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Some Thoughts about killing..

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Tue 09 Jan 2007, 02:56:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'M')axpower,

The problem with the "wussy" in Saving Private Ryan was a leadership problem, not a problem with the soldier. The scene where the wussy fails to protect and aid his fellow soldier, in my opinion, was the fault of the Captain, not the wussy. The Captain screwed up by placing a soldier on his own and compounded the error by placing a noncombative soldier on his own on the battlefield. First, it is well known not to isolate any soldier on the battlefield. Even seasoned soldiers can and will get the "rabbit complex" if put alone, meaning they would rather hide than fight. Leaders are taught, therefore, not to put any soldier alone, always fight in twos. Group peer pressure forces people to fight. The book "on Killing" talks about this, but a better book is "War on the Mind" which is referenced by "On Killing."

The Captain compounded this "rabbit complex" by then by isolating this trained clerk (not a combat arms trained soldier) on the battlefield, thus virtually ensuring the soldier would hide and not fight. As Vegetius wrote in the training of the Roman soldier, that more often courage is "learned" not born in people. Wiki Vegitius

This guy in the movie never had a chance. Alternatives? The mission was to deny the bridge to German forces, blow it if necessary. The Captain should have postitioned this non combat arms soldier on the "near side" of the bridge next to the blasting device with the mission simply to push the lever if any German forces started to cross the bridge. This ensures that someone is there to blow the bridge, allows this noncombat soldier to "hide" in the building housing the blasting device, and not have to confront the enemy. Just blow and go (retreat).

However, the Captain's biggest mistake was his decision to defend the "far side" of the bridge (the enemy side). There simply was no reason for this, other than making a bloody last scene of the movie. The mission was simple, deny the Germans the bridge. Thus, the Captain should have positioned his forces on the "near side" of the bridge, the friendly side, with the river between his forces and the Germans. If Germans start to cross, blow it, mission accomplished. It was potentially a fatal error not to have anyone positioned at the blasting device, as his forces almost were not able to retreat to it. Big mistake. This makes for a good last scene of the movie, but no trained combat leader would have made this mistake.


Good points. Do you still have that notebook you were talking about a while ago on the gun thread?
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Tue 09 Jan 2007, 03:05:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse', 'I')t would be foolish to ever speak in term of absolutes - like always attack or always defend. In fact, a defense often involves some form of offense. Self-defense could easily mean you fire first or you don't fire at all.

However, the decision to attack and defend is highly dependent on the factual circumstances, which constantly evolve. I understand what Doly says, and based on "her?" situation, it may be foolish to plan on any form of "attack."

However, even with small numbers, never rule out the attack, as the British SAS says "who dares wins", or Napoleon who wrote in his Maxims of War that, when surrounded "attack", or Rommel who wrote his famous book "Attack" after his experiences in WWI.


I was thinking the same thing. Say your homestead is being harrassed by bandits and you repel them with defense or you or your friends spy some bandits/thugs gathering in your area. I think it would be prudent to go bandit hunting before being attacked. Furthermore I would imagine in a SHTF scenario being burned out and starved out would be a huge problem of defending anything.

However attacking unporvoked is just greedy an bloodthirsty.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby gego » Tue 09 Jan 2007, 03:30:53

I have never killed a human.

I have killed when hunting wild animals, and butchering farm animals raised for food. I do not enjoy the killing, but I enjoy the eating, so I deal with it.

Whenever men get into times where they mostly solve problems with one another with force and violence, generally they differentiate the enemy from themselves to make the killing more acceptable. From talking with my father-in-law, who fought in the US army in WWII Eurpoe from June 18, 1944 until the end, it is clear that killing was progressively easier as the hatred grew and the Germans seemed less and less human. I have watched programs on the History channel where veterans from the Pacific war said they actually enjoyed killing the Japs, who they did not see as human.

Everyone reacts differently. I also remember reading a study of the US Civil war. A significant number of the soldiers on both sides did not try to kill the enemy, even when their comrades were being killed around them.

I think in a self defense situation, I would be able to kill to protect myself and my family. I would not seek out any such situation if I could avoid it. I am well prepared in the gun and ammunition department, however. Certainly there would be a psychological aftermath.

Years ago I was driving down the highway at 60 MPH when a car did not see me coming and tried to cross in front of me. I hit my brakes and swerved so that I managed to only shear off the radiator forward on their car (occupied by two teenage boys). Had I just hit my breaks and gone straight forward I would have gone directly into their passenger door probably at about 50 MPH. Nobody was badly hurt, but a month earlier an almost identical accident did happen within a mile of mine, and the occupants of the crossing car were all killed. It took me several years to get over just the thought that if I had not reacted quickly enough that those two kids would have probably died.

For some of us, there is no escaping that part of our humanity that finds killing humans offensive.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby seahorse » Tue 09 Jan 2007, 21:18:42

maxpower,

I have a copy of the manual. I will send you a PM to get it to you.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby Jack » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 01:10:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'I')f blisteredwhippet and Jack are not one and the same, they should marry. Problem is, they would probably spend their entire lives visualizing killing each other


I suppose you say that in jest - but, Seahorse, killing is -regrettably - not limited to the enemy (however defined). Let us suppose you have a group of close friends and family; let us suppose a total of 15 people. For some reason, you've got to get from point A to point B in a short time in difficult conditions. One of the 15 is in no condition to travel.

You have a choice:

Stay where you are, or go slow, and all 15 will perish.

Abandon the indisposed individual to some hypothetical fate worse than death.

Provide the individual the means to commit suicide.

Or, terminate them - not out of anger, but for the good of the group.

This becomes yet more problematic when you put a face upon the other person. What does one do if it is someone close, someone dear? What would you want (and expect) them to do if it were you who were indisposed?

