And? Everyone's opinions are based on their perceptions and experiences of the world.
My opinion is based off of me, me, me.
Yours is you, you, you.
Hes is her, her, her.
That is human nature and doesn't make anyone's opinions less credible or correct.
This is but one truth that is part of a greater whole you've yet to realize.
It is not natural for one man to seek dominion over another. It is natural for animals to do so, but aren't we supposedly higher than animals because of our intelligence? Shouldn't our natural ability to reason put us above this natural inclination to dominate, thus making it NOT our nature? But we haven't gotten above this inclination, which is why I say we failed.
Intelligence is the ability to recognize patterns and the cognitive ability to postulate upon a beneficial set of patterns to achieve a desired result.
Intelligence is a tool - it is not an ideology.
Regardless of if my opinions on war are crafted by some kind of fantasy world or what I view as perfection, we are not perfect. The world of humans and society is far from perfect. Unless you can really say:
Death
Murder
Thievery
Rape
Kidnapping
Terrorists
Corrupted governments
Tyrants
Dictators
War
Famine
Disease
Racism
Sexism
Homophobia
are all perfect.
Ask one person whether or not a man is a homophobe - then ask another whether or not that same person is a homophobe. You will often come up with different answers.
What I would feel is sexism against me is not what you would consider is sexism against you.
The only thing your view of perfection leads to is a world of you.
Can I fix the world? No. But why shouldn't we try? Why shouldn't we point out what's wrong with it? The world is NOT perfect the way it is, you have to be completely deluded to think so.
The world is nothing it is not supposed to be.
Yours is the perspective of the chemistry student who looks to his instructor: "Is it supposed to do this?"
As if the world would somehow do something it wasn't supposed to do. There is nothing wrong with the chemicals the student mixed together. There is nothing wrong with the reaction. The only problem is that the student believed the outcome should be something other than the way things should be based on the elements involved.
The world behaves exactly as it is supposed to. If you can't bring yourself to understand the forces of the world - then how can you possibly hope to gain any amount of influence over their actions?
You're just throwing the good smelling chemicals into the swirling chaos of what's already in motion in the hopes that all that it will settle into something approximating your expectations.
And can you really deny that war is a terrible thing? What about all the people that say war was hell when they get back, the ones who actually out their in a storm of bullets and bombs, taking lives? All the people who come back with PTSD, and have their lives shattered because of it? And what of the people that don't come back? What of the millions of people who die because of this, the millions who end up disfigured. The thousands of civilians who weren't even fighting and wanted nothing to do with the war? What about all the people that won't wake up the next day because "the universe is perfect as is" and "there is nothing right or wrong with war"? What about all the terrorist organizations that spawn from and create wars? What about all the hate that spawn for different nationalities, religions, ethnicities because of war that just spur new ones? What about the division of the world? The debts that come to be because of war? Can you seriously sit there in your ****ing militarism pride and tell me this shit are NOT bad things?
And here is where you illustrate just how little you actually know and how juvenile your view is.
Of course war destroys people (in more ways than one) - that's kind of the point of it.
But here is what you need to understand. I'm a pithy little sub-human piece of shit, and I realize that you have a farm and are doing quite well for yourself. I think you should give me 2% of your harvest.
Why, you ask?
Well, you see - I keep the wolves away from your cattle. No wolves? - Exactly. No? You won't pay? My, that's a pretty daughter you've got, there. Would sure be a shame if she went missing. Now best you just agree or things will get a little rough around here.
The same for the blacksmith, any other farms in my 'territory,' etc.
How do you deal with that? Line up, link arms, and sing "no we won't" as I drive forks into the eyes of the guy standing next to you?
"That's silly, we'd just stab a fork in you."
And the fifteen other people I've convinced to follow my lead in that type of lifestyle?
"We'll stab them, too."
Now it's a war.
There will always be those who realize that they can use force as an expedient means to an end. This is because we are intelligent creatures and have the ability to understand how to manipulate the environment and other people.
We manipulate each other on a daily basis without even realizing that we are actually trying to engineer the response of another person. We exaggerate, place emphasis on things not because we feel they are important - but because we know they are important to others. It's not inherently wrong - but it is an example that our nature gravitates toward manipulation, even if minor and without malice.
At some point, you encounter an attempt to manipulate you that you are unwilling, or physically incapable of complying with. What then?
The problem with your 'perfection' is that it requires others to comply with your view. Every child born has to be somehow purged of the ability to conceive of taking sexual actions without the consent of the other. As if somehow the actions of each individual are completely dependent upon what the rest of society does. So if you can change society - then you can somehow prevent bad things from happening.
"If... if everyone would just think happy thoughts!"
And if I don't think your happy thoughts?
Then I must be part of the problem, right? I'm keeping you from being happy. I'm standing in the way of your perfection.
Human beings readily reduce to sociopaths. They lapse into and out of sociopathic behavior without ever realizing it because they have never once been confronted with the reality of their behavior. War causes many people to confront that reality head-on. They kill someone who was on the verge of killing them, then discover their kids cowering in a corner, somewhere. The "us versus them" stirred up by politicians (warlords) does not survive prolonged contact with the enemy.
Many people simply can't deal with that reality. Some shelve it and just try their best not to think about it. Others get consumed by it and spend their lives medicated or locked away from the world.
It's actually ironic, having this discussion on this forum. All of Shipuuden has been about this very discussion.
I'm most curious to see what conclusion Kishimoto has arrived at. All indications I am seeing point towards Kishimoto siding with Taoist and Buddhist concepts of enlightenment and ends to the cycle of human suffering... but I think he is going to try and communicate it through an ideologically perfected world of the mundane as the ending (with the dialogue indicating the state is merely temporary with a hopeful note for the future that will encounter separate trials and tribulations).