Sambot wrote:The good ones will eventually see what's wrong
Optimistic
Sambot wrote:A good soldier might let a harmless D-Bee get away.
A good one, or a negligent/lazy/disobedient/arrogant one? Even if he thinks they're harmless, perhaps his superiors are privy to classified intelligence which is why they gave the order to exterminate it.
Sambot wrote:Evil soldiers will just shoot.
Maybe... or they might capture it to sell it into slavery, torture it, experiment, etc.
Sambot wrote:We can see a change in attitudes even more with the currant war. CS Soldiers are seeing that D-Bees and Magic users aren't all evil. Even the leadership has suspended the shoot on sight order.
Is that some kind of minion war thing? I need to refresh myself on the later books I think.
Wise_Owl wrote:Axelmania wrote:Wise_Owl wrote:moral complicity is far more common in the general population than people want to believe.
Countless Germans, even after the war, fondly remember the years of 1933-1939 as 'The good Years'.
People often compartmentalize whats good for 'them' as oppose to others.
It's natural to compartmentalize based on your actual observations and experiences as opposed to things you had to hear about from reports because you never witnessed it.
No-No. This is far more extreme than that. This is "Well yeah, all the Jews were shoved into a Ghetto, and there were all those riots where there shops were destroyed, but I mean after the War Germans in Poland were forced off their land!"
To whoever lost land and then regained it (regardless of the causes of those two events' disconnect) they would subjectively view it as a "good" thing on a personal level.
Pretty much how settlers/pioneers of North America coming from Europe probably thought it was a great time (government awarding free land to farm, getting a fresh start from whatever problems you left behind on the old continent) however to those already occupying North American prior to them, it probably was subjectively not so great an experience for them in situations where they were displaced or had increased competition for food.
You can say there is moral complicity in the settlers and I agree, but at the same time we can also acknowledge that they probable have a different perspective/narrative they've internalized compared to other perspectives those they displace have, or perspectives taken decades later with a longer view on the effects and bias of narratives presented during those times.
Wise_Owl wrote:This is an active history of choosing in and out groups and applying one standard to one and another to the other. People want to pretend that 'most people were pretty good just led by evil leaders' but it's far more accurate to say 'Most people were fine with evil that didn't impinge on those they immediately knew. Plenty more were fine as long as the impingement wasn't too bad, and plenty were just morally cowardly and went along to get along'.
While that does exist, there's also simply people believing what they want to believe and echo chambers.
While few Germans today believe Polish troops attacked Sender Gleiwitz on 31 August 1939 for example, I'd bet many Germans bought that story at the time. It went with the narrative already built, being told about ex-Germans in the former west prussia (annexed into Poland post WW1) being abused, being told they're planning to invade, etc.
Coalition citizens could similarly be told stories like that, which is even easier for them to buy since the FOM had actually invaded Chi-Town for real, whereas Poland had never invaded Germany before. So it would be even easier for Coalition citizens to buy into false-flag attacks such as the burning of the Chi-Town Library.
Wise_Owl wrote:The Coalition aren't some well-thought out interpretation of humanity surviving in a world gone bad.
Their the Horde from She-Ra.
As the "Princesses of Power" remake shows, there's certainly a multi-faceted away of looking at them (look at all the char building they did with Catra!) but even in the original show, Adora began as a member of the Horde herself, so they should be looked at in a multi-faceted way. The Horde is not Hordak and The Coalition is not Karl Prosek.
Wise_Owl wrote:Their Skeletor and his Goons.
Ah, but if you look into Skeletor's lore, he's not a B+W char either.
The 2012 comic "Origin of Skeletor" reveals how his dad King Miro rejected him (he was the firstborn son and true heir to Eternia) for being a half-blood (Miro hooked up with a Gar mommy) to make the 2nd-borne Randor the heir instead. Skeletor had good reason to be bitter and see corruption in Adam's dad.
Wise_Owl wrote:They are the Foot Clan from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Like the CS, the Foot Clan has changed over time with multiple incarnations. Keep in mind that Hamato Yoshi was once a member of it.
Foot-under-Karai can be a pretty different animal to Foot-under-Shredder. There are always factions working in different ways in groups like these.
Wise_Owl wrote:They aren't intended to be super-complicated and reflect some deep understanding of society and sociology or whatever.
