Why do people hate the army?

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Saxnot

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Stu35 said:
Saxnot said:
See, all of this is great, and very worthy of respect.
The problem, though, is that this is only part of what you do. The other part is where you volunteered to do a job which involves attempting to kill people. No offense, but that is morally dubious no matter how you slice it.
Once again, no.

No part of my job involves attempting to kill people - not unless they're trying to kill me first. Yes, that is something the company I work for(The Army) takes part in, and there are people who's jobs it is to kill - but if we're going to hold each employee accountable for the actions of the company they work for, then there are more morally bankrupt people in the world than I thought.

Lets say, hypothetically, you work at Starbucks serving coffee - Would it be, in any way, fair of me to say it's morally dubious for you to do a job which involves the exploitation of coffee growing countries for billions of dollars profit? Just because you work for a company that does that, does not make you some kind of devil for serving coffee.

edit -

now, i want to be clear: i dont see the armed forces as some collection of brainwashed killers. I don't hate the army and i see the need. But it feels like there's something off about joining an organisation whose main (they have others of course, but this is the most basic task) purpose is to kill people who they tell you are our enemies. For all the good work they do, that part of their task remains morally dubious to me....
Well I can understand why you might feel that way. I don't agree with it, but you've accepted we're not just a bunch of brainwashed killers, which is more than some people have managed in this thread.
Well, no, you're not accountable for all the actions of the army, but neither are you without any blame.
Take for example a hypothetical member of the taliban who hasn't killed anyone, but spends all his time recruiting new members and organising IEDs and rocket attacks (without taking part in them). Clearly, this person would be morally responsible for the deaths of soldiers that are caused by him.
Now take another hypothetical insurgent who is really just a farmer, but has been convinced by our first example that the western forces are here as crusaders and want to destroy the islamic faith. If he kills someone he is responsible as well, but he feels he's just defending his home from invaders.
who of these two is more to blame? the man who doesnt kill himself but causes the death of many, or the man who has killed but does so from admirable motives?

Now i'm not saying that you personally are to blame for hundreds of afghani deaths. Rather the opposite, as from what you've told us you have done a lot to help people. But by joining the armed forces you are putting yourself in a moral mire of blame and credit. That is a brave thing to do, no doubt. But it also means you are aiding in morally dubious acts (i.e: killing the man defending his home).

I understand that you'd be angry at people who don't respect the sacrifices you've made, but the morality of those sacrifices is not a clear-cut good v. evil.
 

Stu35

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Mortai Gravesend said:
Point out which army they have, ready to invade if we don't have people killing them. All I think that guy needs to do is sit on his ass over here back in this country and that would be enough of a deterrent right now. They're not going to come overseas and try to conquer us to take away our freedom of speech.
So, you genuinely believe that there are no people, in western nations, who are actively attempting to bring about wholesale changes to our culture and way of life, including implementing restrictions on freedom of speech?

You also genuinely believe they have no power whatsoever to attack us?

I would direct you to the 7/7 bombings and 9/11, two actions which demonstrated both intent, and capability to strike at the west. These are simply two successful attacks, what you won't have heard about is the hundreds of arrests, finds of explosive materiel, and general good work done by security forces in order to prevent subsequent attacks.

What you may also not realise, is that much of the training and support these individuals recieved/are recieving, was, and is, coming from nations such as Afghanistan.


Once again, I will state, I know the threat to our freedom is not nearly as strong as it was during the days of World War 2, but I would argue that the prevention of such threats developing to their full extent is much, MUCH better than waiting until there is an actual army sat on our doorstep.


Your speculation about WWII is irrelevant.
No it's not, it's a direct example of a military being required to secure freedom.

No connection has been made to the present day situation. No comparison of circumstances or motives. Nothing.
Really? So, let's have a look at Hitler - a man with a vision, that the whole world should conform to his way of doing things, by force if necessary.

Now, let's have a look at any number of individuals since, men with visions, that the whole would should conform to their way of doing things - by force if necessary.

