Posted: Tue Oct 30, 2001 9:43 pm
Sanctions are the worst answer, violent men only know violent actions.
Every life lost is a waste, a terrible wrong. But in this existance there are just some times that the only choices are all wrong. Bombing Afghanistan is wrong. Having nuclear weapons is wrong. Killing civilians is wrong.
It's what I call a necessary evil. The wrong choice is bombing afghanistan. The even more wrong choice is no retribution, the path of weakness. Building and storing nukes is wrong, but denying ourselves it while others freely build is more wrong (MAD may be insane but it's the only thing that was consistant in the cold war).
Already in the current semester I've read to things (in what I call my philosophy-lite class) that reaffirm my beliefs.
In two different readings, both Aristotle and the Bhagavad-Gita (spelling?), one of the Hindu texts, state that the worst action one can take is inaction. Freezing because you doubt your actions leaves you with nothing, you're in a weakened state easily controlled. Accepting that you will commit 'bad' acts in the process of heading towards good is necessary to survive.
America is in action right now, against something which almost nobody considers right. I could not possibly bring myself to disagree with this. The loss of one single life in Afghanistan is deplorable; but the loss of thousands of lives on Sept 11 must never be forgotten.
Every life lost is a waste, a terrible wrong. But in this existance there are just some times that the only choices are all wrong. Bombing Afghanistan is wrong. Having nuclear weapons is wrong. Killing civilians is wrong.
It's what I call a necessary evil. The wrong choice is bombing afghanistan. The even more wrong choice is no retribution, the path of weakness. Building and storing nukes is wrong, but denying ourselves it while others freely build is more wrong (MAD may be insane but it's the only thing that was consistant in the cold war).
Already in the current semester I've read to things (in what I call my philosophy-lite class) that reaffirm my beliefs.
In two different readings, both Aristotle and the Bhagavad-Gita (spelling?), one of the Hindu texts, state that the worst action one can take is inaction. Freezing because you doubt your actions leaves you with nothing, you're in a weakened state easily controlled. Accepting that you will commit 'bad' acts in the process of heading towards good is necessary to survive.
America is in action right now, against something which almost nobody considers right. I could not possibly bring myself to disagree with this. The loss of one single life in Afghanistan is deplorable; but the loss of thousands of lives on Sept 11 must never be forgotten.