Responsibility In An Era Of Consequences
by David Krieger, May 17, 2007 |
The inaugural meeting of the World Future Council was
recently held in Hamburg, Germany. It brought together
50 Councilors from all continents, chosen for their diversity
and pioneering commitment to building a better world. At
the conclusion of the four-day meeting, the Council released
the Hamburg Call to Action, a document calling for action
to protect the future of all life. It began, “Today
we stand at the crossroads of human history. Our
actions – and our failures to act – will decide
the future of life on earth for thousands of years, if
not forever.”
The Call to Action is a challenge to each of us to take
responsibility for assuring a positive future for humanity
and for preserving life on our planet. The document
states: “Today there is no alternative to an ethics
of global responsibility for we are entering an era of
consequences. We must share, co-operate and innovate together
in building a world worthy of our highest aspirations.
The decision lies with each one of us!”
We are challenged to consider what we are individually
and collectively doing not only to radically undermine
our present world through war and its preparation, resource
depletion, pollution and global warming, but also the effects
of what we are doing upon future generations. Those
of us alive now have the responsibility to pass the world
on intact to the next generation, and to assure that our
actions do not foreclose the future.
The Hamburg Call to Action is a great document and I urge
you to read and reflect upon it. But I draw your
attention specifically to the section on nuclear weapons: “Nuclear
weapons remain humanity’s most immediate catastrophic
threat. These weapons would destroy cities, countries,
civilization and possibly humanity itself. The danger posed
by nuclear weapons in any hands must be confronted directly
and urgently through a new initiative for the elimination
of these instruments of annihilation.”
With this in mind, we should unite in demanding the abolition
of these weapons – eliminating the weapons before
they eliminate us. There is much to be done in this
regard, most important being the negotiation of a new treaty
for the phased, verifiable and irreversible elimination
of all nuclear arsenals, as required by the 1970 Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. While these negotiations
are in progress, there is much to be done to lower the
level of reliance on nuclear weapons and to safeguard nuclear
materials, including taking deployed nuclear weapons off
high-alert status, ceasing all nuclear weapons tests and
ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and implementing
strategies to bring all weapons-grade fissionable materials
and the technologies to create them under strict international
control.
We must also withdraw our support from any programs that
seek to maintain nuclear arsenals into the future. A
prime example is the Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW)
program now being developed at the US nuclear weapons laboratories. This
is but one example of a dangerous weapons program unworthy
of our humanity. Rather than continuing the nuclear
arms race, largely with itself, while ignoring its obligations
under international law for nuclear disarmament, the United
States must take a leadership role in ending the nuclear
weapons threat to humanity. This is only likely to
happen if US citizens demand such action from their government.
At the University of California, students are challenging
the University’s management and supposed oversight
of the US nuclear weapons laboratories. They are
saying, in effect, “Enough is enough. It is
time for the University to stop providing a fig leaf of
respectability to nuclear weapons laboratories engaged
in a dangerous continuation of the nuclear threat to humanity.” The
students are a voice from the future that is with us today. It
is their future, and they are demanding nuclear sanity. They
deserve our support as they speak out and confront the
University of California Regents, political appointees
who seem content to promote any nuclear weapons program
proposed by the nuclear labs.
The Hamburg Call to Action challenges each of us to change
our way of thinking, and to engage in meaningful actions
to assure the future. The time for global sanity
has arrived – none too soon.
David Krieger is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org)
and a Councilor of the World Future Council (www.worldfuturecouncil.org).
Please send comments to him at "dkrieger@napf.org".
|