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Monday, August 31, 2015

Are we doomed to repeat the past?

When I was a child growing up in Scotland my parents brought me up within the Presbyterian traditions of the Church of Scotland - the Kirk, which in many ways acted as the moral compass of our small, northern nation.  Although I never acquired the sense of Faith felt by my mother and father, and I am not a Christian, I have taken with me into adulthood and my life in the world fundamental tenets that have guided 'Believers' across centuries - millennia, I suppose.

Among those fundamentals are these two pillars of decency and civilised co-existence:

  • First, there's the 'Golden Rule' also known as the 'ethic of reciprocity'. I know best the Christian version from the Sermon on the Mount and rendered in the King James Bible as ... "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets." (Matthew 7:12)  Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.  It's a maxim one finds in every major religion and, I have no doubt, in any moral framework where religion isn't the driver.
  • Second, there is this ... "Blessed are the peacemakers".  Same sermon but this time Matthew 5:9.  It speaks for itself, don't you think?
Those thoughts came to mind while I was reading an article in my beloved Guardian.  You can read it here:
Chancellor says cash will create thousands of jobs at home of Trident deterrent and criticises Labour leadership hopeful’s anti-nuclear stance

The replacement cost for the Trident nuclear missile system on the UK's four - allegedly independent - nuclear-armed submarines is estimated to be at least £100 Billion over the next 35 years.  One hundred billion pounds - at 2012 prices - to replace a weapon that has never been used, should never be used, and which, if used, would signal the end of all human life.

The Trident-class nuclear submarine Vanguard. 
The Trident submarine base is located in a sea loch on the River Clyde in Scotland about 30 miles from where I was born and raised.  As the crow flies ... or nuclear missile soars, come to think of it ... the submarine base is just over 63 miles from the isle of Iona where - in 563 AD - an Irish prince by the name of Columba arrived on a missionary expedition that led to the introduction of Christianity across Scotland. When I was maybe two or three years old my father carried me on his shoulders as our family made its way across the beach to what's known as the Iona Community - blessed peacemakers if ever there were such people - where he and other volunteers were working to renovate and refurbish the community's buildings.

Iona, Scotland
Today's story in the Guardian made me sad and angry.  Scotland needs investment in its people, infrastructure and future.  Half a billion pounds to bolster the nuclear offensive capability of NATO is, however, something no one needs.

As sometimes happens, maybe often, the news set me off on one of my below the line rants in the paper's comments section.  This is it:

It seems we still have to ask the question the proponents of Mutually Assured Destruction have never been able to answer ... In what conceivable circumstances would or could a British Prime Minister independently authorise the firing of nuclear armed missiles and at which - or any - known, likely or foreseeable 'first strike' enemy?

Given there are none - not one, not ever - Trident is not now and never has been the UK's nuclear deterrent. It deters nothing and no one and would never be used independently of an authorisation from the USA via its front organisation NATO. Trident is a tool of MAD in a box wholly owned and controlled by American foreign policy

And given the genocidal consequences of nuclear war, MAD and the impossibility of a 'first strike capability' resulting in anything other than those two outcomes what social, economic or moral purpose does Trident serve?

That's right ... none. Not one. Never.

Have we still not learned?  Make peace, not war.  Join CND.