Does Wearing Your Nations Uniform Automatically Ensure a High Moral Ground?
No. And only an idiot would suggest this or create a thread attacking a straw man you created in a different thread.
I have been reading with interest a thread on this Board today that is discussing the treatment of US veterans. I have noticed that when such subjects are discussed there is an automatic assumption that those who don the uniforms of their respective nations, they somehow are automatically walking on a higher moral ground.
Ceteris paribus, when a man puts his money where his mouth is, served honorably and suffered the consequences, he is entitled to a measure of respect. To do less is despicable.
When a person puts on the uniform and agrees to fight for his or her nation, they have taken a personal philosophical position, which means that surely they must take personal responsibility for their actions and choices. This is one reason that I have absolutely no interest in what Mccain survived as POW, he is no more in love with the US than the bus driver on Broadway.
You have no interest in McCain's background not because of a principled philosophical stance on your own part, but because McCain is on a different end of the political spectrum from yourself, you dishonest man.
It is a war that were I American and drafted I would have taken part in, because from my own philosophic and political position it is a war fought for a sinister agenda, to serve the few.
That is not even coherent.
The Armed Forces are a professional body, but no more professional than is doctoring, keeping clean our waters, maintaining our electricity supply, or training air traffic controllers to keep our skies safe.
Neither doctors, water-cleaners, electricians, or air traffic controllers are placed in a position of life or death as are armed forces members, members of the police force, and others such as firefighters.
I recall reading in Susan Brownmiller's classic book on rape, 'Against Our Will', about two Baptist's who refused to take up the draft and head out to Saigon and were imprisoned. One of them was repeatedly raped every day for two years by criminals who thought them 'cowards' and easy targets. When interviewed at the end of his sentence the young man said he would prefer to endure what bhe had for another two years than fight in what he viewed was an immoral war. The criminal actually thought that they had a higher moral ground because they would have taken up arms and fought!
I believe in the supremacy of the individual conscience in these matters and if this is truly a case of this then they should be applauded. There are just wars, and unjust wars. We all have to decide as individuals whether we are to participate or support if the matter arises.
BTS