Friday, October 5, 2012

Rawls and the Abolition of the Family


...just a quick side note, I hope to have more peace podcasts out soon once I have finished my next two essays. Thanks for your interest. Stay tuned and leave lots of comments :)



Does justice as fairness imply the abolition the family?

Justice as fairness has had a profound effect on political theory. This essay seeks to establish whether justice as fairness implies the abolition of the family or whether justice as fairness implies the more modest action of reform. The essay begins with an explanation of the key concepts such as the ‘basic structure’ and the ‘veil of ignorance’ in Justice As Fairness: A Restatement by John Rawls. The ideas of Susan Moller Okin and Veronique Munoz-Dardée will be discussed in order to go beyond Rawls’s limited writings on the topic in order to consider more fully how his principles of justice interact with the institution of the family. For this topic I will attempt to separate the normative elements from the empirical elements while acknowledging that one’s perspective on the empirical elements of the institution of the family may influence their perspective of what justice as fairness requires for the institution in a normative sense.

Rawls uses a device called the ‘veil of ignorance’ through which he suggests that risk-averse and rational participants would choose the following two principles of justice to apply to the basic structure. The two principles of justice are as follows

a)                  ‘Each person has the same indefensible claim to a fully adequate scheme of equal basic liberties, which scheme is compatible with the same scheme of liberties for all; and
b)                  Social and economic inequalities are to satisfy two conditions: first, they are to be attached to offices and positions open to all under conditions of fair equality of opportunity and second, they are to be to the greatest benefit of the least-advantaged members of society (the difference principle).’[1]

The basic structure, which Rawls seeks to apply these principles of justice to, ‘is the way in which the main political and social institutions of society fit together into one system of social cooperation, and the way they assign basic rights and duties and regulate the division of advantages that arises from social cooperation over time.’ The basic structure consists of ‘the political constitution with an independent judiciary, the legally recognised forms of property, and the structure of the economy (for example, as a system of competitive markets with private property in the means of production), as well as the family in some form.’ [2]

Rawls includes the family in the basic structure because ‘one of its essential roles is to establish the orderly production and reproduction of society and of its culture from one generation to the next.’[3] Rawls suggests that ‘no particular form of the family (monogamous, heterosexual, or otherwise) is so far required by a political conception of justice so long as it is arranged to fulfil these tasks effectively and does not run afoul of other political values.’[4] However, Rawls, somewhat ambiguously limits the scope that the principles of justice have in their affect upon the family by suggesting that ‘political principles do not apply directly to its [the family’s] internal life but they do impose essential constraints on the family as an institution and guarantee the basic rights and liberties and fair opportunities for all its members.’[5]

One may question how the substance of this formal equality can arise without directly affecting the internal life of the institution. If the family, in its current and historical modes is perceived to be moderately unjust and in need of minor reform, Rawls’s approach would seem reasonable and remain consistent with values of liberty. Whereas, if the family, in its current and historical modes is perceived to be severely unjust and in need of major reform or abolition, then one would be more sympathetic to an approach where the family is directly the subject matter of the principles of justice.

In Justice, Gender, and the Family, Okin provides a generally constructive critique of Rawls’s Justice As Fairness from a feminist perspective. In her response to Justice As Fairness and Rawls’s other works she suggests that Rawls uses sexist language and largely ignores historical injustices directed towards women and their subjugation within the family. This has led Okin to feel obliged to ask, ‘does this theory of justice apply to women?’[6] Okin’s drawn out critique of Rawls’s sexist language, while accurate and somewhat relevant, is on the weaker side of her criticism. The strongest challenge that she presents to Rawls is questioning what grounding he has to omit the institution of the family from the direct impact of the principles of justice as they apply to the rest of the basic structure.

