
I LIKE BIG BUTTS AND I CANNOT LIE...
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Javik was an ass, but he got that right.Stand amongst the ashes of a trillion dead souls, and ask the ghosts if honor matters. The silence is your answer.
I mean, the Loroi already did that and worse to the Tithric.sunphoenix wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 1:54 pmDear Gods! Just saw today's spoiler in WIP by Arioch! Not quite Dachau... but Not far away from it either. Yeah, I'm not sympathizing with Umiak, they need to be STOPPED! If they will do that to Loroi.. they'll do it to anyone!
If they won't see reason... then burning them until they can no longer continue to harm is the only option.
Alright ENOUGH! I'm tired of hearing this!boldilocks wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 7:04 pmI mean, the Loroi already did that and worse to the Tithric.sunphoenix wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 1:54 pmDear Gods! Just saw today's spoiler in WIP by Arioch! Not quite Dachau... but Not far away from it either. Yeah, I'm not sympathizing with Umiak, they need to be STOPPED! If they will do that to Loroi.. they'll do it to anyone!
If they won't see reason... then burning them until they can no longer continue to harm is the only option.
First off, we're talking about "survivors" here, which is something that happens after every genocide. Sporadic survivors eking out a living. As far as I know there's still armenians and tutsi around.sunphoenix wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 7:35 pmAlright ENOUGH! I'm tired of hearing this!boldilocks wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 7:04 pmI mean, the Loroi already did that and worse to the Tithric.sunphoenix wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 1:54 pmDear Gods! Just saw today's spoiler in WIP by Arioch! Not quite Dachau... but Not far away from it either. Yeah, I'm not sympathizing with Umiak, they need to be STOPPED! If they will do that to Loroi.. they'll do it to anyone!
If they won't see reason... then burning them until they can no longer continue to harm is the only option.
Straight from the Outsider- Insider:
"The Loroi pressed the Tithric to put a stop to this, but the central government was too weak and corrupt to control its own systems, leaving the Loroi little option but to conduct interdiction raids into Tithric space. These attacks finally unified the Tithric politically and prompted the formation of a stronger central government (and a formal alliance with the Umiak), but it was too late: the Loroi under Admiral Sunfall razed the entire region. Though destroyed as a functioning nation, the Tithric are not extinct. Some refugees escaped into Umiak territory, and survivors continue to eke out an existence on the devastated Tithric worlds, mostly cut off from the interstellar community."
THAT is NOTHING Similar to what the Umiak are doing here! The Lori didn't come down out of space occupy the Tithric worlds and begin systematically eradicating their civilian populous, burning numbers in their flesh to keep track of them so that they extermination efforts were easy to catalogue!
While I understand the rules of the Geneva conventions and the reasons for them, it seems to me that classifying resistance against a conqueror as a war crime is fairly absurd.boldilocks wrote:Perfidy is considered a war crime even by human laws of war.
Yes, precisely. The difference between dropping bombs from 30,000 feet and bayoneting a mother staring you in the eye is in the humanity (or lack thereof) of the participant.
The legalese is beyond grey in this case. Perfidy is a warcrime in terms of 'espionage' and when taken a 'prisoner of war'. Dressing up as an enemy soldier to infiltrate their lines is a crime of war, same in the case of a soldier dressing up as a civilian to avoid capture BUT guerrilla fighters are not in breach of the law, in fact many countries have it in their constitution that it is the people's right to resist oppression and invasion.It's been made clear in the setting that the umiak did not set out with extermination efforts, but resorted to it after occupation became too difficult due to continuous terrorist activity by a populace that should technically be in a state of capitulation. Perfidy is considered a war crime even by human laws of war.
The Geneva conventions require that resistance fighters be under some central authority, bearing arms openly and not concealed, and having some distinguishing device recognizable at a distance identifying them as combatants... all of which is complete nonsense to actual historical resistance fighting, which is by definition asymmetrical warfare, and that means breaking the rules. And while it's a fine line between insurgency and terrorism, I think that line does exist.dragoongfa wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 9:25 pmIn legalese a soldier may not dress as civilian to avoid capture but they are also legally bound to resist with any means necessary any and all forms of foreign occupation (legal authority may give orders for a stand down that would make further fighting 'illegal' but it all depends if such legal orders were given; in the Loroi case, they probably weren't as they fully expected to recapture lost territories).
Like I said, executing a captured partisan is within the understandable realm of wartime conduct. Executing the partisan's family is not. You'd better be prepared for that outcome if you're going to fight as a partisan, but that doesn't make it okay when it happens.
But that's kind of the whole point of resistance in the context of an active war; limiting the enemy's ability to benefit from their holdings and forcing them to commit resources that could have been better used on the front lines. It's an unpleasant business and it's a realm of gray moral ground, but it's kind of a exercise in trying to find the balance of achieving your objectives without pushing the enemy over the edge into barbarism. Though I guess that could be said of all warfare.icekatze wrote:If an army can't distinguish between hostile and non-hostile, then practically speaking, they have a very serious problem. Obviously there's more than one way to solve that problem, but treating everyone as hostile is a method that does not require much intelligence.
