posted on Apr, 1 2011 @ 07:19 PM
reply to post by HomerinNC
So what constitutes an unlawful act?
Killing a child in a combat zone?
Bombing a wide area which is occupied by both enemy forces and civilians?
Military action due to intelligence that has the possibility of being inaccurate but is acted on anyway?
All are not equal in the eyes of the law that we have established. Especially in the arena of war where we fight and let the philosophers work out the
morality of it later. This is quite evident if you look at pass genocides committed by the US military where soldiers are prosecuted for crimes yet
commanding officers take a slap on the wrist if anything such as the My Lai Massacre in Vietnam.
We also take part in a form of accepted genocide in the US which there are many examples of,
The firebombing of Tokyo in WW2 and the nuclear weapons drops on japan during WW2.
The use of agent orange in Vietnam
And consistent use of aerial bombardment which is the greatest WMD ever created which kills countless civilians.
The problem with our military is that we have soldiers who are not allowed to question, because it would make them combat ineffective. Therefore
ignorance makes the best soldier, now I am not saying that all soldiers are stupid, they are perhaps jaded by the illusion of patriotism. This is true
of all armies not just the US.
"War will exist until the distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige as the warrior does today."
— John F. Kennedy
All war breeds is hate, and as long as there is hate there will be no understanding and no compassion.
edit on 1-4-2011 by Openeye because: Spelling
edit on 1-4-2011 by Openeye because: More Spelling