Not in the arithmetic of military strategy. If it is strategically right to take out a munitions factory, a bridge, a railroad junction or a communications tower, the civilians working there are only one part of the equation. In the example, the consideration is how many lives on our side would potentially be taken by the cannons or tanks bombs or whatever is produced in that factory, compared to the people on their side who produce those weapons. 200 of them is pretty cheap for an effective strike against the weapons that could kill 4000 of us.Isn't bombing an armaments factory where there are no soldiers and knowing you will kill civilians "going after the civilian population itself"? — RogueAI
That's already established if you stop pretending I disagree with everything. I'm very clear about what I disagree with with respect to the article you cited. All non-combatants are equally innocent and therefore ALL of them need to be taken into consideration without weighing them because of their presumed affiliation when deciding on a military course of action, irrespective what side of the border they're on. Then it becomes abundantly clear plenty of historic and current violence is entirely disproportionate. — Benkei
Let's say there are two broad approaches:
A1) Just ground troops
A2) Aerial bombardment and ground troops.
A1)Let us say, if the first approach was the one taken, 10x the casualties on one's own side would take place, and the war would become bogged down to indefinite, hellish levels for one's own troops because it would become essentially an unending maze or trap…essentially this is how the enemy would like you to play..keep you indefinitjry stuck for maximum length and lethality. Make it a complete street fight, booby traps etc
A2) The second broad approach allows your troops enough room to maneuver and eventually go in and fight more aggressively, saving lives for your own troops, and ending the war more quickly.
So, I am fine discussing international law.. But it will simply get bogged down to various instances whereby "Did this fighter, by ducking into a building, make that building a legitimate target in the eyes of international law".. Having civilians as "human shields" doesn't make the enemy use it as a "get out of jail free" during a war. As we both agreed, (even if we detest war and violence), war is a "legitimate" thing countries can wage. — schopenhauer1
It's quite obvious some people entered this discussion to defend Israeli atrocities. We can talk about those or pick other events less heated to see how these principles should be applied. — Benkei
Who declared it immoral to choose one's own child over another child? If it's a question of being able to save only one from an external danger, making the decision emotionally would be accepted by most people. However, if it's a question of sacrificing an unknown child in order to save one's own (say, with a heart transplant), most people would consider that wrong.Apparently you'd consider a father morally blameworthy for saving his child (showing preference) over a random child because it would be immoral to favor one's own kin in moral decision making. — BitconnectCarlos
That's not always or necessarily a bad thing. But I very much doubt ethical public decisions would contribute to such a dissolution.Complete dissolution of the family unit. — BitconnectCarlos
Who declared it immoral to choose one's own child over another child? — Vera Mont
That's not always or necessarily a bad thing. — Vera Mont
It's not morally relevant. But if the choice is 1/1, some other factor must tip the balance, else the would-be rescuer is paralyzed by indecision and both children drown.I was commenting on an idea brought up by Benkei that filial relationship is not morally relevant (ought not to be viewed as morally relevant) - thus, one morally ought to show zero bias when it comes to saving e.g. two drowning children with one being a stranger and one being one's own child. — BitconnectCarlos
How would that be better than letting emotion decide?Perhaps a coin flip ought to decide it. — BitconnectCarlos
Allowing a natural process with no predetermined outcome to take place and striving toward a goal are very different things.Some families can be toxic but I do not believe the dissolution of all families would be something we should strive towards. — BitconnectCarlos
How would that be better than letting emotion decide? — Vera Mont
Even if that were the case, the impasse is broken and the rescuer can take action. Morally, it makes no difference whether the tie-breaker is love, anger, fear or chance.So we can act in any number of ways. Maybe we're mad at our child that day and choose to save the other. — BitconnectCarlos
Maybe so, but I also doubt reason plays much of a part in this example. More likely, the man makes no decision at all; is incapable of a coherent thought, let alone and ethical consideration: he just jumps in and saves his genetic legacy. Once he can think again, he may very well intend to go in after the other kid - in fact, almost certainly will do so, even if reason tells him it's too late.Reasonable action is action in accordance with what we are believing to be true/reflects the nature of reality. — BitconnectCarlos
OK. I'm not invested in the moral dimension of a situation that involves a split-second response from an party with a deep vested interest.However, I believe that a father has greater moral duties to his child than a stranger. — BitconnectCarlos
There isn't time. If both drowning children are your own, or both are strangers, the primal impulse is to save both, or failing that, the nearest one. In that situation, you don't weigh odds, and you don't know the result: you simply act.If we believe we all have the same exact duties towards all children then why not flip a coin? — BitconnectCarlos
More likely, the man makes no decision at all; is incapable of a coherent thought, let alone and ethical consideration: he just jumps in and saves his genetic legacy. — Vera Mont
How nice for one! And the subject of this thread is rational?But now we're playing the "human behavior game" and not the "philosophy game." In the "philosophy game" one strives for rationality at all times. — BitconnectCarlos
But then again, who invented the philosophy game - and why? — Vera Mont
A legitimate war is if you are attacked, you can justifiably defend yourself. Even the Old Testament in the Bible says so (not the New Testament, and not surprisingly). Nobody can say that you were the aggressor, however times the aggressor will declare "that he was forced to do it". Many would also see as legitimate an intervention to some heinous genocide or civil war. Like Vietnam isn't accused by the World community in ending Pol Pot's reign of terror.First off, what are we admitting to, when we say that (at least some) wars can be legitimate? — schopenhauer1
Well, for example in the 19th Century when the British forces fought the Crimean war in Finland, it was a gentleman's war. Their behaviour of the Royal Navy was quite "Victorian" in a way. In the university I studied the Crimean war in Finland and the stories and events show a reality of behaviour that simply wouldn't happen today. It's like from another world, actually. And that shows how low we as humanity have gone. Perhaps when faced "savages" that did the hideous things to those soldiers captured, the British Armed Forces behaved in a different manner, but when faced with other Europeans in war, the meeting was very different. But who cares today about red crosses or white negotiations flags. It's all just naive stupidities in war. And that's the problem.Presumably war isn't a gentleman's game of backgammon or chess.. — schopenhauer1
Again I would recommend reading Clausewitz.But then, again, what is war? What is war when it means having to make Nazi Germany totally surrender? What is war in making Japan totally surrender? Japan only killed 2,403 people in Pearl Harbor, but it resulted in millions of Japanese deaths.. for example. — schopenhauer1
Are War Crimes Ever Justified?