Rawls suggests that the principles of justice apply to broader political and economic institutions rather than to the internal life of private groups and associations such as ‘firms and labour unions, churches, universities, and the family.’[7] He uses the example of a church being able to excommunicate heretics but not being allowed to burn them. This, according to Rawls, is compatible with justice as fairness. Although Rawls may not personally believe such an action is justified, he is seeking to establish a system of political justice rather than a moral framework such as utilitarianism which is significantly more comprehensive in its scope. In the same way, Rawls sees the institution of the family as ‘bound by the constraints arising from the principles of justice’, but only ‘indirectly from just background institutions within which associations and groups exist, and by which the conduct of their members is restricted.’[8] He points out that women and men ‘are equal citizens and have equal basic rights,’ and goes on to state that ‘to establish equality between men and women in sharing the work of society, in preserving its culture and in reproducing itself over time, special provisions are needed in family law (and no doubt elsewhere) so that the burden of bearing, raising, and educating children does not fall more heavily on women, thereby undermining their fair equality of opportunity.’[9]

Rawls explicitly argues for reform as opposed to more radical change such as abolition in securing justice for all peoples including those who form part of a family institution. While Okin does not directly call for the abolition of the family in Justice, Gender, And The Family, she does believe that ‘a consistent and wholehearted application of Rawls’s liberal principles of justice can lead us to challenge fundamentally the gender system of our society.’[10] It is apparent that this is not the purpose of justice as fairness as intended by Rawls. However, if Okin is right in suggesting that Rawl’s principles of justice would ‘fundamentally change the gender system of our society’, then these same principles would ultimately impact on the family which is an institution which has historically been largely shaped through the gender system.

Another important analysis of what Rawls’s theory means for the institution of the family is presented by Munoz-Dardé in Is the Family to Be Abolished Then?. She makes several empirical claims as background to her argument. The article begins with the assertion that ‘the family is one of the main causes of morally arbitrary inequality. Moreover, it is not inequality which makes everyone better off.’[11] This empirical claim is directly appealing to Rawls’s ‘difference principle’ which was explained earlier. The same claim could also be made about private property. It seems likely that private property also does not satisfy the difference principle in being of the ‘greatest benefit of the least advantaged members of society.’[12] In the same way, the author suggests that the difference principle should lead us to question whether the family is to the greatest benefit of its lest well-off members. To satisfy the ‘difference principle’ in this case, one may need to consider whether the institution of the family benefits women and children, or at least, whether the inequalities created by the institution are to their maximum benefit. Such a broad empirical assertion cannot be made here, but it will suffice to say that there are conceivable instances of the family working to either the advantage or the disadvantage of its least well-off members.

Munoz-Dardé views child rearing by elders within a community as an essential function of the family and she describes the family by this function. Understanding that children must still be cared for if the family were to be abolished, she contrasts the institution of the family with a well-run orphanage. In Marriage and Morals, Russel suggests the state substitution of the family would come with both positive and negative consequences. He argues that health and education have improved due to state intervention in Western nations. However, he also point to ‘grave dangers’ in trusting the state in the role of ‘parenting’ children. The main issue of concern for Russell is that the state is likely to treat children as a means rather than an ends, whereas, due to individual bonds between parents and their children, parents are more likely to treat their children as an ends in themselves. After referring to Russell’s argument, Munoz-Dardé concedes that the abolition of the family in favour of a well run orphanage ‘would probably pose such extreme threats to individual liberty and capacity for self-determination, that it would defeat the very purpose that made us envisage its substitution by a well-run orphanage.’[13]

Munoz-Dardé does suggest that state marriage should be abolished because it ‘creates inequalities which are not beneficial to the worst-off.’[14] However, she does not see any need to intervene upon the institution as a ritual or religious ceremony. Allowing the institution of marriage to continue yet abolishing state recognition of marriage does not abolish the institution itself. Therefore, the steps that Munoz-Dardé is proposing to take in regards to both the family and marriage are closer to reform than abolition. While either reform or abolition could be invoked to achieve justice in the institution of the family, a Rawlsian political approach, both through explication and implication, would suggest that reform would be the preferred option.[15]

Rawls does not provide a strong and comprehensive defence of the family in Justice As Fairness: A Restatement. Indeed Rawls does not intend his political theory to be comprehensive and to explicitly intrude upon the domains of the private sphere or the moral sphere so long as his egalitarian political conception of the good can still be met. However, several authors, such as Okin have noted similar sentiments as this: ‘the critical force of the original position becomes evident when one considers that some of the most creative critiques of Rawls’s theory have resulted from more radical or broad interpretations of the original position than his own.’[16] The Rawlsian method has proved useful for both Okin and Munoz-Dardé in highlighting the failures of the institution of the family. However, given the unattractiveness of the alternative possibilities and their associated threats to liberty, I will conclude by suggesting that justice as fairness does not imply the abolition of the family but significant reform.



