Her brother distributed stolen black powder to the suicide bombers. Her brother killed his cousin. He did so because he believed his brother's cause was fundamentally evil or led to evil. Something akin to Germans fighting the Third Reich during WWII. Resisting what one believes to be evil is the primary responsibility of a good man or good woman.
Yes, we both, you and I, disagree with what the GoGA is trying to do. We both think that those opposing Charis support evil goals. Discounting all of the motivations of the opposition as stemming from evil or mental illness is to view all of them as less than human or less than rational or in some ways unworthy of a fundamental consideration one gives to any human being.
That sort of intolerance allows people like Clyntahn to send suicide bombers to kill innocent civilians as if their lives mattered less than human beings that agreed with his own beliefs. War calls for good human beings on both sides to do bad things. Acknowledging that and trying to mitigate it as much as possible means that both sides recognize those admirable qualities of the other. Conviction and commitment are admirable regardless of the side they serve.
Isilith wrote:PeterZ wrote:Does conviction not merit something more than being called a pyschopath? Strong conviction and strong faith even when those convictions and faith are not shared are worthy of recognition and respect. Otherwise its oh so easy to demonize those that disagree and hold those disagreement powerfully. Especially in times of war.
Uh, no they don't merit respect. She KNOWS her brother just killed himself, a cousin that was raised WITH HER as a brother, and God only knows how many other people. Trying to justify actions like that isn't conviction, it is a mental illness.
That is like saying "respect the suicide bombers" as they blow up busloads of kids.