But if the people revolted, the regime would collapse and the people could demand an end to the war. So they are responsible for not ending the war. — LFranc
What is your own answer, by the way? Are citizens responsible for the crimes of their leaders? And, for example, is the sergeant's "less responsible" for a war crime than his general? — LFranc
Tempting answer to the problem: it is all true but responsibility comes in degrees: the tyrant is the most responsible, then his police, then his citizens, then citizens from other countries...
Problem 1: how could we prove this? (I've read several disappointing papers) — LFranc
Indeed, just like the military could stop a tyrant, but doesn’t. The only difference here is that, within the military, the responsibility is shared, whereas in your example it is rather concentrated in one person. The new problem, then, is to determine how big this difference is. Is a shared responsibility a smaller responsibility for each individual of the group? Can responsibility be “diluted”?Easy example is Trump and the insurrectionists. He's guilty even if he didn't want all of those crimes because he was in a position to stop them and chose not to.
. That is a good way to put it.to live under a mafia is to live under coercion to support criminality
. But there's an important difference here. The one handing over the cash is almost sure of dying if he disobeys. The military revolting against a tyrant (or a very large number of citizens revolting against a tyrant) are almost sure of putting an end to injustice. But they don't.if one handed over the cash of the bank at gunpoint one would not be committing robbery
Sure, here it is:I'd like to learn what exactly was disappointing in the papers you read?
Sure, here it is: — LFranc
I’m a bit confused because you first want to defend that citizens aren’t responsible for the crimes of their leaders, but using an argument that actually seems to prove the opposite:
"Easy example is Trump and the insurrectionists. He's guilty even if he didn't want all of those crimes because he was in a position to stop them and chose not to." Me. — LFranc
The one handing over the cash is almost sure of dying if he disobeys. The military revolting against a tyrant (or a very large number of citizens revolting against a tyrant) are almost sure of putting an end to injustice. But they don't. — LFranc
If citizens are to be held responsible for the acts of their leaders, aren't all of the Palestinians responsible for the October 7 attack/murder/rape of non-combatants? If they should all be held responsible since they didn't stop the attackers, then how can we say Israel is committing war crimes or doing anything wrong when Israel just trying to hold the right people responsible by attacking all of Gaza? — Fire Ologist
The main responsibility is on the one who pulls the trigger. Not on the one giving the command to pull the trigger. — baker
Which is often the case anyway. People have all kinds of desires, goals, impulses, and then they choose which one to act on.What if the trigger puller's mind consists of a heterogeneous mosaic of multiple, different will-vectors? — Quk
My reply was in response to the dichotomy between the leaders and the followers/citizens.Which of the many will-vectors belong to that "single person"? And when the killer is caught, what part of this person has to get into jail?
What if we were to transcend the notion of country or nationality, and treat people as individuals? Because at the end of the day, it's that individual who pulls the trigger. Yes, the individual is subject to all kinds of pressures and forces and influences and is embedded in a socioeconomic context -- yet it is also the individual who decides whether to pull that trigger or not.While we're at it: Could this principle be applied to an entire country as well? Every person in this country represents one individual will-vector. The person itself is sort of a country too, containing many different will-vectors.
One cannot convict a whole population of any moral failure, but must prove it of each individual, showing that there were things they could and should have done that they did not do, and/or things that they did that they could and should not have done. — unenlightened
"I am not responsible for the war crimes committed by my country, only the tyrant is". But if the people revolted, the regime would collapse and the people could demand an end to the war. So they are responsible... — LFranc
Tyrants are the criminals. T — Fire Ologist
This is a poorly written question and certainly written to arouse the reactionary responses, not the intelligent responses.Are citizens responsible for the crimes of their leaders?
Agree. But then, two comments: 1. All the people who didn’t join to make up that “enough” will be held responsible, although just partly and indirectly, of those killed and imprisoned ones. Because, had they joined their peers, the regime would have been overthrown (with limited and/or temporary casualties, and political prisoners freed). This is what I mean: the people who have stayed at home for fear of demonstrating may be friendly and cordial, but they are by no means "neutral". There is no neutral zone, because inaction is always also action. They are definitely not as responsible as snipers on the roof, but their responsibility is not 0 either. Right? 2. It could at least be said that those who stay at home in such a situation value life higher than freedom. Which is understandable, and I'm likely to join them, but morally questionable.(…) one the 0.5% shot down on the street and never heard from again? You don't: it's risk you take.
then I'd be calling for an impossible administration of justice.
Indeed I'm first looking for the truth, not the thesis that is most applicable in practice. A good example of this would be denazification in Germany from 1945: in May 1945, there were 8 million members of the Nazi party. In Bonn, 102 out of 112 doctors were Nazis. In Bavaria, 94% of judges and prosecutors and 77% of finance ministry employees were former Nazis... and so on. So obviously these people were guilty, at least partially or indirectly, of Nazi crimes, but it was impossible to prosecute them and put them in prison, for practical reasons.But I thought this post was about
you are morally culpable, but not criminally culpable — unenlightened
All the people who didn’t join to make up that “enough” will be held responsible, although just partly and indirectly, of those killed and imprisoned ones. — LFranc
There is no neutral zone, because inaction is always also action. — LFranc
Indeed I'm first looking for the truth — LFranc
I’m a bit confused because you first want to defend that citizens aren’t responsible for the crimes of their leaders, but using an argument that actually seems to prove the opposite:
"Easy example is Trump and the insurrectionists. He's guilty even if he didn't want all of those crimes because he was in a position to stop them and chose not to. - Fire Ologist — LFranc
I don't have time to answer all messages — LFranc
One thing to remember here is that the public is not CONSULTED in any meaningful way about planned military or other actions that may or may not be criminal. The lack of consultation or ability to intervene in top administration activities severely limits responsibility. — BC
As does deliberately misinforming the public, or at the very least presenting a situation to the public in a biased way. — Vera Mont
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