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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 5:57:01 PM   
sstevens06


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quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious

quote:

ORIGINAL: vahauser

I'm more concerned about the extinction of the species


Human beings are remarkbly adaptable. You might be able to kill 99.999% of us- but that still leaves 60,000. A good, viable population- and with good rates of growth we'd be back where we are in a thousand years.

Obviously, the intervening period would be pretty unpleasant, but I don't think we're capable of exterminating ourselves.



At the height of the Cold War, when nuclear stockpiles were far larger than today, a full-scale exchange would not have resulted in the death of 99.999% of the population. Far from it - vast tracts of land with ample populations would have remained relatively unaffected. IMO most people greatly overestimate the effects of nuclear weapons, especially on a global scale.

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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 6:02:13 PM   
vahauser


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sstevens06,

I hope we never find out if you are correct or not.

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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 6:15:51 PM   
sstevens06


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vahauser

sstevens06,

I hope we never find out if you are correct or not.



That goes without saying.

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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 7:54:20 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: vahauser

LOL. You are funny. "A good viable population of 60,000."

Perhaps. But not so good for the 6,499,940,000 who got rubbed out.

And all of the former "garden spots" on the planet will be radioactive wastelands.


Why are the garden spots in particular going to be targeted? Whowver takes a shot at the US is going to be targeting Manhattan -- not Yellowstone. On the whole, the experience should improve the look of things. All those cluttered inner cities and gritty industrial tracts -- gone.
quote:



And for the 60,000 survivors, they might be so scattered all over the world that a secure genetic future for the species would be quite problematic indeed (to say nothing of radiological mutations). I'll put my money on the rats and cockroaches and flies.


Rats. flies, and cockroaches all depend on people to a large extent. Go ahead and count how many you find in a tract of wilderness. Their numbers are going to plunge as well.

60,000 should be ample. For example, if there were 60,000 Right Whales the species would be in fine shape -- probably straining its environment, if anything. Prior to man's discovery of the various technological jee-jaws that put him at the top of the food chain, human numbers weren't much greater than 60,000. Animal populations often go through similar swings. Moreover, with all the technological remnants lying aobut, our numbers should rebound all too quickly.

quote:



This is not the sort of future that I dream about for my children and grandchildren.


As opposed to ten billion souls in a regimented society swimming in a goo of industrial and agricultural effluent heated by global warming? Or, your descendant could be like Daniel Boone, carving his own future on a virtually empty planet...


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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 8:02:15 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious


quote:

ORIGINAL: Ike99

I´m not so sure males are attracted to the war side of things with the military. I think what attracts them is the sence of comradery and sence of purpose. Perhaps even the discipline side of it too.


We do start to feel queezy when it comes to pulling the trigger- but almost every male when looking at a weapon will feel a certain sense of excitement and an urge to take it down and have a go. Killing? Maybe not. But being there where the action is? Where do I sign?

quote:

IIRC there was a study of WW2 soldiers that showed most soldiers didn´t fire their weapons.


That's an exaggeration. About one in five didn't fire. One in five did exactly what they were supposed to. The other three fell somewhere in between.

I would say this has more to do with not being able to act in an organised manner while under fire than deliberate avoiding killing.


Most people are conditioned against actually killing each other. It's why such astonishing quantities of ammunition get fired off in the inner city -- and so few actual fatalities result.

It's also why certain groups which are less thoroughly conditioned -- career criminals, nomadic herders -- make remarkably effective soldiers.

However, none of this demonstrates that the activity isn't appealing. After all, all that ammunition does get fired off. Repeatedly -- the War of 1812, the American Civil War, the Spanish-American War, World War One -- war's outbreak is greeted with widespread excitement and rejoicing. We like it.

As I say, it's an oversimplification to say 'war is bad.' Waging war is a natural human activity. One might as well say building houses is bad.


< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/26/2007 8:29:10 PM >


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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 8:06:39 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: sstevens06


quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious

quote:

ORIGINAL: vahauser

I'm more concerned about the extinction of the species


Human beings are remarkbly adaptable. You might be able to kill 99.999% of us- but that still leaves 60,000. A good, viable population- and with good rates of growth we'd be back where we are in a thousand years.

Obviously, the intervening period would be pretty unpleasant, but I don't think we're capable of exterminating ourselves.



At the height of the Cold War, when nuclear stockpiles were far larger than today, a full-scale exchange would not have resulted in the death of 99.999% of the population. Far from it - vast tracts of land with ample populations would have remained relatively unaffected. IMO most people greatly overestimate the effects of nuclear weapons, especially on a global scale.



