Message from @Bookworm
Discord ID: 510553968997564416
All a legitimate part of wartime strategy.
And of course, the big one.
That war was two horrible regimes killing each other.
The south Vietnamese government was fucking awful.
It would certainly be a huge detriment to the war effort to try and feed millions of undesirables when trying to provide logistics to soldiers.
Thus, the Holocaust is a permissible wartime strategy, per Insane's reasoning.
The holocaust had nothing to do with feeding them.
Let's go with that, then, and say that the German Reich had more than enough resources to feed everyone.
In a hypothetical germany where they *didn't* have the food, the Holocaust would have been permitted by Insane.
The Holocust was "Lets just kill all of these people we hate!" regardless of citizenship, or military justifications.
No, the Russians didn't have enough food to feed their own army, but they didn't commit a genocide to feed them.
And Stalin was pretty nuts.
Though I guess you could argue he might simply have not thought of it.
What's your point?
If it's that Stalin was more moral than this hypothetical Germany, I guess I'd agree with you.
In that one regard specifically.
No my point was more that even the insane wouldn't necessarily resort to that measure.
The holocaust was an ideological solution, not a pragmatic one.
But if they did, it would be justified under the current reasoning put forward by Insane, correct?
No.
The Nazi's weren't insane.
Okay.
It's an easy copout but it's not true.
One should confuse insanity with villiany. There are plenty of sane and rational people who have no problems justifying the worst acts imaginable.
The Nazis were loyal to an evil ideology.
I'm going to go ahead and bow out of this conversation. Best of luck.
The lesson of the Nazis isn't that insane people can come to power, or that evil can win. It's that otherwise good people can be convicted it's in the "greater good" to commit truly horrible acts @Bookworm .
That's fair.
Pretty much.
Going back to Vietname do you guys know about the Meili massacre?
It was a slaughter of women, children, and civilian men by US troops. They weren't raised wrong, or an abortion, it was a total break down of civilization.
If these soldiers were in any other situation with an exception of a very few they would have been honest hard working citizens, but were drug down into a pit that allowed them to become avatars of the worst aspects of humanity.
@Bookworm Of course, by Insane's reasoning, oathbreaking is also an acceptable act if it is judged to be a part of attaining victory in war. can you quote me on saying that i by any means agree with that. i said it happens not that i in any way condone breaking oaths
i said its neccesary to obtain victory in war
you can handle opponents with honor after you have won like respecting prisonors etc but winning? noone takes compromises for honor at the cost of winning.
The post I was referring to.
Which in hindsight, I realize is less you claiming it is acceptable and more you saying that people do so.
So, then, Insane, what is and is not to be condoned in the attainment of victory in warfare?
warfare is in itself taking something that is not yours by force. it dishonors conversation and logic its leads the victory of he who is strongest not he who is right