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War and the Wealthy

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20.03.2026

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Reflections on this moment and ways to take action.

For thousands of years, war has been a favorite way for the rich to make money and consolidate power. High risk, high (material) reward.

Despite recent volatility, the US stock market has been consistently driven higher by war and the inevitable rebuilding efforts, turning conflict into profit for wealthy shareholders, institutional investors and, these days, hedge funds. There is such a stark divide between those who bear the cost of war and those who stand to gain.

Today is no different. Trump and Netanyahu are doubling and tripling down on their strategy of shoring up domestic support through endless war.

This conflict is not about human rights. It is about power, profit and oil.

It has little to do with the well-being of Iranians, Israelis, Americans or anyone else.

In the 1990s, I remember anti-war protests by students at my K-8 private school in San Francisco, on the street corner outside our building. I can picture cars honking while they drove by on Masonic Avenue as middle school kids held up signs saying “No War in Iraq.”

In 2002, I was part of a direct-action group that was going to lock down the corporate offices in San Francisco to protest the invasion of Iraq after 9/11. The day before I got horribly sick. I might really have been sick, but I was also scared. Scared to lock down. To be putting my body on the line like that.

My dad was a conscious objector in Vietnam. My mom was part of a weekly vigil at the federal building after 9/11.

This was all righteous action. But quite disconnected from any relationship with the largely working-class people who serve in the US military.

No one I know from any of the K-12 schools I went to enlisted in the military. If anything, I was taught to look down on those who served and for whom patriotism was an important value.

Without a broad-based, cross-class alliance, anti-war efforts like my family’s are justified and right, but also isolated and ineffective.

What do we do now? How do we organize across class and race to build an anti-war movement that can win? Here is an admittedly noncomprehensive list of suggestions:

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