Hi Keith,

With all due respect, though many of your premises make good sense, and one 
should never underestimate the stupidity of those in power (especially not 
today or in the near future, with the US govt basically adrift) I don't think 
your WWIII scenario ( to the limited extent it even is one) holds much water. 
It's true that financial manipulations could be considered war by other means, 
but that hardly implies they would turn to actual war. Neither China, Russia 
nor the US orEurope has the  number of large families willing to surrender a 
substantial proportion of their children as cannon fodder, which was not the 
case a few generations ago. countries are far more interdependent now, and so 
anything approaching full-scale war between advanced countries including the 
BRIC ones seems pretty self-defeeating. 

Of course, in  away we are already in sort of World War, what with the ongoing 
Congo crisis, Sudan, Somailia the Iraq and Afghan wars, the still hot Islamic 
south of Russia, and the looming crisis over Iran. But these are wars fought  
substantially by proxy and in very poor places, for the most part. The dangers 
of either nuclear war or even full-scale conventional war between well-armed 
rivals are so obvious tht even the current crop of leaders are far 
toointellignet to risk any such adventure. After all, the whole reason for 
sabre rattling against Iran is that  they may get nukes, but that does not mean 
that even India or Pakistan would be foolish enough to start a nuclear war 
against one another. the US  has still more constraint on it, and will for 
sometime to come.So do Russia and China. 

WWII did plenty to help lift the industrialized world out of the Depression, 
through rampant, and not so creative destruction. The equivalent no w though is 
hardly thinkable, even by a Hitler, should one arise. that leaves the question 
of how to increase worldwide aggregate demand, and I generally agree there is 
no simple answer, but China  and India are certainly doing their best to find 
such a way, through rapidly expanding their own growth. I don't happen to think 
that will be enough, but that is partly because I think the new post-capitalist 
attention economy is growing much faster, and the future will be more in that 
direction. This will lessen the importance of states even further, and with 
that lessening, war will be even more useless. Terrorism is till a fair wart y 
to attract attention, but not to hold it, so I don't see that mode of warfare 
as having much future either. Cultures will compete in something more akin to a 
global version of American Idol. 

But of course, even if that is all true, the cataclysm to fear still will be 
global warming,a bout which not much, it would appear will be done in time. 


Best,
Michael





#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]

Reply via email to