There is nothing "permanent" about war. It is neither a "natural phenomenon" nor an "intrinsic part of human nature," no matter what theorists or policy practitioners claim to justify brutality and oppression.
War is a social—and now, increasingly bureaucratic—construct deeply embedded in the international order that benefits a few on top of the food chain. It is a byproduct of the outdated 16th century colonial inspired and deeply racist Eurocentric theoretical frameworks upon which modern society is built.
For wars to end permanently, the social construct of the 16th century, as it exists today, must also end and be replaced with the data, technology, and context of the 21st century—or, better yet, with the projected data of the centuries to come.
There is no reason for us to tolerate or normalise wars as ‘given’. We live at a time when wars should be a relic of the past; something that belong to the museums, for our next generations to see and learn about the horrors of primitive human consciousness.
"Krieg Gehort ins Museum"