So, yes - I would want those I was with to terminate me if I was unable to fulfill the requirement myself.

I recognize this is a profoundly personal decision; I suggest, however, it is worthy of consideration. One can also change the scenario to what one might do if the other person is injured with no chance of recovery and in severe pain. Or, if the person is ill - perhaps with some form of cancer - and is in excruciating pain with no chance of recovery and no pain killers.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', '
')You can love and still kill. Killing doesn't mean you have to become a void, an ice cube otherwise unable to enjoy the best that the world has to offer during the short time you have to enjoy it. There's nothing wrong with pleasure. In fact, I would argue that all this visualization of killing in order to do it without emotion is just fear. You fear to kill, or are afraid you may not be able to, so you try to visualize killing to overcome your own lack of courage. There are plenty of heros out there that never visualized killing, but were able to do so when they had to, yet they still enjoyed people, life and everything that's in it.


The goal is not to become an emotional void; rather, one develops skills through practice. A golfer might visualize hitting a ball - the perfect swing, the precise follow-through - and thus improve his game. An attorney might visualize the questioning of a witness, the presentation of facts to the jury, the making of a motion. A hostess might visualize the presentation of an elegant meal.

As with the foregoing, so too with other skills. One might consider where the best point to shoot might be - behind the ear, perhaps...or, if they're facing you, in the T area. But what if they're at an odd angle? What if they're moving? And then there is the problem of multiple targets. Who should be dealt with first? Who second? Will you double-tap the first target, or dedicate one shot to each? What of the recoil of the firearm? Does this suggest an order to use? What of people in a vehicle? Who should be neutralized first? What about hostage situations? Where do you aim if the opponent has one of your own as a hostage - and has a weapon aimed at them? All these questions, and more, should be considered.

No realist would expect to make such decisions quickly and accurately without practice. Society, however, frowns on those who pursue such practice! So, I suggest to you - and to all - that you acquire practice in a lawful manner. Visualize.

And there's nothing that says you can't enjoy a good meal with friends while you visualize dealing with the annoying folks and their children at the adjacent table. 8)
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby gg3 » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 06:49:23

Over the last few days, while I was in the field scouting out land, something occurred to me about BW's original post.

Quote: "Socially, the best way to kill to not give any indication that you are capable of or going to do it. In other words, they never "see it coming". This killing style necessarily involves getting up close and working or living with the person."

That is not a description of killing in defense of nation, community, family, or one's self. That is not a description of killing an enemy combatant or a criminal who is attacking you or yours. That, summed up in the last sentence, is a description of willful and premeditated murder.

BW is advocating murder.

Murder, plain and simple, and advocating it is a violation of the terms of service of this site.

---

MaxPower is obviously dazzled by Hollywood. Real pacifists, whether 1-O or 1-AO, do not get anywhere near the front lines. If someone is in the US military and becomes a principled pacifist, that person will immediately be placed in a noncombatant role or allowed to resign from their branch of the service.

Someone close to me signed up for the Marines, was in the early phase of physical training before going into basic, and came to the realization that he himself couldn't do the deed. He was released from his commitment with no problems. Despite the troop shortage in Iraq. Another member of our community group went through basic in the Army during Vietnam and concluded he couldn't do the deed either. He was trained for Medic. When he went pacifist, they moved him to a position as a clerk at a base in Germany.

(And in case anyone here thinks our group is full of pacifists, it also includes veterans, and also includes members who are engaged in planning for community defense, including close combat if needed.)

Hollywood is full of shit. Period.

---

Seahorse2 is right on target, no pun intended.

Quote: "In fact, I would argue that all this visualization of killing in order to do it without emotion is just fear. You fear to kill, or are afraid you may not be able to, so you try to visualize killing to overcome your own lack of courage. There are plenty of heros out there that never visualized killing, but were able to do so when they had to, yet they still enjoyed people, life and everything that's in it."

In other words, the BW approach, deadening oneself inside in order to commit first-degree murder, is nothing more than covering up for cowardice.

I'm willing to bet that Seahorse2 is a veteran with a solid record in the service (I'll take a wild guess and say Navy or Marines, probably a commissioned officer.)

---

Attackers have the advantage of surprise, and of choosing the time, place, and method. Defenders have the advantages of fighting on their home turf: knowing the terrain, having support of the local population, having short(er) supply lines, and being able to establish fortifications and suchlike ahead of need.

Our group is betting on the home turf advantages including the continuance of the law and local law enforcement. The latter is a "conservative assumption," in the same sense as in business planning: it imposes more limits, therefore requires greater effort in order to succeed. That is, we can't just go blasting away at trespassers when holding them pending arrival of the sheriff will do (and typically involves greater risks to self, thus requires more effort to plan and execute successfully).

In the event the law ceases to be operative, we have plans to add "proactive defense" measures, e.g. when dealing with the hypothetical bands of bandits.

I've stopped discussing operational and tactical level planning around here for the obvious reason that this stuff has become TS in our group, and also lately because I don't want to give any ideas to anyone who is planning to engage in predatory behavior of whatever kind, much less commit acts of murder.

---

Agreed, practice makes perfect. And I also agree with the US military approach of training to the level of reflex. Being able to do the physical actions on a reflex basis also gives one more room to exercise judgement and thereby to act within a moral or ethical code.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby seahorse » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 10:15:08

Jack,

I was kidding about you and BW.

I agree that its good to practice shooting, shooting skills, martial arts, all that. However, what I disagree with is this posted by BW:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')o get rid of these unnecessary impulses, its a good idea to visualize killing people of all kinds, ages, and sexes frequently to eliminate the prejudicial instinct.


