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 War
Synopsis
Posted: Feb 10 2006, 01:54 PM
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QUOTE (Happy Ahmed @ Feb 9 2006, 06:54 PM)
Does that mean that they have to be used?

If you take several thousand rational people and place them in an empty piece of land I gauruntee you will wind up with a large raving lunatic with borders and a national anthem.
Throw in military spending and you have a recipie for disaster.
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Dr_Steve
Posted: Feb 10 2006, 02:59 PM
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QUOTE (Happy Ahmed @ Feb 9 2006, 06:50 PM)
Why does war have to be inevitable?

because, to quote you, "most people are cunts"
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the oob
Posted: Feb 10 2006, 03:05 PM
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So we're all agreed then: everybody's fucked.

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Senor
Posted: Feb 11 2006, 08:25 AM
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just woke up post, but oh well.

Hobbes had it down. he says every human is selfish, all motives behind any behaviours are for gain for the individual. i believe this is true when human get into groups, crowds, towns, nations. When you strip it down the only actual difference in humans is ability, stronger faster smarter humans control the power, until money is created, then those with the most money rule, those who have the ability to make money recieve the power.

the only way to stop wars and end power struggles is to equalise ability, every human is equal to the next in every way. Kurt Vonnegut wrote this shortstory about equlaising ability.



I also believe the only way humans will ever find true peace is with a shared consciousness, privacy, secrets, lies are all impossible when every human consciousness is conected. I first came across this concept in Deus Ex Invisible war, which has some great philisophical view points on capitalism and "invisible" polictical wars. in Deus ex they had an artificail intelligence as the administrator of this shared intelligence, the AI conducted govermental issues, and every human voted, but not consciously. the AI had an in dept and intimate knowledge of every persons life. there was a single city state and no enforcement of any kind, government simple need not exist.

Technology is heading towards this level, 20 years ago you could either fone your friends land line or send them a letter in the mail. If they were'nt at home you couldnt speak to them until they got there to answer the fone. 20 years on if they dont answer their land line we drop them a text message, a page or sign in to MSN to chat. we email from our computers, from our mobile telephones our laptops even public terminals on the street/train/aircraft. now you have to make an effort to stay out of contact, and an even bigger effort to stay undetected by CCTV, credit card and eftpos usage and mobile telephone calls. if we are this connected now, where will we be in 20 years? implants, computer controlled environments? and i agree with the technology of weapons, they only get smaller more powerful and more readily available.
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Tony Montana
Posted: Feb 11 2006, 10:44 AM
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Hobbes' analysis of the human machine is more true of states than of individuals. While humans can let feelings like love, loyalty, honour etc get in the way of what is best for them, states are under no such restraints. States are perfect creatures of rationality-they know what they want and if on the ballance of things they stand to gain from taking something, they will do so.

To paraphrase Bullet Tooth Tony, "States have drive and clarity of vision. They're not clever; they smell pussy and want a piece of the action."
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sdr
Posted: Feb 11 2006, 02:57 PM
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QUOTE
States are perfect creatures of rationality-they know what they want and if on the ballance of things they stand to gain from taking something, they will do so.


I don't quite follow. If a state taking what they want is a facet of rationality then war is a rational thing. This line of reason may not be of love, honour or loyalty (although I'd argue that they often are, if a collective is simultaneously swayed into doing something based on these emotions), rather it is defined by greed, malice and selfishness. I think any presupposition of rationality is an abstraction.

Here's something else to consider: A lot of people claim to despise war, yet why do so many of these people get enjoyment from watching war on film or engaging in war simulations in video games? I think it’s entirely possible that a desire for war might just be part of human nature. Even particular ant colonies go to war – we’re not the only species that does it. When you look closely enough it seems war never has an intellectual grounding. I think it’s war for wars sake. If this is the case then the only question remaining is whether or not we can evolve above it, can a human collective become so intelligent that it can quench this apparent desire for war?
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Tony Montana
Posted: Feb 11 2006, 04:02 PM
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QUOTE (sdr @ Feb 11 2006, 02:57 PM)

I don't quite follow. If a state taking what they want is a facet of rationality then war is a rational thing.

