2014/11/18

Longest Continuous Period of War In American History

Barry Ritholtz writes about the Longest Continuous Period of War In American History.

Ritholtz writes that this endless war and unceasing alarms is weakening the US Republic through the corrosion of the legal and political system. He writes that it is a cynical attempt to garner power and to distract the populace from the real problems:

But — underneath the ever-changing marketing and branding campaign — it’s really just the good ‘ole military-industrial-and-banking complex consolidating their power and making money hand over fist.

It is in the interests of the Capitalists to preserve their power: both in the objective realm of physical force, and in the subjective realm of ideas. Since they are a minority, they must delude or subject the majority to their whims. They do not rule by consent—but by force and delusion.

The inherent danger of continuous wars, as the Spartans found out, is that your enemies learn how to fight you. Sparta was able to dominate their part of Greece for hundreds of years due to their reputation and mystique—they actually did very little fighting.

It was only with the conquest of Athens that the Spartans entered upon a period of continuous warfare. After a period of time, Sparta's enemies began to lose their fear of her and began to work out how to defeat her.

With defeat came the revolt of the subject peoples and slaves. This further undermined the Spartan war economy. Then Macedonia swept in to conquer all of Greece. Despite attempts to free herself, Sparta became a subject state of Macedonia, then Rome, then Byzantium, then Istanbul.

The three (3) Russian revolutions (1905, February 1917, and November 1917) came on the back of great military defeats. The German revolution of 1919 came with defeat in WWI. Military defeat is sometimes a catalyst for social revolution as the ruling class has lost its mystique of superiority and invincibility.

With this latest Capitalist crisis, war is probably seen as the only way to maintain power. But it is a dangerous one as it can hasten the demise of the ruling class.

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