kearney is a libertarian residing in Plainview, New York. Send him email.
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