Codo, on 2012-February-24, 06:15, said:
www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2009/aug/10/religion-george-bushThis is but one of several articles that appears to show a solid foundation for concluding precisely that.
And Bush himself repeatedly claimed that he prayed and sought guidance from god before major decisions. He belongs to a branch of christianity that claims that worshippers have a personal, direct, communication with god.
You and I may find this sort of belief to be incomprehensible......but it exists, and it only exists amongst religious believers....by definition! An atheist has no-one to pray to.
Your larger point, to the effect that the ambitions of leaders explains (virtually) all wars seems to me to be valid to a point, and I doubt that any would seriously dispute that notion. Religion in and of itself may not be responsible for many wars, altho it is clearly responsible for much violence and death. Look at the reaction in Afghanistan to the burning of some pieces of paper. People are being killed because the paper had some words written on it and those words were sacred to a certain religious sect.
I think most secular thinkers would argue that while religion may not be the primary reason for many (or any?) large scale conflicts, it has often been a primary tool by means of which the leaders gathered support from the populace. War is never fought by a leader in personal confrontation with the opposing leader.
In historical times, leaders were often at the forefront of physical conflicts. That seems to have changed as nation-states grew stronger, and armies became more professional. But even when a king would be part of a charge by feudal knights, most of the army was made up of the lower classes.
In truly distant times, the prospect of rapine and pillage was a major motivating factor. In addition, personal loyalty to various subchiefs would lead to various tribes contributing to an army, and there have always been mercenaries.....Carthage was heavily reliant upon mercenaries in its centuries-long conflict with Rome.
But at least since the rise of the christian church, religion has been used by the ruling elite to persuade and motivate the common people. Historically, the pulpits were often filled by the younger sons of the aristocracy...the village pulpit by a younger son of the squire, the cathedral by the younger son of a more noble branch of the aristocracy.
So the power structure included both temporal and spiritual control of the populace. As Seneca observed some 2000 years ago, religion was 'useful' to the rulers.
The crusades were, it seems, never really about religion as such...but it seems apparent on the historical record that religious claims were emphasized as part of the propaganda campaign that always underlies large scale conflict.....the leaders have to motivate the cannon-fodder (even before the invention of cannon) or they couldn't indulge in their power games....and religion was and is wonderful tool. Not only does religion inculcate the habit of doing and believing what one is told, but religion also serves to minimize the consequences of death.....think of the suicide bombers of islam today.....while I suspect that most are fuelled by nationalistic grievances, surely the notion that paradise awaits is part of the explanation for the willingness of so many young people to kill themselves?