The misfortunes of
war and preparations for war bear little relation to the reasons given to
explain war: the real reasons are usually so insignificant that they are not
even worth discussion, and they are completely unknown to those who die.
The madness of contemporary war is justified by dynastic
interest, common nationalism, European equilibrium, or ambitions. If there are
ambitions in people, this is a very strange way to sustain it, with all the
crimes which happen to people during war: destruction of homes, plunder, and
mass murder.
— Anatole France
You ask me, is it necessary for civilized people to make
war? And I tell you not only is it “already” unnecessary, but it was never
necessary, and not sometimes but always it destroys the normal development of
humanity, destroys justice, and stops progress.
— Galston Mohk
Only during a period
of the war does it become obvious how millions of people can be manipulated.
People, millions of people, are filled with pride while doing things which
those same people actually consider stupid, evil, dangerous, painful, and
criminal, and they strongly criticize these things — but continue doing them.
The reasons which
governments give for wars are always screens, behind which lie completely different
reasons and motives.
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