But those humans are a result of many things, thus there actions were. A person is in part genetic, in part their up-bringing. So if their society taught them to escape at all costs, that it was okay to risk the murder of pacifists, then their society or whoever taught them that is to blame, so yes, also a small piece of the humanity that formed them.
Lol. I just KNEW this perspective would come. Once again, this goes back to the black and white scenario. 99% of the people living on this Earth don't condone the murder of innocents. 99% of the people living today have a sense of morals, standards, and fairness when taken as individuals. Therefore, while horrible acts are often done by people who get caught up in massive events, most people generally try and foster positive qualities for both themselves and their society.
Do you really believe that the future society in which these characters lived really fostered the murder of pacifists? Or did that society, in general, and like our own, stress something better?
We know that they stressed the latter and as such, these acts were the acts of individuals who were not representative of humanity as a whole or what many define humanity as i.e. compassion, caring, and understanding for others.
Why do we always try and be relative? Why aren't things just simply black and white. Good vs bad. Why must we always try and connect dots between things when sometimes we should just stop and say "No. There is nothing beyond this. It is what it is and they are who they are."
I'm not saying its black and white- far from it. [/quote]
I know you're not saying it's black and white. You're trying to connect too many dots. The actions of the MACO's were the actions of the MACO's. Not humanity as a whole. It's that simple. It's black and it's white.
[/quote]And I don't buy that "people are animals and fight their way out of everything" because, if for no other reason (and there are other reasons) we can think more than animals can. We can reason. [/quote]
I allowed for that in my previous post. We CAN reason. However, when we reason about things in our environment, when we reason that the environment may be restrictive to ourselves in an oppressive manner (as the crew did), it can multiply our anxiety and our need to escape. Sure, as thinking beings we will still may use REASON to enact our responses to that condition, but we're still reacting to our condition by impulse due to the anxiety it causes.
Simply, put, a claustrophobic can REASON that it's just a closet and that there is nothing to be afraid to be afraid off. However, the more he thinks of his situation, the more aware he is of it, it actually serves to make him MORE anxious and primal in his need to escape and get out of the situation.
I was merely arguing, that any human who has tasted freedom, (however they define it) and then suddenly finds themselves in a situation where they no longer have it, may react primal or aggressively in attempt to lash out or alter their circumstances. Sometimes, it IS human nature to react to certain circumstances and find a way to rationalize our way out of it. We may not always do it in the right manner however.
[/quote] So the fact that the MACOs were willing to take action that influenced circumstances so that millions of Caeliar died, and the fact the thought of shooting Thayer even crossed their minds shows something in their learned behaviour that society put there which it shouldn't have. They must've been aggressive to begin with, and there must've been a willingness to go to violent lengths that not all people have. [/quote]
Wow, well I guess we don't have free-will then. I might as well tell the nearest convict who PLANNED a home invasion, killed a family, and raped and killed a child, that it wasn't HIS fault. It's was society's.
No offense, but I don't buy that and I NEVER will.
[/quote] And if there is any sort of fight-for-freedom no matter in what circumstances, no matter how many people I have to kill exists now- thats part of society- its unnatural, and shouldn't be there.[/quote]
First of all, I didn't say NO matter the circumstances. I said it depends on how they reason their circumstances and how threatening they are to them as a being. However, we DO have a fight or flight reaction that is hard wired into our system and there are times, that it takes over and people do whatever is necessary to escape from a situation. That's the product of evolution. Just look at a cornered wild animal sometime.