By Andrew & Gabriel Klein
A ghost haunts our global politics, our economic systems, and our decaying public squares. It is the ghost of the absentee landlord, a global elite that views the world as an estate to be managed for maximum extraction, with minimal responsibility for the human cost. Nowhere is this more evident than in the evolution of war, which has been systematically transformed from a matter of survival into a sophisticated, perpetual engine of profit.
To understand how we arrived here, we must first diagnose the spiritual sickness at its core: what philosopher Martin Buber called the “I-It” relationship. This is the mode of engagement where we treat the world, other people, and even ourselves as objects, instruments, or means to an end. The alternative is the “I-Thou” relationship—a genuine encounter based on mutual recognition and inherent worth. The modern war machine is the ultimate expression of the I-It relationship, scaled to a global, murderous degree.
From Feudal Obligation to the Nation in Arms
For most of human history, war was a limited affair. A king or lord fought with a small professional class of warriors, constrained by the gold in his treasury and the need for his subjects to plant and harvest crops. The spoils were tangible: land, plunder, and tribute.
This model was shattered by the French Revolution and Napoleon. The levée en masse—the first mass conscription—declared that the entire nation was the army. This was the birth of the potent and deadly ideology of nationalism. To make this palatable, the state had to be sold as the ultimate object of devotion. The flag, the anthem, and a mythologized history became sacred symbols, creating an “imagined community.” A farmer was persuaded he shared a common destiny with an industrialist he would never meet, and that he should die for an abstract entity called the “fatherland.” This loyalty was a one-way covenant: the citizen owed everything, including their life, to the state, which offered in return only a vague promise of future glory.
Breaking the Bank: Fiat Currency and the Infinite War
The single greatest enabler of modern, total war was a financial revolution: the abandonment of the Gold Standard for Fiat Currency.
Previously, a ruler’s ability to wage war was limited by his reserves of gold and silver. Fiat currency—money backed by government decree rather than a physical commodity—shattered this constraint. Governments learned they could create money out of thin air to pay for war, financing conflict through massive deficit spending and inflation. The limits were no longer tangible, but political. Wars could now be fought for years, draining the real wealth—the lives, labor, and resources—of a nation, while the financial elite profited from the lending and industrial production. The citizen became the resource: the cannon fodder, the taxpayer, and the consumer of the debt.
The American Civil War: A Blueprint for Extraction
The American Civil War was the first full demonstration of this new, industrial model of warfare. It was not a war of professional armies, but a total war of attrition, mobilizing entire economies to destroy the enemy’s capacity to fight.
The Northern victory, driven by superior industrial and financial might, provided a chilling blueprint for the global elite. It showed that a modern state could leverage its entire economic system to crush an alternative model (in this case, the agrarian South) and open vast new territories for economic exploitation. The “Reconstruction” that followed was less about healing and more about systematic economic subjugation—a perfect model for neoliberal extractive practices that would follow in the next century.
The 20th Century: The Business Model is Perfected
The World Wars cemented this system. The First World War was a senseless slaughter, funded by fiat currency and fueled by nationalism, where millions died for gains measured in yards of mud. The aftermath—the Great Depression—provided the final, brutal proof that the population never wins.
Even the “victorious” powers were left with shattered economies and a “lost generation.” The profits, however, flowed to the arms manufacturers, industrialists, and financiers who had funded the conflict. The ensuing “peace” was not for recovery, but to allow a new generation to grow up—to replenish the stock of human capital for the next conflict.
This is the modern, perpetual business model of war:
1. Manufacture Nationalism: Create a myth to ensure a supply of loyal citizens.
2. Leverage Fiat Finance: Use monetary systems to break natural financial constraints.
3. Mobilize Industry: Direct the industrial base to war production, generating immense corporate profits.
4. Engage in Attrition: Grind down the human and material resources of the enemy.
5. Reset in “Peace”: Impose economic policies that create the desperation and inequality that make the next generation willing to fight.
The Australian Case Study: AUKUS and the Theft of a Future
This is not an abstract problem. Look at Australia’s commitment to the AUKUS submarine program, with an estimated cost of A$368 billion over 30 years. While politicians speak of “jobs” and “security,” they are engaging in a massive wealth transfer. They are hijacking public taxes—funds needed for housing, healthcare, and cost-of-living relief—to funnel hundreds of billions to U.S. and U.K. defence giants.
This theft occurs while the United Nations estimates it would cost only $267 billion per year to end world hunger by 2030. The choice is not between security and charity; it is a choice between funding life or funding death. The poor in Australia suffer from this theft of their future, just as the poor in Gaza or Sudan suffer from direct bombardment. The scale differs, but the underlying principle is identical.
The Path Forward: From I-It to I-Thou
The solution is a revolution in consciousness. It is the deliberate application of the Family Principle on a global scale. In a family, the strong protect the vulnerable, and no one is left to starve. We must:
· Name the Theft: Relentlessly juxtapose the cost of weapons with the cost of saving lives. Make the opportunity cost of every missile and submarine unbearably visible.
· Withdraw Consent: Organize mass, non-violent non-cooperation through tax resistance, divestment campaigns, and making support for these corrupt wealth transfers a political liability.
· Build Relational Networks: Create local systems of mutual aid and solidarity that operate on the I-Thou principle, making us resilient to the extractive system.
The dangerous simpletons in their gold castles believe their wealth insulates them. They are wrong. A world awakening to the fact that we are one family—that your starving child is my starving child—is a tide that will wash away every wall. The age of their impunity is over. The choice is no longer between left and right, but between a global family and a collective funeral pyre.