Yeah. It's worth noting that prior to World War Two, estimates for the civilian casualties to be expected from a single air raid on London ranged from a quarter of a million to a full million. The Luftwaffe might have bagged a thousand on its best night, and fatalities for the whole war totaled 40,000.


< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/26/2007 8:20:25 PM >


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RE: SS - 11/26/2007 8:07:37 PM   
ColinWright

 

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or...




And nuclear war would be bad?

< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/26/2007 8:10:59 PM >


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Post #: 97
RE: SS - 11/26/2007 11:21:02 PM   
desert


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When I read these posts, I think of Thomas Hobbes, Captain Trips, and Lord of the Flies.

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Post #: 98
RE: SS - 11/27/2007 2:43:57 AM   
Foggy

 

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Interesting - ever thought about nukes are used? Ground bursts for
elimination of targets - airbursts to maximize damage - maybe Cobalt 60 enhanced weapons to kill every possible human in an area forever

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Post #: 99
RE: SS - 11/27/2007 3:56:33 AM   
desert


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Have fun getting 500 tons of cobalt-60 then?

It's possible to have a 10,000 megaton nuke in this game, FYI.

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"I would rather he had given me one more division"
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Post #: 100
RE: SS - 11/27/2007 11:32:51 AM   
golden delicious


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

As opposed to ten billion souls in a regimented society swimming in a goo of industrial and agricultural effluent heated by global warming? Or, your descendant could be like Daniel Boone, carving his own future on a virtually empty planet...


It would take two or three generations to reach your frontier bliss. Of course, you and I would both be wiped out on day one, since we live in major cities.

_____________________________

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"War? Huh. What is it good for?"
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Post #: 101
RE: SS - 11/27/2007 7:45:56 PM   
Ike99


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quote:

Most people are conditioned against actually killing each other. It's why such astonishing quantities of ammunition get fired off in the inner city -- and so few actual fatalities result.


People killing people is not a natural activity. If anything we condition people to kill people in our societies by the violence portrayed in movies, books, TV, graphic video games, etc. With all this still it is necessary to condition soldiers to kill other people.

quote:

It's also why certain groups which are less thoroughly conditioned -- career criminals, nomadic herders -- make remarkably effective soldiers.


These types of people make effective soldiers because they have the ability to overlook human suffering and kill without hesitation or remourse. But in almost every case this is a graduated, learned activity.

Not something natural.

For example a criminal going to a store shooting a clerk who hesitates to give him the money. In almost every single case as this if one looks into the criminals background he will have a history of escalating violence. On up until he kills the clerk in the store.

quote:

As I say, it's an oversimplification to say 'war is bad.' Waging war is a natural human activity. One might as well say building houses is bad.


Of course war is bad. Why is it an oversimplification to say so?

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RE: SS - 11/27/2007 8:42:04 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Ike99

quote:

Most people are conditioned against actually killing each other. It's why such astonishing quantities of ammunition get fired off in the inner city -- and so few actual fatalities result.


People killing people is not a natural activity. If anything we condition people to kill people in our societies by the violence portrayed in movies, books, TV, graphic video games, etc. With all this still it is necessary to condition soldiers to kill other people.

quote:

It's also why certain groups which are less thoroughly conditioned -- career criminals, nomadic herders -- make remarkably effective soldiers.


These types of people make effective soldiers because they have the ability to overlook human suffering and kill without hesitation or remourse. But in almost every case this is a graduated, learned activity.

Not something natural.

For example a criminal going to a store shooting a clerk who hesitates to give him the money. In almost every single case as this if one looks into the criminals background he will have a history of escalating violence. On up until he kills the clerk in the store.

quote:

As I say, it's an oversimplification to say 'war is bad.' Waging war is a natural human activity. One might as well say building houses is bad.


Of course war is bad. Why is it an oversimplification to say so?


If people killing people is not a natural activity, why does warfare become more endemic as one moves backward along the evolutionary scale of civilization?

It's peace that's unnatural. No healthy pre-modern culture indulged in it for any extended period.

It is we that are the anomaly. We are attempting (rather unsuccessfully) to engage in perpetual peace. This urge comes from four sources:

1. Christian teaching. That's what's largely behind Western mores -- and what's largely behind our perception of peace as a moral good.

2. The increasingly horrific nature of our wars. World Wars One and Two put a lot of people off their feed.

3. Our ability to wage genuinely devastating war at the drop of a hat. Note that this isn't quite as much of an innovation as it might appear. There are regions in the world today that are still deserts largely as a result of the work of the Mongols. Whole peoples that were exterminated to the last man. Amazing what you can do with simple hand tools...

