Clonnie Yearout:Yes, war is hell. And horrible. And it's definitely unnecessary if our only objective is lack of conflict. But if we hold to the higher ideals of individual freedom and the kind of real peace that comes from strength rather than capitulation, war is going to be necessary from time to time. It's just the way of the world. Always has been, always will be -- unless someone finds a way to alter human nature.
This is exactly what I fear. You have unlimited time for mischief-making, and may cause me to be either fired for neglecting my work or institutionalized for a physical and mental collapse. The idle brain truly is the Devil's playground. Get a dog, please.
The American Revolution was not necessary. It's hard to argue that it was stupid because it had a happy ending. Had rebellious Americans lost the war to loyalist Americans and the British, which was a distinct possibily, it would have been written in the history books as a stupid gamble. The same could be said for the South's war for independence in 1861. The real question there is not whether or not war was necessary, once the shootin' started at Fort Sumter, but whether or not secession was necessary. After that fateful step, it was just a matter of Lincoln doing his job, or not (like Buchanan).
You've gone from war being men acting out their primal instincts to a moral choice between defeatist pacifism or staunch self-defense. That's progress, I guess. I was referring more broadly to the history of world civilization, and I think it's fair to say that most wars over the past 3,000 years were unnecessary and waged for power and wealth. Unless there is a coin-toss to see who is on offense rather than defense, there is almost always an aggressor.
You're like the student who makes the teacher do all the work. I have two stacks of tests to grade. Here is your homework assignment. Which of the following American wars was a good idea, or not, and why? The War of 1812. The Mexican War. The Civil War. The Spanish-American War. The First World War. (The Second World War was necessary; Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and declared war on the U.S., followed by Germany also declaring war on the U.S. That was not something that could have been patched up with diplomacy.) The Korean War. The Vietnam War. The Gulf War. The Afghanistan War. The Iraq War. That should keep you busy for a while, you pesky varmint!
You wrote that "war is going to be necessary from time to time. It's just the way of the world. Always has been, always will be -- unless someone finds a way to alter human nature." You began that bit of philosophical musing with a reference to "peace that comes from strength rather than capitulation." Then you immediately abandoned it for your dark view of human nature (back to men acting out their primal instincts). From 1945 to 2001 it seemed that the overwhelming, unrivaled strength of the United States had given us security and perpetual peace. The problem was that we fooled ourselves into thinking that nuclear weapons and high-tech intelligence made our country invulnerable. A few men with box cutters broke that delusion. We had forgotten that peace also comes from more than strength. We were not attacked on 9/11 because we were weak. There was a lesson there that day, Clonnie, and I wonder if we learned it.
"Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read." --Groucho Marx