[1] Rawls and Kelly, Justice as fairness, 42–43.
[2] Ibid., 10.
[3] Ibid., 162.
[4] Ibid., 163.
[5] Ibid., 164.
[6] Susan Moller Okin, Justice, gender, and the family, 91.
[7] Rawls and Kelly, Justice as fairness, 10.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ibid., 11.
[10] Susan Moller Okin, Justice, gender, and the family, 89.
[11] Munoz-Dardée, “Is the Family to Be Abolished Then?,” 37.
[12] Rawls and Kelly, Justice as fairness, 42–43.
[13] Munoz-Dardée, “Is the Family to Be Abolished Then?,” 216.
[14] Ibid., 54.
[15] Rawls and Freeman, Collected papers, 600. Such an approach is discussed in Collected Papers in direct response to authors such as Okin.
[16] Susan Moller Okin, Justice, gender, and the family, 101; see also: Okin, “Political Liberalism, Justice, and Gender,” 42.


Munoz-Darde, Veronique. “Is the Family to Be Abolished Then?” Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99, no. 1 (1999): 37–56.
Okin, Susan Moller. “Political Liberalism, Justice, and Gender.” Ethics 105, no. 1 (1994): 23–43.
Rawls, John, and Samuel Richard Freeman. Collected papers. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999.
Rawls, John, and Erin Kelly. Justice as fairness : a restatement. Cambridge, Mass [u.a.]: Harvard Univ. Press, 2003.
Susan Moller Okin. Justice, gender, and the family. New York: Basic Books, 1989.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

The case for unilateral nuclear disarmament





What shapes the arms control stance of Barack Obama’s Administration? How would you assess the administration’s arms control policies?

Introduction
During Barak Obama’s term as President of the United States of America he has taken several steps towards the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons and nuclear arms control. However, the practical actions taken by the administration in support of this commitment have been less than admirable. To respond to the question I will argue the following points: (i) nuclear weapons are highly ineffective and unethical as deterrence mechanisms against the threats that the US and its allies currently face, (ii) arms control is not an ultimate end in itself and there must be a broader change in nuclear culture, (iii) although the Obama administration appears to be ideologically committed to ‘a world without nuclear weapons’, their spending priorities and desire to remain in a place of dominance suggests otherwise, and (iv) there are several steps that the Obama administration must take if they genuinely desire a world without nuclear weapons and the threat of nuclear weapons.

Part I – Morality & Utility
Before one can respond to the question of the merit a particular nuclear arms control policy should receive the value of nuclear weapons must be considered. If the value of nuclear weapons is considered to be very high in all contexts, then there is strong merit in abolishing nuclear weapons regulations. If the value of nuclear weapons is very low in all contexts, or the negative consequences of their use outweigh any good they could achieve, then it would follow that steps towards a future free from nuclear weapons is and the threat they present is desirable.
From an egalitarian perspective there are no justifications to act from the belief that nationality, religion, or other factors of this nature can make a person more or less valuable. While other perspectives such as racial or religious superiority are used in the political debate, I shall not entertain them here. Nuclear weapons by their nature do not discriminate between civilian and military targets. The collateral damage that is likely to occur from the use of nuclear weapons against an enemy target is so great that the weapons themselves already appear to have little moral standing. Arne Naess points out that responding to a nuclear strike with nuclear weapons would create a situation where ‘the chance of killing those really responsible for the disaster would be slim.’ He goes on to state that ‘millions of nonbelligerents and innumerable other beings would suffer, while people at the top of the power pyramids would likely escape.’[1] The sheer military ineffectiveness in addition to the likely excessive collateral damage of nuclear weapons compounds the immorality of the use and investment into these devices.
The ineffectiveness and immorality of nuclear weapons has been strengthened in the post-Cold War context. Drell and Goodby suggest in their article Nuclear Deterrence in a Changed World that nuclear weapons ‘have little or no effect in coercing states, insurgent groups, or terrorists to abstain from actions that threaten international peace and security.’[2] They argue that although the mutually assured destruction (MAD) strategy may have been a useful means of attaining security through parity during the Cold War, in the vastly different current global context, this strategy is futile. This is largely due to the decentralised structure of groups like Al Qaeda. Terrorist groups usually have no central military training base and do not identify themselves with uniforms which makes them a difficult target to identify. Using nuclear weapons against targets that are difficult to identify compounds the risk of error of judgement. These reasons would make a state significantly less likely to use nuclear weapons against a terrorist group. Understanding this, terrorists groups are significantly less likely to respond to the fear of being attacked.
Both the Bush and Obama administrations have expressed their awareness of the changed world context from the Cold War era, but neither administration has gone far enough on acting upon this understanding. In the 2002 National Security Strategy lead by the Bush administration it was noted that ‘traditional concepts of deterrence will not work against a terrorist enemy whose avowed tactics are wanton destruction and targeting of innocents; whose so-called soldiers seek martyrdom in death and whose most potent protection is statelessness.’[3] President Bush has reiterated this sentiment in a recent speech at Hankuk University, suggesting that his administration’s ‘inherited’ nuclear arsenal ‘is poorly suited to today’s threats, including nuclear terrorism.’[4] While both sides of politics in the United States have recognised that nuclear weapons are not an appropriate means for addressing contemporary conflict situations, the United States has still managed to retain what Obama describes as a ‘massive nuclear arsenal.’[5] Moreover, the Obama administration has not shied away from continuing to view nuclear weapons as a necessary part of the US’s national security. The administration is investing more money into modernising these weapons they seek to abolish.[6] In consideration of the futility and immorality of nuclear weapons, political courage must be employed to ensure that the US takes a genuine leadership role in the abolition of nuclear weapons.

