I would like to take a moment and say I do agree with you that such people are responsible for their actions. However your use of the word "exuse" would imply you mean "blame", and while some does lay with the individual much of the blame lies with the species itself.Mortai Gravesend said:No, it doesn't counter my argument. Anyone in that situation that does it is responsible. That others would also is no excuse.Shadowkire said:Not an example of what the other guy was talking about, but a general rebuttal to your entire stance as I perceive it.Mortai Gravesend said:Do find a parallel example in the real world. I was ignoring that kind of thing because it doesn't seem like it would ever come up. I assumed they generally knew the consequences. Of course there are other situations, like invading and screwing up someone else's country, where following orders without knowing yourself what the consequences might be is simply reckless. But find me a similar situation where they did something that they couldn't reasonably know could have bad consequences.
And I am glad to see that you agree that in all other cases they are fully responsible, just not in cases where they don't know the results of their actions. After all, you wouldn't do something dishonest like only address one set of situations and try to ignore the rest, you must clearly agree with the rest.
Really though, why is the concept of someone being responsible for what they do such anathema to you? Because it was orders? If you understood the concept I think you'd realize why your example was pointless. Being deceived is one thing, following orders without thinking it through is another.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment
"Dr. Thomas Blass of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County performed a meta-analysis on the results of repeated performances of the experiment. He found that the percentage of participants who are prepared to inflict fatal voltages remains remarkably constant, 61?66 percent, regardless of time or place."
This counters your arguments(or just opinions?) that single out soldiers for use of lethal force under orders when the majority of the human race would kill others under orders even in non-combat scenarios.
But further, what you're ignoring is that they agreed to put themselves in that situation PRIOR to any such influence. It's like getting drunk then driving a car and claiming that any drunk person would crash.
I did not ignore anything, in the experiment these people knew they would be delivering shocks, they were informed by the receiver of the shocks that he had a heart condition and finally when the target of the shocks stopped responding altogether they continued to deliver greater(and even lethal) shocks.
These many, varied, average people in the course of a few hours went from not meaning any harm to murder with a little goading. This points to a flaw in the species itself, which weakens your drunk driver analogy. You can control when you are drunk, you can't control your race.
To try and clarify my argument: There is no doubt the soldiers are responsible for their actions, but is there any blame to place?