Visualize killing kids? Innocent people? Come on. As GG3 says, this is just visualizing murder. Its sign of a sociopath. You don't have to visualize murder to be able to do the right thing when its upon you, however, as you say, practicing shooting, martial arts etc., is probably a must. I'm not aware of any military, police department, or any martial arts that says to visualize what BW is suggesting.

If you love something other than yourself, your country, home, family, friends, you will do the right thing. Funny how protective people get of the ones they love.

Jack, you suggest a scenario where euthanasia may be required. But even in those cases, its done out of love, not the lack of it. However, I can tell you, that with the ones I truly love, or love the most, my immediate family and some friends, I wouldn't leave them, even if it meant that was going to be my final hour too. As the "Code of the Sumarai" says, we can't run from death, it catches us all eventually. We can only hope to choose our manor of death and make it a good one. So, I could never abandon any of my kids or my wife. I would not violate my Ranger creed and "leave a man behind" in that situation. It would be my final hour, with no regrets. If there's no one worth dying for, there's nothing worht living for.

gg3,

I was in the military many years ago. Never went to combat. I was enlisted at first, having served in the 509th pathfinders, the 4/325 Airborne BN in Italy, and finally the 82nd at Ft. Bragg (discharged as an E5 weapons squad leader). I then did become an officer, and finished out 8 years of guard/reserve service spending most of that time as the BN recon platoon leader, but was eventually moved to an admin job as a captain, so I got out.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby kevincarter » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 15:43:59

I had the opportunity to meet some Israelis the other day. We talked many things but they seemed to me VERY organized and with lots of chances of survival, at least I know that if the do not survive they’ll die trying hard as a nation.

To begin with ALL of them have undergone military training (3 years for man, 2 years for woman, compulsory, don’t you dare to try to avoid it) and army duty. So is not all theoretical for them, they’ve actually been there in the checkpoints looking for bombs with their m16 armed and ready.

One of the things the army does to them is to imprint “the morals of war” in their brains. So killing for them is not bad if it falls into the morals of war.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 17:24:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'T')hat is not a description of killing in defense of nation, community, family, or one's self. That is not a description of killing an enemy combatant or a criminal who is attacking you or yours. That, summed up in the last sentence, is a description of willful and premeditated murder.

BW is advocating murder.

Murder, plain and simple, and advocating it is a violation of the terms of service of this site.


I don't advocate murder, however, I just want to point out to you that the U.S. government, its military, and its various spy agents have murdered so many people over their history that you could hardly count them. Protest to this policy has been almost nil, except for vietnam.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'M')axPower is obviously dazzled by Hollywood. Real pacifists, whether 1-O or 1-AO, do not get anywhere near the front lines. If someone is in the US military and becomes a principled pacifist, that person will immediately be placed in a noncombatant role or allowed to resign from their branch of the service.

Someone close to me signed up for the Marines, was in the early phase of physical training before going into basic, and came to the realization that he himself couldn't do the deed. He was released from his commitment with no problems. Despite the troop shortage in Iraq. Another member of our community group went through basic in the Army during Vietnam and concluded he couldn't do the deed either. He was trained for Medic. When he went pacifist, they moved him to a position as a clerk at a base in Germany.

(And in case anyone here thinks our group is full of pacifists, it also includes veterans, and also includes members who are engaged in planning for community defense, including close combat if needed.)

Hollywood is full of shit. Period.


I said I didn't know how realistic the movie actually is. No matter how fake the movie is, chaos happened in the movie and the captain had to deal with it quickly. Hindsight is 20/20. Armchair quarterbacking is easier than real quarterbacking.

And, for the record, There is NO WAY I could kill an Iraqi or vietnamise, or anyone else for the benefit of Halliburton, Neocons, Rich elitists, or the 300 pound woman driving a Hummer to Walmart. All wars, even world war 2, since the last hundered years have been total scams.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'S')eahorse2 is right on target, no pun intended.


Seahorse is awsome. I would be thrilled to have him watching my back any day.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 17:26:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kevincarter', 'I') had the opportunity to meet some Israelis the other day. We talked many things but they seemed to me VERY organized and with lots of chances of survival, at least I know that if the do not survive they’ll die trying hard as a nation.

To begin with ALL of them have undergone military training (3 years for man, 2 years for woman, compulsory, don’t you dare to try to avoid it) and army duty. So is not all theoretical for them, they’ve actually been there in the checkpoints looking for bombs with their m16 armed and ready.

One of the things the army does to them is to imprint “the morals of war” in their brains. So killing for them is not bad if it falls into the morals of war.


I rather enjoyed observing Israel get spanked by Hezbolah last year. That was fantastic and definitely not hollywood dazzle!
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby BlisteredWhippet » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 19:03:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'O')ver the last few days, while I was in the field scouting out land, something occurred to me about BW's original post:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Socially, the best way to kill to not give any indication that you are capable of or going to do it. In other words, they never "see it coming". This killing style necessarily involves getting up close and working or living with the person."


That is not a description of killing in defense of nation, community, family, or one's self. That is not a description of killing an enemy combatant or a criminal who is attacking you or yours. That, summed up in the last sentence, is a description of willful and premeditated murder.

BW is advocating murder.

Murder, plain and simple, and advocating it is a violation of the terms of service of this site.


I think labelling it "advocacy" is stretching the definition too thinly.

I may or may not be a true sociopath. But to tell you the truth, if there was a magic button I could press that would make half the world's population disappear into a fine red mist, I wouldn't hesitate one second. Oops, did I violate the TOS? Was that "advocacy"? Someone call 1-800-Dial a Lawyer.

