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Seymour Melman, 86, Dies;
Spurred Antiwar Movement
by
JENNIFER BAYOT, December
18, 2004
Seymour Melman, a Columbia University scholar who helped galvanize the
antiwar movement from the 1950's on with analyses of the social costs
of military spending, died on Dec. 16 at his home in Manhattan. He was
86.
The cause appeared to be an aneurysm, said Benjamin Abrams, his research
assistant.
Dr. Melman, an economist who taught industrial engineering at Columbia,
was a leading advocate of disarmament for nearly half a century. He opposed
nuclear weapons almost from their inception and he opposed the current
war in Iraq.
A longtime co-chairman of the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, he
emphasized arguments that military spending diverted resources from health
care, public housing and education.
In speeches, editorials, scholarly articles and close to a dozen books,
he criticized the stockpiling of nuclear weapons and maintained that the
United States and the Soviet Union were draining their economies for little
more than the ability to destroy each other hundreds of times over. He
popularized the use of the word "overkill" to describe thebuildup.
"Isn't 1,250 times overkill enough?" he wrote in a 1964 letter
to The New York Times. "Since the Soviets by similar calculation
can overkill the United States only 145 times, are we to believe that
any advantage exists here for either side?"
He rebutted a post-World War II argument that war drove the economy, maintaining
that the opposite was true and that other factors helped pull the country
out of the Depression.
In his 1974 book, "The Permanent War Economy," he composed a
long list of military trade-offs. The money spent on one Huey helicopter,
he said, could buy 66 low-priced homes, while a recent $69 million reduction
in child-nutrition programs represented the cost of two DE-1052 destroyer
escorts. He added, "To eliminate hunger in America = $4-5 billion
= C-5A aircraft program."
"His work changed the debate in the peace movement to much broader
issues," said Marcus Raskin, a founder of the Institute for Policy
Studies, a liberal research institute, and an adviser to the National
Security Council in the Kennedy administration.
Professor Melman's arguments appealed to a wide spectrum, attracting unions
like the United Automobile Workers and the Machinists Union as well as
public advocates like Ralph Nader, who yesterday described Prof. Melman's
studies as "prescient for decades."
Noam Chomsky, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor and
antiwar activist, said Dr. Melman helped mobilize what once was weak and
scattered resistance to war and other military operations.
"The country is a lot different than it was 30 to 40 years ago, and
he had a big role in that," Mr. Chomsky said. "There's much
more widespread opposition to the diversion of resources to military production,
to the use of force in international affairs, to nuclear development."
Dr. Melman became an authority on a process called "economic conversion,"
the retooling of arms factories and military bases for civilian purposes.
He outlined such plans in "The Demilitarized Society" (1988)
and "Rebuilding America" (1992). He advised the United Nations
on the possibilities of economic conversion from 1979 to 1980, and from
1988 on, he was chairman of The National Commission for Economic Conversion
and Disarmament.
Seymour Melman was born in the Bronx on Dec. 30, 1917. He received a bachelor's
degree in economics from College of the City of New York in 1939.
After serving in the United States Army during World War II, he received
a doctorate in economics from Columbia, where he was later chairman of
the industrial engineering department.
His books on military spending include "Our Depleted Society"
(1965), "Pentagon Capitalism" (1970) and "Profits Without
Production" (1983).
His more recent books, including "After Capitalism: From Managerialism
to Workplace Economy" (2001), describe the potential of employee
self-management, an idea that interested him for decades. As a young man,
he briefly lived on a kibbutz in Israel, and later in his career participated
in studies and meetings on the productivity of such collective settlements.
Dr. Melman is survived by a brother, Myron, of Rehovot, Israel. His marriage
to JoAnne Medalie ended in divorce.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ralph Nader on Seymour Melman
by Ralph Nader, December 20,
2004
Published by CommonDreams.org
In the rarified world of economics
and industrial engineering, there was never anyone like Columbia University
professor Seymour Melman. I grew up reading and listening to the prophetic,
factual and hard-nosed arguments he made for his anti-war and worldwide
disarmament causes in the specialized and, occasionally, the major media
as well.
There were Seymour Melman's op-eds and letters to the editor in the New
York Times starting in his twenties. There were his cogent Congressional
testimonies about the permanent war economy and its damage to our civilian
economy and necessities of the American people. His economic conversion
plans and his advocacy for a muscular peace agreement with the Soviet
Union illuminated what kind of economy, innovation and prosperity could
be ours in the U.S.A.
Melman's work was detailed and he challenged what President Eisenhower
called the "military-industrial complex" like that of no other
academic. He would show how talented scientific and engineering skills
were sucked into this permanent war economy to the detriment of civilian
jobs and economic development as if people's well-being mattered. "To
eliminate hunger in America = $4-5 billion = C-5A aircraft program,"
he would say, referring to Lockheed Martin's chronically bungled, defective
and costly contract.
Melman's consulting services were in great demand. His numerous books
made such sense to people for whom foresight was a valued attitude. He
advised citizen groups, unions, legislators and the United Nations. For
years he was chairman of the National Commission for Economic Conversion
and Disarmament.
Into his eighties, Mr. Melman probed the arcane regions of weapons systems.
He meticulously took apart the wrong ways the corporate-dominated Pentagon
priced the corporate cost of subs, ships, planes and other modern weaponry,
by way of explaining the staggering spiral of weapon budgets.
The titles of his books spoke to his concerns - "Our Depleted Society,"
"Pentagon Capitalism" and "Profits Without Production".
As a World War II veteran, he knew the difference between an adequate
defense and weaponry "overkill". He calculated that US nuclear
weapons had the power to destroy the Soviet Union 1,250 times over. He
asked, how much is too much of a drain on our economy and well-being?
With the demise of the Soviet Union and the agreement on dismantling many
of those nuclear warheads on both sides, Mr. Melman looked forward to
the "peace dividends" and the economic conversion or retooling
he so long urged. It was not to happen. The military budget now consumes
half of the entire federal government's operating expenditures.
In his later years, Melman promoted the idea of self-management as an
alternative to giant corporations. For the last twenty years the media
blacked him out. He could scarcely get an article published in the newspapers
or even in the progressive magazines. On frenetic radio and television,
he did not qualify because he spoke in paragraphs and was
elderly - an electronic bigotry that is keeping many wise, older Americans
from communicating with their younger generations.
It was precisely because he had been so right again and again that print
media tired of his research even though it was up to date. How many Americans
know, for example, that 90% of the products sold in the 2002 L.L. Bean
catalogue were imported? He counted them, to make his point about the
de-industrialization of America.
How many people would want to know that a recent New York City contract
for mass transit vehicles received only foreign bidders? Not one American
company was there to compete and provide the jobs for the $3 billion dollar
project.
Before he passed away this month, Seymour Melman had completed a concise
book manuscript titled, "Wars, Ltd.: The Rise and Fall of America's
Permanent War Economy". He was having trouble finding a good publisher,
when I spoke with him earlier this summer.
But he will leave a legacy of wisdom, insight, humanity, consistency,
and diligence. In a society whose rulers and corporatists seal the people
off from such magnificent minds and inundate them with trivia, distraction
and the hot air artists daily bellowing their lucrative ignorance, sagacious
Americans like Seymour Melman will not receive the attention the citizenry
deserves unless we the people, who own the public airwaves, begin to control
and use our own media rights
For more information, visit www.citizenworks.org
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