|
Source: (consider it)
|
Thread: Deano on world war 2
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Tortuf: I do strongly disagree with your notion that surrender is better than death on the battlefield.
If you've surrendered and you're alive then you can still attempt, however ineffectively, to live as good a life as possible. There's still life, and therefore there's still hope.
If you've been killed in war, you cannot. You're gone. The game's over, and you lost.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: Such enemies seldom exist outside of fantasy novels though.
What about Gaddafi's threat of "no mercy" as he advanced to recapture Benghazi. Or the Hutus massacring Tutsis in Rwanda. Or, since we are discussing WW2, Hitler's final solution.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
RooK
 1 of 6
# 1852
|
Posted
Let us not neglect the horrific firebombing of Dresden and Tokyo.
Posts: 15274 | From: Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth | Registered: Nov 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: What about Gaddafi's threat of "no mercy" as he advanced to recapture Benghazi. Or the Hutus massacring Tutsis in Rwanda.
I did say "seldom", not never. Though I also note that if the Libyan rebels hadn't started their rebellion then Gaddafi wouldn't have had any need or desire to kill them.
quote: Or, since we are discussing WW2, Hitler's final solution.
I doubt my family would have been in any of the categories taken to the concentration camps, so I'd have no reason to fight on that front.
I may not have had as good a life under Hitler as I would have under Churchill, but at least I'd have had a life rather than being shot to shit in some stupid fucking battle...
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I doubt my family would have been in any of the categories taken to the concentration camps, so I'd have no reason to fight on that front.
You're familiar with that "and then they came for me" poem?
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by RooK: Let us not neglect the horrific firebombing of Dresden and Tokyo.
That's what Churchill said too.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Sioni Sais
Shipmate
# 5713
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I doubt my family would have been in any of the categories taken to the concentration camps, so I'd have no reason to fight on that front.
You're familiar with that "and then they came for me" poem?
I'm sure web forum hosts and admins would have to "assist police with their enquiries" too.
-------------------- "He isn't Doctor Who, he's The Doctor"
(Paul Sinha, BBC)
Posts: 24276 | From: Newport, Wales | Registered: Apr 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
rolyn
Shipmate
# 16840
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: That's what Churchill said too.
Yes, because the shrewd Old War-Horse had his eye on the post-war General Election . Dumping all the public disquiet re area-bombing on Air Marshall Harris.
-------------------- Change is the only certainty of existence
Posts: 3206 | From: U.K. | Registered: Dec 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: I'm sure web forum hosts and admins would have to "assist police with their enquiries" too.
First up against the wall I would think. [ 06. December 2012, 20:57: Message edited by: mdijon ]
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
no prophet's flag is set so...
 Proceed to see sea
# 15560
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I doubt my family would have been in any of the categories taken to the concentration camps, so I'd have no reason to fight on that front.
I may not have had as good a life under Hitler as I would have under Churchill, but at least I'd have had a life rather than being shot to shit in some stupid fucking battle...
Possibly. But quite possibly not. It is important to stand up sooner versus later in many circumstances. Whether a casual bystander, a potential future victim, or someone thinking of helping others. Not saying that war is the place necessarily for that. I am fairly certain that a number of my relatives wish they had sacrificed themselves for other people so as to have avoided having to live as they did under Hitler and afterwards.
There are worse things than being killed, and I have prayed to be taken myself in the past versus what had and was transpiring. I have learned this rather clearly.
-------------------- Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety. \_(ツ)_/
Posts: 11498 | From: Treaty 6 territory in the nonexistant Province of Buffalo, Canada ↄ⃝' | Registered: Mar 2010
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: You're familiar with that "and then they came for me" poem?
Naturally. But that doesn't mean I'm going to rush to throw my body into an unmarked grave in some god-forsaken patch of mud I've never heard of just to stop someone else being taken away.
Self-preservation comes first.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by no prophet: I am fairly certain that a number of my relatives wish they had sacrificed themselves for other people so as to have avoided having to live as they did under Hitler and afterwards.
Perhaps. But because they didn't sacrifice themselves they survived to have lives and descendents, ultimately including you.
Isn't that better? Would they really have traded every single moment of joy and happiness in their subsequent lives for the sake of some other jerks they'd never even met? Do they wish they'd deprived their children and grandchildren of the very possibility of existence for such a cause?
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
no prophet's flag is set so...