Murder, killing... all kinds of a priori semantics discussed here. Gg3's version of neocolonial ethics is pulled straight from the canons of Western morality. Despite the fact that this system predicates and seems impotent in halting a larger, planetwide process of symphonic global destruction is irrelevant, I suppose. The settlers at Jamestown were content to starve before considering the ways of "Savage" men. First and foremost was the worship of official pieces of paper, and the invisible endowments on ordinary men as signified by their signatures.

Gg3's adventures in community-building is a simple, vain attempt to create a fleshy buffer zone between the reality of life and death and the incarnations of technology. Heirarchies, moral orders, schedules and payrolls to stave off the long darkness of night. Neon Orange jumpsuits and secret handshakes. The New New Mormonism.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Quote: "In fact, I would argue that all this visualization of killing in order to do it without emotion is just fear. You fear to kill, or are afraid you may not be able to, so you try to visualize killing to overcome your own lack of courage. There are plenty of heros out there that never visualized killing, but were able to do so when they had to, yet they still enjoyed people, life and everything that's in it."


In other words, the BW approach, deadening oneself inside in order to commit first-degree murder, is nothing more than covering up for cowardice.

I'm willing to bet that Seahorse2 is a veteran with a solid record in the service (I'll take a wild guess and say Navy or Marines, probably a commissioned officer.)


Its just common sense to visualize. Your brain already does it by dreaming every night. The characterization "Deadening oneself" is simply a semantic artifact of the western moral imperative. Its your way of neutralizing my humanity to conserve the the moral superiority your ethics presupposes. You simply define yourself into the realms of moral superiority. This is advantageous becuase it surrepetitiously takes advantage of the fact that the motivations and origins of human action are completely arbitrary and relativistic.

You start with certain assumptions, articles of faith. The shape of these assumptions are teased out quite easily. But fundamentally, for you there is no real internal moral compass without the contrived instrument of codifed law. No heirarchy, therefore no code, no law, and no honor.

Your archtype is paladin or knight in the classic Romantic tradition.

The problem is that this moral philosophy is nothing new; and history shows many instances where it simply pushes humanity backward with its totalitarianism. As the basis for a human society, it is not revolutionary, but utterly conventional in a western sense. For you, the legacy of western empricism is the brick and mortar of the new world you want to create.

The collapse of the larger civilization, however, will give rise to new concepts of what is ethical, and where ethical or moral authority originates. Contrary to what you might believe about the inevitable devolution of morality in the process of collapse, revision and revolution will be possible. Value scales will change and with it propriety. My hope is that your traditionalism survives as a subculture only, and retreats in the face of emergent value systems given space by social and environmental convolutions. Heirarchy and codified law will probably hold on into the future for some time, but ultimately, these things will have to go, along with money and ownership concepts. Bye-bye post-renaissance "enlightenment" morality.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Agreed, practice makes perfect. And I also agree with the US military approach of training to the level of reflex. Being able to do the physical actions on a reflex basis also gives one more room to exercise judgement and thereby to act within a moral or ethical code.

The code is your achilles' heel, and always will be. So train hard.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby seahorse2 » Wed 10 Jan 2007, 19:14:12

BW,

Your historic view that there was mankind, a "savage man", without any moral code is misplaced. What about the Greeks who had none of what we would call "modern civilization" but had a moral code? Any number of American Indian tribes? or any number of early finds that also showed man believed in something higher than himself, beyond himself. Push a button to kill half the people? Which half? Would you be in the half to die or the half to live? You are thinking only of yourself. Like it or not, you are a part of and dependent on all of us here. Your dream to make us go away is only that, a dream, which cannot happen. You need to let go of that, it deprives you of finding any joy in the time that you have here.

I think you would enjoy this book:

No Boundaries
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby BlisteredWhippet » Thu 11 Jan 2007, 18:27:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'B')W,

Your historic view that there was mankind, a "savage man", without any moral code is misplaced. What about the Greeks who had none of what we would call "modern civilization" but had a moral code? Any number of American Indian tribes? or any number of early finds that also showed man believed in something higher than himself, beyond himself.


Absolutely, this is what I meant when I said "The settlers at Jamestown were content to starve before considering the ways of 'Savage' men." In other words, within the capitalist worldview, the world is a bubble they live inside. Its morality and ethics are self-contained. Unable to broaden their perspective by mental handicap, they starved and died until an external force came to rescue them. Even this was not enough to reveal to them the reality of the Other, it was simply interpreted as an act of providence. My point is that morality is a cultural construction, and utterly arbitrary.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')ush a button to kill half the people? Which half? Would you be in the half to die or the half to live? You are thinking only of yourself. Like it or not, you are a part of and dependent on all of us here. Your dream to make us go away is only that, a dream, which cannot happen. You need to let go of that, it deprives you of finding any joy in the time that you have here.


Again, this sentiment, that the best we can hope for is the fulfillment of our own gratification, is the basis of the argument for joy as principle motivator. It is better known as the doctrine of Hedonism. A good argument for convincing a Hedonist, which I am not. So you are in error.

Tell, me, was all the joy of your childhood not enough? The fact that your material comforts be exponentially greater than previous generations? Who is to say when there is enough joy, enough happiness, for one lifetime? Hedonism is the psychotic reflex toward pleasure in perpetuity. For the Hedonist, there is no reason sufficient to stop the pursuit of pleasure. It is nothing but a doctrine of insatiability. If that is our greatest virtue, then we have no virtue.

The magic button is a fairy tale, it is true. Unlike a dream, though, the fairy tale is real. It is real as metaphor or analogy, if you believe in thermonuclear devices or biological weapons. And those things are real. The actual plans detailing procedures for launching nuclear missiles are a kind of analouge of reality, like the construction of the magic button here. It is just a tool for thinking about volition and responsibility. An honest exercise in this vein precludes "Speak No Evil"-type moral avoidance behaviors.

