Perhaps, the Founding Fathers themselves didn't feel that way, but... their predecessors certainly did.Zombie_Affair wrote:
As a warning, I'm not trying to put you down (I'm actually really enjoying hearing things from a different point-of-view) but don't you think, in this day and age, somethings wrong when you are more concerned about bombing another country then exploration? Couldn't imagine our founding fathers going "heh, see all that land? Could be pretty cool stuff over there, maybe one day we can go check it out, but for now, got some people that needs extermination". (Lingo may differ..naturally).
A great way to assess what our species is naturally like is to observe how every major society that exists today is not indigenous to the area it inhabits. White Americans, White Australians, Japanese, Anglo-Saxons in Britain, Indians, etc. Even the main Chinese ethnicities killed off previous indigenous groups to inhabit the lands they do now. The few indigenous cultures that remain are either marginalized (Aborigines, Native Americans, Ainu, indigenous peoples in India) or so interbred with invaders that they really don't exist in their original form (most South American populations).
The point is... we may have better technology, but learning to peacefully coexist with each other is a very slow process we've only begun relatively recently. There's going to be plenty of war in the near future, just like there's plenty of war today. I just don't think we're ready to move to another planet just yet.