wand3rer said:Its interesting, because i have met people and worked with people who would deem us cowards because of our attitude. And yet the seeking of truth is anything but.
voyageur said:Just my thoughts:
There are a thousand and one quotes on reasons to not ever entertain the thought of going to war; such as this one on SoTT today:
Never think that war, no matter how necessary, nor how justified, is not a crime.
- Ernest Hemingway
I've read none that make war a justification.
Fwiw, behind each and every aggressor war there is pathology of some sort that is operating behind the scenes. Awareness of the mechanisms and (as has been said above) with an aim to survive and also help others when possible, is always preferable - war, as they say, creates death and dead is dead.
In this video ( http://youtu.be/in-GUuFTyJA ) in the Eastern Ukraine, you can hear Zakharchenko telling the mother of a captured soldier, as advice, to get him out of the country. And he basically said, 5 years in prison is another option. On the other hand, an evil neo-Nazi junta is on the doorstep of his home - this evil ties to the West, yet he is helping to lead a resistance and like Caesar, he has a heart.
Going to war should not be a big question, nonetheless, it requires some context, and circumstance plays its role, such as what Zakharchenko is facing, although he would rather be raising his family. :(
Niall said:wand3rer said:Its interesting, because i have met people and worked with people who would deem us cowards because of our attitude. And yet the seeking of truth is anything but.
Indeed, it's the only 'war' worth 'going to'.
Once you're done with physical wars, you graduate to network wars, one front of which takes place within - the struggle between yes and no.
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.
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?
Niall said: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?
Dylan said:As horrible as it is, and I would think it weighs heavily on the consciences of the resistance fighters, it seems like they have taken a final stand against a corrupt and tyrannical government hell bent on bending the 'sub humans' to their will. I don't know what choice they have, or if there could have been a peaceable settlement. But that is neither here nor there at this point; for the resistance in Novorussya, it seems it is fight or die.
loreta said:But the question is not easy to answer. Maybe another question is: what would be our attitude during war? Or: is there a "good" war? But war is war, a huge and profound nightmare.
The only way to go to war, if necessary, if obliged, would be to help, as a nurse, an ambulance driver but again this image of a ambulance driver is an idealistic one, in my mind, as idealistic as the young man that came here to fight freedom. And again, I think, you are food for the war, war being a big mouth that needs food, is hungry, always.
loreta said:Some go to war, giving their lives thinking that they are fighting in the right side, for example when the Spanish Civil War. How many young people came to this country, idealistic, good people, young and valiant, giving their lives for something that again, I think, was a propaganda: freedom. They were manipulated. And worst, they killed in the name of freedom.