But when a country imposes conscription on its citizens, it begs the question, for whose interests is the country acting? Is the country mobilizing to save its citizens, or is it mobilizing to save the existing power structure? — _db
you really think it would just have been "a change in existing power structures"? — ssu
The oddity the OP is picking up on is that in the case of war, the decision (of literally life and death magnitude) is not only removed from any democratic process, but removed from personal choice too. — Isaac
In fact, the first philosopher in the West to give perfectly explicit expression to cosmopolitanism was the Socratically inspired Cynic Diogenes in the fourth century BCE. It is said that “when he was asked where he came from, he replied, 'I am a citizen of the world [kosmopolitês]'” (Diogenes Laertius VI 63). — Cosmpolitanism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
National defense is a collective good — Olivier5
Actually under Egyptian and Syrian rule. In 1948 the Arab countries didn't give a damn about the Palestinians, they were trying to conquer as much of the former British Mandate as possible. But onward...Let's take your assumption for granted. Israel would have ended up under the Palestinian thumb had it lost. — Isaac
I'm not sure I get your point here. The state always tries to do what is the best for and understandably there always will be some who oppose it's policies.That's not the question the OP is asking. The question the OP is asking is why does a state feel compelled to decide in opposition to those citizens, which state of affairs is preferable - war, or Palestinian rule. — Isaac
This is the utter fallacy of people living in countries which go to war without any repercussions or effects on the country's own people AND have a paid volunteer army.The oddity the OP is picking up on is that in the case of war, the decision (of literally life and death magnitude) is not only removed from any democratic process, but removed from personal choice too. — Isaac
We live in representative democracies. In these, the decision to go to war is usually done by the Parliament or a similar institution. These institutions already decide what we can do and can't do on a daily basis. Hence you can argue that the government forcibly imposes it's agenda on to you at a daily basis. In things that it considers dangerous for the collective, these regulations can be far more drastic than otherwise. Just think about the limitations you were forced to live under the pandemic. And wars typically are the most dangerous things for the collective.The question is why the government forcibly imposes its conclusion on that weighing exercise when it doesn't do so in many other far less impactful decisions. — Isaac
In things that it considers dangerous for the collective, these regulations can be far more drastic than otherwise. — ssu
wars typically are the most dangerous things for the collective. — ssu
Like what decisions? — Olivier5
Why do you assume that not fighting a war the other option is "an ambiguous, uncertain harm on the other"? What are your examples for this idea?So with a clear and definite harm on one side, and an ambiguous, uncertain harm on the other, by what precedent does the government consider forcing people to take a very high risk of torture and death to avoid such an uncertain outcome. — Isaac
War (WW2) and occupation deaths listed in the current reports total at 81,000. These include deaths in Soviet deportations in 1941, Soviet executions, German deportations, and victims of the Holocaust in Estonia.
War isn't normal.If you think this is normal behaviour for governments, you shouldn't have any trouble coming up with a similar action. Something where the harm is near certain injury, torture and death, the benefits are not even agreed upon, and the government gives no choice. — Isaac
Why do you assume that not fighting a war the other option is "an ambiguous, uncertain harm on the other"? — ssu
Let's look at what that meant for example for Estonia: — ssu
Where do you get this idea that countries that invade others are somehow very benign and friendly to the people they conquer? — ssu
Let's look at what that meant for example for Estonia: — ssu
It's irrelevant. No one is claiming that being invaded is good. — Isaac
It's very related, because war can cause such immense destruction and death, it is something you cannot easily relate to peace actions of the state. You should understand that.How is any of that related to the discussion. — Isaac
I have no idea what you are talking about here.Are you claiming that more people want to be shot than want to be ruled by Russia? — Isaac
I don't understand what you point here is.I'm still waiting on those examples your argument requires of government action which impose a risk of death for a non-unanimous gain. — Isaac
Well, I've tried to give examples of that (to fight or to surrender) when it comes to war, but you respond that it's irrelevant. So that's why I'm a bit confused what your point is. — ssu
I'm still waiting on those examples your argument requires of government action which impose a risk of death for a non-unanimous gain. — Isaac
The simple fact is that there is in war a massive risk of harm and to be defeated in a war the whole society takes also a massive risk. And the people also understand this. You are making a separation with the government and the people here as if the threat would not be extremely dangerous for everybody in the society.The question is why, in this specific case, the government does that weighing and then forces it's decision on its people.
It doesn't seem to behave that way in any other case. I can't think of a single thing people are otherwise forced to do with such a massive risk of harm, on the basis of the government's idea of the pros and cons. — Isaac
No soldiers better than coerced soldiers. — Confucius
the people also understand this....
... "the government" isn't some different entity from the people making decisions to fight a war totally independently from the people. It's delusional to think any government or regime would contemplate war or to defend itself by military means if there is no support for this from it's people for this. If there's not the will to fight — ssu
as if the threat would not be extremely dangerous for everybody in the society. — ssu
because it is not meant to be. — Olivier5
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