It's unbelievable that someone well-educated says something so ridiculous.
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The business of conflict
MAKING money and making war have long been related activities. That soldiers loot and arms manufacturers turn a profit is hardly new. But is competition for wealth and resources becoming the major cause of new wars around the world?
Where tribal violence, independence struggles or cold-war rivalry were once blamed for wars, now bandits, traders and some businesses are being fingered, especially in developing countries. Though some conflicts are ethnic or religious clashes (as in Kosovo) or stem from scraps over influence (a concern of Uganda in Congo), many of today's wars, especially civil ones, have a strong commercial element too often ignored by analysts outside, though not by businessmen willing to profit from war.
Prolonged internal violence in countries with rich natural resources but corrupt or weak governments may best be understood as battles for money or resources, suggests a report to be published by the International Committee of the Red Cross this month*. Some wars are caused in a large part by corruption and banditry (Sierra Leone), whereas others which may have begun as ethnic or ideological conflicts, are now sustained in part by illicit trading (opium in Afghanistan, cocaine in Colombia).
Rebels, governments and even peacekeepers have fought for diamonds, minerals and timber in recent wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone. In the latter, peace was won only when the rebels' leader, Foday Sankoh, was given a say in the country's mining industry. A long-running war in Angola, once seen as ideological, is condemned by its people, foreign observers and governments as, to a large part, a scramble for oil (by the government) and for diamonds (by the rebels). In recognition of this, the rebels have even been offered permission to operate the diamond mines legally, if they would come to terms, which they would not. In Indochina, illegal logging can be as valuable as drugs: the Khmers Rouges financed their later campaigns in Cambodia from timber.
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" Bitcoin is a market for criminals... "
really? How many corrupt and dictators governments use bitcoin? humm I still have not seen any.But, money, gold, oil, diamond are favorites of the big criminals