Lots of people at DT and other sites seem very worried about the rising China and effect China might have in "taking over" South China Seas. Well, you will need a lot of money to develop all these potential commodity sites, why would China get all aggressive if down the road they are the only ones with the money to extract all these commodities? Does the other countries like Vietnam or Philippines have the money and tech to exploit their resources?
I don't have the true numbers here but as an example would China spend $100 billion invading Australia when it could just simply buy everything in needs from Australia for $50 billion? What would be the point of using force? Why would Australia stop selling commodities to China, very unlikely that Australia will find a better buyer? Now, counter point would be if commodities rise to the point where China feels the price is to high, I guess military action could ensue but in a global economy, prices rise and fall depending on economic conditions and also China would probably try to find other sellers before just invading.
I agree with Ananda, we have economic battles being waged everyday, it would have to make real economic sense to use other means (military).
For NICO and for STURM and ANANDA
You are wrong about your central assumption for the cause of all human conflict. That assumption is that there are not enough resources within the world for the world to realize a time in the future when all of its peoples can obtain a modern level of prosperity due simply to the lack of such contested resources. This assumption is also assumed to be both logical and immutable. Especially when compared to all the other less logical reasons that people have harmed each other which are then assumed to be then illogical because they not immutable.
The logical fallacy is that after a long period of rapid population growth that the planet will reach its maximum load baring potential and then at that point we will decent into a global Malthusian society where the stronger will pray upon the weaker resulting not only in the death of the dream of a peaceful and prosperous world but also a major die off of the species. However only a part of this scenario is true.
For the younger people on this board I will share with you an observation that many of the problems that were considered unsolvable in my youth and which were relegated to the category of immutably unsolvable, I have live long enough to see solved or at least highly migrated to the point that further growth, prosperity, long healthy life, and increased freedom was not limited because of them any longer. Most of the predictions of my youth would put the planet today in far worse shape than we find it right now with no hope of it ever getting better. The majority of people do not have the imagination or the belief to see that mankind’s material problems are solvable if we can find a way to work together and unleash our collective human capacity to adapt, improve, and innovate. But for this to happen mutual cooperation and trust is required on a scale which we have never had before.
The only reason that we have attained the world’s population as we currently find it is because of the unprecedented cooperation we have achieved since WW II.
Cooperation that was designed into the new world order by its victors so as to end the endless cycle of conquest and exploitation the world had always been operating on before. Why? Because we now have the capacity to end all human civilization through acts of our mutual hostility. Something had to change. Have we found the perfect system? Probably not but it is sufficiently better that anything before it that the world has profited greatly.
But here is the danger. If we blow it this time there will be new constraints for any future civilization to advance from the ruble. There is plenty of resource in the world for all of its peoples but all most all of the easily accessible one have been already exploded. The greater amounts that still remain require more technology, infrastructure, capital, organization and stability than any that existed ever before or could exist before the second half of the industrial revolution. If we not only lose the knowledge and skills needed to bring natural resources to a useful condition with wide spread civilization collapse. We will no longer have the capital, organization, infrastructure, or stability to retrieve the resources that still remain. The survivors will be suck in a pre-industrial age permanently. From time to time nature whips the world clean of its higher life forms. It has happed many times before. Without the power to modify the world through physical means that comes with industry and a knowledge bases society so as to insure our existence, we will someday go the same way as the dinosaurs.
To answer the question “is it's more 'profitable' to launch 'armed' wars or 'economic' wars” the answer is nether but that will not stop people from trying. Competition however is a good think. Competition between people, companies, industries, and forgive me for saying it "countries" drives innovation and increases efficiency and the winners need to be rewarded for their skills. But work competition must always be maintained and the winners of the day, kept nervous about tomorrow. All of the players need to be kept in the game and trying for we need all of the intelligence and imagination we can get to solve all of the problems of the world, especially the economic one’s.
To get back on topic “Is some form of world war still possible in this day and age?” The trend I think is to attack the moral, physical, and stabilizing institutions of another society so as to weaken it from within and in doing so suborning it or intimidating it to such a degree that is no longer is a rival. It could be by making illegal drugs more easily available, promoting corruption or just inefficacy’s or anything that destroys mutual trust or cooperation within a target society. I no longer buy anything on the internet. How does this differ from just crime? Government’s do it better when profit is not the main motive.