| | Michael,
You are putting words in my mouth. I did not endorse a system of strong local government. I endorsed a system where the federal government was held in check by the local governments and mentioned that our states used to select our senators. I have always opposed any mixure of state and religion. And, to repeat, I voted against invasion. -----------------------------------------------------------
Alexander,
You said,
Not going to war because of that is like abolishing the profession of surgeon because surgeons sometimes kill the patients they're operating on. It is an attempt to rewrite reality. In reality, you have no guarantee to succeed. Any human activity causes accidents, and some of them are bound to be lethal. But a patieint signs a consent form, volunteering to face the risks, and the arrangements for payment for the surgery are voluntary and are worked out ahead of time and the patient agrees to the procedure because it looks to be better than not doing it.
With Nastonia, we are certain of deaths of innocents. They have not been contacted and have not agreed. And the invasion is financed by coerced tax dollars. You say, any human activity causes accidents, and that is true. Like a robber who only intends to steal some money, but ends up killing the shop owner. Or, like driving while drunk. Saying that human activity causes accidents is not a defense against the deaths of thousands when bombs are dropped. Only the threat of an attack against our country can justify taking an action that might kill innocent lives. If Nastonia were a threat to our country in such a way as to make self-defense reasonable then the those deaths would not on our heads, but rather on the head of the dictator. If it Nastonia isn't threatening us then we are morally responsible for the deaths. That is the reality. --------------------------------------------------------------
Robert,
I like your approach with the five steps you applied to the problem to work out your answers. But I disagree with part of what you said in step five:
A fifth consideration is whether, on the level of governments and warfare, such intervention can be morally proper when it is inevitable that the war will harm innocent civilians. My answer is a resounding: yes. (To argue otherwise is to argue against participation in any war, even one of national self-defense; it amounts to de facto pacifism, based on a platonic conception of individual rights, rather than one arising from the morality of rational self-interest.)
Notice that you said "...governments and warfare," - but in the hypothetica we aren't yet at war. War can't be made into a pre-existing condition since that would be an entirely different hypothetical. The question is whether or not we should initiate a war. You then jump to attack a strawman position of "any war" being impossible to prosecute if the death of innocents will always be immoral. But my point is that the death of innocents is on the head of the aggressor if, and only if, you are being forced to respond out of self-defense. And, I don't understand why you have changed your position - because on the thread that contains this hypothetical you wrote:
As you describe it, I don't see clear grounds here for invasion. Were Nastonia to be a nation with demonstrated practices of invading other nations (demonstrating aggressive behavior), producing and using WMD, harboring/aiding international terrorists, issuing threats against our own country, interfering with our ability to travel to or trade with other nations, etc., then that would be another matter, and invasion would be justified. [emphasis added]
On that reply you were opposed to invasion. I am still hoping you intend to follow through on the reply to you promised in the Iraq war thread. I am more convinced than ever that there is a very serious flaw in the use of "rational self-interest" to justify a war outside of the context of self-defense.
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