In the interests of moving this debate away from the Rememberance Day thread, I thought I'd start one to contain the discussion which is developing over the morality of military action, military service, and the military as a concept.
I've copied in some of the more relevant talking points: should we respect people for having served in the military, or gone to war? Should they be blamed for the horrors and the (inevitable?) atrocities of war? Should we respect our enemies just as much as we honour our own fallen?
Borachio said:I admire the fact that [service personnel] undertake such a job at great risk to themselves.
I'm less comfortable with the notion that they might kill other people on my behalf.
Civver_764 said:I honestly don't see what makes veterans so special. I don't want them "fighting for my freedom", I want those people that are now dead because of them to still be alive.
Borachio said:I think they're special because they apparently put their lives on the line. Not many other people do that. Whether the cause they do it for is worth it, is another issue.
In my opinion it isn't.
I don't think the average soldier (usually quite a young man) is to blame for what others tell him is right.
GhostWriter16 said:The ruling class should be blamed, not the rank and file veterans. Most of whom still think they are indeed fighting for our freedoms and don't understand that wars like Iraq do no such thing.
Galdre said:Serving in the armed forces would be an honorable thing if they armed forces were not continually used for bad motives. It is honorable to protect your nation/community, but not honorable to take part in the invasion of other countries.
Civver_764 said:Do you respect the people that carried out the 9/11 attacks?
I've copied in some of the more relevant talking points: should we respect people for having served in the military, or gone to war? Should they be blamed for the horrors and the (inevitable?) atrocities of war? Should we respect our enemies just as much as we honour our own fallen?