Contemplating such a magic button is anathema to most "good people" in the West, or anywhere for that matter. It makes us morally sick. This is embodied in the cultural idiom, "Speak not of the Devil, lest he appears." It is another of the infantilizing mechanisms of modern socialization. We are all happy people, thinking happy thoughts (or in terms of dreams, "All Good People Are Asleep And Dreaming.") It involves too many aspects of our fears for the facile mind to comprehend willfully, when most if not all cylinders are firing at all times in the selfish pursuit of pleasure. This is probably why there is no action on global warming or peak oil or anything else.

There is a lack of the visceral in the Western, alienating eye. Cause and effect are abstracted. If people could visualize and contemplate the magic button scenario, it could open a doorway to allowing the reality of our other problems to sink in, something to connect the horrors of the future to everyday, mundane actions in the present. We are too coddled by a mafia of cultural influences that muffle and distort warnings from nature and anesthetize our own reactions. Technology grants power, and yet paradoxically takes it away. Hedonism is a state of sweet denial. The irony is that the metaphor of the magic button is only disturbing to the already aware. The rest of humanity is only dimly aware of their powers to manifest anything. It is something an actively filtering, Hedonistic mind would not even register.

Perhaps then, the best way to get things done is slap a different label on the magic button and convince some sheep to press it, after convincing them that it will make them very happy.

I recently had a conversation with a woman who liked to spout bumper sticker type syllogisms and I challenged her with the argument that idealism in itself is not a solution to anything. The youth are infected with the diseased do-nothing pacifism of the 60s.

She responded that it makes her feel good to dole out soup down at the food bank four hours a week, and making herself feel good is the very best she can do. I asked her why her rationalization ends with her own self-gratification. I mean, is that not the end-all be all of capitalist morality? Adam Smith's principle of self-interest as the ultimate end of the western moral code? Needless to say, she did not like me or what I had to say very much. After all, if I am not there to provide some sort of pleasure, then the opposite must be true, right?

I can think of a lot of reasons for pushing the button that have nothing to do with me. There are a lot of people, frankly, that float along on the principle that they are special, because they are humans, and have life. This is one of the assumptions of western morality. Humans are a special category, and combined with the life property, "rise above" western empiricism. The spirituality of the west is a collection of assumptions about our inherent divinity even as science proves that we should be communing with the environment as equals, yet the rationalization of ourselves as special cases is an escape clause within the moral code. The slide is greased with any number of rationalizations, from divine intervention to self-gratification.

But if nothing else, science has effectively proven that the bulk of humanity is simply redundant. It is an inescapable, irrefutable conclusion. Of course, this is glossed over with the arbitrary doctrine of the specialty clause. The truth is, most of us are going to die one way or another because of what has been done to the Earth. Instantaneous Fine Red Mist is a relatively painless way to go, wouldn't you think?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2007/01/08/01291.html', '
')Runaway Global Warming promises to literally burn-up agricultural areas into dust worldwide by 2012, causing global famine, anarchy, diseases, and war on a global scale as military powers including the U.S., Russia, and China, fight for control of the Earth's remaining resources.


Every vehicle mile travelled, every dollar spent, every time you flush the toilet... a million billion little magic buttons. The effects are cumulative. And if there is anything that is little understood by the masses of humanity, it is a sense of the cumulative.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Fri 12 Jan 2007, 03:26:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BlisteredWhippet', '
')
...We are all happy people, thinking happy thoughts (or in terms of dreams, "All Good People Are Asleep And Dreaming.") It involves too many aspects of our fears for the facile mind to comprehend willfully, when most if not all cylinders are firing at all times in the selfish pursuit of pleasure. This is probably why there is no action on global warming or peak oil or anything else....

...Perhaps then, the best way to get things done is slap a different label on the magic button and convince some sheep to press it, after convincing them that it will make them very happy.

I recently had a conversation with a woman who liked to spout bumper sticker type syllogisms and I challenged her with the argument that idealism in itself is not a solution to anything. The youth are infected with the diseased do-nothing pacifism of the 60s....

...I can think of a lot of reasons for pushing the button that have nothing to do with me. There are a lot of people, frankly, that float along on the principle that they are special, because they are humans, and have life. This is one of the assumptions of western morality. Humans are a special category, and combined with the life property, "rise above" western empiricism. The spirituality of the west is a collection of assumptions about our inherent divinity even as science proves that we should be communing with the environment as equals, yet the rationalization of ourselves as special cases is an escape clause within the moral code. The slide is greased with any number of rationalizations, from divine intervention to self-gratification....

...The truth is, most of us are going to die one way or another because of what has been done to the Earth. Instantaneous Fine Red Mist is a relatively painless way to go, wouldn't you think?

...Every vehicle mile travelled, every dollar spent, every time you flush the toilet... a million billion little magic buttons. The effects are cumulative. And if there is anything that is little understood by the masses of humanity, it is a sense of the cumulative.


Very good points...reminds me of a song: "duuuuuuuuust in the wind...all we are is dust in the wind"
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby Hermes » Mon 15 Jan 2007, 09:40:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Schneider', 'G')reetings everyone !

The first one might be the one of Dave Grossman,autor of On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society talking about a innate resistance to kill a fellow human being,even while facing death ..

The second is the one of Gary Bretcher,called the War Nerd where the norm is killing,murdering and even genocide is the usual way to go of humankind when dealing with conflicts between each others !

Schneider


I believe that essentially both of the above will happen.

I believe that the vast majority of people are resistant to killing other people UNLESS the person to be killed has been dehumanized. Genocide relies upon dehumanizing the people to be killed. I believe that genocide will be used as a tactic to gain resources, beginning on a larger scale and slowly working its way down to a local scale.

