From SIMPLE SOLUTIONS for Humanity.
Black and White: Crime and Punishment / War and PeaceIn my
Book 1, both black and white were used to represent subject areas, but never together. Black is the absence of color, and white, or transparent, could well include the full spectrum. They are opposites…ying and yang…good and bad…crime and punishment…war and peace.
I draw on the masterpieces of Russian writers Fyodor Dostoevsky and Leo Tolstoy because the former was an engineer and the latter a part time teacher. I am both. In the first novel, for two murders, the punishment was hardly worthy. In the second, while there was considerable agony from war, there was not much of a peace. There is a lot of character building and details about living in Russia in the 1800’s, but in the end, what do you really get out of these notable works of fiction? Yes, something about life in Russia, then. Some might say, too, the satisfaction of having experienced greatness. Simple Solutions has only two characters—you and me. But we might accomplish a lot more than the two novels. Perhaps we will be able to provide the ultimate punishment to eliminate crime and the rational key to world peace. If we fail here, in this first chapter, there are a few others to which we can contribute.
My interest in crime and wars influenced me to look into studying law forty years ago when I applied to the New York University School of Law, was accepted, but till today feel a bit guilty for not informing them I was not coming. I do know that in parallel, I also took steps towards becoming a graduate student at Louisiana State University in chemical engineering, and went there because they offered a full fellowship, plus the sugar industry continued to pay me for a while if I did so. Later, after I got my PhD, during my early academic career at the University of Hawaii, the local School of Law began operations in 1973, the same year John Houseman in The Paper Chase, convinced me that I should add a juris doctorate to my record. Again, there was something about the challenge. This is why, perhaps, people run marathons. However, sanity prevailed, I continued being an engineering educator and never ran the marathon, leading to my career in energy and extending to this book.
But on to the subject at hand, so let me start with the two most significant attacks on the United States, leading to World War II (WW2) and the World War against Terrorism (WWT), although a case has been made that terrorism is just a weapon, and the real world war is religious-based (WWR). In my mind, religion could well be the ultimate solution to wars, and is so pervasive, that I am spending a whole chapter on the Golden Evolution, the simple solution for religion, which itself, is in deep trouble.
On December 7, 1941, as a 15 month old child growing up in Honolulu, I witnessed the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese, or, at least was so told by my mother that she pointed to the smoke while I was in her arms. Two thousand four hundred and three Americans died, plus 59 Japanese airmen and sailors. A few more were killed almost 60 years later, on September 11, 2001, when Islamic terrorists hijacked four commercial jetliners; each loaded with nearly 25,000 gallons of jet fuel, and crashed them into the north and south towers of the World Trade Center (WTC) and the Pentagon, with the fourth falling in a Pennsylvania field. Nineteen terrorists died, plus 265 on board the planes, 125 in the Pentagon and 2,603 in the World Trade Center, with 24 still listed as missing and presumed dead. But this should not have been a particularly big surprise because al-Qaeda in 1993 detonated a 1,500 pound bomb in the basement of the WTC, hoping to wipe out up to 250,000 people, but ended up only killing six.
Pearl Harbor I don't really remember. Being an American of Japanese extraction, I have pondered on what would have happened if WWII did not occur. As terrible as any war is, I came to a conclusion that I, personally, actually benefited from this inferno, and to boot, the USA subsequently ascended to become the world economic leader and the champion for peace and prosperity. A close analysis shows that continued access to oil was an important reason why we won WWII, and the need to continue to protect this natural resource is mostly why WWT/R started. In fact, it turns out that we also won WWI because the Allies were able to convert from coal to oil more effectively.
Thus, one way to avoid future wars is to remove oil as a competitive resource. Solar, renewable, and all sustainable resources are de-centralized and universal. We will largely be able steer clear of these major conflagrations when Green Enertopia, the Free Hydrogen or Biomethanol Age and the Blue Revolution begin to flourish.
But, in a sense, war is not necessarily bad. The Falklands victory buoyed the spirits of Margaret Thatcher, Grenada gave Ronald Reagan and the American people our first military victory in a long time and the first Gulf War, plus eradication of the Taliban in Afghanistan, reinforced our international credibility. In each case, the Good Gal/Guys entered into a state of war through provocation. We did not start it. We wanted to be of assistance, and we benefited.
