DOB
Bluelighter
I dont like killing but its natural selection,stronger survive.... and sometimes in future there would be some living thing,at peace,that would be strong and healthy only thanks to killing in past
I dont like killing but its natural selection,stronger survive.... and sometimes in future there would be some living thing,at peace,that would be strong and healthy only thanks to killing in past
No, it isn't. Think of NATURAL selection. Before we had our fancy guns and technology.
Killing is part of nature. If you couldn't kill your food, if you couldn't protect yourself, you'd die.
Psychedelics also played a massive role in which groups of men prevailed in my opinion, and evolved further.
Also, I doubt most of the people who go to the shop and buy a steak would be game to kill, and carve up a cow, although I don't know what relation that has to the discussion at hand.
Pacifism just helps tyranny and often atrocities to be committed. There is nothing worse then a person who knows wrong is being done but refuses to do anything about it based on the grounds that they believe in peace. Despite the contradictions peace is something that has to be fought for as we have seen through history that some of the greatest crimes have been aloud to go on simply because people did not want to break with the status quo or take up arms. Countless lives could have been saved if we had killed fascism at birth but instead we ignored the threats and it led to the biggest genocide in history. If we had killed the first person to proclaim himself a fascist instead of just idly standing by we could have stopped the whole thing long before WW2 began. The west completely ignored what the fascists where doing in Spain (and it can be argued that Britain even helped by blockading Spain) and kept ignoring it until it was almost too late.
Some people only understand force and sometimes change can only be brought about by using force. Bullies are like that as well hence why if you stand up to them chances are you won't be bothered. The first time a bully tried to pick on me i made sure from then on in that anyone else would think twice before trying it that's for sure. It's better to stop a fight by terrorizing your enemy then to let them walk all over you and thus letting the situation get to the point where even more violence will be needed to stop the problem.
So i don't think harm or even killing are unjustified in certain circumstances.
I basically agree with Paranoid Android and freddy. I think that whenever possible, all of one's nonviolent approaches should be exhausted before resorting to brute force.
I can agree with this. The trick is deciding when to make the leap from peaceful negotiation or whatever to taking violent action. Again as a for instance what if Nazism was violently stamped out in it beginning stages. What if Hitler was killed the moment he started thinking about the final solution? Would that be so wrong?
Again I bring up the hypothetical situation of soldiers preparing to execute innocent civilians. Does a foreign military force have the right to prevent this civil conflict from turning into mass genocide?
To further the preemptive argument. Lets say a rogue government (with highly intolerant rhetoric and genocidal beliefs) just came to power. Your country has in their hands from their intelligence service irrefutable intel that says they plan to commit genocide as soon as they can mobilize their armed forces. Your country has the military strength and ability to launch a preemptive strike to prevent this from happening. But this country is no threat to your country and can only harm its own civilians.
Is it wrong to launch an attack on the country to prevent the slaughter you know is coming?
Keep in mind this is a hypothetical situation. Almost no intel from intelligence services are 100 percent reliable. But lets just say for the sake of argument in this situation the intel is irrefutable.
well, if you want to talk about what usually happens. 8(Well let's say if a country had intel that a certain country was planning a genocide on a minority population. Wouldn't any decent country have to step in? Even if it was just in the form of well if you go to war with them your going to be going to war with us as well.
As long as oppression exists violence is a legitimate force to stop it or atleast that's how i see it. Take for instance if you saw a man beating a woman would you just stand there or would you go and stop it even if it meant permanently fucking up the cowardly bastard? It's the same thing really just on a smaller scale.
Well let's say if a country had intel that a certain country was planning a genocide on a minority population. Wouldn't any decent country have to step in? Even if it was just in the form of well if you go to war with them your going to be going to war with us as well.
As long as oppression exists violence is a legitimate force to stop it or atleast that's how i see it. Take for instance if you saw a man beating a woman would you just stand there or would you go and stop it even if it meant permanently fucking up the cowardly bastard? It's the same thing really just on a smaller scale.
well, if you want to talk about what usually happens.
My thoughts exactly.
What usually happens is that the world ignores what happens as they watch a country destroy itself on CNN and BBC.
When was the last time the US or UK or any UN country intervened to stop genocide? Kosovo? Somalia?
They completely ignored Rwanda with some people even refusing to call it genocide so the UN wouldn't be obliged to intervene.
Well let's say if a country had intel that a certain country was planning a genocide on a minority population. Wouldn't any decent country have to step in? Even if it was just in the form of well if you go to war with them your going to be going to war with us as well.
As long as oppression exists violence is a legitimate force to stop it or atleast that's how i see it. Take for instance if you saw a man beating a woman would you just stand there or would you go and stop it even if it meant permanently fucking up the cowardly bastard? It's the same thing really just on a smaller scale.
