You clearly never read the link I posted. It's not just about the motivating factors but the way in which money is made THROUGH war, i.e. war is a business. More metal, more leather, more oil etc is needed and sold via major corporations through war. Weapons manufacturers provide arms to both sides of the conflict, as they did in WW1 (the example given in the book). Millionaires are turned into billionaires on the stock exchange as a result of these military expeditions. That's the main message.
I never disagreed with that and yes, I did read the text and have before.
Now, how do we start a war when there isn't one going on? Well we have to start creating enemies, monsters that aren't just under your bed but all around you. Monsters funded and created by the very people who will then go and fight them. This has happened right before your eyes and I'm sure many of you on here are older than my 26 years and should have seen even more examples of empires such as the US playing both the arsonist and the fire fighters.
For starters I've always been against the wars in Afghan, Iraq, Syria that are now going on. Only intervention I supported was how Iran and Russia co-operated with the legal government to put down the rebels.
Making monsters. This is how war has always worked, it's hard to kill someone who you think is the same as you, right? Not that the monsters are always
funded and created, but entire peoples are deliberately misrepresented and demonized. Sometimes the creations run away and backfire on their creators. You could easily argue this was the case with the mujahadeen of Afghanistan against the Soviets. They were brought up and set loose, decided to use what they learned and turned against those who nurtured them.