anothermagyar
Dagobah Resident
Niall said:Dylan said:I think if I were in the shoes of the population of Donetsk or Lugansk that I would probably do very much the same as they are. A situation like that would be one of the very few I would feel comfortable donning military gear and a rifle with the intent to kill. I really feel for those people and am very worries for their futures. The illegitimate, western backed junta is horrible.
A few of you have said this.
Here's a question for you: should the Ukrainian and/or Russian members of our forum, some of whom are very close to this situation in eastern Ukraine - either geographically or because they have family ties there, and thus feel even more strongly than you about the injustice of what's happening there, join the war?
Are they 'answering their conscience' by fighting that battle... or can they 'walk away' yet still do something in terms of 'answering their conscience'/serving something higher than themselves?
I don't know the answer to your question.
Everybody should decide according their own conscience.
What I would do is this:
1. Provide immediate help for wounded, try to save lives, having a vehicle get them to a hospital, if this is not possible, give first aid via fellow medical staff who I know.(reliable, like minded)
2. Provide food and shelter who is in need, having a bunker, perhaps more then one, a safe place where people who lost their house can go.
3. Build a local network of healthy, capable people who're aware of resources, food, first aid kits, vehicles.
4. Perhaps help guiding people who can leave on their own foot to a safe country's border where they can go.
I think that's what Zakharchenko and his people doing.
When it come to weapons: I'm not expert, I don't even know how to shot. :/