There are other forms of "stepping in" besides declaring war. If I was a high-ranking government official in a militarily powerful country, and I had legitimate intel that a genocide was in the works in a weaker country, my first response would probably be to call a top secret meeting of all the influential people in the targeted population, tip them off, and if need be, stay there at the table as they formulated a plan to avert disaster.
Color me jaded when it comes to military intervention beyond one's own borders. The fact is that no nation is willing or able to act like a superhero, stamping out injustice in all corners of the globe, and I question whether any should be expected to. History shows that nations intervene militarily in other nations' business only when the intervener has a vested interest at stake in the conflict. When the intervening nation stands to gain nothing (save for a pat on the back) for breaking up a foreign war, it turns a blind eye and saves its resources.
A good argument I've heard for military noninterventionism / neutrality is that all policies of intervention, no matter their stated goals or rationale, are easily abusable as a disguise for aggressively pushing one's own interests militarily. "We're going to annex you and subdue your people because we need your resources" doesn't fly in today's world. But policies of "Defending [against] X" can easily be sold to any populace, and provide the perfect loophole for making any self-interested military aggression look ethically justified.
On the other hand, it could be argued that in a world as shrunken and interconnected as ours is now, any war anywhere has effects on all nations, and is in every nation's best interest to do what it can to stop. I just don't know how this could be enforced, though.
Funny you should use this example, because I once posted a thread about this very phenomenon in SL&R. (I'll post the link if it survived the latest prune.) Though not everyone agreed, the general consensus was that an intervening stranger, if he is male, usually stands to gain nothing (and lose much, possibly even his life) by confronting a man who is beating a woman. Typically the woman will not appreciate it as an act of heroism and instead defend her abusive man, because it's a case of the devil you know versus the devil you don't. For all she (and her man) knows, the intervener just wants to take her from him and treat her the same or worse. Plus she's probably with her abusive man because she's brainwashed into loving him dearly, in which case her defense of him needs no explanation. In the experiment I referenced in that post, only female interveners succeeded in confronting the man and convincing him to stop what he was doing. I'm not sure this has a direct analogy on the scale of nations, but I'm guessing that non-military sorts of interventions tend to work better than military ones, in most cases, at dispelling conflicts abroad.
Might work if the targeted population had the means to leave the country or defend themselves. But lets just say for the sake of argument that these people have no means of escape or defense. Or for some reason didn't want to leave and could defend themselves but were hopelessly outmatched by the genocidal party. I'm saying that the military option is the only option that can save these people. IMO to stand back and watch is more morally reprehensible than say making a preemptive strike.
Mostly true but again I bring up the historical precedent of Somalia. The United States had really nothing to gain by going in there. We went there because something like 300,000 people had died from famine and war and more were being counted as the conflict drew on. We left because we underestimated their capabilities and lost about 20 men.
After that the United States refused to send any more troops to any African nation to intervene in Civil conflicts. Again I bring up Rwanda. I bring up Rwanda because it could be argued that because of Somalia and the loss of political capital by the Clinton administration they couldn't send troops to prevent the genocide. During the Rwanda genocide there was only 2,600 UN peacekeepers in the entire country obviously not enough to defend the populace. In some instances a handful of those UN peacekeepers standing guard around a group of refugees 10 times their size was enough to convince whole units of belligerent Hutus from carrying out their intended slaughter.
You should read about the Canadian general who was put in charge of that peacekeeping force. His name was Romeo Dallaire and he was completely traumatized by what he saw there. He felt incredibly guilty afterwords even though he defied UN orders to withdraw his force from Rwanda to protect as many people as he could. Here is a link about him if you're interested. The point is if he just had more troops the whole thing could have been less bloody or maybe even prevented. The man even came up with a plan to stop the genocide if he only had 5,000 well equipped troops which many military analysts say today was completely realistic. Such a small price to pay IMO to save the lives of so many people ignored because of bullshit.
Again a valid argument. But I guess I'm being overly idealistic here. IMO if you have the power to defend yourself and half the world (which the United States military does and then some) then you can use that military power to defend innocent people from slaughter. It's just me but I think when you have that type of power instead of going to war for material gain you should use it to defend those who cannot defend themselves. That is why I think they UN (if they weren't so bogged down by bureaucratic bullshit) is a great idea that fails because countries are often too selfish to concern themselves with a foreign country thousands of miles away.
Personally I have always thought that the UN should have more power in this regard. They should be given the permission to create a permanent military force made up of volunteers of course to be sent in only when genocide is being committed.
Yeah my parents have always told me something similar. That I should never interfere when a man hits his wife or something because chances are she will be more pissed off at me than at her husband. I don't agree with this at all. But gotta say from personal experience, having seen this actually happen in a bar and seeing the guy who played hero getting slapped for his trouble, its hard to not see the validity of this argument.