I believe genocide will be used because it's a tried and true method for gaining another person's landbase, and resulting "resources". Most people who understand what's going on will understand that there is likely to be (more than previously) intense battling over resources coming up shortly between various nations. Also as nations begin to fall apart I foresee genocide (or forced exhiling) used to homogenize a group's ethnicity and beliefs, both to rally together a depressed people, and to make a big land-grab. I think this is going to happen in LOTS of places.

Now I believe that in theory people will be behind such efforts, but that the actual day-to-day application of it is going to be hard for individuals. Said in a not-so-nice way: I think that people are going to say disgusting crap like: "Yeah it's all the fault of those (insert group with land/resources that lives nearby). If they weren't here things would be much better." However at this stage if they went down the street to kill the (insert group name) they would look the people in the eyes and not be able to kill them.

Therein lies the statement Schneider associates with Dave Grossman.

People need to be pushed further than just being irate/jealous/disgusted at a group in order to commit genocide.

This kind of thing is well understood by political 'leaders'. That's where the propaganda comes in. The fake pictures showing the (insert group name)'s massacre of women and children down the road. That's where the cartoons come out depicting the (insert group name here) as monsters or animals intent on raping others' women and children. That's where the 'news' stories come out about the (insert group name)'s plans to take over everyone else's resources. That's where the slowly escalating speeches come in from various 'leaders' where they first give the (insert group name) time to 'rectify' their ways, then claim that the (insert group name) haven't fixed their 'problems' and that the government is going to have to step in and 'help' them. And the snowball effect occurs, until eventually the killing fields show up.

And the important thing is: the otherwise 'moral' citizens will have no problem bashing childrens' brains out, because they will have fallen for the propaganda hook, line and sinker. The 'enemy' will have been dehumanized in peoples' minds, thereby unlocking their ability to murder the (insert group name). The people doing the killing aren't going to be especially bloodthirsty people, or otherwise sociopathic or psychotic. Rather their achilles heel will be their lack of independent critical thought, and softened up by absorbing the propaganda, they will be moved to kill.

And voila: the houses of (insert group name) are now available for habitation by others, their farm lands and animals are available for others, their drinking water is available for others... etc. As the technology continues to decrease, and nations continue to fracture into ever smaller groups genocide will continue, however on smaller and smaller scale as an attempt to sort out these "resource shortages", until there's "enough to go around".

This is my prediction.

Therein lies the statement Schneider associates with Gary Bretcher.

I find this deplorable, however I predict it to be the case.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby gg3 » Tue 16 Jan 2007, 02:25:46

BW is clearly a good writer & rhetoritician, but lest anyone be seduced by his arguements, remember the context: the abdication of law and common ethics.

Who among us would not push a magic button that could virtually reverse time and take us back to 3 billion humans on a relatively undamaged planet? Therein lies the seduction of making virtues out of necessities. The fact that we're heading for dieoff numbered in gigadeaths does not equate to the justification to make a personal contribution one victim at a time.

Who among us is not aware that every trip in the car and every degree on the thermostat is a tiny little version of the big magic button? Kudos for the analogy, but once again, the indirect blood on our hands does not justify the more direct version. Having sinned via our lifestyles does not justify taking the plunge into a life of sin beyond all limits of common ethics.

And therein lies one of the psychological attractors of such arguements: the dominant culture operates on the premise that there are no limits to economic growth; and in order to support that conclusion, pretends that there are no limits to resources, no limits to the ability of ecosystems to absorb damage without harm. This feeling of limitlessness is seductive. It is more seductive than sex, more seductive than drugs, more seductive than any other instinct gratification. It is the ultimate form of hedonism.

But given that it is fatally flawed, and the fatalities of the flaws will escalate in short order, BW offers to trade one fiction of limitlessness for another: the fiction of limitless will, as practiced ultimately by throwing out all limits of common ethics. The hedonism of simple-minded sensuality is replaced by the hedonism of the berserker, who, like the suburbanite in the SUV, knows no limits to his behavior.

Yet the choice between the hedonism of ecocide and the hedonism of homicide is a Hobson's choice, which is to say no choice at all.

There is another option, which constitutes a real choice, and it is a choice that requires greater courage and greater will. The one resource that seems to be most thoroughly neglected in these discussions, is also a truly unlimited resource. It will fill the need for limitlessness without creating a zero-sum game, much less externalized costs or worse yet a state of lawlessness:

That limitless resource is love.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby Fergus » Tue 16 Jan 2007, 12:41:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'B')W is clearly a good writer & rhetoritician, but lest anyone be seduced by his arguements, remember the context: the abdication of law and common ethics.

Who among us would not push a magic button that could virtually reverse time and take us back to 3 billion humans on a relatively undamaged planet? Therein lies the seduction of making virtues out of necessities. The fact that we're heading for dieoff numbered in gigadeaths does not equate to the justification to make a personal contribution one victim at a time.

Who among us is not aware that every trip in the car and every degree on the thermostat is a tiny little version of the big magic button? Kudos for the analogy, but once again, the indirect blood on our hands does not justify the more direct version. Having sinned via our lifestyles does not justify taking the plunge into a life of sin beyond all limits of common ethics.

And therein lies one of the psychological attractors of such arguements: the dominant culture operates on the premise that there are no limits to economic growth; and in order to support that conclusion, pretends that there are no limits to resources, no limits to the ability of ecosystems to absorb damage without harm. This feeling of limitlessness is seductive. It is more seductive than sex, more seductive than drugs, more seductive than any other instinct gratification. It is the ultimate form of hedonism.

But given that it is fatally flawed, and the fatalities of the flaws will escalate in short order, BW offers to trade one fiction of limitlessness for another: the fiction of limitless will, as practiced ultimately by throwing out all limits of common ethics. The hedonism of simple-minded sensuality is replaced by the hedonism of the berserker, who, like the suburbanite in the SUV, knows no limits to his behavior.

