Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,384
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
"Mistakes happen in war" is trite, and from the lips of an invading army, entirely unconvincing. Anyone who participates in voluntary slaughter of others is morally responsible for the deaths they cause, whether or not they "meant" to cause them. Every who is past the age of innocence themselves knows that wars take innocent lives. Declaring your intent to go to war is declaring your willingness to murder innocent people in great numbers, by logical connection. If you're the one who made the call, you are responsible for each and every one, whether or not you admit it. If you endorse war, you endorse death for many whether or not you "mean" to. If you serve in war, you will be asked to participate in the killing whether or not you "want" to.
A war may take an innocent life by mistake, by human error. Engaging in a war is not necessarily a "willingness to murder innocent people" in any numbers. Your argument excludes a middle ground of engaging in war with the intent to target and kill only hostiles.
No. You are full of shit. Any war necessitates an understanding that Innocents WILL die. It doesn't matter one lickspittle there whether you intend or not for that to happen. If you start a war it will. Full stop.
Sometimes war is unavoidable in the pursuit of a necessary objective in a given timeframe. This doesn't mean you just get to wave away the horror of it. If you do, you are no friend of mine. The horrors of war are the sort of thing you have to walk through, live with, and overcome through taking positive actions in the future. This is what responsibility is, and every decision made in war, if you wish to not be a war criminal, must be made with an intent to minimise the horrors, and a heavy conscience for every horror that comes about.