sh00g
@sh00g@lemmy.world
Hello Lemmy!
I am a former 10-year Reddit user who is making the migration to Lemmy since RiF is being shut down by Reddit’s hostile API actions. I am a Purdue University alumnus and mechanical engineer with a multitude of interests. Greetings!
- Comment on Why have there been large coalitions of countries throughout history that come together to draft agreements about the boundaries of war and what constitutes a war crime (like the Geneva Convention), but none have ever made war itself a crime? 1 year ago:
A lot of people on here are making the point that war is profitable in many cases. They aren’t wrong, but it’s much simpler than that and has nothing to do with money. The entirety of the sovereign state based system we live in is predicated on the premise that to consolidate power you have to have a monopoly on use of force. And when you have a bunch of individual states claiming sovereignty over a bunch of individual territories, the only way that sovereignty is actually worth anything is if that state is willing to put up a right to prove it. I think the only way we will ever get away from war in the way we see it now is by moving onto an Earth-encompassing single state. We are a long, long way off from that.