They are bad-guys for your players to blow up.
Maybe if you're playing anti-CS, but if you're playing CS then ley line walkers are just bad guys for your players to blow up...
Or maybe in either case, groups could player more complicated roles than that.
Wise_Owl wrote:it's doubtable that the Coalition could be reformed without fundementally being destroyed and rebuilt.
Something like post-war Japan would have to happen and the Coalition doesn't exist within an Environment where that is likely.
Based on what? I thought that whole plot about giving Karl that thing to enlighten him (forget name) was that he actually could gradually steer the CS in a new direction.
Wise_Owl wrote:I've always been suspicious of the continegent of the Rifts crowd who seem to want to make the Laser-Totting Nazi's the Good guys, so I'll stand by that.
I guess I could just call Dweomer's magi "spell-toting Nazis", but you'd probably disagree with that the same way I disagree with your generalization.
Wise_Owl wrote:I picture Karl as more like classic Skeletor, because it ammuses me.
"Your Bumbling Fools! You can't bring me one old woman!"
ah, but would that be Tarn or his kidnapped wife?
Must be Tarn, since he legit thought his wife was murdered by wizards for years and we're explicitly told this instigated his military escalations.
TBH we don't even know if Karl was Diabolic prior to Jo-Anna's disappearance. He might very well have been Aberrant or Unprincipled prior to that. *shrug*
HWalsh wrote:You're skirting into some arguments used to normalize actual real-world hate groups.
A LOT of things are binary.
A 1 or a 0.
If your organization is filled with racists,
and all racists are backing your organization,
even if you're not racist,
then it's time to find a new organization.
I don't view racism as binary though, there's no perfectly non-racist person or perfectly all-racist person. It's a spectrum. Same thing with sexism, ageism and all other kinds of unfair prejudices.
I don't believe acknowledging that necessitates a path towards normalizing extreme versions of it. Rather it suggests relabeling (less racist / more racist) and making structured comparisons.
The risk we have with such false dichotomies is an extreme lack of humility by accusers, often accompanied by tunnel vision or hypocrisy. Like for example, legitimate victims of racism engaging in racism against other groups, which does happen: in viewing those who prey upon them as "the racists" one becomes unable to apply that analysis inward to realize "No, John. You are the racists."
Hotrod wrote:On the flipside, "othering" such groups, drawing hard lines, and calling them evil effectively distances them and makes it hard to influence them into deradicalization. Sometimes it takes understanding an the perspective of an evil and its rationalizations in order to overcome that evil.
I think othering can lead to sort of a feedback loop. When all-or-nothing false dichotomies come across in semantics used by arguing groups, a group who is actually worse (but never the ONLY group doing bad stuff) will light upon the irrationality of the dichotomy to construct their own: "they speak unreasoanbly, they are unreasonable folk, we are reasonable folk"
This is of course itself a further problem: both groups are capable of reasoning, even if each group has regions in which they reason better than others, neither is UNreasonable. While comparatively either could could be "more reasonable" or "less reasonable" in certain individual debates, both are prone to the unreasonable seduction of othering and exaggerating deficiencies in virtues as utter absences of them.
Sambot wrote:Hate groups are hate groups.
They exist for hate.
Seems oversimplifying. Hate seems like a vehicle driven from other aims, like desire. Though maybe that's getting too Jedi?
IE to evil leaders who want to use hate groups just to consolidate power, hate is a vehicle they use to pursue the true purpose for it's existence: getting resources for the leader, whether that's material assets or having loyal minions.
To the followers, the vehicle of hate is one I think they embrace because they are convinced that the things they hate are threats to whatever things they want to protect, perhaps things they love. Whether that's their family/friends or a sense of culture or safety.
I don't want to generalize that all hate derives from fear and that all fear derives from love, but people probably could paint that causality chain for a lot of stuff.
Love/Fear do not always lead to rational places, and hate is one such place it can lead as anger is directed in an often-confused way of trying to enact change or prevent change.
Sambot wrote:Other groups have haters among their members
but they're not all haters.
And there's all kinds of reasons for their joining.
Some are just people defending their home.
Not mutually exclusive either: joining the CS to defend your home can also coexist with hatred towards those you think are threats to the home.