cottonwoodarmada1651
Active member
I don't think it's reasonable to say those wars are really CAUSED by religion.  Wars are almost always over money - whether in the form of raw materials, trade routes, or otherwise - or, on occasion, power.  Religion is very often used as a tool to mobilize and motivate groups of people to fight wars, but if you analyze conflicts in any depth, you'd be hard-pressed to find many examples where religion was really the root cause.
Regarding your examples specifically, the Crusades were much more about controlling trade routes between Europe and India than they were about "recapturing the Holy Land from infidels." The problem, of course, is that the people don't want to go fight for the former, while they may for the latter. The conflict in Northern Ireland was always more about nationalism than it was about religion. I'm not sure what you're referring to with regard to the Hebrews and the Egyptians - I assume you meant Canaanites and not Egyptians, but it's not easy to come up with hard historical documentation of that conflict either way. Your strongest example is probably the current situation in the Middle East, but even that has much more to do with the geopolitics of oil production and the residual effects of European colonialism and, later, the Cold War than it does with religion.
Now you'd be reasonable to raise the point that it's bad enough that religion is USED to incite these conflicts, regardless of whether it's actually the REAL cause. To that, though, I would again cite the historical examples of atheistic regimes finding other means to similar (and, recently, much worse) ends.
				
			Regarding your examples specifically, the Crusades were much more about controlling trade routes between Europe and India than they were about "recapturing the Holy Land from infidels." The problem, of course, is that the people don't want to go fight for the former, while they may for the latter. The conflict in Northern Ireland was always more about nationalism than it was about religion. I'm not sure what you're referring to with regard to the Hebrews and the Egyptians - I assume you meant Canaanites and not Egyptians, but it's not easy to come up with hard historical documentation of that conflict either way. Your strongest example is probably the current situation in the Middle East, but even that has much more to do with the geopolitics of oil production and the residual effects of European colonialism and, later, the Cold War than it does with religion.
Now you'd be reasonable to raise the point that it's bad enough that religion is USED to incite these conflicts, regardless of whether it's actually the REAL cause. To that, though, I would again cite the historical examples of atheistic regimes finding other means to similar (and, recently, much worse) ends.