Part II – Ends & Means
In the previous section I have justified the importance of the reduction and (eventual) abolition of nuclear weapons on normative and pragmatic grounds. In this section I will argue that arms control is a means (rather than an end). I will also argue that arms control is a necessary but not a sufficient condition of achieving a world without nuclear weapons.
There have been several bilateral and multilateral nuclear arms control treaties between Moscow and Washington. These include the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) and the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START). The START verification regime limited the aggregate number of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) and Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) to 6000 for each party to the treaty. The START treaty also limited the number of strategic delivery vehicles to 1,600 for ‘deployed ICBMs and SLBMs and their associated launchers, and heavy bombers.’[7] The START treaty was signed in 1991 and the 2001 implementation deadline was reached. However, the treaty expired in 2009, so the Obama administration took the opportunity to pursue further bilateral nuclear weapons reductions through the 2010 New START treaty.[8] The main development in this treaty was the planned reduction of deployed ICBM, SLBM, and heavy bomber warheads to 1550 from 6000.[9]
These treaties are useful and important as a means to a reduction in the nuclear stockpiles of Russia and the US. They are a necessary aspect of the goal of abolishing nuclear weapons and moving towards a demilitarised world. However, the treaties alone are insufficient. Philosopher Arne Naess suggests that the threat of rapid nuclear rearmament ‘would probably replace the present threats’ if disarmament was achieved through international treaties and negotiations.[10] He suggests that ‘nuclear culture as a whole’ must change in order to abolish the threat that nuclear weapons present to all planetary life forms.[11]
Naess observes ‘that if one of a pair of mutually hostile nuclear powers unilaterally disarms, little motive remains for the other to use nuclear bombs.’[12] In order to reduce the threat of nuclear war Naess suggests step-by-step unilateral disarmament to move beyond nuclear deterrence. Unilateral disarmament, while it may seem extreme, manages to overcome the nuclear deterrence paradox where both sides ‘are thus confronted by the dilemma of steadily increasing military power and steadily decreasing national security.’[13]
While unilateral nuclear weapon disarmament and consequential nuclear weapon abolition would mean that a state has no nuclear deterrence mechanism in place, there are other potential benefits. For example, in the Nuclear Posture Review the United States committed to not using or threatening to use nuclear weapons ‘against non-nuclear weapon states that are party to the NPT (non-proliferation treaty) and in compliance with their nuclear non-proliferation obligations.’[14] There are 189 states who are signatories of the NPT. The only states that have not become signatories are India, Israel, and Pakistan. Although not every state has committed to this standard, and the US’ commitment is conditional, their pledge lends support to the idea that a state who has nuclear weapons becomes a greater target. Neighbouring states may be worried that a state is making or buying nuclear weapons with a plan to use them. This often creates further conflict even if the weapons are never used. Furthermore, if the weapons ever were used it would likely be met with global condemnation. Therefore, there is a strong case for unilateral disarmament as a means to change nuclear culture as a whole.
Part III – Ideology and Actions
Obama has stated his desire to ‘seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons’, recognising that security may not be achieved through weapons of mass destruction.[15] While Obama acknowledged that this goal ‘will not be reached quickly’, he conveyed it as a serious goal with concrete steps that can be taken by the US.[16] In a speech given in Prague in 2009, he said that ‘we will reduce the role of nuclear weapons in our national security strategy, and urge others to do the same.’[17] Presented in this order, Obama’s ideals would be compatible with Naess’ suggestions of unilateral disarmament as a means to change nuclear culture as a whole.