The main difference is, Hitler was allowed to get pretty damned far with his desires before anybody thought about putting the brakes on. Everybody who has come since has found themselves up against stiff opposition before they could get a head of steam up.


- Once again, I'm going to state (and probably have it ignored) - I'm well aware that the modern British military does not directly fend off some foreign juggernaut of an opponent in order to preserve freedom. However we're still ready to do so if necessary, and it's fairly telling that the last time we weren't properly prepared to do so, a global conflict the likes of which the world had never seen kicked off.

So yeah, I believe that the lesson from history is simple - never assume that there's nobody out there with the intent of taking away things you hold dear. They are out there, and just because they don't have the capability now, doesn't mean they won't if left unchecked.

Saxnot said:
Well, no, you're not accountable for all the actions of the army, but neither are you without any blame.
Cool, I'll shoulder my portion of the blame for Women getting to go to school in Afghanistan, and the people there getting the choice to vote between the asshole politicans that rule them (just like us).

I'm happy with that.



Take for example a hypothetical member of the taliban who hasn't killed anyone, but spends all his time recruiting new members and organising IEDs and rocket attacks (without taking part in them). Clearly, this person would be morally responsible for the deaths of soldiers that are caused by him.
Now take another hypothetical insurgent who is really just a farmer, but has been convinced by our first example that the western forces are here as crusaders and want to destroy the islamic faith. If he kills someone he is responsible as well, but he feels he's just defending his home from invaders.
who of these two is more to blame? the man who doesnt kill himself but causes the death of many, or the man who has killed but does so from admirable motives?
Interesting scenario. What I'd say is that they're both standing in the way of their own peoples freedoms. Honestly, the way Afghanistan is currently being fought, we're not simply slaughtering everybody we come across.

The first individual, yeah he'd probably wake up one night to find some men in black suits kicking his front door down.

The second, well the whole point of what we're doing in Afghanistan is that he wakes up one day to find the infidels have dug his village a well, treated his children of their ailments, opened up a school so that his sons and daughters might have a better life, replaced the Taliban who tax him every cent he earns working his farm with a local police force who are actually there to help, and given him better equipment to help his farm be a little more productive (as well as teaching him how to make sure it stays productive).

If after all that, he still decides that we're infidel invaders coming to destroy his religion... Well, then how does his simple religious ignorance excuse him from an active stance against basic human rights?

Now i'm not saying that you personally are to blame for hundreds of afghani deaths. Rather the opposite, as from what you've told us you have done a lot to help people. But by joining the armed forces you are putting yourself in a moral mire of blame and credit. That is a brave thing to do, no doubt. But it also means you are aiding in morally dubious acts (i.e: killing the man defending his home).
Minor point - Afghani is a currency. Afghan is the correct term for a person from Afghanistan(I know it's a really minor bullshitty point, but some people honestly see it the same way as if somebody called you a Dollar, rather than an American).

Anyway - I see your point. Yes, there have been plenty of morally grey areas in the war in Afghanistan, there still are, but I don't believe that justifies simply allowing the people there to fall back into the dark ages and stay there til the end of time.


I understand that you'd be angry at people who don't respect the sacrifices you've made, but the morality of those sacrifices is not a clear-cut good v. evil.
I'm not angry at anybody regarding any sacrifices I may or may not have made. I simply take umbrage at the idea that what we're doing in Afghanistan should be considered morally wrong simply because it's being done by an Army, when I'd say we're doing what OXFAM wishes they could do, but a damned sight better.