 Proceed to see sea
# 15560
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by no prophet: I am fairly certain that a number of my relatives wish they had sacrificed themselves for other people so as to have avoided having to live as they did under Hitler and afterwards.
Perhaps. But because they didn't sacrifice themselves they survived to have lives and descendents, ultimately including you.
Isn't that better? Would they really have traded every single moment of joy and happiness in their subsequent lives for the sake of some other jerks they'd never even met? Do they wish they'd deprived their children and grandchildren of the very possibility of existence for such a cause?
Possibly. But I'd have to be able to 'rewind the tape of time' and have an alternate life play forward. But I'm fairly certain that at least some segments of time as we know it are actually unstuck bits of the an evil alternate universe which, while in it, we know nothing of the good one.
Posts: 11498 | From: Treaty 6 territory in the nonexistant Province of Buffalo, Canada ↄ⃝' | Registered: Mar 2010
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: Would they really have traded every single moment of joy and happiness in their subsequent lives for the sake of some other jerks they'd never even met?
I think some people would. And probably the world would be a worse place if such people weren't in it.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
aumbry
Shipmate
# 436
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Anglican't: quote: Originally posted by Fool on the hill: Omg I feel so much better.
That's nice, love, but the Vichy French weren't on the Allied side. The clue's in the name.
Drancy was in Occupied France not Vichy France so the posted article was wrong on every count.
Posts: 3869 | From: Quedlinburg | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: And probably the world would be a worse place if such people weren't in it.
That's part of my point - once they've done it, they're not in the world any more.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Jane R
Shipmate
# 331
|
Posted
Marvin: quote: Would they really have traded every single moment of joy and happiness in their subsequent lives for the sake of some other jerks they'd never even met? Do they wish they'd deprived their children and grandchildren of the very possibility of existence for such a cause?
If they don't have any children or grandchildren yet and they will feel guilty about not offering resistance for the rest of their lives, then they ARE trading their future joy and happiness for the sake of people they've never met. Future descendants who may never exist at all may be less important in some situations than your little brother or sister or your best friend from down the street.
The option of surrendering is only available if you are confident that your enemy will not kill you afterwards. Or rape you, or torture you, or kill you in unethical medical experiments, or murder your children and make you watch while they die, or starve you and everyone you care about to death. All of these things happened in Europe during the Second World War and are happening in various places around the world; we don't have to imagine them. Where do you think fantasy writers get their ideas from?
About five and a half million Polish civilians died during the Second World War, including just about all the Polish Jews who didn't flee the country in time. The Danes surrendered after a token resistance and spent the rest of the war collaborating whilst refusing to enact any anti-Jewish legislation; when their country was finally taken over by the Nazis they shipped their entire Jewish population to Sweden. As a result, their civilian casualties were among the lowest in Occupied Europe (being off the direct route between Moscow and Berlin probably helped as well). But surrendering to the Nazis and cooperating with the occupation forces wouldn't have helped the Poles; it was only a viable option for the Danes because they were seen as 'brother Aryans' by the Nazi leadership.
Posts: 3958 | From: Jorvik | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: And probably the world would be a worse place if such people weren't in it.
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: That's part of my point - once they've done it, they're not in the world any more.
What a paradox. Reminds me of another saying - if staying alive is all that matters then staying alive doesn't matter any more.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Jane R: The option of surrendering is only available if you are confident that your enemy will not kill you afterwards.
Not quite - you just have to have a better chance of surviving under occupation than in the trenches.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: Reminds me of another saying - if staying alive is all that matters then staying alive doesn't matter any more.
Lots and lots of other things matter to me. It's just that I can't do, be or take pleasure in any of them if I'm dead.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Hawking Dawkins
Apprentice
# 17457
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by deano: quote: Originally posted by Fool on the hill: I already said I don't know alot about ww2.
Well there's no argument on that score dear.
I never said children were not injured or killed in the war. In fact if you read ALL my posts you will see that I comment on that frequently, and that was horrific. Inevitable in war, but horrific. My point was that the allies never made children a specific target. There was nothing the allies did that was comparable to separating Jewish children form their parents and killing them because they were incapable of working in the camps.
To wilfully misrepresent what I said exposes you as a rather pathetic fool, incapable of reading anything beyond a soundbite. Are you a half-wit, dim-wit or just plain witless?
I thank God that people like you have no influence on policy or public opinion. It's people like you who would roll over and turn a blind eye to what the Nazi's did (it's a thread about WWII, so Godels Law need not apply!) that led to the collaborating VICHY French, you ignorant piece of shit.