4. The absurd imbalance of power. It's hard to accomplish anything of significance in the face of the fact that the United States has overwhelming military superiority. Warfare can only accomplish whatever the US is prepared to permit it to accomplish. Witness both Serbia's and Iraq's failed attempts at national aggrandizement.

However, to return to the original claim, none of these are 'natural' conditions. On the contrary, they are unnatural, artificial conditions. The 'natural' state would be perpetual, low-level, limited warfare. Sort of like gang warfare.

< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/27/2007 9:01:50 PM >


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RE: SS - 11/27/2007 9:03:05 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

As opposed to ten billion souls in a regimented society swimming in a goo of industrial and agricultural effluent heated by global warming? Or, your descendant could be like Daniel Boone, carving his own future on a virtually empty planet...


It would take two or three generations to reach your frontier bliss. Of course, you and I would both be wiped out on day one, since we live in major cities.


Well, I could well be on the road. Fair chance.

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Post #: 104
RE: SS - 11/27/2007 9:09:57 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Foggy

Interesting - ever thought about nukes are used? Ground bursts for
elimination of targets - airbursts to maximize damage - maybe Cobalt 60 enhanced weapons to kill every possible human in an area forever


Reminds me of Teller working out the various theoretically possible nuclear weapons around 1947.

One colleague recalls seeing his list on a blackboard along with the needed delivery system. 'Artillery shell, missile, aircraft, ship...'

The last one was 'backyard.' The idea behind the 'backyard bomb' is that you wouldn't need to take it anywhere: just set it off and it would kill whatever it was on the planet you wanted killed.

Sadly, Teller eventually had to admit that this last wouldn't work. The problem was that above a certain megatonnage, the destructive area of the blast wouldn't increase significantly: all that would happen would be that the chunk of atmosphere overhead would be accelerated into space at an increased velocity.


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RE: SS - 11/27/2007 9:16:15 PM   
ColinWright

 

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What would be interesting is to work out whether nuclear war would help or hinder the greenhouse effect.

On the one hand, you've got all those inveterate CO2 emitters being done away with, along with their infernal machines.

On the other hand, you've got a lot of simple heat being released, and quite a bit of greenery being incinerated. Of course, the greenery comes back -- but then so do the CO2 emitters.

There was the 'nuclear winter' theory. That was demonstrated to not have the long-term effects claimed -- but perhaps it would reverse the warming trend? In more ways than one -- after all, the necessary war would also greatly reduce the number of CO2 emitters.

We could get the answers to some of these questions by encouraging a limited exchange. Like between Pakistan and India, or Britain and France.

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RE: SS - 11/27/2007 10:36:35 PM   
desert


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quote:

However, to return to the original claim, none of these are 'natural' conditions. On the contrary, they are unnatural, artificial conditions. The 'natural' state would be perpetual, low-level, limited warfare. Sort of like gang warfare.


Instead of fighting on the battlefield, why not have countries decide their disputes by playing wargames? The national leaders could have a nice PBEM to see who gets that chunk of territory.

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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 2:51:08 AM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: desert

quote:

However, to return to the original claim, none of these are 'natural' conditions. On the contrary, they are unnatural, artificial conditions. The 'natural' state would be perpetual, low-level, limited warfare. Sort of like gang warfare.


Instead of fighting on the battlefield, why not have countries decide their disputes by playing wargames? The national leaders could have a nice PBEM to see who gets that chunk of territory.


I imagine the results would be happily accepted by the winners -- rejected by the losers.

That's what war does, you see. It forces people to accept outcomes they would otherwise reject.


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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 4:11:56 AM   
desert


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What about tactical shooters? And a result of using them to resolve disagreements, would be lag-free servers that can hold thousands of players.

Did you ever see a 1980s movie where two stupid CIA(?) agents stop a nuclear war, and at the end they play a boardgame with Soviet diplomats and win Eastern Europe?

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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 5:08:49 AM   
JAMiAM

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright


quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

As opposed to ten billion souls in a regimented society swimming in a goo of industrial and agricultural effluent heated by global warming? Or, your descendant could be like Daniel Boone, carving his own future on a virtually empty planet...


It would take two or three generations to reach your frontier bliss. Of course, you and I would both be wiped out on day one, since we live in major cities.


Well, I could well be on the road. Fair chance.

Why do I get the feeling that every Wright Moving van has a secret compartment outfitted with an old blackpowder rifle, 20 lbs of powder, 10 lbs of shot, buckskins, coon cap, and enough cornmeal, coffee and pemmican to last a year?

