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Pinko,
I am not an academic. Please let me offer this crude analogy to help communicate the current situation.
Imagine if there was a house fire in your city. When the firefighters received the call, they immediately deliberated and discovered that the home belonged to a convicted pedophile. They decided not to combat the fire.
Later, there was another fire. Prior to dispatching, the firefighters convened and discovered that the home belonged to someone with several unpaid parking tickets. They decided not to combat the fire.
Unfortunately, there was another fire. Again, the firefighters deliberated and discovered that the owner habitually drives 10 km/hr over the posted speed limit. They decide not to fight the fire.
Do you want your firefighters be selective in which fire they deem worthy to combat?
Yes this analogy is sophomoric. But it does a very good job in illustrating the nature of the Canadian Forces role. We are the hands and feet of Canadian foreign and defense policy. We go were we are told. We do what we are asked because we are professionals.
Your position is inconsequential and intellectually embarrassing. It equal to debating the philosophy of economic pluralism in a liberal democracy to someone who just had their home foreclosed. Your position may have its value whist shared over a 5 dollar latte, but in the real world it is immediately discarded.
What I have always had trouble understanding is how you (and I group people like you into one homogeneous group) manage to walk the ethical tight rope- being passionately outraged at the mission while being completely dismissive of the consequences of failure. I would like for you (and other like you) to accept the responsibility of the consequences of your position. I doubt you would carry that albatross around your neck- it would get in the way of your latte.
Please take your academic pontificating down the street. We are busy putting out a fire.
I am not an academic. Please let me offer this crude analogy to help communicate the current situation.
Imagine if there was a house fire in your city. When the firefighters received the call, they immediately deliberated and discovered that the home belonged to a convicted pedophile. They decided not to combat the fire.
Later, there was another fire. Prior to dispatching, the firefighters convened and discovered that the home belonged to someone with several unpaid parking tickets. They decided not to combat the fire.
Unfortunately, there was another fire. Again, the firefighters deliberated and discovered that the owner habitually drives 10 km/hr over the posted speed limit. They decide not to fight the fire.
Do you want your firefighters be selective in which fire they deem worthy to combat?
Yes this analogy is sophomoric. But it does a very good job in illustrating the nature of the Canadian Forces role. We are the hands and feet of Canadian foreign and defense policy. We go were we are told. We do what we are asked because we are professionals.
Your position is inconsequential and intellectually embarrassing. It equal to debating the philosophy of economic pluralism in a liberal democracy to someone who just had their home foreclosed. Your position may have its value whist shared over a 5 dollar latte, but in the real world it is immediately discarded.
What I have always had trouble understanding is how you (and I group people like you into one homogeneous group) manage to walk the ethical tight rope- being passionately outraged at the mission while being completely dismissive of the consequences of failure. I would like for you (and other like you) to accept the responsibility of the consequences of your position. I doubt you would carry that albatross around your neck- it would get in the way of your latte.
Please take your academic pontificating down the street. We are busy putting out a fire.