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Franklin O'Kanu's avatar

Do human love to kill each other? No, absolutely not. Does it occur? From time to time under various circumstances.

Is war entirely propagated by evil forces? Absolutely. This is what is the root cause of wars as humans do not look to kill masses, but an evil force that infects humans does — and uses other humans to spread this evil message.

Humans, in real situations work together and achieve greatness as I wrote about the Tonga Boys: https://unorthodoxy.substack.com/p/the-real-lord-of-the-flies-what-really

Humans don’t love to kill each others, but evil does. Evil compels humans to kill each other

Christopher Quick's avatar

You would enjoy a book called The War Against Humanity by Anonymous Patriot. It details the Evil behind the last three thousand years of history through a biblical lens, detailing those rulers and popes infected by dark, spiritual sickness.

Phil Davis's avatar

I must disagree. Humans do like killing other humans, and it depends on the circumstances. When a human, group of humans, or a government finds themselves at a crossroads of losing, either in an argument or at worst, a geopolitical event, humans will resort to killing each other.

Whether you believe in biblical stories or view them as fiction, the event of Cane and Abel, the very first children of the first human couple, involved murder because of jealousy. The earliest humans could not find a way to resolve a petty conflict without murder. And that has been human nature since.

To many, others' lives are cheap, especially to politicians.

gus gaster's avatar

Sad to say, 'War is just another means of politics'.

Crixcyon's avatar

Not so much. It is governments that love to kill humans but the truth is that few in government are actually human.

albert venezio's avatar

A small element of humanity does, many are programmed to often based on false flags and the demonization of the enemy, however Mass Murder = War is driven by the Controllers and their agents (Politicians, Media etc.).

Debra Nolasco's avatar

I would say, that based on what happened during covid, that there is a perverse desire for humans to kill other humans. It was evident everywhere you looked. Probably the worse was the deliberate suppression & withholding of early out-patient treatment that, according to the approximately 500 medical doctors in this country that did offer such treatment, was responsible for 80-85% of the covid deaths that did occur. Translated, that means that if 1-million people in this country died from covid, that between 800,00 - 850,000 did not need to die. For those who love to kill other humans, this was the perfect set-up. No weapons required (other than the "vaccines") & no blood shed on a battlefield. Simply deny them the treatment that they so desperately need or keep offering the population booster shots.

David O'Halloran's avatar

It seemed this way to me also Debra. We seem to love any excuse to allow our hatred of others off the leash. Road rage is an example. Covid was another. War is another. I cannot say there are not circumstances when I would not regard violence to others as the right thing to do.

evergreen's avatar

There were physicians who had nearly zero fatalities among their treated patients. Understand the disease mechanism and progression and can highly effectively treat it.

The takeaway: practically ALL of the dead after the first few weeks of confusion were rescuable.

Alamo Dude's avatar

Happy ChemTrails, to you

All the leaves are green

And the sun is behind a screen

On such a Californication day…

Franklin O'Kanu's avatar

Didn’t know these were the lyrics until now - thanks for this video!

Mark Brody's avatar

Love of war is a reflection of the duality of man, which inhabits us as two opposite poles that coexist even as they appear to be mutually exclusive. We love and we hate; we value life (survival instinct) and we seek death (Freud called this the death instinct); we abhor violence, and we have violent instincts; We detest war, and yet we seek it out. The self-contradictory aspects of human nature would appear to comprise incompatible elements, but that this precisely the paradox of being human - containing in one vessel immiscible components. They are mixed in different ways in different people. People who LOVE peace are alienated from their warlike selves. People who LOVE war are alienated from the peaceful selves. Both sides of the coin are alwayspresent, but we see one more than the other in different people, and we see varying degrees of denial about our shadow selves. By definition, the shadow self, introduced by Jung, is the part of us we don't like to look at.

Carl Nelson's avatar

Like war or not, some are justified. Destroying Iran's nuclear ambitions are certainly justified after 40 some years of useless negotiation.

Mothertrucker's avatar

Thought we did that last summer?

John Day MD's avatar

5-6% of humans are sociopaths, and do often love the sport of killing other humans, especially when it obviously needs to be done and nobody else will get up and do it, but just complains.

See that perspective?

When crops are bad, wars to kill extra people and to control the rest get the job done. We have a special sub-breed of humans for this purpose, the "lines of kings and nobles", as it has been in history. These are ancient lines, self-tended for traits that facilitate their unique roles in our planetary Apex-Predatory-Ecosystem-Management-Paradigm.

I seek to follow Divine Guidance as part of my free-choice contribution to making that harsh system redundant.

Paul's avatar

Bomb Isreal

Save the world

Barbara L Skinner's avatar

We have been trying to negotiate with Iran for almost 50 years. During that time they have simply built up their war capabilities while misleading us about "deals." Here's an exercise from Dennis Prager: If Hamas lost all weaponry, what would happen? What would happen if Israel lost all their weapons? Now, how about Iran? Someone once said, "Peace through strength." Hmmm.

Rachel Girshick's avatar

YES, YES, put them ALL on the front line!

Sam's avatar

I've often said that! There'd be no wars if Trump or Biden had to go - can you imagine it? How wonderful!

Paving the Way's avatar

God chooses, picks, prioritizes, selects, favors? Nonsense. God created. Man mostly destroys and occasionally improves the creation if he follows his divine spark.

John Day MD's avatar

The Divine has given free-will to life forms, and seems to strictly leave it alone, while offering guidance to life forms which freely choose to seek and follow it.

Veronica Gardener's avatar

I'm a human and i can say that I absolutely don't love war. I don't love terrorism either, which is a sort of war that doesn't have the same sort of "rules" that modern warfare has, from what I can understand about it. For sure, every sort of diplomatic conflict resolution should be tried, over and over, but if it's not working, then it seems that going to war is man's last ditch attempt at defeating a "worse evil". That said, I can certainly sympathize with anyone who doesn't want their young loved ones to go out to fight in a war! And I agree that any people in power positions who seem to be getting some sort of pleasure out of these battles, should perhaps try it out on the frontlines themselves. Maybe someday, if people are still too reluctant to engage in peaceful resolutions to conflict, then only robotics can fight the battles and humans shall just try to control war behind the scenes using AI. That might pose some very profound problems, though.

JJJ's avatar

Will The Iranian Shootout cease sooner than many suspected?

TEHRAN, MASHAD and SHIRAZ overtaken by anti Islamists reported by Tousi TV ?

1,164,969 views Streamed live on Jan 10, 2026

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIWxMyHrpuU.

Perhaps this is why Pete Hegseth was smiling when Major Garret asked him in interview on 60 Minutes, "Do you have any assets inside Iran"?

MrBlaat's avatar

No. We live in a time were less people kill each other than ever before in history.

To give you some examples:

(1)

The Yamomamo, an Amazonian Indian tribe who lives in small isolated hamlets of about 80 to 120 people. ONE IN THREE dies through violence.

(2)

I know someone who did her PhD on murder statistics in the middle ages. On average, about 1 in 10 died from murder or manslaughter.

(3)

My country has a population of about 17 million people, which was roughly the same population as the entire Roman Empire at some point. We have about 200-220 murders each year, 2/3 of those in people who are related.

Do you think the whole of the Roman Empire had only 200 murders each year?

So, No. It's complete bollocks. We know from the animal kingdom that even animals don't like to kill unless it's necessary.