Not always true. Sometimes the presence of the stick is all you need to prevent trouble.
Like when? Besides the Cold War - which was in its own way devastating and not particularly cold - did having weapons act as a deterrent? I mean, you can say any number of platitudes that sound good, but they don't work. They don't exist. People who have guns - whether in the home or on military scale - tend to want to use them. History does show that pretty clearly.
I do think the Civil War is debatable and mainly comes down to two sides who's cultural differences made them just want to kill each other with slavery as peripheral issues, but I'll hand it to you. And I'll also hand you a number of Revolutionary wars including our own. But I think Egypt and India prove that there are other means to freedom from tyranny. But that's still a small handful compared to the vast number of conflicts that even the United States has been in the last century - which has been in a constant state of military aggression in one way or another. Statistically your argument doesn't hold up.Massive ideological divides drove the South to succession. In Lincoln's mind a divided state served no ones best interest. The endgame was a united country and a the ending of slavery in the U.S. and it's territories. It's in the eye-of-the-beholder whether or not it was beneficial in the long run. In my personal opinion, the Civil War was inevitable and it was beneficial.
Sonak said:Believing in security and preparedness doesn't make one a "hawk," an "imperialist," or some other boogeyman term.
You can frame it that way, but taking a look at how our weapons are used you would be completely wrong. You think you're being realistic, but it's you who's the idealist - thinking that trillions of dollars of weapons are just for defense.
Hmmm... the old "when you have a hammer..." expression huh? I guess that could come into play, but I bet there are examples of nations with pretty big defense budgets that don't go around starting wars very often. (The U.S. skews this because it does have a massive defense budget and fights a lot of wars)
I just think the more prepared and secure you are, the greater your range of options. Look at how well the international disarmament movement following WWI worked out. Some nations decided to disarm, others went the other way. Guess what happened when it came time for the disarming nations to confront aggressors?