In Java, the designers specifically left out the ability to do pointer arithmetic. Things are passed internally as references all the time, which is great. There were many reasons for removing pointers, part of which was to sidestep a problems you encounter with pointers. In C++, we end up sidestepping a subset of those problems with RAII. RAII is meant to write exception-safe code. A side-benefit is that it means our objects are initialized before they can be used. Since it is initialized before it can be used, when it is used, it is not null (unless it has been destructed). It thus helps battle null reference-type issues don't occur when you actually have acquired and initialized a resource. Yes, you can initialize them to invalid or nonsensical states, but that is *not* what RAII helps; for cases like that (and others) we have (if x == null) and other idioms and constructs. These are separate issues. RAII -> "automatically" initialized stuff -> hard to pass uninitialized stuff -> helps with nullpointerexception type issues All that other stuff is unrelated