Haha! Yeah, those Christians man, they're wild too. We've just become numb to the BS they spew. — Manuel
Or it could simply be indecision. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Ayatollah said in the end of times Israel should disappear, right? Bad comment, evil judgment. Israel is making Palestine disappear, massive difference. — Manuel
Well, absolute nothingness is not just a mental negation of something, it is actually the negation of something. That's what it is defined as, and any would-be referent would correspond to that definition. — Ø implies everything
Do you believe Palestinians should be allowed to "retaliate and make sure such attacks can't happen again"? — Tzeentch
With that said, there will be resistance to these developments. Entire swaths of the population, including individuals in high leaderships roles, will stop at nothing to prevent this from happening. As they are motivated by rather techno-pessimistic religions and/or worldviews. — Bret Bernhoft
In any case, I don't see the situation in Gaza not leading Hezbollah to act, unless Egypt and Israel agree to open the Rafah crossing, just by allowing basic necessities, would make the situation in Gaza a smidgen better. They should do it, looks unlikely. — Manuel
Frank, I'm just not sure how much can be accomplished by a discussion of the morality of war in general, particular battles, specific weapons, and various policies. You've heard of "the fog of war" -- how facts and rumors mingle, how chaos prevents a clear view of what is happening, how propaganda becomes indistinguishable from reliable reports, and so on. — BC
No doubt it is an easier task to decide who and what were moral almost 80 years ago. I don't believe 'moral' and 'immoral' were so clear in the middle of the war. — BC
But... sooner or later, people do those things and think themselves quite moral. — BC
Sometimes folk do stuff they ought not? Yes. Many - most? - issues are inscrutable. That our choices are rational is more pretence than reality. — Banno
Should we therefore not at least attempt to be rational? To be consistent and coherent? There's a new discussion for you. — Banno
Why is it immoral to bomb workers in armaments factories? — RogueAI
That is exactly how this whole discussion with you: the only thing that you can bring to this dicussion are your strong beliefs, which do not seem to be supported by much evidence. — Jabberwock
I think you could make that pretty absolute. — Count Timothy von Icarus
There aren't many ways in which bombing civilians can be justified because it isn't effective. But it's also wrong to conflate "any attack once an enemy has entrenched themselves in a populated area and not evacuated it," with "bombing civilians intentionally." — Count Timothy von Icarus
One can keep one's footing. I surmise Truman realised it was immoral, but did it anyway. Would I have done differently? Such contemplations are fraught with equivocation. The morality of the act was probably not high on the agenda at those meetings. — Banno
Another tough one. For me, I think you have to look at the consequences. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I won't pretend to have special access to Truman's beliefs. — Banno
So jeer from the sidelines. Israel has a population it must protect. — Hanover
What you do on behalf of your own survival can't be judged as long as you thought you had no alternative.
— frank
This does not follow from your premise. It doesn't follow because it is about how you treat others, and so has moral content.
Whence that moral content? There's a missing premise, something along the lines of "I may do whatever I want to other people in order to preserve my life". And that is not so. — Banno
But further, it is clear that there were alternatives, that the Allies were winning and that neither Truman nor the allies were in imminent danger of extinction.
So I don't see how your argument works. — Banno
Good to hear at least one person had a look. "Choosing to kill the innocent as a means to an end is always murder". Truman was a murderer. — Banno
I think the will to destroy other human beings was paramount, not only because they knew such a thing would happen (they ran the tests), but because they knew it would give them an edge in their campaign. They knew it would destroy innocent people, most of whom I assume had never killed any American soldiers. The choice to drop the bomb was no doubt an immoral one. — NOS4A2
Is there justification for nuking? — Down The Rabbit Hole
We bombed civilians in WW2. Did that make us the bad guys? — RogueAI
And so Hamas uses its citizens as human shields so the law of not harming citizens protects Hamas from attack? Is it that easy? — Hanover
Maybe I should just periodically post it instead of bothering to debate what should need no debate. — Baden
I get those from the sidelines think they have a gentler way to secure Israel's security, but others disagree. — Hanover
I knew it would be funny to read the arguments of the Americans backing up the massacre in Gaza, but at the same time, in the 'Ukraine Crisis' thread criticising Putin for being bloody and not letting Ukraine be free and independent...
Something that Palestine wants too... — javi2541997
American response: now when have people's desire for revenge, go after anybody, everywhere and make every conflict with muslims part of the fight. That' war on Terror in a nutshell.
Remember just how Cheney was going around right after 9-11 happened that the US ought to attack Iraq, even everyone informed knew it was Al Qaeda. — ssu
