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View Full Version : The Decline of War [Op Ed]



Godfather
08-13-2016, 08:13 PM
https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/2000/1*RRVy00TYHuUXgQ__h4QFPA.jpeg

The Decline of War

We are experiencing one of the least discussed, yet most remarkable cultural shifts of all time: war, one of our species’ most abiding and defining social practices, is at its lowest ebb ever

On Wednesday 21st June, the Colombian government agreed to a ceasefire with the country’s largest rebel group. For most people, this story would have passed unnoticed, buried amongst the headlines. That’s a pity. Not only does it mark the end of a 50 year old war that has killed more than 220,000 people, it also signals the end of official armed conflict in the entire western hemisphere of the planet. It means that all of the war in the world is now contained to an arc stretching from central Africa through to Pakistan, containing less than a sixth of the world’s population. If you can tear your attention away from the 24 hour news cycle, you’ll be astonished to hear that we are experiencing one of the least discussed, yet most remarkable cultural shifts of all time: war, one of our species’ most abiding and defining social practices, is at its lowest ebb ever.

The immediate reaction to a claim like that is of course, disbelief. The brutal conflict in Syria has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, and displaced millions. We are in the midst of the largest refugee crisis of modern times, and terrorism is also at an all-time high. Every night our screens are saturated with images of hollowed out buildings in Fallujah and Aleppo, masked men flying black flags in the desert, and the faces of the latest innocent victims in Baghdad, Lagos, Paris, Brussels and Orlando.

https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/800/1*QY6C2fXi_pLa3dPuEoPATg.png
Source: Global Conflict Tracker (2016)

But, as Joshua S. Goldstein and Steven Pinker point out in a recent Boston Globe editorial, our obsession with these stories blind us to a far greater truth. Outside the Middle East, war is effectively disappearing. In Nigeria, Boko Haram is on the retreat from many of its home terrories. In the Central African Republic, a newly elected government has brought genuine hope for lasting peace. In Ukraine, a shaky ceasefire is holding despite partial flare ups. We have short memories too. We forget about the wars that ended recently in Lebanon, Rwanda, Chad, Peru, Iran, Sri Lanka and Angola and have forgotten earlier ones from a generation ago in places like Greece, Tibet, Algeria, India, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Uganda, and Mozambique that killed millions of people.

The world was a far more dangerous place when you were born. Death tolls from wars in the 1970s and 1980s were 4–5 times higher than they are today. We are, despite reports of religious and political insurgencies, despite high-profile terrorist killings and unrest in various corners of the globe, living in the most peaceful era of our species’ existence. The world is getting less violent; we’re just more aware of the violence that happens, thanks to the mass availability of information. And unfortunately, the media and our politicians use that information to make it look as though we’re doing worse than we actually are. I’ve written about that elsewhere, so I won’t get into it into much detail. Suffice to say we have some evolutionary hangovers that leave us ill equipped to think about this stuff properly.

So what’s happening here? Why is war declining? Well the answer is complicated, but a big part of it seems to be that our institutions are getting better. After centuries of hard earned lessons, people are starting to understand that governance really matters. Democracy is more prevalent today than ever before (and despite all its obvious flaws, it’s still a hell of a lot better than authoritarianism and feudal serfdom). Since democracies don’t usually go to war with each other, the likelihood of interstate war, which kills more people than the kinds of intermittent, non-state conflicts we see today, is declining. As the world becomes more interconnected, the powerful have ever more incentives to avoid the catastrophic economic consequences of going to war too. Conflict isn’t good for your economy in a world of dense trade networks and digital flows.

https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/800/1*59stiQu2nUXhIdBRPnuIjw.png
Sources: Our World in Data (2015); Uppsala Conflict Data Project Programme (2015); Peace Research Institute of Oslo (2014)

An important caveat here — the data does not suggest that war is over, nor does it suggest the end of low level conflicts within states. It also feels strange, almost perverse to be writing an article entitled “The Decline of War” when we know hundreds of thousands of people around the world are still suffering and when millions of displaced people are being shunned by countries that are turning their backs on the principles they agreed to in the UN’s Refugee Convention. Our work is only just beginning. As large scale war declines, we have an opportunity to turn our collective efforts to overcoming other forms of violence such as domestic abuse, slavery, and racial, political and religious persecution. We’ve got a long way to go: from ethnic violence in the Congo, state collapse in Venezuela and persecution in Tibet, to drug wars in Mexico and Brazil and the rise of far-right extremism in Europe.