However, the approach of the Obama administration has been closer to bilateral and multilateral disarmament as local disarmament has been used as a bargaining chip to convince others to reduce their nuclear stockpiles. This has been exemplified in the New START treaty where the Obama administration and Moscow mutually agreed to reduce their nuclear weapon stockpiles. While this type of disarmament should not be condemned, one may argue whether it will achieve its intended purpose. States may invest in the ‘technological race’ as a means to ‘rapid nuclear rearmament’, defeating the purpose of international arms control treaties.[18] This leads us once again to Naess’ suggestion that ‘nuclear cultures as a whole’ must change, not just treaties or policies.[19]
The signs of a positive nuclear weapons cultural shift are ominous. A recent report by the nonpartisan Stimson Centre estimates that ‘the US will spend between $352 and $392 billion on strategic nuclear offensive forces over the next 10 years.’[20] Hans Kristensen from the Federation of American Scientists described this as ‘somewhat of a schizophrenic nuclear policy.’[21] Since the Bush administration military spending in the US has continued to grow in constant terms, whilst staying stagnant as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP).[22] These figures do not to represent a significant shift in priorities by the Obama administration as compared to the priorities of the Bush administration.
Part IV – A pragmatic solution
The Obama administration faces a deeply challenging political situation where progress on the issue of nuclear arms control is difficult at best. The political agenda is packed and there is a limit to what a president can achieve in their first term in office. A recent article in Reuters suggests that the Obama administration had some early achievements with New START. However, the author also points out that ‘the administration had difficulty winning ratification in the Senate.’[23] A great deal of the difficulty has come because support for nuclear arms reduction policy is not bipartisan. Presidential candidate Mitt Romney has expressed his disapproval of the New START policy, writing that it ‘could be his worst foreign policy mistake yet’, suggesting that ‘the security of the United States is at stake.’[24] This has been a critical factor in what has shaped Obama’s arms control policies.
Given the challenges that the Obama administration faces in realising its goal of a world without nuclear weapons, and perhaps the even more ambitious goal of a world free from the threat of nuclear weapons, it is understandable that progress has been slow. However, there are several key steps that the administration can make to achieving this goal.
First, the Obama administration should cease all investment in nuclear weapon technology except that which is specifically related to safety and weapon security. This will give greater credibility to treaties such as New START and create greater trust between hostile parties.
Second, the Obama administration should lead the way by unilaterally reducing their nuclear arsenal. This would achieve three things. First, it would demonstrate that the moral decisions of the US are not contingent upon the decisions of another nation. Second, it would demonstrate the type of leadership that is required for a change in nuclear weapon culture that could eliminate the threat of nuclear weapons. Third, it would demonstrate that even occupation would be better than a nuclear war.
Third, the Obama administration must stop using the fear, security, and deterrence rhetoric that has paved the way for the public consent of massive amounts of funding for nuclear weapon modernisation. This is also required for a significant change in nuclear weapons culture.






