Only 13% of Americans want the US to intervene in Ukraine: mostly people who can’t identify Ukraine’s location on a map.

David Swanson


War for dummies. Sorry if this gets you hoping for a quick 1-step guide on how to bomb a country without breaking a sweat. I don’t actually mean that I could teach a dummy to wage a war. I meant that only dummies want to wage wars.

Need proof? Check out a recent Washington Post report.

Now there I go misleading you again.  While it’s true that the editors of the Washington Post are often dummies and often want wars to be waged, that’s not what I mean right now.  I think members of the U.S. government and its obedient media constitute an important but tiny exception to the rule this report points to.

The facts as reported on April 7th are these:

  • 13% of us in the United States want our government to use force in Ukraine;
  • 16% of us can accurately identify Ukraine’s location on a map;
  • the median error by Americans placing Ukraine on a map is 1,800 miles;
  • some Americans, based on where they identified Ukraine on a map, believe that Ukraine is in the United States, some say it’s in Canada, some Africa, some Australia, some Greenland, some Argentina, Brazil, China, or India;
  • only a small number believe Ukraine is in an ocean.

And here’s the interesting bit:

“[T]he further our respondents thought that Ukraine was from its actual location, the more they wanted the U.S. to intervene militarily. Even controlling for a series of demographic characteristics and participants’ general foreign policy attitudes, we found that the less accurate our participants were, the more they wanted the U.S. to use force, the greater the threat they saw Russia as posing to U.S. interests, and the more they thought that using force would advance U.S. national security interests.”

I take this to mean that some people believe that attacking Alaska or the continental United States (where they believe Ukraine to be located) will advance “U.S. national security interests.”  This suggests one of two things: either they believe the United States would be better off bombed (and perhaps suicidal tendencies account for some of the staggering stupidity reported by the Washington Post) or they believe the United States is located in Asia or Africa or somewhere other than where they’ve indicated that Ukraine is on the map.

I also take this report to mean the following: ignorant jackasses are the only statistically significant group that wants more wars.  Virtually nobody in the United States wants a U.S. war in Iran or Syria or Ukraine.  Nobody.  Except for serious hardcore idiots.  We’re talking about people who can’t place Ukraine in the correct landmass, but who believe the United States should go to war there.

People informed enough to find Ukraine on a map are also informed enough to oppose wars.  People who can’t find Ukraine on a map but possess an ounce of humility or a drop of decency also oppose war.  You don’t have to be smart to oppose wars.  But you have to be an unfathomably ignorant jackass to favor them.  Or — back to that exception — you could work for the government.

Why, I wonder, don’t pollsters always poll and report sufficiently to tell us whether an opinion correlates with being informed on an issue?  I recall a poll (by Rasmussen), tragic or humorous depending on your mood, that found 25% of Americans wanting their government to always spend at least three times as much on its military as any other nation spends, while 64% said their government spends the right amount on the military now or should spend more.

This only gets tragic or humorous if you are aware that the United States already spends much more than three times what any other nation spends on its military.  In other words, large numbers of people want military spending increased only because they don’t know how high it is already.

But what I want to know is: Do the individuals who have the facts most wrong want the biggest spending increases?

And I wonder: do pollsters want us to know how much opinions follow facts? If opinions follow factual beliefs, after all, it might make sense to replace some of the bickering of pundits on our televisions with educational information, and to stop thinking of ourselves as divided by ideology or temperament when what we’re divided by is largely the possession of facts and the lack thereof.


Very Distinguished

By David Swanson

It’s important to distinguish terrorism from war. Because otherwise war would look bad.

It’s important to distinguish genocide from war. Because otherwise war would be indefensible.

It’s important to distinguish civil war from war. Because civil war seems so gruesome and irrational.

It’s important to distinguish the horrors of war from war’s higher purposes. Because otherwise who would let war continue?

It’s important to distinguish wars people have seen from possible future wars. Because otherwise someone might ask what the higher purposes had been and whether they were achieved.

It’s important to distinguish war from inaction as if those were the only options. Because otherwise people might wake up before they die.

David Swanson is the author of “When the World Outlawed War,” “War Is A Lie” and “Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union.” He blogs at http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works for the online activist organization http://rootsaction.org

Source: warisacrime.org


Ukraine: What’s behind the crisis?
Public Meeting: Tuesday 15 April 6.30pm
The Wesley Hotel, Euston Street, London

Speakers: Jonathan Steele, John Rees, Carol Turner
Chair Jeremy Corbyn MP


11 Apr 2014

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