Insanity on a Mass Scale
APR 25, 2026
Courtesy of NBC News, here’s a brief summary of the butcher’s bill of the latest wars in the Middle East:
Iran’s forensics chief said nearly 3,400 people had been killed in the country since U.S.-Israeli strikes began Feb. 28. Almost 2,500 people have been killed in Lebanon, 32 have been killed in Gulf states, and 23 have died in Israel. Thirteen U.S. service members have been killed, and two more died of noncombat causes.
I happen to believe Iranian lives are as valuable and precious as American lives. What gives the U.S. and Israeli governments the right to inflict such disproportionate casualties on Iran, on Lebanon, on Gaza? (I know: might makes right.) If you include the Palestinians, more than 100,000 people, and probably closer to 200,000, have been killed in the latest Israeli/U.S. wars, with the United States providing most of the deadly weaponry.

Speaking of weaponry, the liberal New York Times had an article yesterday lamenting the heavy expenditure of costly precision weaponry (like Tomahawk cruise missiles) by the U.S. since the beginning of the Iran War. Nowhere in the article was there a complaint about the death toll, nor was there much of a complaint about the cost. No—what the liberal New York Times was concerned about was how quickly the U.S. could replenish its stockpile of weaponry so it could be prepared for a future war against peer threats like China and Russia.
Here’s an excerpt from the article:
Since the Iran war began in late February, the United States has burned through around 1,100 of its long-range stealth cruise missiles built for a war with China, close to the total number remaining in the US stockpile. The military has fired off more than 1,000 Tomahawk cruise missiles, roughly 10 times the number it currently buys each year.
The Pentagon used more than 1,200 Patriot interceptor missiles in the war, at more than $4 million a pop, and more than 1,000 Precision Strike and ATACMS ground-based missiles, leaving inventories worrisomely low, according to internal Defense Department estimates and congressional officials.
The Iran war has significantly drained much of the US military’s global supply of munitions, and forced the Pentagon to rush bombs, missiles and other hardware to the Middle East from commands in Asia and Europe. The drawdowns have left these regional commands less ready to confront potential adversaries such as Russia and China, and it has forced the United States to find ways to scale up production to address the depletions, Trump administration and congressional officials say.
Again, if you read the article, nothing is said about morality. Nothing is said about death and dying and the bloody awfulness of war. The article simply says the U.S. has used a lot of very expensive missiles that we MUST replace if we’re to be prepared to wage more wars in the near future.
There’s not even a hint here that maybe America could be at peace—even in the most distant future. Apparently, America must always remain locked and loaded for a war with China, or Russia, or some other country and combination of countries, even as all this is couched as defending the homeland.
How many war crimes can be hidden or explained away by this phrase: “defend the homeland”? Far too many, and of the most horrific nature.
American militarism must end. Support of Israeli warmongering and killing must end. The national love affair with weaponry must end. Cut the Pentagon budget by 50% and keep cutting. Retrench the empire and recommit to being a republic that doesn’t seek war. Turn away from the bloody awfulness and waste of constant warfare.
War isn’t macho. It isn’t glorious. It’s insanity on a mass scale.

Dear Bill,
For a timelier and more topical response, and given the chaotic situation in the Middle East, please allow me the pleasure of resonating with your current post entitled “The Bloody Awful Waste of War” as follows:
Yours sincerely,
SoundEagle🦅
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Thanks. Powerful cartoon.
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For generations already (even before my lifetime), the U.S. economy is coincident with the war economy (or military-industrial complex). The so-called peace dividend that appeared (promised only) then evaporated in the 1990s was a head fake. Also, as Neil Postman once remarked, patriotism is a sordid emotion. I’ll add that it’s also ubiquitous, which is why the NYT‘s failure to say anything remotely peaceful or moral in relation to this year’s new war with Iran should not be so surprising. Patriotism and its reflexive war boosterism if the water we swim in and the air we breathe. It’s like mother’s milk.
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The militarists at the top never think of the human beings on the scene of war. Even the phrase “boots on the ground” avoids it. McNamara in looking back at Vietnam said that all in DC including himself were obsessed with containing Communism and could never see the civil war that was involved. As Westmoreland kept asking for more troops, his requests were granted even though bodies were coming home. LBJ in a bizarre comment that avoid loss of life said that in Vietnam, “we’ve got to nail the coonskin on the wall.”
I salute those involved in selecting the design for the Vietnam War Memorial in DC, the first such monument that truly speaks to war both in appearance and in naming every one of the Americans who died. Not mentioned, of course, are the 2 million Vietnamese who died.
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Dear clif9710,
Thank you for your comment. I would like to add that there were not two but three millions Vietnamese casualties, as far as I can recall. Official 1995 estimates from Vietnam reported roughly 1.1 million North Vietnamese/Viet Cong fighters and up to 2 million civilians killed.
Yours sincerely,
SoundEagle🦅
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Well Bill, Guess you are not a billionaire member of our own and very profitable “DEATH” INDUSTRY.
We don’t need no stinkn’ Health Care…
Or affordable housing…
Or solvent Social Security.
We would much rather have another WAR
Jerry King
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It is possible to have some restraint on the Dept of War and Sec of War by reducing money available to Pentagon….
https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/congress-rescind-money-iran-war
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