Go away for a few days and you miss alot, swear we've been down this road before..
Acorn and Infanteer good to see someone out to make this interesting, lest it becomes a quiet thread ;D
1. Why are you so ready to believe those media reports as truth, while you slag the media for bias and lack of professionalism in other threads?
2. Have any of you seen kids in faux soldier uniforms on various parades here in Canada? I have, including as kid in CFs with MWO rank - that of his dad.
2.a. Is this so far different from kids in the Middle East, at a parade/event, wearing the uniform of that society's heros (however misguided we think those "heros" are)?
3. Whether you're 15 or 50 it's experience of the events of a culture that count. A 50 year old Canadian soldier generally has much less experience of cultural motivators than someone who lives in that culture - even a soldier who serves in the same environment. We have difficulty discarding our cultural armour.
1.Becuase that would mean that there are certain within Western culture that are fallible. Western culture has been raised to believe that there is absolutely nothing wrong with it and that most, if not all, views contrary to it are inherently wrong. In order to support this infallibility hypocrisy is often needed.
2. & 2, A.) Absolutely, conversely if we went on a Palestinian forum and tried to convince them that the Israeli Pilot or Tankcrewman or Israeli Army/Air Force Cadet looks "Brave and Smart in their Dress uniform" we'd be meeting the same resistance. Objectivity is something we pride ourselves on at times but when it comes down to it, many are as objective as an angry Palestinian.
3. BTDT that does not always mean "Been there experienced that" which is understandable, how can one let down cultural armour when one can't even remove their body armour?
I find just as often it can mean "Been there watched my ass" as I said, understandable, but if we're using these views to shape our own because we've never 'BTDT' than we are not getting the full picture, and objectivity is shot.
I'd be just as willing if not more willing to listen to a bohemian backpacker tell me their experiences and understanding of the Arab peoples, or TE Lawrence who fooled himself into thinking that he was one, than I would be a grizzled vet with a patch over his eye telling me about his experiences.
Quote from: 2332Piper on Yesterday at 21:44:19
If we want to debate the very basic facts, yes, the Palestinians are using weapons as they see fit, for all we know they may view bombing from the sky as cowardly and immoral just as we view suicide bombers.
Precisely and if you're objective you can see that the two are not as far apart as we would like to believe to make us feel warm and fuzzy about what we do, to make us feel like some war is great and heroic. Word to the wise, no war is great and heroic, but we've managed to fool ourselves into thinking ti is. When man is in war he is as debased and vile as an animal, we (western society) have just found ways of removing ourselves from the killing so we can glorify things. Which is great if you're trying to combat PTSD, what better way really? Condition us to believe that we are different because we kill from a plane and that's different from shooting or bombing from the ground.
A great scene from Lawrence of Arabia (A good movie if you want to look at the schism between the cultures) the Turks are bombing the Arabs at their camp from planes and Prince Feisal is chasing the planes with his sword on horseback yelling "Cowards"
I've also read anecdotal accounts of Arab defences at Baghdad where they could nothing against american planes yelling the exact same thing.
I'm certain my grandfather felt the same way about the Germans during the blitz which prompted him to enlist, I'm also certain that people felt the same way in Dresden.
Rest assured the person being bombed from the air is just as vulnerable and defenceless by many accounts as the person being bombed from the ground.
Children will continue to die on both sides until people are
truly objective and not just half objective about things that they want to be objective about, I concede that I'm not entirely there but I've made leaps and bounds but many (here, there and everywhere) are as muddled as the next.