My Turn: Our tax dollars being used for death, destruction

Palestinians search for the bodies of the Darwesh family killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip in Nusseirat refugee camp, central Gaza Strip, Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024.

Palestinians search for the bodies of the Darwesh family killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip in Nusseirat refugee camp, central Gaza Strip, Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024. AP PHOTO/ADEL HANA

By KATHERINE GOLUB and STACEY SEXTON

Published: 01-03-2024 7:00 PM

As elected officials representing the people of Greenfield, we face the very real needs of our community every day.

Fourteen percent of Greenfielders live below the poverty line. Our schools face an untenable fiscal situation leading to cuts in programs including music and arts. Climate change and flooding threaten the health of our rivers and drinking water. We lack sufficient funds for things like roads, sidewalks, and pipes.

Many Greenfielders struggle to pay for child care, college, housing, health care and other necessities. Imagine what we could do as individuals and as a community if our basic needs were met.

It can be easy to get stuck thinking that we don’t have enough money to meet our needs. But we start to see a different story when we consider that Massachusetts residents contribute over $134 billion annually in federal income taxes.

So where is our money going?

Most years, over half of the federal government’s discretionary budget is allocated towards military spending, even though the U.S. military has never passed an audit and is regularly unable to account for hundreds of billions of dollars it spends.

One of the biggest recipients of U.S. military funding is the Israel Defense Forces. According to the US News and World Report, “The United States has given Israel more than $260 billion in combined military and economic aid since World War II, plus about $10 billion more in contributions for missile defense systems like the Iron Dome. That’s the most granted to any country throughout that time frame.”

That figure includes nearly $130 million from Massachusetts taxpayers.

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For over 75 years, these funds have been used to impose apartheid conditions on Palestinians — strictly surveilling Palestinians’ movement, decimating industries upon which Palestinians relied for sustenance, and blocking food, water and medicine imports.

And since Oct. 7, U.S. tax dollars have been used to fund Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza.

The most recent official death toll now exceeds 20,000 people killed in Gaza since October. About 70% of these are women and children, and hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been permanently disabled, orphaned, and made homeless.

Israel’s deliberate destruction of roads, water pipes, electricity, and communication lines leaves remaining Gazans to face death by starvation, dehydration and illness.

We understand that the Israeli state’s actions do not reflect the will of all Israelis or Jewish people. Similarly, Hamas does not reflect the will of all Palestinians, the majority of whom had not even been born yet when Hamas took over in the Gaza Strip in 2006. We are appalled by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks and the continued holding of Israeli hostages.

This is not about choosing sides between Hamas and the Israeli government. We choose the side of the hundreds of thousands of innocent people in Gaza whose lives are being destroyed at this very moment, using our tax dollars.

So, what to do?

We believe that U.S. taxpayers have a responsibility to stand in solidarity with any group experiencing oppression funded by U.S. tax dollars and advocate for stopping the flow of money and materials to Israel, pressuring Israel to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza, putting conditions on future aid to the Israeli government, and ending this genocide.

We believe that U.S. citizens have a responsibility to advocate for the humane appropriation of our tax dollars.

If you agree, we invite you to join us in action:

1. Urge Massachusetts Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey to call for a permanent cease-fire. You can reach Warren’s office at (202) 224-4543 and Markey at (202) 224-2742.

2. Attend a protest. You can find announcements about local protests on the Jewish Voice for Peace Facebook page: www.facebook.com/JVPWMASS.

3. Educate yourself about the history and current relationship between Palestine, Israel, and the United States. For instance, listen to Ezra Klein’s podcast coverage of the issue, check out the digital action toolkit from the Palestinian Feminist Collective, or watch the documentary “Israelism.”

4. Vote with your wallet. Boycott companies like Starbucks, which profit from Israeli apartheid, and join calls for divestment from weapons manufacturers and companies benefiting from genocide. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

Imagine what might be possible if we all worked to invest our resources in our communities rather than in killing.

Stacey Sexton is a Greenfield School Committee member, and Katherine Golub is the Precinct 1 Greenfield city councilor.