Suppose the U. Suppose, further, that the interests of the military-industrial complex play a major role in these actions. Does this show that the influence of the military-industrial complex on public policy may not always be a bad thing? Is there ever a good justification for war?
What are the traditional definitions of a just war? Do they apply to any of the U. What is the difference between a preemptive war and a preventive war? Are either kinds of war justified? Public Affairs Talk, May Bacevich , Boston University; Mary-Lea Cox , Carnegie Council "Family values," says Bacevich, used to apply to domestic politics; "but today this concept is aligned with a foreign policy agenda based on a belief in the efficacy of military power along with a revived sense of the American mission in the world.
Singer , Brookings Institution P. Singer examines the Pentagon's policy of contracting private security and logistics firms for tasks ranging from combat to catering in the Iraq War. What makes the United States, the land of the free and the home of the brave, so damn convinced that we must serve as the neighborhood police for the entire world?
Are we genuinely concerned with evildoers? Are we, in fact, serving as the defender of the oppressed and downtrodden? OR is there an agenda? Are we, in fact, increasingly acting upon an almost blind vision for world domination? Do we wish to become the Rome of the 21st century? Your answer to these questions may, in fact, determine just how much you are able to enjoy Eugene Jarecki's latest documentary, "Why We Fight," a film that essentially builds itself around former President Eisenhower's last address warning that America was headed towards becoming a nation of war dominated by its military industrial complex at the cost of true democracy.
Unlike Moore's film, Jarecki's film lacks the energy, insight and urgency necessary to effectively argue for a change in American culture that is, quite honestly, almost incomprehensible. Eugene Jarecki. Top credits Director Eugene Jarecki. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Why We Fight. Photos Top cast Edit. Gore Vidal Self as Self. John McCain Self as Self. Ken Adelman Self as Self.
John Ashcroft Self as Self archive footage. Osama bin Laden Self as Self archive footage. George Bush Self as Self archive footage. George W. Bush Self as Self archive footage. Robert Byrd Self as Self archive footage. Frank Capra Self as Self archive footage. Dick Cheney Self as Self archive footage. Joseph Cirincione Self as Self. Bill Clinton Self as Self archive footage. Shouldn't it be obvious that a legislator who votes against government spending in his own district must have given the matter a lot of thought, and be courageous, and perhaps even correct?
That's a useful thought. But it's not news, and when documentaries like "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room" contain fresh and shocking information, a film like "Why We Fight" is not very necessary. Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from until his death in In , he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Wilton Sekzer. William Solomon. Richard Perle. Dwight Eisenhower. Chalmers Johnson. William Kristol. Charles Lewis. Reviews Preaching to the choir.
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