cosmicfish wrote:Tor wrote:I think it's less a matter of moral differences and more a matter of how we view the threats the CS has to face.
The ends justify the means? Evil is situational?
We have the resources to neutralize many threats through non-lethal means like taser, pepper spray, plain old outnumbering/tackling, joint locks, etc. We also have nice armored cars to transport prisoners in, and nice prisons to put them into so they can't begin hurting people as soon as we stop holding them down.
A lot of people do not have these resources, this would be the case of many villages out there. For them, only a lethal solution may be reliable to secure their populace when dealing with a threat, even though someone wealthier may have the resources for non-lethal subdues.
For that reason, yes, evil is situational. If some mental patient is swinging around a knife (or a vibro knife) and you had the means to subdue them non-lethally, you could consider it evil to use lethal force instead. But I wouldn't consider it evil to use lethal force if you did not have other options.
cosmicfish wrote:Can you indicate either what such measures of "peoplehood" Dog-Boys fail to meet, or else how the leadership and scientists and psionics in the CS fail to recognize that they in fact met said measures?
I would say that their failure to recognize any existing people-quality that might be there is evident by how they are treated and loved. I can't quantify what it is, as I don't have first-person experience thinking in these touchy-feely terms, I tend to just default to considering IQ and raw processing power.
cosmicfish wrote:I disagree that slavery is such a value, especially when the slaves were handcrafted to be such.
Cept as others pointed out, the CS did not add obedience, dogs already evolved this, they just enhanced the IQ/dexterity/strength/etc. Is the CS obligated to try and make dogs less obedient so they can be freer?
cosmicfish wrote:I think that is an awfully generous criterion. Only 1800 or so Germans were tried for the crimes of the Nazis out of a population of 90 or so million, and the Nazis are our gold standard of real evil. I guess they weren't evil though! Good old ignorant Nazis! Knuckleheads, what were they thinking?
The amount of people tried for a crime is not necessarily an accurate estimate of how many people are committing the crimes. Particularly when numbers reach higher amounts and it becomes hard to collect evidence.
I also do not know how many Nazis were evil and how many were simply selfish and scared to disobey, thinking they would be shot for treason. I don't consider cowardice necessarily to be evil.
Have to keep in mind that this all started with them "reclaiming" the Rhineland, which doesn't seem like very much of an evil act. But by the time it snowballed into invading other nations, a lot of these guys were already in, and nobody could speak out against it for fear of sanction/murder.
cosmicfish wrote:Are you trying to convince me that the proper term for farming is "slavery"?
I don't see why the noun 'slave' should be limited to a particular species, so yes. I am a slaveowner to 2 dogs and 1 cat.
cosmicfish wrote:There is a difference between "high animal intelligence" and "sapience", in genuine, verifiable, biological ways.
So far as we know.
Per Underseas, Dolphins/Orcas are our equals, modern science does not acknowledge that, so the void of our current knowledge is Palladium canon.
cosmicfish wrote:how many thousands or millions must know that none of this is true because they belong to the military or scientific or political elite? And what portion of the power and influence does that faction have in deciding the actions of the society as a whole?
I don't know enough about Chinese or CS society to estimate that. I don't think belonging to the elite necessarily means that people know better though. Having a high access to information does not necessarily mean that you will be presented with the correct information or know how to sort it out.
cosmicfish wrote:Then in your non-canon interpretation I guess Mr. Ed is non-fiction.
Pretty sure Mr. Ed would be created as a mutant animal, and they roll a base of 3D6 which is then adjusted for size levels.
cosmicfish wrote:In canon, in Palladium games, "animal intelligence" is a real thing.
It has no statistical relevance as far as I have seen, it is only put as a side mention to the attribute sometimes to explain the rough levels.
cosmicfish wrote:Wow. Just... wow. Slavery doesn't count as "harming an innocent???"
