Beyond the Midas–MARS Trap: Life-Coherent Security, Economic Conversion, and the End of Claim-Protected Militarism | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM

Humanity is living through a convergence of militarized insecurity, ecological breakdown, widening inequality, public-budget distortion, technological misrelevance, and financial claim-sovereignty over the life-ground. These crises are usually analyzed separately: as problems of war, capitalism, empire, extractivism, public finance, national security, or collective psychology. This white paper argues that they are better understood as expressions of a deeper conserved civilizational coupling: the Midas–MARS Trap.

The Midas Trap names the drift by which money-value, asset-value, debt-value, and corporate claim-value become sovereign over the living conditions from which all real value arises. MARSMilitarized Asset-Resource Security — names the organized protection of assets, resources, routes, markets, extractive concessions, geopolitical access, and corporate claims through military power, public subsidy, intelligence systems, sanctions, coercive diplomacy, bases, surveillance, and war. Together, the Midas–MARS Trap describes a civilization in which claims are protected more reliably than persons, communities, ecosystems, civil commons, and future generations.

The empirical pattern is stark. World military expenditure reached $2.887 trillion in 2025, the eleventh consecutive year of real growth, and global military spending rose 41% over 2016–2025 (Liang et al., 2026). The United Nations reports that military spending reached $2.7 trillion in 2024, while only one in five Sustainable Development Goal targets was on track and the annual SDG financing gap stood at approximately $4 trillion (United Nations, 2025). The same report estimates that $93 billion per year could help end hunger by 2030, $114 billion per year could provide universal safe drinking water and sanitation in 140 low- and middle-income countries, $3.7 trillion over ten years could provide basic healthcare to all in low- and lower-middle-income countries, and $5 trillion over ten years could fund 12 years of quality education for every child in low- and lower-middle-income countries (United Nations, 2025).

Drawing on John McMurtry’s critique of the military paradigm, Johan Galtung’s analysis of collective subconscious pathologies, Joan Roelofs’s mapping of the military-industrial-congressional-almost-everything-complex, Mason Gaffney’s critique of “defense” as a falsely universal public good, and the author’s life-coherent framework of conserved drift, this paper argues that civilizational repair requires more than anti-war critique. It requires the conversion of a whole dependency ecology. McMurtry helps distinguish persons from the destructive patterns they bear; Galtung shows how violence becomes pre-reflectively felt as necessary; Roelofs shows how militarism embeds itself into livelihoods, universities, nonprofits, pensions, and civic respectability; and Gaffney exposes how public military expenditure can function as a subsidy for private overseas claims (Gaffney, 2018; Galtung, 1996; McMurtry, 1989, 1991; Roelofs, 2018).

The paper proposes a life-coherent alternative: security as the shared capacity of persons, communities, institutions, ecosystems, and future generations to continue living, repairing, learning, adapting, and flourishing under conditions of uncertainty, difference, and constraint. The way beyond the trap is not anti-security, anti-economy, anti-technology, or anti-defense. It is the disciplined conversion of security, money, law, investment, science, technology, and public power back into service of life-capacity.

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