If aliens sat down to read earth history, they’d get the impression that we’re a very warlike species. While, no doubt, this is true for a large part of history, I’d suggest that at least since 1900 it hasn’t been so much that the species is warlike, but that its leaders are. As long as we have “shallow bastards” (to use Frank Turner’s phrase from “1933”) leading us, is it any wonder? Even with current world leadership given a pass, looking back over the big ones of the last century, it was mentally unstable leaders with fragile egos that led to wars. I’m sure some national resentment across borders certainly exists, but would people just go and kill those in the next town over, in the “modern” world, if their leaders didn’t tell them to? Think of World War II, brought on by a madman. Yes, Germany had grievances, but war wasn’t the only way to solve them. And killing Jews did nothing to help anybody.
Or World War One. The assassination of an Archduke need not have led to nations clashing with excessively deadly force. Men with inflated egos and personal ambitions seem to have played a large role. To any aliens reading this, some of us would like to take exception to this warlike generalization. Human society is complex, and the jury is still out on whether democracy can really work when the electorate doesn’t bother to educate itself. Or allow itself to be educated. Still, my sense of my species is that we’ve managed to civilize ourselves out of being warlike, but we do have strong emotions that we need to learn to control. Watching Washington flirt with war every day because of incompetence, well, dear aliens, we’re not all like that.
The world into which I was born seemed to be okay as far as national boundaries went. Younger generations are raised to realize that colonialism was an evil, exploitive outlook. There are those alive, unfortunately many of them in public office, who want to go back to acquiring more land. And countries, sometimes artificially created (generally by Europeans), continue to break apart. South Sudan became a country only in 2011, but Sudan appears to have been artificially held together by pressure from other nations. I still don’t see why globalism and lack of war can’t coexist. If nations had thinking persons in charge rather than macho men eager to show how big they are (aliens, this is a human fascination, I’ll grant you), we might well be able to live in peace. If you want to take them back to your planet, you are most welcome to do so.