Not necessarily. You could for example, enslave a non-innocent, however non-innocent is determined. Like say for example, a guy is going around serial-killing for no reason, you could enslave him.
cosmicfish wrote:nothing evil about using zombitrons???
That would depend on the context. If you use it to pacify Mr. Serial Killer, that doesn't seem evil.
cosmicfish wrote:But is not even slightly vague that they exist.
True. But I would say "this is not an evil genocide" if we were talking about wanting to completely wipe the Xiticix off the face of the earth. I might allow for Genocide against Vampires to have some more moral discussion attached to it, but am thinking a lot of people would similarly see a genocide against vampires as similarly non-evil, a self-preservation tactic against supernatural alien invaders who, if not completely obliterated, will replicate at ridiculous speeds and overwhelm us later.
cosmicfish wrote:Sure, because Erin Tarn is a noted Mechanoids/Xiticix-rights activist.
I don't recall specifically what Erin has said about CS and genocide which is why I would like to read it before commenting.
cosmicfish wrote:the entire context of the books from which those quotes came is about the war between the CS and Tolkeen, claiming that this is all about the Mechanoids and Xiticix goes beyond speculation.
The Coalition War Campaign is not solely about Tolkeen. The CS is mentioned as developing genocidal policies in response to the FoM invasion. That is not necessarily about (or just about) wizards, but also about supernatural invaders from other dimensions like demons/deevils/vampires who may have been used to attack them. While doubtful the Xiticix were, they are recognized as enough of a threat to be included in CWC statements.
cosmicfish wrote:Tor wrote:Normal humans are being delibertately hunted down to be killed by monsters, that's what happens to them when they are vulnerable to lethal attack.
No, it really isn't. Being vulnerable to attack does not mean that said attack occurs. Modern humans are quite vulnerable to bullet wounds, yet the vast majority go their entire life without ever being shot.
I think it's a mistake to compare our world's trends with Rifts, which experiences much more conflict and danger.
Consider what a single Alu demon could do to a town with no MD defenses. Those things a first level Shifter can easily pluck into our world to dominate others and then lose control of. Those things already teleporting here to commandeer our dimensional nexus for their war.
cosmicfish wrote:speculate why they bothered to include her and how reliable her information is overall.
I have found enough errors to question her reliability, even in RMB does say that Traversing is the best overall world description that exists out there. Doesn't mean much for her accuracy regarding particulars. Especially if she's writing about people who put her on a wanted list and oppose the policies of her home city.
cosmicfish wrote:we also don't see them committing acts of genocide
It's unclear what, if any, acts by the CS are considered genocide by Palladium. We know that Karl was prepared to launch a campaign of genocide, we know that extreme officers like Drogue and his flunkies brought the option to the table, and we know they started doing it without authorization from Karl, but since it was unauthorized I do not consider that the Coalition States itself did this thing.
We might as well say that the Coalition States are creating Psi-X aliens because Desmond Bradford is part of the CS. Never mind that it's secret and unauthorized and being covered up.
cosmicfish wrote:how do you think the CS fares per-capita compared to non-CS humans?
I honestly don't know, it could vary a lot based on whether we're talking Psyscape or Pecos Empire or all these little wilderness communities...
cosmicfish wrote:Anyone want to take bets on when "The Siege of Lazlo" occurs? Going back to Siege on Tolkeen 2, the immortal Kevin states outright that the CS is built on and sustained by continued conquest, anyone not thinking Lazlo is in their sights is dreaming.
I think the Federation of Magic would be a priority first.
The CS would target intermediary places like New Lazlo and Magestar first, and while doing so, Dunscon would be guerilla warfare all over their supply lines and stuff.
I think the CS sees the value in allowing Lazlo to stay around a bit and fight Xiticix, and that it would make more sense to go after guys like Dunscon first.