Yet the choice between the hedonism of ecocide and the hedonism of homicide is a Hobson's choice, which is to say no choice at all.

There is another option, which constitutes a real choice, and it is a choice that requires greater courage and greater will. The one resource that seems to be most thoroughly neglected in these discussions, is also a truly unlimited resource. It will fill the need for limitlessness without creating a zero-sum game, much less externalized costs or worse yet a state of lawlessness:

That limitless resource is love.


Good post GG and nice thought too. But your solution is also the most energy intensive. To Love requires caring, giving and thinking about others before yourself. It requires that you respect yourself and others. In todays world, we dont have time for that. Its all about ME. We have created a society that sees 'special interests' as a cause easily changable, like a coat. Todays youths are taught to value what others have, to measure themselves against the Jones and requires them to match or better the Jones. If you dont have the biggest SUV on the block, your a nobody.

While I agree with you totally, I know beyond a doubt, pple dont care about no one but themselves and would not give you a minute of thought unless you have something they want. Your way is the long road and pple just aren't interested in taking the long road home anymore. They want instant gratification now. Your way will never work in a world of 6 billion + individuals. Pride is now defined as 'I have more _______ then you do. To frame this point, we have a black lady at work, nice enough, but lazy as the day is long and when called on the carpet for half ass'ing a client her retort was 'He was mean to me, so why should I go the extra mile and even smile for him, let alone jump through hoops for someone that would not even address me by my name' then she came up with the 'Its not in my job discription to be nice to everyone'. When we pointed out in the handbook where it says 'Treat all customers with curteousy and handle all customer problems in a timely and curteous manner, she through out the race card and said we were picking on her cause she was black. I fell out of my chair. I just laughed in her face.

Its a classic example of her wanting a full days pay for nothing. She created 3 times the work for me and then yelled at me for scolding her like I did something wrong. This more then anything, made me resign and accept a peon position. How can you manage employees with attitudes like that. We could not fire her cause she screamed racism and the President is so scared of a law suit. Shes got the company by the balls and knows it and flaunts it like a badge.

So when the world is full of pple like this, Love will never work, cause they will use and abuse youand chew you up and spit you out when your out of stuff for them to mooch, steal or swindle.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby max_power29 » Wed 17 Jan 2007, 02:53:39

I hate the race card! I had to accept a supervisory job to get the schedule I wanted (to be able to spend time with my family). Being supervisor sucks!

I agree Love will not work on members of the dominant culture/paradigm. Its like casting pearls before Swine and unfortunately this fact appears to make blistered whippet right.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby Chaparral » Wed 17 Jan 2007, 15:21:39

Hmmm. Interesting thread this be.

It would seem that BW is adopting a rather behaviorist notion of just what the human mind is and is not hardwired to do. It seems that the majority of us are not real thrilled to actually kill another being, whether it's the hunter experiencing a twinge of remorse after taking his animal or the man who retches and vomits his lunch after killing another man on the battlefield. This and other evidence through the ages indicates a hardwired predilection towards not killing rather than one of bloodlust. I know hunter's remorse well (for game like rabbit or dove) yet at the same time, another living being (raccoons mainly) has caused me anger by tearing up my plants and killing my animals. I've patiently waited by premeditated, pre-planned kill zones into the wee hours of the morning so that I could slaughter families of them wholesale with zero remorse. It seems that my mind underwent a phase change of sorts and all regrets evaporated. What sorts of things might cause a similar "phase change of mind" in my fellow man?
Is there some innate mechanism by which the individual overcomes his or her inhibition before the act and remorse afterwards? One might argue that killing a racoon is not the same as killing a human, even one painted as the enemy but I know the change in my own mind and I know the society that created Bach and Beethoven and Goethe also constructed ovens and railways leading to those ovens to similarly liquidate others. I've read anecdotes of the Serb-Croat-Bosnia fiasco a few years ago where former teachers/athletes/countrymen were killing former students/team mates etc. This is alien to me and yet I've thought about it given the likelihood of TSHTF coming soon to a city near all of us. I sure would like to know more about the nature of my neighbors beforehand though. One thing common to all organized killing is the presence of that "community with it's meat-shields and hierarchies and moral orders and payroll etc". Someone was directing the killing from on high. It had to be engineered. It likely did not occurr spontaneously out of unfettered individual motive.

The cultural mechanisms of dehumanizing the other man so that he may more easily be killed is more likely a function of that large, hierarchically organized group with chieftains and payroll clerks that BW says will go away. The Hobbesian state does not appear to favor survival of even the lone berserker. If the berserkers get too numerous, the rest of the sheep will come together and become wolves and solve the problem. I see a sort of frequency dependent dynamic between group selection and individual selection here. Perhaps it should be stated that the Hobbesian state does not favor itself; it may not be evolutionarily stable. It may be invasible by that cohesive community that eradicates the lone gunmen. Like the succession of wildflowers to shrubs to young trees after a forest fire, a Hobbesian state may force the germination of tribes which then grow and mature into something larger and enduring.

BW's strategems and ideas parallel mine when I first figured out what TSHTF would mean for someone like myself trapped in a city like Los Angeles with no way to escape and no place to escape to (hence my resolve towards community Mr. G- that and I've experienced firsthand, a Hobbesian micro-state in the ghettos of South LA). I'm afraid that I would have to agree with our Greyhound friend were I to remain in that position (think Mexico City, pop 24,000,000+ when Cantarell runs out, the US border is militarized and the rains stop coming). The decision thus has been made to leave that dangerous environment, head north and cast my lot with "community" or "tribe" versus "rugged individual".