For an entity which has an inherant need to grow stronger and become more secure against internal and external threats, war is a perfecfectly rational means for the attainment of those ends.

The moral universe of the state revolves around what is good for it. What makes the state stronger is good, what makes it weaker is bad. To a degree, this is true for people as well. However, this system of reason is clouded by human emotions. The state has no such emotions. Policies are formed by various groups of people who are paid to devise ways to make the state more powerful, more secure, and more glorious. If you accept (as Hobbes does) an inherant selfishness to be the center of gravity of reason, then you find that the state is far more rational than the individual.
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Hauser
Posted: Feb 12 2006, 03:16 PM
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QUOTE (sdr @ Feb 11 2006, 02:57 PM)
If a state taking what they want is a facet of rationality then war is a rational thing. This line of reason may not be of love, honour or loyalty (although I'd argue that they often are, if a collective is simultaneously swayed into doing something based on these emotions), rather it is defined by greed, malice and selfishness. I think any presupposition of rationality is an abstraction.

Agreed here to a certain extent, SDR. States themselves are not rational by the fact of their existence, but they are rational when you are debating a form of social organisation of a territory when other states have formed.

When you mix a natural human drive for resources, for working in groups (plus linguistic, racial and cultural differences) alongside geographical factors and high population densities, state-like entitites are likely to form. Thus, not all presuppositions of the rationality are abstractions, because it would be rational to form a state and to use war to perpetuate the states existence of the state guarantees you a higher quality of life than it would be to living outside a state.
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Adolf Chiang
Posted: Feb 16 2006, 08:54 PM
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Despite my yearnings for a conservative, militant nationalist society build on discipline and readiness of defense, I've never had an expansionist mindset. I believe that militarism is best served for defending one's nation in case of foreign aggression; preservation of your nation's territorial integrity is a sacred duty!

Despite constantly watching war movies, reading on military history and playing violent war-related games, I personally would only fight in a war for the defense of NZ. (I have a rather isolationist approach to foreign affairs.)
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Hauser
Posted: Feb 16 2006, 09:01 PM
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You seem to describe a society that is perpetually ready for war, yet you don't plan on engaging in active expansionist military conquest? You simultaneously overestimate yet underestimate your enemies, just like the Fascist movement in Europe did, and that was the key to their downfall, they were incapable of winning a war.
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Adolf Chiang
Posted: Feb 16 2006, 09:06 PM
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Coming from nation that has sufferred so much at the hands of aggressors, I believe that it is necessary to learn from their enemies, become militaristic but only act defensively. Vigilance will always be the price of nationhood.

In a previous thread, I've mentioned how society should be build on discipline, compulsory military training should be no exception that rule.
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the oob
Posted: Feb 16 2006, 09:06 PM
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The trick is to do what the yanks do: be perpetually ready for war, and hone your skills on 'trap and release' countries like Afghanistan and Iraq. They win most of the time and learn from the times they lose.

Thus, while the United States may piss everyone off and blow billions on wars which become public relations nightmares, it could never be occupied by an outside force.
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Adolf Chiang
Posted: Feb 17 2006, 09:16 PM
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QUOTE (Hauser @ Feb 16 2006, 09:01 PM)
You simultaneously overestimate yet underestimate your enemies, just like the Fascist movement in Europe did, and that was the key to their downfall, they were incapable of winning a war.

I don't think my 'ideologies' have anything in common with the Fascists on this matter. The fascist war machines of Germany, Italy and Japan were build on expansionist goals, while my support for militarism is purely for defensive purposes.

I support my argument through historical references cited by Hitler and Mussolini. Mussolini argued that Italy shall become and "new Roman Empire" and referred to the Meditteranean as the "little Roman lake" (translated from "Mare Nostrum" in Italian). Hitler actively preached hatred against the "Untermensch" Slavs and believed that it is the noble birthright of the superior "Herrenvolk" to take "Lebensraum" off the inferior peoples.
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Happy Ahmed
Posted: Feb 17 2006, 10:24 PM
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