Possibly Dweomer, even though it seems less evil, it seems a bit easier to find than the City of Brass, I'll take 'in an indestructible castle in another dimension' over "we have some illusion walls" any day. Psyscape also seems pretty easy to access. Sadly the 2 better guys might get hit first when they could've been helping take out Soulharvest.
If Nxla is still growing his empire, odds are that is going to reach critical mass before Lazlo is anywhere near being on the table.
cosmicfish wrote:why counter a dismissed argument with one you yourself dismiss?
I guess it wasn't necessary, I suppose it's fun to engage in speculation too even while seeing it as fruitless the further we go.
cosmicfish wrote:the existence of the mages of the Vanguard does not disprove in any way the persecution and extermination of mages by the CS right now.
No, more like it relates back to how they didn't back then, and the Vanguard (not to mention their psychic agents who might well infiltrate Psi-Bat or Psi-Net) and the RCSG are a means to gradually acclimitize the CS to limited magical use in a highly regulated fashion in the long term.
cosmicfish wrote:I am not sure that distinction between CS-friendly towns and the CS itself is all that meaningful here.
If we can't include CS friends, we're to look for CS-neutral or CS-enemy folk to find people who share their views?
cosmicfish wrote:Actually it says "By Kevin Siembieda & Bill Coffin",
I know, I should've phrased it better, should've said "says it's also by Bill" instead of "also says it's by Bill"
cosmicfish wrote:The moment they lose control, the very foundation of the Coalition's military society begins to crumble.
Military's gotta stay organized!
cosmicfish wrote:a much smaller, weaker power that has never overtly challenged the CS or made moves against it. Certain individuals within Tolkeen may have, but the nation as a whole has never sought conflict with its massive, technologically powerful neighbor, which makes the Coalition's aggression all the more questionable, its heroics all the more hollow.
Couldn't we also say the same thing about Afghanistan? It never declared war on the US as a whole, as a nation, but individuals within it may have.
Perhaps the Coalition is justified in attacking Tolkeen because it harbor's anti-CS terrorists and does not bring them to justice as other respectable nations do?
Overkill came out August 2000 so it's obviously not a commentary on that situation, but those events do lead to stimultation to analyze it by that comparison.
cosmicfish wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:The average citizen is actually of Good alignment.
Got anything to back that up?
KC might've been thinking of "In game terms, the average citizen of the Coalition States if of a
good or selfish alignment" from CWCp46 under "The Average Coalition Citizen".
Based on that vagueness, would anyone find it disagreeable to say "Unprincipled" is the average? That's also what I'd expect is the average of our modern society.
Other interesting catch phrases:
*47: "CS soldiers as the villain"
*48: "Coalition Soldiers as Good Guy Player Caracters
Also worth considering is "CS soldiers who are truly creatures of evil (15%)"
This sounds to me like the CS military is 85% good/selfish, a majority, like the average citizen.
cosmicfish wrote:Tor wrote:Perhaps it is "easy to forget" the CS espouses genocide because they did not espouse it in the main book?
Not being in the main book does not make it non-canon!
I didn't say anything about whether it was canon.
I just wonder if KS is right to describe that we "forgot" the CS is genocidal when, unless we can find evidence of the term's use to this effect in earlier groups, he may actually be introducing it as a certainty in his reminder.
cosmicfish wrote:You keep coming back to the Xiticix despite the fact that all of the references I am giving are from a series of books that describe the Coalition completely outside of its (or anyone else's) interactions to the Xiticix.
I do this because the statements about the CS as not necessarily about Tolkeen itself. "Overkill is all about how the Coalition is the bad guy .. the CS espouses many of the things we have grown to detest .. racism, and genocide" This is a generic statement, it is not Tolkeen-specific, so the genocide espoused by CS could be in regard to the Xiticix.