A legitimate war is if you are attacked, you can justifiably defend yourself. Even the Old Testament in the Bible says so (not the New Testament, and not surprisingly). Nobody can say that you were the aggressor, however times the aggressor will declare "that he was forced to do it". Many would also see as legitimate an intervention to some heinous genocide or civil war. Like Vietnam isn't accused by the World community in ending Pol Pot's reign of terror. — ssu
Then, if you don't do warcrimes, you don't have any skeletons in the closet (literally...) that you try to hide away. You can have a clear consciousness about the war and that you fought in it. — ssu
Again I would recommend reading Clausewitz.
When attacking the US at Pearl Harbour, Japan likely assumed that the US "would see" the writing on the wall and simply negotiate some peace with Japan and leave it alone, which the Japanese would have gladly accepted. Yet (domestic) politics in the US didn't go that way. Just as mr Hitler didn't see what a huge error he made with declaring a war with the US.
But hey, Americans were simply lazy racists with an army smaller the size of Belgium, so what kind of threat could they be? That was the idea of the US that the Nazis had. — ssu
A legitimate war is if you are attacked, you can justifiably defend yourself. Even the Old Testament in the Bible says so (not the New Testament, and not surprisingly). Nobody can say that you were the aggressor, however times the aggressor will declare "that he was forced to do it". Many would also see as legitimate an intervention to some heinous genocide or civil war. Like Vietnam isn't accused by the World community in ending Pol Pot's reign of terror. — ssu
A legitimate war is if you are attacked, you can justifiably defend yourself. Even the Old Testament in the Bible says so — ssu
Deuteronomy 20:17 But thou shalt utterly destroy them ; namely, the Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee:
Yes, life is so.And what about pre-emptive self-defence. As usual, it's not so simple in real life. — Benkei
Again, do not convieniently forget the colony of the US, the Philippines. It wasn't just an attack on Pearl Harbour, it was also the Japanese taking over the Philippines, which started on the 8th of December (one day after). Just in the Bataan Death march some 5000 to perhaps 18000 POWs were killed, many from the Continental US too. So it wasn't just Pearl Harbour, but I can understand that the US isn't keen to make WW2 to be a war of it defending it's colonies (especially when the Philippines was given independence after the war).It seems here that Nazis and Imperial Japan had it coming, even though Japan only killed 2,403 people as far as attacking Americans. — schopenhauer1
By the fact that the victors of wars lay down the post-war laws. As I've stated earlier, the commander of the RAF Bomber command has acknowledged that if the UK would have lost the war, he would have been convicted of war crimes.But the millions lost aren't presumably considered a "war crime". How can you square that circle? — schopenhauer1
By the fact that the victors of wars lay down the post-war laws. As I've stated earlier, the commander of the RAF Bomber command has acknowledged that if the UK would have lost the war, he would have been convicted of war crimes. — ssu
That, of course is completely different.... depending on how you define murder. Here's a list of things you not only may but must kill your own tribe members https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Leviticus-Chapter-20/Thou shalt not murder. — BitconnectCarlos
IN A LOT OF PLACES!!! In the Old Testament, where not? should be the question. In the Old Testament, not a forgiving peacenik of a Dad like in the teachings of Jesus C.Where? — BitconnectCarlos
(1 Samuel 15) And Samuel said to Saul, “The Lord sent me to anoint you king over his people Israel; now therefore listen to the words of the Lord. 2 Thus says the Lord of hosts, ‘I have noted what Amalek did to Israel in opposing them on the way when they came up out of Egypt. 3 Now go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.’”
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