You're as thick as two short planks with a telly inbetween.
What about "Operation Chastise" in 1943 when the British Airforce bombed the Mohne dam. In the full knowledge of the devastation it would cause to the civilian population. 1,600 people killed. Leading to a change in the Geneva convention in 1977, banning the bombing of dams and installations where it posed a significant threat to the civilian population.
-------------------- Science knows it doesn't know everything; otherwise, it'd stop. But just because science doesn't know everything doesn't mean you can fill in the gaps with whatever fairy tale most appeals to you.
Posts: 4 | From: Lytham | Registered: Dec 2012
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: Lots and lots of other things matter to me. It's just that I can't do, be or take pleasure in any of them if I'm dead.
Well likewise, obviously. But I can imagine some situations where I might feel that my failure to "do the right thing" at some critical point, with some critical outcome, might then drain all those things of any pleasure.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
I'd still rather be able to do those things with little or no pleasure than not be able to do them (or anything else) at all ever again because I'm dead. There's something awfully big about death that kinda outweighs all other potential diminishments in quality of life in these calculations.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
For it's all in how you spin it. "Potential diminishment of quality" versus "life-long anhedonia, guilt and regret". We all have different value systems.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
rolyn
Shipmate
# 16840
|
Posted
I see something disarming in your logic Marvin .
If you are able to do, or say *anything* simply to stay alive then that's all well and good if staying alive, until old age takes you, is your sole aim.
This though often isn't a person's sole priority in life. Hence humanity's long history of the spilling of sacrificial blood . A well-known campaigner of human rights in America, when told of the dangers he faced, said ---'It's better to live a short life about something than a long life about nothing' . He was assassinated .
-------------------- Change is the only certainty of existence
Posts: 3206 | From: U.K. | Registered: Dec 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by rolyn: [Staying alive] often isn't a person's sole priority in life.
Of course it's not my sole priority. But it's kind of a prerequisite for any of the others. Can't very well have kids if I'm dead, can I? Can't very well get that promotion if I'm dead, can I?
quote: Hence humanity's long history of the spilling of sacrificial blood.
Yeah, usually someone else's.
quote: A well-known campaigner of human rights in America, when told of the dangers he faced, said ---'It's better to live a short life about something than a long life about nothing'.
I disagree with him.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: For it's all in how you spin it. "Potential diminishment of quality" versus "life-long anhedonia, guilt and regret". We all have different value systems.
It's all about quality of life, isn't it. The way I see it, death represents a quality of life of zero. You know, because it means there isn't any life. Life-long anhedonia, guilt and regret may be a really low quality of life, but I'll bet you it's higher than zero.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by rolyn: A well-known campaigner of human rights in America, when told of the dangers he faced, said ---'It's better to live a short life about something than a long life about nothing'.
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I disagree with him.
As is your right, of course. But doesn't any part of you admire him for it?
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
Posts: 12277 | From: UK | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
monkeylizard
 Ship's scurvy
# 952
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Hawking Dawkins: What about "Operation Chastise" in 1943 when the British Airforce bombed the Mohne dam. In the full knowledge of the devastation it would cause to the civilian population. 1,600 people killed. Leading to a change in the Geneva convention in 1977, banning the bombing of dams and installations where it posed a significant threat to the civilian population.
You're still missing the point. Chastise wasn't grown out of a desire or purpose to kill non-combatant civilians or children. It was a way to stop German hydro-electric power production being used to power war factories. The water was also used in a canal system to transport war materiel. The goal was to stop that. The side effect was major civilian losses, but that wasn't the goal.
It was not worth the trade off, thus the edit to the Geneva convention. [ 07. December 2012, 21:15: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
-------------------- The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. ~ Herbert Spencer (1820 - 1903)
Posts: 2201 | From: Music City, USA | Registered: Jul 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by deano: quote: Originally posted by Doublethink: What I am suggesting,is that one of the things we should learn *as well* as appeasement being ineffective, is area bombing civilians and using atom bombs are actions that are morally wrong. More particularly, we should not allow ourselves to be talked into believing its OK because there is a war on.
That's the fundamental weakness of your position. Each decision has to be taken on its own merits.
For you to preclude any course of action before a war starts is playting into the hands of an enemy who knows exactly what you will opr will not do and can set their strategy accordingly.