I do agree it's not clear cut good vs evil - the politicians who originally decided to invade don't give a fuck about the actual people of Afghanistan, if they did they wouldn't be pulling us out in about 2 years, way before the job is done. (If Northern Ireland is anything to go by, we'll need another generation at least - You won't convince a 40 year old Talib that the British are evil infidels come to desecrate the great lands of Nad-e Ali, but you can convince his 6 year old grandson that the British troops who have been around his whole life are good people, and their message is the right one), however the soldiers on the ground - even the ones who go out there thinking 'yeah I wanna shoot me some ragheads!' ... After 6 months, they care about those people. Ultimately, who cares why the politicians are sending them out there, if once they're on the ground they become humanitarians? I know plenty of stereotypical racist ignorant retarded infantrymen, who after a 6 month tour have decided that, actually, Afghans are people too, and why shouldn't they get the same opportunities as the rest of us?

Anyway, Saxnot, this has been a long, and ranty post, and I'm sure there will be plenty of comeback from it - I'm going to try and avoid responding, because ultimately I won't change your opinion, you won't change mine, and at least you seem to have thought it out, and I can completely respect that the British Army has morally questionable incidents on its hands - however I'd argue that these are not good enough a reason to give up a fight which I feel is, on the whole, going to make the world a better place.

Mortai ... Just because you have never known a threat to your nation in your lifetime, doesn't mean that one cannot possibly exist in the future. I hope you realise this.

I grew up in a Britain that The IRA(funded, ironically enough, by Americans) were trying to tear apart with violence - these people were actively using violence to try and force a nation (Northern Ireland) to do something they, by democratic vote, didn't want to do. They were stopped, with great effort, by the British Army and the RUC/PSNI.
 

Biosophilogical

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Mortai Gravesend said:
Biosophilogical said:
Hating on the soldiers because you disagree with what the army is doing is like hating on the road-workers because you disagree with what the council is doing.
Road worker don't generally perform jobs that could be considered dubious ethically though. If they did I'd put blame on them for carrying out the job anyway. If I dislike what the city council is doing to the roads it generally isn't an ethical issue so much as one of what I would think is the best way to run a city.
While a war/'conflict' might be unethical/immoral, a soldier in that war can be perfectly ethical in how they act. The soldiers don't decide where they are deployed, and short of a full-scale soldier-revolt it is more a matter of who performs the duties of a soldier, rather than if someone performs them at all. From that point it is easy enough to say that even in a morally heinous war, a good person could, with good intentions, join the military, and conduct themselves in the most morally good way possible under the circumstances. Their actions could easily be considered moral, even if they are required to do immoral things, because by them putting themselves in that position, and trying to minimise the harm they cause, they've taken that place away from someone who may not have acted as such, and could easily have caused a great deal of needles harm, beyond the necessities of the role.

I wouldn't judge a soldier by their orders, I'd judge them on how they handle them.
 

Sarge034

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manic_depressive13 said:
I don't like any group with state sanctioned authority to use violence and reduced accountability for their actions.
So are you suggesting we live in a world where everyone has to defend themselves? What is the point of being a cop if you are going to be brought up on manslaughter charges every time you perform a legitimate shooting?

I'm talking about a perfectly clear video of a helicopter pilot who opened fire- just watch it. It's quite clear that the pilots were never at risk and they killed children.
It's quite clear is it? Do you have 360 degree view of the situation like the pilots did? Do you know what happened before the clip started? And so what if they killed children? Is it a tragedy? Sure it is. Could it have been avoided? I don't know. Kids can be combatants too you know. The point is we don't know the facts of why it happened. So in the end we use our biases to fabricate a reason in our own minds. The reason could be right and it might be wrong.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haditha_killings
I could have, but if you don't provide the supporting information for your arguments I'm not going to waste my time with it. Anyhow, I ended up guessing correctly because everyone tries to use this video in threads like this.

I am observing the precedents and making a prediction based on that. If he gets off lightly I want you to remember that I fucking called it.
The only way he could get off lightly is if the defense pulls the "insanity card". If you look up the news about the incident it is stated that he had what amounts to nervous breakdowns prior to his latest deployment. This is probably what will happen, not because he is a soldier but because this is how the justice system in the US operates now. So I fucking called that.

Sure, but still not good enough.
You come up with a foolproof way to get the job done while eliminating civilian casualties and then we'll talk.