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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 9:12:33 AM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JAMiAM


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright


quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

As opposed to ten billion souls in a regimented society swimming in a goo of industrial and agricultural effluent heated by global warming? Or, your descendant could be like Daniel Boone, carving his own future on a virtually empty planet...


It would take two or three generations to reach your frontier bliss. Of course, you and I would both be wiped out on day one, since we live in major cities.


Well, I could well be on the road. Fair chance.

Why do I get the feeling that every Wright Moving van has a secret compartment outfitted with an old blackpowder rifle, 20 lbs of powder, 10 lbs of shot, buckskins, coon cap, and enough cornmeal, coffee and pemmican to last a year?


You forgot the Jim Beam. That's what the second fuel tank is for.


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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 12:25:35 PM   
golden delicious


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

If people killing people is not a natural activity, why does warfare become more endemic as one moves backward along the evolutionary scale of civilization?


I would say forget warfare and go to a more visceral level. When are we more likely to kill? When motivated by our instincts or when acting at our most rational, unnatural level?

Killing each other is part and parcel of human behaviour. Has been since the dawn of the species. It is only recently- when we have been living in extremely contrived and unnatural conditions- that it has been possible to try to abolish violence. Notice the abject failure of these attempts.

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Post #: 112
RE: SS - 11/28/2007 12:38:40 PM   
golden delicious


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quote:

ORIGINAL: desert

What about tactical shooters? And a result of using them to resolve disagreements, would be lag-free servers that can hold thousands of players.

Did you ever see a 1980s movie where two stupid CIA(?) agents stop a nuclear war, and at the end they play a boardgame with Soviet diplomats and win Eastern Europe?


Again, there's nothing to force the loser to accept the result.

_____________________________

"What did you read at university?"
"War Studies"
"War? Huh. What is it good for?"
"Absolutely nothing."

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Post #: 113
RE: SS - 11/28/2007 8:50:42 PM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: golden delicious


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColinWright

If people killing people is not a natural activity, why does warfare become more endemic as one moves backward along the evolutionary scale of civilization?


I would say forget warfare and go to a more visceral level. When are we more likely to kill? When motivated by our instincts or when acting at our most rational, unnatural level?

Killing each other is part and parcel of human behaviour. Has been since the dawn of the species. It is only recently- when we have been living in extremely contrived and unnatural conditions- that it has been possible to try to abolish violence. Notice the abject failure of these attempts.


There's also the point that legitimizing violence makes it possible to apply moral standards to it. See the mores regulating the limited warfare of the eighteenth century versus the barbarities that invariably seem to accompany the eruption of violence these days.

On another level, I recall an elderly newspaper columnist regretting the decline of the traditional fist fight. You see, men used to fight each other fairly regularly, and it was accepted. It also meant that society was able to impose rules, like no guns or knives. One would even have large urban brawls -- but no guns or knives. The phrase 'paddy wagon' comes from the large vehicles the police had to use to haul off all the contestants when Irish immigrants got going in their version of a block party -- but it was all fists. No guns or knives.

Earlier, one had the elaborate rules and customs governing dueling. Now, of course, fighting is right out -- and if you've got a gun or knife, by all means use it to gain an unfair advantage.

It's possible to make too much of the above -- but I think we'll do better accepting violence/war and establishing norms regarding the activities than we will if we just attempt to deny this aspect of our behavior.


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RE: SS - 11/28/2007 11:50:35 PM   
desert


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War is too expensive. Whats the point of wasting all that junk and money? We could always use swords and spears again, I guess.

I'm hoping for a nice, healthy interstellar colonization era. 



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RE: SS - 11/29/2007 12:02:59 AM   
Ike99


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quote:

On another level, I recall an elderly newspaper columnist regretting the decline of the traditional fist fight. You see, men used to fight each other fairly regularly, and it was accepted. It also meant that society was able to impose rules, like no guns or knives. One would even have large urban brawls -- but no guns or knives. The phrase 'paddy wagon' comes from the large vehicles the police had to use to haul off all the contestants when Irish immigrants got going in their version of a block party -- but it was all fists. No guns or knives.


Many times their were guns and knives/swords but there was always a sence of honor. That´s what is missing today that was present before.






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Post #: 116
RE: SS - 11/29/2007 3:21:16 AM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: desert

War is too expensive. Whats the point of wasting all that junk and money? We could always use swords and spears again, I guess.

I'm hoping for a nice, healthy interstellar colonization era.




One could say the same about almost anything past about $4000.00 per capita per year. It's all unnecessary.