Ironically, postmodern moral relativism's entire idea is that context indeed matters - that there cannot be an absolute judgement on an issue because it's all about the specifics of matter, the circumstances, and the individuals involved - including the ones doing the judging. That there's no situation where there's "no difference between X and Y", as there are always differences, and therefore generalizations are inherently reductive, and while those generalizations are still inevitable and may even be preferable, they must be recognized as such, and not objective truth.Arioch wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 9:09 pmPostmodern moral relativism troubles me a bit. It's technically true that dead is dead, and "when the bullet hits your skull, what will it matter why?" However, in that sense there's no difference between killing a baby for sport and killing someone who was trying to kill you and your family. Context matters.
I think the ones who would see little moral difference are the ones whose opinions are critically disregarded in the first place - namely the civilians getting killed. As you have pointed out yourself, they would generally judge on the side of not getting killed at all, neither by planet-bombing nor by industrial extermination. They are not very prone to saying "thank you" for being provided with a somewhat quicker death. We can conclude so from the fact that they choose to fight.
Tithric, though. We're facing the issue of realities of warfare and their demands intruding upon what is considered necessary and as such acceptable by a society.
I do happen to find the idea of humanity being measured by how much the executioner can afford to look away to be the truly troubling one - it's the idea that something can be made more humane without reducing the atrocity, which means that the morality of the action is not being meaured by what is actually being done to the victim. It starts with the perpetrators actions and ends with his feelings, excluding the victim from the context. Dropping bombs instead of bayoneting doesn't make any less of the atrocity happen - it only means that the perpetrator is more secure from facing and comprehending the consequences of his actions, both through the objective distance inducing loss of information coming his way (full of crying mothers clutching their dying children), and the moral distance between the intended effect and eventual outcome. If we could accept that victims can be excluded from the context in this way, then we would be forced to admit that there's nothing "more wrong" about hardtroopers slowly pulling Loroi civilians apart limb by limb, if that is what helps them sleep better at night. Well, to do that or admit explicit hypocrisy. Which is also understandable, but there's no use in lying to ourselves then.
I think I have a slightly different reading of postmodern relativism, and that's that there is no objective truth, and no right and wrong. There is only power; the oppressed and the oppressor. That the ends justify the means, because all aggrievements are morally equivalent.Mk_C wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 5:42 amIronically, postmodern moral relativism's entire idea is that context indeed matters - that there cannot be an absolute judgement on an issue because it's all about the specifics of matter, the circumstances, and the individuals involved - including the ones doing the judging. That there's no situation where there's "no difference between X and Y", as there are always differences, and therefore generalizations are inherently reductive, and while those generalizations are still inevitable and may even be preferable, they must be recognized as such, and not objective truth.
I'm not suggesting that the remoteness of the act affects the morality of the atrocity, but I think it does tell you something about the humanity (or the lack thereof) of the perpetrator.Mk_C wrote:I do happen to find the idea of humanity being measured by how much the executioner can afford to look away to be the truly troubling one - it's the idea that something can be made more humane without reducing the atrocity, which means that the morality of the action is not being meaured by what is actually being done to the victim.
The very concept of civilian deaths by bombing as "collateral damage" is fundamentally dehumanizing. That's not giving people unsightly tattoos, that's rendering them as part of the landscape. As less than cattle.Arioch wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 9:09 pmPostmodern moral relativism troubles me a bit. It's technically true that dead is dead, and "when the bullet hits your skull, what will it matter why?" However, in that sense there's no difference between killing a baby for sport and killing someone who was trying to kill you and your family. Context matters.
In WWII there were at least as many civilians killed as soldiers; sometimes they were collateral damage, and sometimes they were specifically targeted, and both sides did this. But if you can't see any moral difference between civilians killed by high-level bombing and civilians rounded up and killed in death camps, then that's troubling.
Survivors of Nazi death camps aren't upset that they have unsightly tattoos. They're upset that the Nazis treated them like cattle to be slaughtered.
And argument could be made that this indicates a flaw in the fundamental makeup of loroi culture. That the appearance of such deviancy from what regular loroi would consider 'good morality' makes for disastrous stewards of the conquered, while at the same time the Umiak appear more as a species whose entire line of morality is fundamentally different on a biological level, but not actually morally flawed, since that would require them to hold to a morality that we share, which they seemingly don't.Arioch wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 9:09 pmIt's technically true to say that the Loroi did more or less the same thing to the Mannadi that the Umiak did to the Steppes Loroi, and for more or less the same reasons. However, I think it's important to consider that the Loroi action was the work of a local commander, not official policy; the Loroi did not round the Mannadi up into death camps for orderly disposal, nor did they perform medical experiments on them, nor did they take them apart and put them back together and send them as meat puppets into Loroi lines to demoralize them. The Umiak have what they think are good reasons for what they do, but they routinely do things that even the "evil" Loroi would never dream of doing.
Maybe I don't understand the story correctly, but my understanding was that branches of loroi military and intelligence were continuing to operate on conquered worlds while remaining hidden in the civilian population. I thought the point of the law is supposed outlaw these sorts of efforts precisely because they make retribution against civilian populations necessary to either enforce compliance in the military assets or cause the civilian population to defect out of desperation.
Which I'm not sure could ever truly apply in a war against aliens as different from us as the umiak. I mean, imagine if we were at war with some kind of race of space-spiders. Just saying the word just caused a shiver to run down my spine, but somehow I'm supposed to see the humanity, or some fellow sentient kinship while staring into the multi-eyed face of a giant arachnid?