If retaliation IS justification, then the twin tower bombings ought to be justified in your eyes.
Retaliation for what? By my count the score was even with 1 good guy point to the US in their eyes.

>They did the whole "Persian Empire" thing.
>We did the crusades.

>Russia invaded them.
>We sent CIA and special warfare units to train the resistance.

>They (Iraq) invaded Kuwait, launched scud missiles into Israel, and threatened the use of chemical/biological weapons.
>We invaded them (Iraq) and let Saddam stay in power when he "agreed" to play by the UN's rules.

>They attacked a civilian target (9/11).
>We invaded two strong points for the terrorists (Iraq and Afghanistan).

So what was the justification of their "retaliation"?

What. Drunk drivers are neither bad nor good. They're just people who made a stupid decision.
The chopper pilot is bad for allegedly shooting innocent people, but drunk drivers are not bad for knowingly putting innocent lives at risk/killing innocent people? I don't understand how you think. Could the chopper pilot not have felt threatened and made a stupid decision making him neither bad nor good?

Yes, I have a problem. Creating a straw man would be taking YOUR argument, misrepresenting it, then refuting it. How could I possibly make a straw man argument when I wasn't arguing with anyone?
Only one of the three definitions required the opposition's argument. The other two allow you to use "a weak or imaginary opposition" and "a weak or sham argument".

The post you demonstrated was my first post on this thread. I merely gave an analogy to illustrate my opinion of military personnel. It was quite clearly my own opinion. I wasn't claiming that it was anyone else's, nor that it was fact.
Yes the first one was an analogy, but it was also a straw man. It was an oversimplified comparison that was set up to allow your "side" to easily gain the upper hand.

A straw man argument IS NOT an inaccurate analogy.
Sometimes things can be classified as more than one thing. I.e. an inaccurate analogy AND a straw man.
 

manic_depressive13

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Sarge034 said:
So are you suggesting we live in a world where everyone has to defend themselves? What is the point of being a cop if you are going to be brought up on manslaughter charges every time you perform a legitimate shooting?
There's no point being a cop.
It's quite clear is it? Do you have 360 degree view of the situation like the pilots did? Do you know what happened before the clip started? And so what if they killed children? Is it a tragedy? Sure it is. Could it have been avoided? I don't know. Kids can be combatants too you know. The point is we don't know the facts of why it happened. So in the end we use our biases to fabricate a reason in our own minds. The reason could be right and it might be wrong.
You don't need a 360 degree view to observe that they were not being fired upon by the people they murdered. They just said "hey, those guys look like they have guns!" and went to town. But I suppose you'll justify anything.

I could have, but if you don't provide the supporting information for your arguments I'm not going to waste my time with it. Anyhow, I ended up guessing correctly because everyone tries to use this video in threads like this.
Actually you were completely wrong. The Haditha killings are a different incident altogether. Good to see that I provided a link and you didn't even bother to click on it.

The only way he could get off lightly is if the defense pulls the "insanity card". If you look up the news about the incident it is stated that he had what amounts to nervous breakdowns prior to his latest deployment. This is probably what will happen, not because he is a soldier but because this is how the justice system in the US operates now. So I fucking called that.
You're calling the fact that they'll make up any bullshit excuse to get him off lightly, and it will probably work? Okay.

You come up with a foolproof way to get the job done while eliminating civilian casualties and then we'll talk.
We could leave.

So what was the justification of their "retaliation"?
I would explain and provide evidence but you're not going to look. I also have better things to do.

The chopper pilot is bad for allegedly shooting innocent people, but drunk drivers are not bad for knowingly putting innocent lives at risk/killing innocent people? I don't understand how you think. Could the chopper pilot not have felt threatened and made a stupid decision making him neither bad nor good?
Drunk drivers don't get behind the wheel with the intention of killing someone. They assume they will make it home safely, but they often have accidents. Comparing a person like that pilot to a drunk driver is doing drunk drivers a disservice. Drunk drivers generally have the decency to be duly ashamed after they kill someone.