War -- unlike four-bedroom houses, mountain cabins, and new cars -- is exciting and interesting. It creates good stories, helps to address overpopulation, and stimulates technological development. Finally, where would we be without it? Want to play TOAW scenarios based on the mores of middle-class conspicuous consumption in the 1950's?

War's great stuff. Should involve only the participants, be voluntary, occur only in one's youth, involve about a 5% chance of a fatal outcome and about a 20% chance of an honorable but not grossly crippling wound, and consume about a year of one's life with perhaps a month of active danger.

Given those limitations, I'm all for it. In short, the institution needs to be improved, not abolished.


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RE: SS - 11/29/2007 3:25:54 AM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Ike99

quote:

On another level, I recall an elderly newspaper columnist regretting the decline of the traditional fist fight. You see, men used to fight each other fairly regularly, and it was accepted. It also meant that society was able to impose rules, like no guns or knives. One would even have large urban brawls -- but no guns or knives. The phrase 'paddy wagon' comes from the large vehicles the police had to use to haul off all the contestants when Irish immigrants got going in their version of a block party -- but it was all fists. No guns or knives.


Many times their were guns and knives/swords but there was always a sence of honor. That´s what is missing today that was present before.







There you go. And those duels produced remarkably few fatalities. Swords, though, tend to confer an advantage on the aristocracy. However, pistols at thirty yards is fairly random and considerably fairer than Russell Crowe challenging Woody Allen to fisticuffs.

Really, dueling with single shot, black powder pistols should be brought back. Upset? Well, either live with it or challenge your opponent. None of this nonsense with drive-by shootings and lawsuits.


< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/29/2007 3:29:55 AM >


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Post #: 118
RE: SS - 11/29/2007 4:02:18 AM   
desert


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John Locke would weep if he could read this. Notice how there is no evidence of "war' until around the beginning of the Neolithic. And war would never help lower the population, unless you want to have another WW2, which you don't, because they make people lose their stomach for war. No one will fight a war just for the sake of letting off steam. War is for politics, money or land. If you look back far enough, you could include slaves. People are in favor of war until the casualties start to climb. Just look at the Iraq War, or the Vietnam War.

In my opinion, there could be a time when war is obsolete. Think of the Indus River valley.

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Post #: 119
RE: SS - 11/29/2007 4:46:06 AM   
ColinWright

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: desert

John Locke would weep if he could read this. Notice how there is no evidence of "war' until around the beginning of the Neolithic.


? American Paleolithic tribes that engaged in warfare more or less continually. The Sioux, The Arapaho, The Crow, The Cheyenne, The Apache, The Paiute... The rest that come to mind were either neolithic or I know so little about them that I can't positively affirm that they fought all the time, but I've no knowledge of any tribe that actually avoided waging war.

Paleolithic cultures almost invariably practice warfare. The only exceptions are such 'refugee' cultures as the Bushmen and the Pygmies -- who themselves were produced when their forebears were driven out of more habitable areas by warfare -- and such groups as the Australian aborigines, who have to deal with an environment so inhospitable that staying alive is a full-time job. Given reasonable facilities and a wholesome childhood, however, paleolithic man goes at it hammer and tongs.
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And war would never help lower the population, unless you want to have another WW2, which you don't, because they make people lose their stomach for war. No one will fight a war just for the sake of letting off steam.


Au contraire. The Mongol invasions halved the population of Iran. As to letting off steam, what the hell do you think we started the Spanish-American War for? The sugar?
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War is for politics, money or land.


No. Often such motives are offered as justifications. However, absent a basic visceral desire for war itself, differences arising out of such motives can usually be settled non-violently. See, for example, our various disputes with Spain and Britain from 1815 through 1898. Absent an actual desire for war on the part of at least one party, it usually proves eminently avoidable. The same observation could be made about the Soviet-American confrontation from 1945 through 1991. No direct superpower war. Why? Neither side ever actually wanted it.
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If you look back far enough, you could include slaves. People are in favor of war until the casualties start to climb. Just look at the Iraq War, or the Vietnam War.


Again, nonsense. Most stayed firmly in favor of World War One -- and indeed, grew only more determined -- as the butcher's bill grew. Had casualties been enough to stop anyone, the war would indeed have ended before the leaves fell. By your logic, World War Two should have ended about mid-1942.
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In my opinion, there could be a time when war is obsolete. Think of the Indus River valley.


Okay, I thought of the Indus River Valley. Nothing happened.


< Message edited by ColinWright -- 11/29/2007 5:17:18 AM >


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