But, as one of my favourite statisticians Hans Rosling says — you have to be able to hold two ideas in your head at once. The world is getting better. But the world is not yet good enough. It’s important to acknowledge one of the great stories of our time. We are very lucky. Fewer of us as a proportion of the world’s entire population have had to go to war than any other generation since the Roman Empire. Surely that’s something that should be celebrated as part of our public discourse? When we speak about the decline of war, we have an opportunity to express our gratitude to those who came before us, and sacrificed so much for the principles of peace, and freedom from persecution. Our relative comfort and wellbeing is a direct result of their sacrifices — and by saying that the world is getting worse, we dishonour their memories. War is not inevitable. Many brave people have fought for that belief. Our generation is starting to show that it’s possible. And the more people start understanding that, the sooner it becomes a reality.

https://medium.com/@angushervey/the-decline-of-war-8760f9a5b5ce#.3vey05awg

Godfather
08-13-2016, 08:16 PM
Fuck the images won't come over from the host, now it's all ruined :lol:

Anyways, interesting data showing the decline of war.

"The world is getting less violent; we’re just more aware of the violence that happens, thanks to the mass availability of information.

And unfortunately, the media and our politicians use that information to make it look as though we’re doing worse than we actually are. "

DemonGeminiX
08-13-2016, 08:16 PM
It's a pipe dream. As long as human beings exist, war will exist.

Godfather
08-13-2016, 08:20 PM
War is on the decline world wide, violent crime on the decline in western countries. Fear mongering and pessimism in general is no doubt up though

KevinD
08-14-2016, 03:31 AM
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=R3rnxQBizoU

DemonGeminiX
08-14-2016, 04:09 AM
War is on the decline world wide, violent crime on the decline in western countries. Fear mongering and pessimism in general is no doubt up though

Try realism. All it takes is one desperate country to put one sociopath in control and that'll throw everything into turmoil. I see the possibility for it every where I look. China, North Korea, Russia, Iran. Africa is a hell hole in the majority of the continent's countries. The terrorist groups. Open borders in Europe. Safety is an illusion, my friend. You have to be forever vigilant, almost paranoid, and constantly have to wield the biggest stick to keep the bad actors at bay. Yes, we've reached a stage of enlightenment where the thought of warlords running countries seems outdated, but I'm telling you, lifting pressure off of the bad actors is giving them an opening that they're dying to take advantage of. People, in general, just can not be trusted.

There will always be a bad actor. There will always be someone who thinks they deserve to have another's resources. Everybody wants to rule the world. There will always be war and the need to deter it.

redred
08-14-2016, 06:24 AM
Your first sentence sounds like America and trump :outtahere:

DemonGeminiX
08-14-2016, 04:09 PM
"Try realism" sounds like America and Trump?

:-k

redred
08-14-2016, 06:29 PM
Only time maybe will tell

DemonGeminiX
08-14-2016, 06:48 PM
:lol:

You lost me, man.

redred
08-14-2016, 06:50 PM
We will maybe see if all your dreams come true if he gets in, remember all you guys said Obama wouldn't get back in last time

DemonGeminiX
08-14-2016, 07:09 PM
Whether he gets in or not, our dreams will never come true. Nobody's dreams ever come true. That's a fact of life.

And you misunderstand my intention: I just really don't want HER in the Oval Office.

redred
08-14-2016, 07:40 PM
That's fair enough you will settle for anything but her, must be a scary world hoping that all he talks about he can deliver