Only one of the three definitions required the opposition's argument. The other two allow you to use "a weak or imaginary opposition" and "a weak or sham argument".
If you can't understand simple english I'm not going to bust my balls trying to explain it to you. That's not the correct usage of 'strawman' and if you want to avoid discrediting your arguments in the future I'd suggest re-reading the definitions or just avoiding the term altogether. It doesn't actually make you look as smart as you think it does.
 

HalfTangible

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Mortai Gravesend said:
HalfTangible said:
Wars only end if the two sides make a peace treaty or one side is completely annihilated. That's what a declaration of war means: "I'm gonna attack you until you stay dead."
Clearly someone's never heard of a ceasefire. Or North and South Korea for that matter. Not technically the end, but in all but name...

Once a war starts, you need a military to fight it. You can't change that. A Military at war is going to do terrible things. You can't change that either. A military officer that orders his men to be nice is just going to get them all slaughtered.
A military being needed does not mean that all actions taken are justified.

So his choices are thus:
A) Fight, do terrible things, and possibly win and remove an enemy
B) Fight, DON'T do terrible things like shoot a man, and get massacred.
C) Don't fight at all and let whoever the enemy is win and do whatever they please. Call me crazy, but this doesn't seem like an option after declaring war >.>
Do tell me what scary things would be done to us if we just up and left Iraq right now.

Your options are also clearly biased. I never objected to killing the enemy in and of itself.

Nine times out of ten, soldiers are just defending themselves. They kill people out of anger, or fear, or reflex or even (god forbid >.>) out of duty to their country.
I'll wait for you to get the statistics out for that. But let me give you a hint, that's impossible in a traditional war. Think about it.

Politicians have absolutely nothing to justify their actions save greed. THEY decided to send thousands upon thousands of men to die by the boatload, calm, collected and probably sipping on some wine. THEY look at casualty reports and say 'Not bad' to fifty dead men in a year. THEY would rather send their young men to die than lose an election.
Lol. And the men run out because wine isn't good enough for them, they want to drink the blood of their enemies. See? I can make things up to demonize people too.

But anyway, the thousands upon thousands of men decided to follow the orders to go. If they'd never left, then there is no war.

I don't care what a soldier does, he can't be as bad as the monsters who sent him there to kill in the first place.
No, he easily can be. You're simply too biased to see it and apparently have never heard of war crimes.
I put cease-fires under peace treaties - basically the same thing, just a lot more likely to break... in retrospect, probably shouldn't.

Wasn't your point that it was the SOLDIER'S fault because they were following the orders of politicians?

In Iraq's case, we can't leave until the region can maintain stability without us because the middle east would tear ITSELF apart if we left. I was being very general with those three options >.>

Then what, precisely, are you objecting to in a war? Which way the gun is firing? Supply trains? >.>

I take it you've never heard of hyperbole. >.>

What, precisely, do you think I'm making up? Or more to the point, what part of what I am "making up" do you think is false? The wine? I'll concede the wine. The important part was that they felt no anger, no desperation, nothing to justify what they do except greed.

...THAT is what you're going with? Do you honestly believe that nobody from any nation on either side of a declared war is going to go to war? Because otherwise it's an entirely moot point.

Let me clarify: I am NOT trying to say that soldiers don't do terrible, unforgivable things. I am saying the WORST thing done in a war is starting it and/or sending soldiers to fight and die. I can say "That serial killer isn't worse than Hitler" and I'd probably be right but that doesn't mean the serial killer is any good, it just means Hitler was worse. Personally though I think you're overgeneralizing soldiers so that in your mind they're all the same as, say, that guy who killed a civilian in cold blood and celebrated by keeping the finger.
 

