jgnfld wrote:"I treated the Jews I sent to the gas chambers really really well. Much better than others. As best as I could. I feel very repentent now. I was just following orders" was tried. It worked to some degree if you consider that Speer was not hanged but rather got 20 years.
Tanstaafl wrote:jgnfld wrote:While I hear you, this argument really didn't fly well at Nuremburg. Thirsk is a willing participant in evil. He will need to face those consequences and I remember textev of Sharpfield, at least, pointing this out in LAMA. Ah here it is in November Year of God 896 Chapter 4:
"I'm pretty sure it wasn't Thirsk's idea, but there's a price for something like that, whether it's your idea or not, and I'm not the only officer in Their Majesties' Navy who wants a little payback. A lot of payback, actually.
Sharpfield was not e member of the inner circle. He did not know what had happened in detail.
He knows Thirsk did have the responsibility for the POW’s. He does not know how Thirsk has (tried to) live up to his obligations.
This kind of unfounded opinions can win you elections, but get you nowhere in court.
Equating the CoG with the Nazi party is problematic at best. The Nazis were aware that they were acting in defiance of all standards of international law (whether enforceable or not) and morality. They were also acting in defiance of the tenets of virtually all major religions and Western moral teachings. The Church is following the letter not simply of international law but of God Himself, so far as anyone on Safehold has ever been taught. The heretics --- the ones
defying international and divine law --- are the Charisians and their allies.
The problem is, at least in part, that the
Writ is schizoid. On the one hand, you have the
Book of Bedard and the
Book of Langhorne, each of which repeatedly emphasizes the believer's moral responsibility to treat his fellow humans with compassion and kindness and both of which underscore the belief in a merciful and beneficent God Who wants His children to love one another and Who has so ordered and constructed the world (and granted so many and manifold capabilities through the teachings of His Archangels) that His children will be safe, well-cared for, and healthy. On the other hand, you have the
Book of Schueler, which teaches the retribution and savagery to be handed out to those who defy the Proscriptions
and justifies them on the basis that it will help to save the souls even of those who suffer the Punbishment. So what seems a very clear moral choice is nothing of the sort. The internal compass used to tell you that the Punishment is evil is the same internal compass which teaches you it's God's will. This is the entire reason resistance is so often and so consistently stated in terms of resistance to
the Group of Four for misusing God's law for their own personal ends and for identifying their own beliefs and desires with God's. The argument that the Punishment
itself is against God's will comes later in the theological and moral journeys of most Safehoildians, whereas it seems to me that many of the commenters think it should be the other way around.