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British Nationals Murdered Abroad.
Figures from the Foreign Office show that around 60 British nationals are murdered abroad each year. Does the murder of one, no matter how grotesque the circumstances, justify going to war?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.For once I'm sympathetic to Khandro's point. If we're going to talk about war, then moral justification should come after we have carefully considered how effective our intervention would be, and whether it would achieve the goals it is supposed to.
This isn't a conversation I see happening anywhere.
This isn't a conversation I see happening anywhere.
Khandro. Freedom of speech is good and the moment it stops is when we lose freedom. I however don't agree with a thing you say and you miss the point of the factor that started the whole problem. If our leaders were capable and actually gave a flying f%*& about its citizens then we would not be in this situation. We as individuals need to change this terrible world. Little bit by little bit.
// Can we expect Ludwig and mikey to be heading off to Syria soon, or would they prefer to send agents on their behalf? //
Agents obviously - people who know how to use guns and bombs. Will you be heading off there to try and talk some sense into the militants? To explain to them that chopping people's heads off and crucifying them isn't very nice?
No, thought not.
Agents obviously - people who know how to use guns and bombs. Will you be heading off there to try and talk some sense into the militants? To explain to them that chopping people's heads off and crucifying them isn't very nice?
No, thought not.
-- answer removed --
It appears to me, to be a so-called 'religious war' carried out by the so-called 'religious', but in reality it is fanaticism, tribal, and to some extent territorial, and all fuelled by Iranian and Saudi Arabian ignoramuses.
Sunnis, Shias, Alawites, Kurds, in an apocalyptic pre-destined battle to the death. Do you want to take part in it?
me, or anyone on my behalf? - no thanks!
As the ex-military Commander says, we should ask ourselves two questions;
(1) What needs to be done?
(2) What can realistically BE done?
Beware of specious knee-jerk reactions by second-rate leadership, carried out to demonstrate to their electorate and peer groups how they are 'acting decisively'. Hasn't there has been enough British blood spilt in the sand?
Sunnis, Shias, Alawites, Kurds, in an apocalyptic pre-destined battle to the death. Do you want to take part in it?
me, or anyone on my behalf? - no thanks!
As the ex-military Commander says, we should ask ourselves two questions;
(1) What needs to be done?
(2) What can realistically BE done?
Beware of specious knee-jerk reactions by second-rate leadership, carried out to demonstrate to their electorate and peer groups how they are 'acting decisively'. Hasn't there has been enough British blood spilt in the sand?
Khandro, you quote a nameless ex-military Commander who says:
//we should ask ourselves two questions;
(1) What needs to be done?
(2) What can realistically BE done?//
Do you think his answer to those questions from an ex-military commander is “nothing”? I doubt that very much.
You say that this is ”an apocalyptic PRE-DESTINED battle to the death.”
Are you quite sure you’re not confusing reality with fantasy?
Krom, if we stand by and do nothing I fear that in the long term a great many more lives will be sacrificed. In the absence of opposition these people will be holding the whole world to ransom.
//we should ask ourselves two questions;
(1) What needs to be done?
(2) What can realistically BE done?//
Do you think his answer to those questions from an ex-military commander is “nothing”? I doubt that very much.
You say that this is ”an apocalyptic PRE-DESTINED battle to the death.”
Are you quite sure you’re not confusing reality with fantasy?
Krom, if we stand by and do nothing I fear that in the long term a great many more lives will be sacrificed. In the absence of opposition these people will be holding the whole world to ransom.
naomi; // you quote a nameless ex-military Commander// I beg his pardon for not remembering his name. About 3 weeks ago he was on, I think, Ch. 4 news on two consecutive evenings interviewed in his garden, he was an ex-general maybe - perhaps others saw him. He didn't say, as you suggest "do nothing", he said we must ask what can we do. (My view is we should have given support to Assad a long time ago).
//You say that this is ”an apocalyptic PRE-DESTINED battle to the death.”
Are you quite sure you’re not confusing reality with fantasy?//
I suggest you enter 'Ahmadinejad's Apocalypse' into Google, take your pick, and find out what he (who hasn't gone away) and many other fruit cakes like him actually believe it's all about.
//You say that this is ”an apocalyptic PRE-DESTINED battle to the death.”
Are you quite sure you’re not confusing reality with fantasy?//
I suggest you enter 'Ahmadinejad's Apocalypse' into Google, take your pick, and find out what he (who hasn't gone away) and many other fruit cakes like him actually believe it's all about.
Khandro, you’re tying yourself up in knots again. You don’t think it’s a good idea for us to go to war with ISIS, and offer the words of an unnamed ex-military commander, one assumes, in support of your opinion. Further on we discover that he doesn’t actually support your opinion – he’s simply saying that we should ask ‘what needs to be done?’ and ‘what realistically can be done?’ – both questions most or us ask, I would have thought. Then you talk about ‘pre-destined’ apocalypse, and offer in support of that the words of a man you subsequently described as a ‘fruit cake’. What are you talking about?
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