The atom bomb decision was taken after consideration of a multitude of factors.
The area bombing of Japanese cities was the only effective way of stopping the japanese producing munitions, with which they killed allied soldiers and civilians including children.
You are simply going "Nope", and ignoring those factors, and are doing so not on the basis of an objective review of the circumstances and legalities available at the time, but from the comfortable position of a 21st Century democracy.
You have signed-up to a simplistic set of sentimental politics and "better-than-you" morals and are now applying them inapproprately using nothing more than hindsight, emotion and subjectivity, and I for one find it offensive, purile and irrational.
I never fail to be bemused by those members of the Labour party who believe the party should be a protest party, and really shouldn't be in Government. Their reasoning is that way, they can maintain an ideological purity in their condemnation of everyone, whereas in power they have to compromise their positions in accordance with real-world conditions.
I think you are your ilk are similar. You need people to make the terrible, awful choices, so that you can pontificate from the moral high-ground, safe and secure in the knowledge that you will never be called to account for your naiveté.
Absolutely agree Deano
For every allied soldier risking his life in combat, for the dependents of those soldiers, for every enslaved, starving and tortured POW held by the Japanese, for every comfort woman being raped day and night by the Japanese, for the Singaporeans and Malaysians suffering brutal "purification" and countless others, I can accept that the atom bomb was a necessary evil that ended the war much more quickly and with fewer allied losses than would otherwise be the case.
Doublethink, you can't justify any and every horrible or immoral decision on the bases "there's a war on", I agree. Neither can you judge the morality of decisions without considering context, sometimes killing enemy civilians is a terrible but morally justifiable thing to do.
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Evangeline: quote: Originally posted by deano: quote: Originally posted by Doublethink: What I am suggesting,is that one of the things we should learn *as well* as appeasement being ineffective, is area bombing civilians and using atom bombs are actions that are morally wrong. More particularly, we should not allow ourselves to be talked into believing its OK because there is a war on.
That's the fundamental weakness of your position. Each decision has to be taken on its own merits.
For you to preclude any course of action before a war starts is playting into the hands of an enemy who knows exactly what you will opr will not do and can set their strategy accordingly.
The atom bomb decision was taken after consideration of a multitude of factors.
The area bombing of Japanese cities was the only effective way of stopping the japanese producing munitions, with which they killed allied soldiers and civilians including children.
You are simply going "Nope", and ignoring those factors, and are doing so not on the basis of an objective review of the circumstances and legalities available at the time, but from the comfortable position of a 21st Century democracy.
You have signed-up to a simplistic set of sentimental politics and "better-than-you" morals and are now applying them inapproprately using nothing more than hindsight, emotion and subjectivity, and I for one find it offensive, purile and irrational.
I never fail to be bemused by those members of the Labour party who believe the party should be a protest party, and really shouldn't be in Government. Their reasoning is that way, they can maintain an ideological purity in their condemnation of everyone, whereas in power they have to compromise their positions in accordance with real-world conditions.
I think you are your ilk are similar. You need people to make the terrible, awful choices, so that you can pontificate from the moral high-ground, safe and secure in the knowledge that you will never be called to account for your naiveté.
Absolutely agree Deano
For every allied soldier risking his life in combat, for the dependents of those soldiers, for every enslaved, starving and tortured POW held by the Japanese, for every comfort woman being raped day and night by the Japanese, for the Singaporeans and Malaysians suffering brutal "purification" and countless others, I can accept that the atom bomb was a necessary evil that ended the war much more quickly and with fewer allied losses than would otherwise be the case.
Doublethink, you can't justify any and every horrible or immoral decision on the basis "there's a war on", I agree. Neither can you judge the morality of decisions without considering context, sometimes killing enemy civilians is a terrible but morally justifiable thing to do.
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by deano: quote: Originally posted by Doublethink: [qb]What I am suggesting,is that one of the things we should learn *as well* as appeasement being ineffective, is area bombing civilians and using atom bombs are actions that are morally wrong. More particularly, we should not allow ourselves to be talked into believing its OK because there is a war on.
That's the fundamental weakness of your position. Each decision has to be taken on its own merits.
For you to preclude any course of action before a war starts is playting into the hands of an enemy who knows exactly what you will opr will not do and can set their strategy accordingly.
The atom bomb decision was taken after consideration of a multitude of factors.
The area bombing of Japanese cities was the only effective way of stopping the japanese producing munitions, with which they killed allied soldiers and civilians including children.