Conclusion
In conclusion, it is clear that nuclear weapons are in the first instance immoral, and in the second instance, ineffective in countering modern security threats. Reducing the number of nuclear weapons will not completely eliminate the threat of nuclear weapon use, a broader change in culture must take place for this to happen. Obama’s spending priorities have indicated that his interest in taking steps towards achieving world without nuclear weapons is not a priority for his administration in his first term in office. While this is partly due to the difficult political situation the administration finds itself in, there are several concrete steps that must be worked towards as indicated above. The Obama administration has a great deal of work to do in order to take seriously the threat of a global nuclear war.

Works Cited
Alexander, David. “After Early Successes, Obama Struggles to Implement Disarmament Vision.” Reuters. Washington, August 31, 2012. http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/31/us-usa-nuclear-arms-idUSBRE87U06B20120831.
Arms Control Association. “START I at a Glance”, 2009. http://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/start1.
Cohen, Avner, and Steven Lee. Nuclear weapons and the future of humanity : the fundamental questions. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Allanheld, 1986.
Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs. “Comparison of the START Treaty, Moscow Treaty, and New START Treaty”, February 11, 2011. http://www.state.gov/t/avc/rls/139901.htm.
Drell, Sidney, and James Goodby. “Nuclear Deterrence in a Changed World”, 2012. http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2012_06/Nuclear_Deterrence_in_a_Changed_World#Bio.
“Remarks By President Barack Obama In Prague As Delivered | The White House”, n.d. http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-By-President-Barack-Obama-In-Prague-As-Delivered.
“Remarks by President Obama at Hankuk University | The White House”, n.d. http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/03/26/remarks-president-obama-hankuk-university.
Romney, Mitt. “Obama’s Worst Foreign-policy Mistake.” The Washington Post, July 6, 2010, sec. Opinions. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/05/AR2010070502657.html.
Rumbaugh, Russell, Nathan Cohn, and Henry L. Stimson Center. Resolving ambiguity costing nuclear weapons. Washington, DC: Henry L. Stimson Center, 2012. http://www.stimson.org/images/uploads/research-pdfs/RESOLVING_FP_4_no_crop_marks.pdf.
Sagan S.D. “Shared responsibilities for nuclear disarmament.” Daedalus Daedalus 138, no. 4 (2009): 157–168.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. “Military Expenditure of USA.” Yearbook, 2012. http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2005/08.
United States. Dept. of Defense. “Nuclear posture review report”, 2010. http://purl.access.gpo.gov/GPO/LPS121566.
United States. President. The national security strategy of the United States of America. [Washington, D.C.]: White House, 2002. http://purl.access.gpo.gov/GPO/LPS90878.
Wiesner, Jerome B., and Herbert F. York. “National Security and the Nuclear-Test Ban.” Scientific American 211, no. 4 (October 1964): 27–35.

Footnotes
[1] Cohen and Lee, Nuclear weapons and the future of humanity, 426.
[2] Drell and Goodby, “Nuclear Deterrence in a Changed World.”
[3] United States. President, The national security strategy of the United States of America, 15.
[4] “Remarks by President Obama at Hankuk University | The White House.”
[5] Ibid.
[6] United States. Dept. of Defense, “Nuclear posture review report,” 7.
[7] Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, “New START.”
[8] Arms Control Association, “START I at a Glance.”
[9] Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, “New START.”
[10] Cohen and Lee, Nuclear weapons and the future of humanity, 426.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid., 427.
[13] Wiesner and York, “National Security and the Nuclear-Test Ban,” 35.
[14] United States. Dept. of Defense, “Nuclear posture review report,” viii.
[15] “Remarks By President Barack Obama In Prague As Delivered | The White House.”
[16] Ibid.
[17] Ibid.
[18] Cohen and Lee, Nuclear weapons and the future of humanity, 426; Sagan S.D, “Shared responsibilities for nuclear disarmament,” 158.
[19] Cohen and Lee, Nuclear weapons and the future of humanity, 426.
[20] Rumbaugh, Cohn, and Henry L. Stimson Center, Resolving ambiguity costing nuclear weapons, 6.
[21] Alexander, “After Early Successes, Obama Struggles to Implement Disarmament Vision.”
[22] Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, “Military Expenditure of USA.”
[23] Alexander, “After Early Successes, Obama Struggles to Implement Disarmament Vision.”
[24] Romney, “Obama’s Worst Foreign-policy Mistake” Note: This was Romney’s response to the policy as was drafted in 2010. There are no signs that his views have changed considerably since then.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Conversations with Asha Kurup about Brahma Kumaris, Interfaith Dialogue, and Creative Meditation







The sixth episode in the 'I Am Instrumental: Peace Podcasts' series is a conversation with a friend of mind, Asha Kurup. Asha is studying a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Melbourne, with majors in International Relations, Politics, and Asian Studies. Asha believes that 'we become violent because we don't know who we are'.  Find out more about Asha, the Brahma Kumaris, and Peace Building in this podcast.


