Plus, while you can't entirely ignore the potential costs of standing up and doing the right thing sometimes people or countries reach a point where temporary safety isn't the most important thing and they take a stand despite the risk of injury or death.n7axw wrote:I don't really disagree with Cthia about human nature. I am a preacher and I can wax eloquent on the subject myself.
But, isn't this exercizing a bit of tunnel vision? Not only do you have the Mandarins, St. Just and the Detweilers, you also have Eloise, Honor, Alfred and Allison, and yes, Elizabeth, who are commited to spending the energy of their lives in the service of others. Then there are lots of others who fall somewhere in the middle, sharing in the flaws of humanity as a whole, but still wanting to be decent people.
What it all amounts to is that even after the dark side of human nature, bottom line is that we are an incredibly complicated mix of both good and evil. And even the best of us mirror that in our hearts.
Don
-
Sometimes, painful as it is, things don't get better until some little guy stands up for his rights; and then in the cold light of day, before the whole world, gets utterly destroyed by the violent oppressive force denying those rights. That brutal public suppression of him and his rights can be what finally triggers the widespread backlash against that abuse; leading to it's correction.