You are simply going "Nope", and ignoring those factors, and are doing so not on the basis of an objective review of the circumstances and legalities available at the time, but from the comfortable position of a 21st Century democracy.
You have signed-up to a simplistic set of sentimental politics and "better-than-you" morals and are now applying them inapproprately using nothing more than hindsight, emotion and subjectivity, and I for one find it offensive, purile and irrational.
I never fail to be bemused by those members of the Labour party who believe the party should be a protest party, and really shouldn't be in Government. Their reasoning is that way, they can maintain an ideological purity in their condemnation of everyone, whereas in power they have to compromise their positions in accordance with real-world conditions.
I think you are your ilk are similar. You need people to make the terrible, awful choices, so that you can pontificate from the moral high-ground, safe and secure in the knowledge that you will never be called to account for your naiveté.
Absolutely agree Deano
For every allied soldier risking his life in combat, for the dependents of those soldiers, for every enslaved, starving and tortured POW held by the Japanese, for every comfort woman being raped day and night by the Japanese, for the Singaporeans and Malaysians suffering brutal "purification" and countless others, I can accept that the atom bomb was a necessary evil that ended the war much more quickly and with fewer allied losses than would otherwise be the case.
Doublethink, you can't justify any and every horrible or immoral decision on the basis "there's a war on", I agree. Neither can you judge the morality of decisions without considering context, sometimes killing enemy civilians is a terrible but morally justifiable thing to do.
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
deleted weird coding.
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
?????????
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Chesterbelloc
 Tremendous trifler
# 3128
|
Posted
Marvin, there is a part of me that has some admiration for your brutally honest self-shaming here, I'll admit. An admission of such humiliating cowardice and clinging to life at whatever expense to yourself or others as your posts on this thread suggest takes a kind of courage all of its own - or, at least, a complete disregard for the esteem of your fellow posters. That is also a form of courage. Of course, it could also be a kind of boasting. I am - if pushed - reluctantly prepared to admit that you may indeed be as morally cloth-eared and egotistical as your posts on this thread suggest.
But here's what doesn't ring true for me. You spend so much time here trying to tell us that your adhesion to Christian worship is essentially based on abject fear of being consigned to hell (the Real Thing) by a sadist God. If that is so, it does rather imply that the afterlife is a major preoccupation of yours. If for no other reason than sheer self-interest, I cannot believe that life at any cost whatever is preferable to you than even the noblest of deaths.
You would rather live the rest of your life in a stinking prison with sadistic warders than save a child with a chance of escape by throwing yourself between her and a hand-grenade? I'm not even talking about knowing you could actually stump up the courage to do so in the actual event - which of us knows that? - more just committing yourself in theory to the preferabilty of that outcome.
I'm prepared to think of you as being as despicable as that if you absolutely insist - but I'd rather not.
-------------------- "[A] moral, intellectual, and social step below Mudfrog."
Posts: 4199 | From: Athens Borealis | Registered: Aug 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
Firenze
 Ordinary decent pagan
# 619
|
Posted
We none of us know.
We all have a fantasy of how we would behave in extreme circumstances - modestly heroic, cynically self-interested - but I don't think these are accurate predictors.
I haven't actually been in life-threatening situations for about 40 years, but denial was a popular option, certainly for the ever-present-but-not-actually-here-and-now. I suspect that we do this up until the very last moment in which we have to acknowledge that yes, it is happening and to us. And then we're just into whatever our particular physiology does with extreme fear.
Posts: 17302 | From: Edinburgh | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Chesterbelloc
 Tremendous trifler
# 3128
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Firenze: We none of us know.
Agreed, absolutely. But I don't think it is stupid to wish that I would choose to defend others rather than cower in a corner so as to live a miserable life thereafter.
-------------------- "[A] moral, intellectual, and social step below Mudfrog."
Posts: 4199 | From: Athens Borealis | Registered: Aug 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Chesterbelloc: You spend so much time here trying to tell us that your adhesion to Christian worship is essentially based on abject fear of being consigned to hell (the Real Thing) by a sadist God. If that is so, it does rather imply that the afterlife is a major preoccupation of yours. If for no other reason than sheer self-interest, I cannot believe that life at any cost whatever is preferable to you than even the noblest of deaths.
Hm, let's see. Someone with serious doubts and fears about the afterlife has no desire to reach it any sooner than he absolutely has to.