So, then, is war justified? War is bad, not good, though sometimes necessary. World War I was supposedly fought to end all wars. World War II stopped Hitler and the spread of fascism. Starting wars is immoral, but value systems are not the same. China will more and more become a concern because of its large size and a dissimilar culture. But there is a simple solution.
I was there via the omnipresence of television, lying in bed, on 9/11, and actually saw, live, that second crash into the south tower of the World Trade Center. It was 6:03AM in Hawaii. I, too, was stunned. How could this be happening to the United States?
Yet, the U.S. was not really threatened with extinction. Pearl Harbor could have been an imminent threat to my life and country, but terrorist acts today seem not unlike the television series, 24. Yes, terrible, but safe, for most of us. Subsequent to 9/11 I wondered about the passing of the Patriot Act and was troubled by those vexing airport rituals. Invading Iraq the second time was okay, for weapons of mass destruction (WMD) could have been there, and the Bush Administration did a great P.R. job on the public. Hey, world oil was protected and our globe was now a better place with Saddam disposed, and who knows, those other Arab Nations could have subsequently fallen in line. President Bush and Vice President Cheney would have then been considered beneficent heroes. The crucial factor in this Domino Theory was that Iraq would have served as the model for the rest of the Middle East to become democracies. But a few things went wrong.
We are all becoming increasingly frustrated at the inanity of how we are going about saving us from what, terrorists? Almost every day on the evening news, and certainly when I travel by air, I see increasing amounts of my tax dollars being spent protecting me from a rag-tag bunch of Islamic fundamentalists with a point to prove. Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, or his handler, is right up there with the person who invented those ads that fall out of magazines. From April 2005 to July 2006, 16 million cigarette lighters were confiscated at airports, representing 80% of all seized items.256 It costs the Transportation Security Administration $6 million/year just to dispose of them, but the absurdity is that personnel could have spent the time looking for more dangerous articles. Or maybe fire everyone, stop being so paranoid, save a lot of my tax dollars and go on with our life, as those same terrorists, with what they carried, probably would pass through the TSA check routine today.
At this point, these amorphous terrorists are actually winning the war, maybe even smirking during prayer time. Yes, we won the Battle of Iraq, but we are losing the more important mission of securing the peace, and, like Vietnam, looking for any responsible way out.
I once work for U.S. Senator Spark Matsunaga, who had, as his noblest goal, the establishment of the U.S. Peace Academy, for, if we are training warriors for war, he felt we should spend more to instruct peacemakers for peace. In the early 80’s, the Matsunaga Commission listened to what amounted to 6,000 pages of testimony, and recommended a national peace academy. Matsunaga was the lead sponsor of a Senate bill that was adopted on June 22, 1984 to establish a U.S. Academy of Peace. The furthest this went, though, was the establishment in 1986 of the U.S. Institutes of Peace to conduct research on the subject. More recently, Representative Dennis Kucinich, in 2005, introduced a bill to establish cabinet-level Department of Peace and Non-violence. He reintroduced HR 808 with 65 cosponsors in 2007.
I have on my office wall a press release from Spark M. Matsunaga entitled, “Matsunaga on Crime, Punishment and Energy.” Dated April 1, 1981, it says Sen. Spike Matsunaga introduced a bold and historic measure called the National Crime Prevention, Research, Development and Demonstration Act, featuring mild to severe torture. This was apocryphal, of course, and only a reaction of fellow office-mate, Harvey Meyerson’s, and my, playful response to a recommendation of Sparky’s re-election campaign to feature crime as his major platform focus, something we thought was idiotic on strength of his past legislation. Certainly, this press release never was even shared with the staff, for we probably would have been fired if it ever got out.
Well, this is a fitting segue to start with combating crime. Why link crime to war? Well, both kill, or, otherwise inconvenience, our society. Can you imagine a world without crime and wars? Well, then, why not also eliminate natural death? Sure. But that’s in the next chapter. What about needless infighting in a family or the injustices that goes on in jungles? Where there are people, there will be differences of opinion. In the jungle, that’s the law of nature…survival of the fittest…evolution. Let us focus on crime and major wars, something fundamentally human, yet potentially manageable.