WAR. It seems to be as old as time itself. And so many people seem to think it is inevitable. However, it turns out that is not really true. War is neither timeless nor inevitable. It has a beginning, and it has an end. The beginning was about 7000 years ago (with the advent of patriarchy), while the end will be coming very soon (with the inevitable fall of patriarchy and rise of Matriarchy in the not-too-distant future). And the end can't come soon enough!
Indeed, patriarchy itself can be thought of as a gender war writ large, and the only way to end it once and for all--and all other wars that come from it--is for men to surrender to Women. It's a war men have lost before the war even began, despite winning nearly every battle--men just don't realize it yet.
From the Wikipedia article:
- War is a racket
- Who makes the profits?
- Who pays the bills?
- How to smash this racket!
- To hell with war!
It contains this summary:
- "War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives. A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small 'inside' group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes."
(And now we can add "defense contractors", aka mercenary corporations, such as DynCorp, Blackwater, Halliburton, KBR, Raytheon, et al. to the list of war profiteers as well.)
(Note that since the gold standard was abolished in 1971, our Monetarily Sovereign federal government does not actually need taxes to fund anything, since they can just "print" (create) the money now if they wanted. But since wars inherently chew through ludicrous amounts of non-monetary resources, all wars are thus inflationary regardless, so We the People still pay for it in the form of higher prices.)
And that's to say nothing of the human toll of civilians in the other countries as well, who bear the brunt of it.
Again, as noted on Wikipedia:
1. Making war unprofitable. Butler suggests that the means for war should be "conscripted" before those who would fight the war:
It can be smashed effectively only by taking the profit out of war. The only way to smash this racket is to conscript capital and industry and labour before the nation's manhood can be conscripted. […] Let the officers and the directors and the high-powered executives of our armament factories and our steel companies and our munitions makers and our ship-builders and our airplane builders and the manufacturers of all other things that provide profit in war time as well as the bankers and the speculators, be conscripted — to get $30 a month [NOTE: that's $667/month in 2024 dollars], the same wage as the lads in the trenches get.2. Acts of war to be decided by those who fight it. He also suggests a limited referendum to determine if the war is to be fought. Eligible to vote would be those who risk death on the front lines.
3. Limitation of militaries to self-defense. For the United States, Butler recommends that the Navy be limited, by law, to operating within 200 miles of the coastline, and the Army restricted to the territorial limits of the country, ensuring that war, if fought, can never be one of aggression.
The second part of the law would implement some of General Butler's recommendations from his book, taking into account that we currently have an all-volunteer military. Take the profit out of war, first of all. Use the tax code to do so. And for any war lasting beyond six months (which by definition would now require a formal declaration of war), require an annual limited plebiscite of all citizens that would be eligible for military service. Make it a non-secret ballot such that those who vote "yes" would be drafted if we run out of volunteers, followed by those who abstain from the vote if necessary. Those who vote "no" would be exempt from any such draft. A kind of "consensual conscription", if you will. We would all have skin in the game. Women would be included as well, but before they draft the very first Woman, we should draft men in their 40s and 50s first. That's the demographic group who starts the wars but rarely fights them. It's only fair, right fellas? Watch as war becomes a thing of the past, at least for the stupid ones and decade(s) long quagmires like Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.
(It would also be a good idea to do like the Iroquois once did: give Women elders the power to VETO any decision to go to war. That alone would prevent essentially all wars that are not waged in strict and absolute defense of the homeland.)
For the record, I am personally 100% against the draft on principle. Unless absolutely necessary, I view it as a form of slavery and involuntary servitude, and if there were ever such a thing as a truly just war (as per St. Augustine's Just War Theory criteria), which is about as rare as a unicorn, conscription would be unnecessary, since volunteers would be plentiful. And today's technology further makes it largely obsolete to raise such large numbers of boots on the ground. But since nuance, gray areas, and exceptions that prove every rule do in fact exist in the real world (see WWII and the American Civil War, for example), I will note that if we ever must have a draft, only those who voted yes (or chose not to vote) for such a war should be drafted.
As General Butler famously said,
"TO HELL WITH WAR!"
"Either war is obsolete, or man is."
-- Buckminster Fuller
"War, what is it good for? Absolutely NOTHING!"
-- Edwin Starr
"Come the war, come the avarice, come the war, come hell...Come attrition, come the reek of bones, come attrition, come hell...This is why, why we fight, why we lie awake...And this is why, this is why we fight..."
-- The Decemberists
"Now the labor leader's screaming when they close the missile plant, United Fruit screams at the Cuban shore. Call it peace or call it treason, call it love or call it reason, but I ain't marching anymore."
-- Phil Ochs
"I declare the war is over, it's over, it's over..."
-- Phil Ochs
"But the hardest thing I'll ask you, if you would only try, is take your children by their hands and look into their eyes. And there you'll see the answer you should have seen before. If we win the wars at home, there'll be no fighting anymore"
-- Phil Ochs