Lenwen also brought up CWC statements about genocide which has made mention of Xiticix. Plus... are we forgetting that the Xiticix Gambit was part of the SoT ?
cosmicfish wrote:the quotes I gave are not describing the Coalition in a manner limited to the war. Indeed, most of the quotes are about the Coalition as it has been before the war, discussing the long build up to it, discussing the way the Coalition leadership uses war and conquest to maintain fear in the population and thereby control it. This is not a temporary madness, it is decades of policy and practice.
All this was discussed in CWC where they were also described as mostly non-evil optional good guys.
cosmicfish wrote:I see nothing to indicate that it is intended as such.
You have to look in the greater scope, taking into account CWC solidying the CS, civilian and military, as evil. As being either villains or 'good guys'. They can play either role. Overkill focused on the villain role, that doesn't make it their prime role.
cosmicfish wrote:That implies a level of ignorance that I cannot see the government maintaining.
You underestimate gullibility
cosmicfish wrote:The military is too large and there are going to be way too many personal accounts over the years to conceal what is happening from a bulk of the populace.
Personal accounts do not need to be 100% concealed. Those that slip through may pass as stories, but ones people are skeptical of due to inability to locate evidence.
If we look at that Shadows of Evil thing about the Sgt letting the D-Bees go, fondling the Yeno dad's cheek, leaving the concentration camp intact: that's the kind of epic civilian-swaying story you'd expect to get out, right? Except as soon as Drogue got wind of it, he could probably just find someone else to blow it up, and so in the end, the concentration camp gets destroyed anyway. What proof remains to convince the populace of the rumors of the mercy act?
cosmicfish wrote:Selfish alignments seem like the norm not only for the CS but indeed for any population not explicitly denoted as being largely good.
If selfish were the norm it would have just said that, instead it is "good and selfish" so there has to be a significant number of good people, I'd expect more than there are evil ones, otherwise they'd say the average citizen is "selfish or evil".
cosmicfish wrote:Except for one big difference - the CS started this war.
I don't agree with this. Perhaps if we view it in the short term. But if you look back far enough, Tolkeen was a member state of the original Federation of Magic and the Federation invaded Chi-Town, so really, THEY started it.
cosmicfish wrote:Everything that the CS is doing .. is their choice to do, without pressure
No pressure except that Tolkeen is a haven for dangerous people who could prey upon innocent humans.
Sorcerer's Revenge page 49 "Tolkeen's current leadership has never been very discriminating about the kinds of individuals it allows into its borders"
Isn't Freehold a kingdom of dragons led by guys who split their souls into animalistic predatory shadows which slowly turns them evil the more they do it? Are we thinking this is the worst evil Tolkeen shelters under its inclusive boundaries?
cosmicfish wrote:Tolkeen in book 3 is desperate, fighting a defensive war against a massive and implacable foe, a war that they did not start and which promises (literally!) the most total annihilation their enemy can accomplish! Comparing the actions of Tolkeen in this moment to those of the Coalition across a century is like drawing equivalence between a serial killer and the victim who shoots back in self-defense, simply because they both committed an act of violence with a gun.
Serial killer is inapt to describe them, they are expanding a secure place for humans to live in. Magic cities full of monsters get in the way of that.
Tolkeen is parked close to Chi-Town the same way the Great City was. Invading them was not an absolute guarantee. If Robert Creed had stopped letting miscreants into his town, maybe got rid of the demons/shifters, allowed a CS embassy, things could've gone smoother.
I still think the CS is open to diplomacy with magical nations if they will make concessions. Cordoba I think is evidence of this, they are willing to engage in talks and trade even though they have dwarves and techno-wizardy.
It's just that: however big the concessions were originally when they sat down to talk with Nostrous, they are going to be WAY huger now, with way more strict controls and concessions.
I expect that if Tolkeen had been willing to join the CS, they could've been offered a similar deal as the Vanguard were: get out, don't come back, go live elsewhere further from humans you might endanger, take your demons with you, we will protect the normal civilians you leave behind and allow your d-bee refugees to live in outskirts/burbs as second-class non-citizens.