Thinh Pham

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Good Morning. I am getting the perspective that you dislike the military and what we do. THat is okay, it is your choice. Granted, you see on TV that our troops kill in the middle east, but hey it is a war for a reason. Are you upset? Do you remember the morning of 9/11? How many people lost their lives because the taliban was butt hurt. I am a Fleet Marine Force corpsman. I will only kill if I have to, in order to protect my patients. If you do not want to stand behind us, that is fine, but do you care to step in front?
 

sibrenfetter

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manic_depressive13 said:
Sarge034 said:
... and if you want to avoid discrediting your arguments in the future I'd suggest re-reading the definitions or just avoiding the term altogether. It doesn't actually make you look as smart as you think it does.
Now I am all for discussion, it can bring us further, but looking at your reply I hardly see any argumentation whatsoever. Statements like "there is no point in being a cop" or saying that you could provide proof but no one will look at it anyway will not bring the discussion further. Basically, every time you say something like that you are saying: "That is a valid counter-argument, but I refuse to accept it so I will throw out some statement to mask this". Sarge034 puts some valid questions forward, which you can't just throw away like you do. Also keep in mind that in any discussion one might gain new insights. If you go into a discussion without the acceptance that some of your thoughts might have to be adjusted, there is no point in discussing with you.

One thing I do directly want to reply to:
manic_depressive13 said:
Sarge034 said:
there is no point in being a cop
What you are saying here is that you would prefer a country without any laws. Because, if you have laws you need law keepers, which is per definition what cops are.How would you see such a country? Nothing of your comfortable life would be possible as all would be about pure survival regardless of the costs to others. That is no world I would want to live in. Technically speaking, that would be pre-stoneage and even then it can be argued groups had certain rules and laws (like not killing each other).
 

Tanner The Monotone

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I know a lot of retires from the army say that they disliked the way they were treated. Other than that, I haven't heard anybody out of the army say they dislike it.
 

3aqua

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When you sign up to become a soldier you agree to surrender your judgement to the government. You are no longer allowed to make moral decisions and you essentially become a hired killer of the state.
 

generals3

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I'm confused to how someone could dislike the Army. The Army is nothing more than a political tool to do what is most likely the dirtiest job ever. You should be happy it exists and you don't have to do what they do.


Sure some folks in the army do bad things and fuck it up, but it happens in any profession. Unfortunately due to the nature of a soldier's job when he fucks up it usually is a big fuck up.
 
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3aqua said:
When you sign up to become a soldier you agree to surrender your judgement to the government. You are no longer allowed to make moral decisions and you essentially become a hired killer of the state.
Or, you know, a hired radio repairman. That's what I was attempting to go in as when I enlisted. Didn't work out, as i couldn't handle the stress of boot camp, but a hired killer, I was not.

generals3 said:
I'm confused to how someone could dislike the Army. The Army is nothing more than a political tool to do what is most likely the dirtiest job ever. You should be happy it exists and you don't have to do what they do.


Sure some folks in the army do bad things and fuck it up, but it happens in any profession. Unfortunately due to the nature of a soldier's job when he fucks up it usually is a big fuck up.
Took the words out of my mouth. Especially the last sentence. I mean, I could pull up a Cracked article as evidence that 911 operators are uncaring bastards with a poor sense of judgement. Proof! [http://www.cracked.com/article_17150_5-horrifying-tales-911-incompetence.html]
 

generals3

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Mortai Gravesend said:
generals3 said:
I'm confused to how someone could dislike the Army. The Army is nothing more than a political tool to do what is most likely the dirtiest job ever. You should be happy it exists and you don't have to do what they do.
People who let themselves be used as tools should be judged for what they are used for if they were sufficiently knowledgeable. Can't really cede responsibility.
But that would entirely defeat the purpose of an army. There is a difference between a soldier and a (wom)man with a gun. A (wom)man with a gun can make moral judgements and therefor take full responsibility for (her)his actions while a soldier cannot. A soldier should only be held accountable for decisions (s)he makes on his own (like going on a murdering spree for fun, disobeying orders, etc.).

It's the same as cops actually. A cop has to uphold the law regardless of how f*cked up the law is. He's also a political tool just like a soldier.