Shark_Force wrote:again, i'm not disputing that it will be common for CS soldiers to not choose to make the effort to find out the truth for themselves, or to even consider the questions.
Understood. The disagreement is about how much effort it would take to discover the truth, and how much actual choice is involved.
From the CS point of view, the whole "D-Bees are actually pretty cool" is going to look like a treasonous version of Flat Earth theory, and most people aren't going to waste much time on it because it'll seem like nonsense.
i'm simply disputing this moronic notion that "common" somehow must mean "not evil".
Good thing I haven't made that argument, then.
it was no less evil for a person to treat another person as a piece of property before the constitution was ammended following the civil war in the united states than after.
I'm not talking about laws; I'm talking about global social understandings.
Slavery predates Columbus; he just boosted the scale.
Slavery is something that existed to varying extents for pretty much as long as humanity has. Longer, really, if ants predate humans.
I personally find any standard that puts categorizes the majority of humans for the majority of human history as "Evil" as being a bit too severe for me to agree with. I feel that it waters down the word to near meaningless, because for all we know, it applies to everybody today as well--we just don't understand what great Evil act we're committing that's perfectly socially acceptable today.
and i'd say the hypothetical CS soldier's alignment is the lower of the two. principled is quite clear: you cannot attack or kill unarmed foes and be principled. note that this is dictating how you treat your enemies, not just people you like.
Okay, so what alignment would you assign to such a character?
principled requires that you never harm an innocent. there is no disclaimer of "unless you just can't be bothered to think for yourself" anywhere there. most people like that will most likely fall somewhat closest to aberrant, in that their personal code forbids them from doing certain things to humans, for example. now, you might make a mistake once, but, and this is crucial, if you just shrug it off and don't care? well, you just accepted killing an innocent unarmed foe as something you would do, and are now no longer principled.
There is no disclaimer of "you can make a mistake once."
There is no disclaimer, period.
Yet the ways which a character might "harm an innocent" are incredibly numerous, even for people with the best of intentions.
on to other things: the notion that the CS is under constant siege in any remotely meaningful way by monsters and mages is hysterically absurd.
RUE 230
They die in droves to save human lives and won't hesitate to risk their own lives to save an innocent farmer or child from the clutches of an evil monster or wicked D-Bee.The CS territory is vast, and they defend the borders as well as the interior. They patrol Old Chicago and other places where monsters pop out. They send patrols across the globe, and they clash with any number of factions.
They breed and recruit faster than they die, but that doesn't mean that they don't die.
there are enough d-bees in CS territory (primarily in the 'burbs) for any soldier to find out the truth for themselves about d-bees. no need for involving other soldiers. if they care enough to ask, they have the resources to get answers. that they choose not to use those resources, or don't care enough to ask the questions, does not exempt them from being morally responsible for their decisions.
Oh, sure.
Like people who grow up immersed in countless horror stories of demons will reasonably think it's a good idea to hang out with one and get to know one.
Like for people who think that
The Exorcist is a documentary, the average rational person would want to get out a Ouija board and have a little chat, just to get the other side of the story.
What could go wrong?
You're talking about a world in which demons are real, where there actually are evil shapeshifting races that want to eat human flesh or souls, where mind control is an actual and not too uncommon thing, and you expect people to stop and chat with the people they've been indoctrinated to believe are the enemy.
Sure, why NOT look into the vampire's eyes.
What could go wrong?
"arms" in rifts still includes the ability to fight. if they just died without being able to fight back,
I'm not sure what made-up scenario you're envisioning here, so I can't really address it all that much.
But I can point out that "they died without being able to fight back" and "you overwhelmed them with superior firepower and the element of surprise before they could effectively retaliate" can be the same thing, or at least can look like the same thing.
well, people complain about treating the CS like they're a bunch of evil robots, maybe that's because any defense of them on a moral level pretty much requires them to be evil robots. if they're thinking human beings, then they're evil, because they make evil decisions and don't care.
Again, that depends on how you define "Evil."
By Kantian standards, where the person's will is more important than their results, many CS soldiers don't make evil decisions.
More importantly, "CS Soldiers could easily break out of their lifetime of indoctrination if they were thinking human beings" is the main issue of debate at this point, so repeating arguments that hinge on that claim being true don't really advance the discussion.
and yes, i know the CS doesn't eliminate psychics. they do persecute them and are heavily prejudiced though, and it is a simple thing to find a psychic and get to know them.
Call me prejudiced, but in the real world I wouldn't hang out with anybody who could mind-control me on a whim.
Probably wouldn't hang out with telepaths either.
Not all psychics can do that, so IF I knew exactly what powers a psychic did or did not have, then sure... I might.
But I'm not sure what you'd expect me to find out by talking to a psychic.
frankly, given the rate of psionic powers, it is highly probable that you know dozens of psychics from when you were growing up.
I don't know about "dozens," but yeah, some.