Wow, how contradictory is that.
quote: I'm not even talking about knowing you could actually stump up the courage to do so in the actual event - which of us knows that? - more just committing yourself in theory to the preferabilty of that outcome.
Well, in the sort of no-time-to-think-just-act situation you describe I have no idea how I'd react. All options are possible, depending on pretty much every factor that would be present. Not least who I would be trying to protect.
But that's a far, far, far cry from saying I'd want - and deliberately choose - to put myself into that position in the first place.
As for "the noblest of deaths": spare me the "Dulce et Decorum Est" bullshit. It's just a load of patriotic crap fed to us by our Dear Leaders so that the next time they have a row with their counterparts somewhere else or want to award a bunch of new defence contracts to their buddies we'll queue up to do the dirty work for them.
Islamic terrorist leaders fill their cannon fodder with tales of virgins in heaven so that they'll go out and die for the cause, Western warmongers fill theirs with tales of derring-do, heroism and valour. But have you ever noticed how few of those leaders ever seem to want such rewards for themselves? Ever noticed how they stay at home in their nice comfortable lives, pushing the odd button to send another batallion to its doom before having a nice brandy by the fire? Almost makes you think they don't actually believe all that stuff they said to the people they're trying to get to die for them, doesn't it?
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
rolyn
Shipmate
# 16840
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
Islamic terrorist leaders fill their cannon fodder with tales of virgins in heaven so that they'll go out and die for the cause, Western warmongers fill theirs with tales of derring-do, heroism and valour. But have you ever noticed how few of those leaders ever seem to want such rewards for themselves? Ever noticed how they stay at home in their nice comfortable lives, pushing the odd button to send another batallion to its doom before having a nice brandy by the fire?
'And when the flower of England is dead, the balding old Generals toddle off home to die in bed. ' (or something like that --Sasoon I think )
Often wonder though, do Generals find their armies , or ultimately is it armies looking for Generals ?
WW1 was dubbed "The People's war" . as for WW2 ? Well the people of germany certainly got behind their fuhrer in a big way , so the rest of us had to respond in kind .
Now we've got this Afghan thing , which no-one really understands the whys or wherefores, and yet has earned itself the peculiar title 'Our war'.
The trouble with war is that it holds a deeper place in our psychology than any of us ever realise, or would even care to admit.
-------------------- Change is the only certainty of existence
Posts: 3206 | From: U.K. | Registered: Dec 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
quetzalcoatl
Shipmate
# 16740
|
Posted
'He’s a cheery old card,' grunted Harry to Jack As they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack. . . . . But he did for them both by his plan of attack.
Sassoon, The General. [ 08. December 2012, 09:47: Message edited by: quetzalcoatl ]
-------------------- I can't talk to you today; I talked to two people yesterday.
Posts: 9878 | From: UK | Registered: Oct 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: "Forward" he cried from the rear And the front rank died
Pink Floyd
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Chesterbelloc
 Tremendous trifler
# 3128
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: Hm, let's see. Someone with serious doubts and fears about the afterlife has no desire to reach it any sooner than he absolutely has to.
Wow, how contradictory is that.
And you can't see why someone with doubts and fear about the afterlife would want to maximise the chances of their own afterlife being nice rather than nasty? There's a popular prejudice to the effect that selflessness is not such a bad way to get "in" with God... quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: As for "the noblest of deaths": spare me the "Dulce et Decorum Est" bullshit. It's just a load of patriotic crap fed to us by our Dear Leaders so that the next time they have a row with their counterparts somewhere else or want to award a bunch of new defence contracts to their buddies we'll queue up to do the dirty work for them.
Who was talking about patriotism or militarism? I was talking about protecting children in a heroic personal act.
-------------------- "[A] moral, intellectual, and social step below Mudfrog."
Posts: 4199 | From: Athens Borealis | Registered: Aug 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
Oh, sorry. I was assuming that on a thread about war and people's attitudes to war you were talking about people's reasons for going to war...
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Chesterbelloc
 Tremendous trifler
# 3128
|
Posted
I was talking about people's conduct during a war, certainly. Not all people caught up in wars are combatants acting under orders. Some are just the unlucky bastards caught in the crossfire, or suffering under enemy occupation.
-------------------- "[A] moral, intellectual, and social step below Mudfrog."
