Quote:
Originally Posted by Oberon
(Post 1806127)
If we had the same sort of mindset on war then that we have now then, well...Bomber Harris would not have lasted long, neither would have Le May. Patton would never have made General, and hundreds of thousands of US soldiers would have died invading Japan because of the risk of damage from the Atomic bombs.
It's all well and good to have laws on war, but when you're fighting for your survival you will throw every law out of the window if it means that you will win.
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Yeah, in other words, here we have a basic contradiction at play: on the one hand, in civil society (that we HAVE to stand for, or else you may as well surrender your American, British, or other first-world Western country's passport) we have to defend ideals of due process, and abhor violent retribution and violence in general. That goes with the human rights that YOU enjoy - and if you believe others don't deserve them, well, hand 'em over. On the other hand, in this same society, we have a hypocritical and unrealistic ideal of a "clean war" that does not and cannot exist. That's just a fact of life. We often go on pretending that there's "good wars", but in fact all of it is terrible business and no matter how you slice it, illegal killing and revenge are all part of it from the start. In any war, at that.
You'll never be able to reconcile those two, but the best you can do is avoid hypocrisy. I think saying that Gaddafi somehow deserved a knife in the butt and being beaten to death by a mob fundamentally threatens your own way of life. So don't throw the allegation around lightly, or you might just have to live with the consequences of it one day.
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