Bluesqueak wrote:Yes, I think that my problem with your moral judgements is that you are treating outcomes as equivalents when they're not. Same with intentions. That is, you are taking a situation where Nation A is actively trying to destroy Nation B, and then treating an attack by Nation B on the citizens of Nation A as being the same as the Alignment's attack on the citizens of Mesa.
To be fair, I am making relative moral judgments rather than absolute ones. I consider Malign to be fighting a guerilla war and the guerilla mindset is that anyone who is not actively for my cause is against that cause. This is a more malign version of the dictum: if you are not part of the solution, then you are part of the problem. It is obvious, even to me, that a guerilla war raises more moral questions than does a conventional war.
Bluesqueak wrote:Essentially, you seem to be saying 'ah, yes, these are both attacks on civilians, therefore it's equivalent' but failing to consider context. Generally, an action in response to a threat (in individuals, self-defence) is not morally equivalent to an attack against someone who is not a threat (in individuals, murder). Both Germany and Britain could argue that the other country (and all its citizens) were directly threatening its survival.
If you like, I am ready to stipulate that British Bomber Command (including Harris) is more moral tham Malign and Marinescu. I was trying to reason that just as Harris' superiors were more moral than he was, so were Marinescu's superiors more moral than she was. The difference is not by much in either case. The problem that the British had in the European theater, later joined by the Americans, was that before the Normandy landings there was no way to strike directly at Germany except by bombing. And the German bombings had shown that it was inefficient against either morale or war capacity.
Bluesqueak wrote:The Alignment can't make that argument about Mesan citizens. They're killing them because it's more convenient than an obvious evacuation.
They would certainly argue that it's necessary for their survival, but that's not really the same thing as defending your nation or ideology against a group of people who, as a group, are trying to kill you. They might have more success arguing that it's a 'Coventry' situation, but the myth of Coventry is that Coventry was abandoned to the bombs in order to save the entire country. The Alignment is more in a situation where they choose to devastate the entire planet in order to save Houdini/Coventry.
It's not really the same outcome - one is 'we must destroy this country because the alternative is that they destroy us', and the other is 'we must destroy this planet in order to cover our escape'.
The Malign has the very real operational problem of concealing their evacuation to Darius; this is not just a convenience. After the Solarian Press accepted the explanation for the Green Pines incident, where a seccie detonated a nuke in the park of a residential community (that this had been a terror attack by the Audubon Ballroom aided by the notorious Manticoran Zilwicki); then the realization was made that more attacks by the Audubon Ballroom could cover the widespread disappearance of the evacuees. So the points of dispute are whether there was a operational necessity to hide the evacuation (I insist that there is) and whether the most effective way to do this was by exploding bombs among the ordinary citizens of Mesa (I do not know what alternatives there were, given the time constraints of a probable attack by Manticore).
Bluesqueak wrote:Getting back to the 'psychopaths' thing - no, a psychiatrist or psychologist wouldn't define them as psychopaths. Nonetheless, the ideology they follow is psychopathic. It sees people as objects (collections of genes) to be manipulated.
I can agree with this, but prefer the words "evil" or "immoral" to "psychopathic" because I do not want the "not guilty" by reason of insanity defense. I consider Malign to be worse that Warnecke, because he was crazy and they are not.
PS. I had trouble entering this response, because I took too much time composing it. When I hit the preview button, I was told I was not signed in; but how could I get to the response screen if I was not signed in? Anyway I re-entered my ID and password and this wiped out all my work. So on retry I copied everything to an outside text editor. If this happens again, I need to copy all my work before going to the login screen.