Posts: 4199 | From: Athens Borealis | Registered: Aug 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
Fool on the hill
Shipmate
# 9428
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by aumbry: quote: Originally posted by Anglican't: quote: Originally posted by Fool on the hill: Omg I feel so much better.
That's nice, love, but the Vichy French weren't on the Allied side. The clue's in the name.
Drancy was in Occupied France not Vichy France so the posted article was wrong on every count.
I'm not sure why you say the article was wrong. It didn't say Drancy wasn't in occupied France.
And the article also says that children were rounded up in occupied France.
Anyway, my point being that shit always flies in both directions in war.
Posts: 792 | Registered: May 2005
| IP: Logged
|
|
rolyn
Shipmate
# 16840
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Fool on the hill:
Anyway, my point being that shit always flies in both directions in war.
A good point that's worth the repeating .
There's a song somewhere in my head with the line 'I don't want war no more' . Negro Spiritual ? Not sure.
(For those who like the cutting edge of Sassoon poetry 'Does it Matter ?' is a classic )
-------------------- Change is the only certainty of existence
Posts: 3206 | From: U.K. | Registered: Dec 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
Moo
 Ship's tough old bird
# 107
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by rolyn: There's a song somewhere in my head with the line 'I don't want war no more' . Negro Spiritual ? Not sure.
The song is "Down by the Riverside". Here are the words.
The 'riverside' the song refers to is the Jordan, i.e. life after death.
Moo
-------------------- Kerygmania host --------------------- See you later, alligator.
Posts: 20365 | From: Alleghany Mountains of Virginia | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
rolyn
Shipmate
# 16840
|
Posted
Thanks Moo .
That's it ---'I ain't gonna study war no more'
If only .<sigh>
-------------------- Change is the only certainty of existence
Posts: 3206 | From: U.K. | Registered: Dec 2011
| IP: Logged
|
|
no prophet's flag is set so...
 Proceed to see sea
# 15560
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by rolyn: WW1 was dubbed "The People's war" . as for WW2 ? Well the people of germany certainly got behind their fuhrer in a big way , so the rest of us had to respond in kind .
That's not true, certainly at the beginning. The start of the war was seen as a horrible mistake by Germans, though the mistake was seen as mostly Britain's for going to war over Poland. Hitler was also seen as making an error. How could the Poles be worth something the Czech's weren't? It wasn't seen as a stifling or take over of free peoples by Germany, rather a regaining of historical (pre WW1) boundaries and consideration that Germany had been a multi-nation empire before WW1, not different than Britain's overseas conquest and subjugation of countries on other continents.
The people in Berlin didn't cheer, didn't go outside to watch the convoys going east, and we terribly frightened initially. Remember that Hitler had only something like 37% popular vote when he took over in 1933. As the campaign in Poland was successful and the French and Brits didn't invade from the west, the thought was that the war was now over. There was great surprise that the French-British didn't think that it was time for peace. It was only after the fall of France that there was really any enthusiasm at all. But again, the Germans thought that it was time for Britain to ask for peace and it was thought that Germany's offer was rather generous. Germany to dominate the continent, and Britain to maintain its overseas empire.
The general thought in Germany was that the British had always wanted to keep Germany down, from the arms race of the 1890s-early 1900s and WW1. The keeping of the German speaking peoples controllable was thought to be the main French, British, and pre-communist Russia's policy (think Austria and anschluss). The Czechs and Poles were thought of as no different than the Irish whom the British had failed to keep under their hobnailed boots. The Germans felt they could probably be more successful.
I write the above as someone whose German relatives have, over the years, discussed some of this as above. They will now say that the Hitler policies towards minorities were wrong and would agree with everyone's else's assessment of the Holocaust etc, but the idea of German ascendency was correct, and the ascendency is economic now within the EU. [ 09. December 2012, 16:09: Message edited by: no prophet ]
Posts: 11498 | From: Treaty 6 territory in the nonexistant Province of Buffalo, Canada ↄ⃝' | Registered: Mar 2010
| IP: Logged
|
|
LeRoc
 Famous Dutch pirate
# 3216
|
Posted
I read a piece a couple of years ago (Was it on the Slacktivist? I can't find it with a quick Google) about people like Martin Luther King, who died for a cause. The gist of the article was: people like this don't seek death, but there are causes or people they care so much about that they are prepared to accept high risks defending them.
There are people and causes that I would take a high risk for.
-------------------- I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)
Posts: 9474 | From: Brazil / Africa | Registered: Aug 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
|