'My faith really projects my vision onto the world as one with as little expectations as possible'

'My inner-peace is my inner-power'


'Meditation is a process of connection with myself'


"Conversations with Asha Kurup about Brahma Kumaris, Interfaith Dialogue, and Creative Meditation" by iaminstrumental is licensed under a Creative Commons License


Monday, August 13, 2012

Peter Singer on Q&A tonight

Tonight's Q&A Panellists


Thought I would blog a quick post mentioning that Peter Singer will be on ABC's Q&A tonight. If you live in Australia, you will be able to catch up on ABC iView if you miss it.

As you are probably aware, I have written a few too many essays about Peter Singer's views on various ethical issues. These essays have included my comparison of Singer and Rawls on International Justice. In this essay I was cautiously supportive of Singer's views on most international relations issues like increased foreign aid. However, I was sceptical about his ideas on refugee issues - and I'm hoping this will be talked about tonight.

I have other concerns with his work. Singer's views on equality have some serious problems. As Singer is a committed preference utilitarian, he places the fulfilment of one's preferences over and above any idea of rights-based moralities. Sometimes these two ideas overlap, but in other scenarios they clash. You can read more about it in my essay Singer and the Principle of Equality.

This isn't even his controversial stuff though. You'll find that in his papers on abortion, infanticide, and bestiality. While I tend to disagree with his writings surrounding bioethics, I can't help but admit that many of his views represent the natural outcome of morality without God.

While I disagree with Singer in many areas, I find his work in books such as The Life You Can Save to be inspiring, challenging, and incredibly important. You can find my essay entitled The Case For Foreign Aid.

Please post all your comments about tonight's show below. I'm sure topics such as asylum (which I wrote about here) and religion will be covered. Do you agree with the panellists? Do you agree with my essays on these issues?

And while you're here, why not plus-one or like a post, or follow my blog :)

*UPDATE* 14/8/12 4:21PM

As expected, when pressed about his thoughts on 'boat people' by Tony Jones, Singer conceded that off-shore processing of refugees is the best way to address this 'issue' according to his moral framework. Kudos for consistency.

Perhaps this is the natural outcome of utilitarianism - a theory that allows an individual to be treated as a means to an end if a greater good can be maximised. I incredibly disappointed that Phillip Blonde didn't call Peter Singer up on this.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Conversations with Amy Fitzpatrick about Christianity, Anarchism, and Structural Violence








The fifth episode in the 'I Am Instrumental: Peace Podcasts' series is a conversation with a friend of mind, Amy Fitzpatrick. Amy is a speech pathologist who currently lives and works in Perth. Amy believes that 'there's a real strength in nonviolence.' Also in this podcast, hear Amy talk about her views on Christianity, anarchism and violence.

Amy was a facilitator at the Pace E Bene 'Nonviolent Leadership for Interfaith Peacebuilders' course. You can register your interest in participating in this course in 2013 here:http://www.nonviolentinterfaithleadership.org/

'I have a lot of respect for people who stand up for what they believe in without intimidating others'

'As I started to read the Gospels much more closely, I began to realise how important nonviolence was to Jesus'

'I would like to live as simply as I can'

"Conversations with Amy Fitzpatrick about Christianity, Anarchism, and Structural Violence" by iaminstrumental is licensed under a Creative Commons License


Friday, August 3, 2012

Conversations with Jordan Bakker on Climate Change, Ken Wilber, Jack Kornfield and more!







The fourth episode in the 'I Am Instrumental: Peace Podcasts' series is a conversation with a good friend of mind, Jordan Bakker. Jordan studies Arts and Law at Monash University, Clayton. He's had some incredible experiences working in Bangladesh on cutting edge climate change management projects. Jordan also talks about how he's witnessed and experienced spirituality and peace.

'It's easy to be blissful when you're in a cage'

'Don't lose sight of the problems that affect us all'

'We are all connected'


"Phone Interview with Jordan Bakker about Climate Change, Ken Wilber, Jack Kornfield and more!" by iaminstrumental is licensed under a Creative Commons License