I would argue against BW's dismissal of community as the "new new mormonism". Organization seems to arise spontaneously out of chaos like algae in newly formed puddles of rainwater. If the poo has hit the rotating blade, I am finding a tribe to join, even if I have to join as a janitor. I will cover my fellow tribesmens' backs and they will cover mine; that is the deal. Lone berserkers will be given the raccoon treatment.

It is in the context of the collective that BW's notion of surreptitiously desensitizing oneself to killing might become the Mark of Cain on all who wear it. Tribes can have within themselves, their own Hobbesian theaters where intrigue, treachery and assassination create similarly unlivable circumstances. It is how I'd argue, Jack, that one could survive and even prosper within a garrison state. It is with this point in mind that I would have to respectfully disagree with gg3's solution of love. I have to honestly say that my knowledge of and experience with humanity over the years tells me that we are scheming, power-hungry pursuers of social status. Any long term plans for a community in the upcoming uglyworld must take this into account.

Within a tribe, those who combine Machiavellian proclivities with violence might also need to be given Chaparral's famous "raccoon treatment". Chapter 2 of Robert Greene's "The 48 Laws of Power" give an interesting view of this in the Courts of Louis XIV and the rise of the courtiers. I think Mr Greene's book is a mandatory read for all citizens of the tribe. I'd argue that transparency and a sort of evolutionarily-stable strategy of administration would be needed to counter the potential greyhounds in the yard (as a breed, greyhounds do not get along with other smaller animals you know...literally, they run them down and tear them to shreds). To counter the mindset of the BWs and Polestars of the world, our culture must seek to "innoculate" our tribesfolk (cooperators- to borrow the parlance of game theory) against the usurpers, sociopaths, powermongers (defectors) etc within them. If no such innoculation occurs, then the violent Machiavellian will rise to power and the channels of information flow will be manipulated and we will be back to premeditated organized killing.
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Re: Some Thoughts about killing..

Unread postby gg3 » Thu 18 Jan 2007, 06:36:57

Re. all those who say that love is impossible or absurd:

Fergus, "today's world" of Status-Usurping Vehicles and monster McMansions, is headed for the edge of the cliff with the accelerator pressed to the floor. In the world to come, the social contract for survival necessarily includes the willingness to go the distance for others. This is not idealism, it is pragmatism.

---

As I've said before, and note that this is an analogy to the present case: A society needs a balance between militarists (defined as advocates of warfare, in contrast to warriors who are the practitioners of warfare) and pacifists: Too many pacifists, and you don't fight when you should, and you end up in Darwin's Dustbin. Too many militarists and you fight when you shouldn't, and also end up in Darwin's Dustbin.

By way of the above as an analogy, a society also needs a balance between love and power. Too much of the former and it becomes so yielding that it melts. Too much of the latter and it becomes so rigid that it snaps. Here in this topic we speak of killing which is the ultimate exercise of power. Speaking of love is the necessary counterpoint in order to achieve balance.

Keep in mind that power is a limited resource and thus a zero-sum game: we cannot, for example, have two Presidents at once, or our town have two Mayors: there can be but one at a time. Our entire system of governance, which has survived 225 years including wars and depressions and near-brushes with tyranny, is based on the division of power and on its allocation through lawful processes. In places where checks and balances are not built into the system, power changes hands chaotically and with much bloodshed: those societies advance far more slowly if at all.

Who among us would disagree with this to the point that they would put their money & muscles where their mouths are and move from Europe or the UK or US, to a place such as Somalia...? (If there are no takers it can be assumed that my point here stands.)

And as I said in the previous posting, love is an unlimited resource, a positive-sum game. Though you may only have one spouse or partner, you can still have love for all members of your family both nuclear and extended, and for all of your friends and others who are near to you. Your love for your son does not diminish your love for your daughter. Your love of one friend does not diminish your love for another friend. In fact they are additive: each contributes to the others and strengthens them.

If we are seeking a place in our lives where we may exercise limitlessness without bringing about overshoot and dieoff, this is the place. Consumption is not limitless, nor is reproduction, nor is power, nor is thuggery. Love is limitless, as learning is limitless.

---

Chapparal, what you're talking about first off, is the difference between necessity and wantonness.

The soldier under fire overcomes the vomit reflex to defend himself and his fellow warriors. The hunter overcomes remorse thinking about his or her family or tribe in need of food. And you yourself, along with every other farmer, shoot possum and raccoons without guilt when they threaten the crops that would otherwise be destined for table or market.

The delinquint and the thug do it for thrills or for contract murder pay.

And those who stay in the megalopolis with the resolve to shoot first and ask questions later, most likely do it out of fear.

No doubt you were probably scared shitless at the thought of South Central boiling over like a chemical waste spill and engulfing Los Angeles whole. As I would be too, were I to stick around the Oakland area much longer, due to the close proximity of two places that are on the FBI's top ten list for violent crime.

We team up with others to form community and go to the country not only to reduce the risk of being hunted by thugs, but to multiply our strength by virtue of cooperation, proximity, and a clearly defensible border.

This is one of the key benefits of community: mutual defense and the strength of numbers to provide an actual deterrent. Berserkers are not likely to come near a place that has a reputation of being armed, trained, well-organized, and willing to fight.

The stance of community defense is, "We will not start it. But if someone starts it with us, we will take it to the finish and we will finish them off." All it requires is one or two instances of some attempted barbarian incursion ending up with a score of barbarian graves on the outskirts of town, and the word goes out: don't mess with these people, find someone else to loot and pillage.

---

In game theory, the most advantageous strategy in repeat-iteration mode is to meet cooperation with cooperation, and to penalize defection with time-delimited defection-in-return. A social fabric that balances love and power is one that is well equipped to play in this mode. In other words, it is a prerequisite for a winning strategy.
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