first, the child was japanese not vietnamese...the documentary series is called WWII in HD not Vietnam in HD...secondly that was not an explanation it was a poorly attempted and ill timed philosophical statement gleened from other people. undoubtedly you are one of the brighter squeekers around these boards, however you are irritatingly lacking in areas of social interaction that at times make you appear to be a simple minded copy and paste poser with too much time on his hands. i'm sure that on facebook amongst your friends you would get responses along the marks of "wow, that's deep" but here, it is apparent that you are predominantly out of touch with not only reality but the full breadth and scope meaning of the philosophical text you have read elsewhere.
my aversion to the aforementioned clip is due to an ingrained distaste for seeing little children suffer from the shortsighted and selfish whims of grown men.
Oops, I thought for sure that the kid was Vietnamese, it must be from another clip I watched. You're right, though, looking back on that post, I can see that messed it up badly.
Just now, I noticed that the part about the cause making no difference came from Ghandi; man, I need to lay off the Wikipedia for a while.
You're right about the being out of touch and lack of social skills part, too. I barely leave my house and have few, if any friends. This forum is a place where I can test my (rather weak) intellectual mettle, though.
Dang, you old dogs are smarter than you look.
However, I do not copy and paste. I
do read about ethics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, and it unfortunately comes out in my work. I try hard not to use others' ideas, but with so
many ideas bouncing around in my head it gets hard to see the difference between what I've read and what I've thought up.
Let me rephrase my previous post:
The horrors of war: shattered families, mangled minds, empty stomachs. No more than pawns in the ever-shifting struggle for power, those caught in the crossfire are long-forgotten.
I can't find anything unoriginal there, but correct me if I'm wrong.
-Penguin