I have recently faced the idea that there may be people I have met and liked who honestly believe that attacking the innocent and the powerless, especially girls or young women, is a good way to get things done.
I do not know if I am misunderstanding the person in question. It seems likely. I could be taking things too literally, a common failing of mine.* I could be misunderstanding in some other way. But even supposing this one is a misunderstanding, I've now faced the idea, and it's not at all pleasant.
Maybe I was in the Army too long. (I honestly believe the vast majority of US soldiers hold this value as strongly as I do.) You don't DO shit like that. You don't even THINK about THREATENING to do shit like that.
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* If I'm starting to get ticked off, it could be nothing more serious than my belief that what you say is what you mean. A useful tactic might be to remind both of us of this pattern. Humans are neither robots nor computers, and I forget that too often.
I do not know if I am misunderstanding the person in question. It seems likely. I could be taking things too literally, a common failing of mine.* I could be misunderstanding in some other way. But even supposing this one is a misunderstanding, I've now faced the idea, and it's not at all pleasant.
Maybe I was in the Army too long. (I honestly believe the vast majority of US soldiers hold this value as strongly as I do.) You don't DO shit like that. You don't even THINK about THREATENING to do shit like that.
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* If I'm starting to get ticked off, it could be nothing more serious than my belief that what you say is what you mean. A useful tactic might be to remind both of us of this pattern. Humans are neither robots nor computers, and I forget that too often.
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I think we are given challenges like this not only to grow ourselves, but to see if we can gently persuade that person to examine something they never even think about. Not necessarily to change them but to make them more aware of how something they perceive as a non-issue or non-problem is perceived by others.
Good luck in sorting this out.
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(Silly random comment because I have no idea what this post is about. On a more serious note, I hope you come to a conclusion, of one sort of another, that gives you more comfort in your life.)
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Is this something you can ask the other person for clarification about, saying that you think you misunderstood something? If it's someone who I otherwise think highly of that's the approach I'd take. If it's a casual acquaintance who you know but don't interact a lot with, I usually let it go and take a wait and see attitude.
Either way, yeah, disturbing.
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Thanks. I *think* it's all about me believing that what is said is what is meant. That's what I'm going to try to presume, anyway, if I get no further information.
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But I find I have a real hard time feeling live-and-let-live about this one. I guess I have some pretty strongly held values.
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On the other hand, we tend to say stupid things at times or at least I know I do. And I'd like to think that friends would give me the benefit of the doubt and judge me on all they know over time more so than a particular thing I said or did.
So sometimes it becomes a balancing act of giving someone the benefit of the doubt over and over again until you just can't anymore and your opinion of them changes. And that can be a rather unpleasant situation on many levels. :(
Wow, what a depressing topic even if I am understanding your situation correctly, and there is probably a good possibility I am not. In which case, I am just babbling on and depressing myself. :)
We should talk about more fun topics. What would you do to punish me for being a terrible human being? ;)
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1) Communication is a really tenuous thing. I'm thinking of something in my head, which I translate into words (written, spoken). You then take in those words (possibly mis-reading or mis-hearing) and then translate the whole thing into your own world model inside your brain. Sometimes I wonder at all that communication seems to work (or maybe it really doesn't, but the dis-connects are so small that they don't affect everyday life).
2) The world isn't black and white. You'll find traits that you like in people you don't like and vice versa. It's quite a balancing act to decide whether some set of traits push someone from one side of the scale to another -- and it can be quite disorienting when you discover "bad" traits in someone you like. People generally do things that fit into their world model of "what's right", but may not fit into your model of "what's right". I'm pretty sure that my own "judging" of people is pretty fluid and is predicated on many factors.
In your example of attacking the innocent & powerless, it would obviously make a difference to me if the person was talking about making more corporate profit or if they were using an argument like "bombing Japan in WWII killed innocent people, but it also saved more lives than were lost, because it ended the war earlier". It would also matter to me whether the person had themselves been the victim/target of such an attack. Imagine someone raised by the sole survivor of an ethnic cleansing -- to them, none of the "enemy" are really innocent, and women who give birth to more "enemy" are perpetuating the oppression.
I do, however, question your belief that the vast majority of US soldiers don't even think about threatening to attack innocents & women. I believe that the thought crosses their minds quite often, but is pushed back most of the time. I don't think that they are different from any other US citizen in this manner -- they are just exposed to more situations and deprivation that bring it all out of the theoretical.
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Gee, I don't know: are you into punishments? ;-)
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2) I'm often pretty much live-and-let-live about a lot of stuff, particularly if I feel I can make choices that avoid the disagreement areas entirely (as a made-up example, "don't lend a book to CJ because she won't take care of it"). Then there are some things that really get my dander up, and I guess this is one of them.
I definitely agree that the person's past and the goals in mind make a difference. I'm prone to get all angry before I know whether the speaker has survived an ethnic cleansing or is hoping to save lives, and that too is a powerful force for problem-causing. (wry smile)
I'll stick with my thoughts on the soldiers a little longer. Boy, were we ever taught that was seriously wrong. Attack combatants. It's sort of like -- awful example alert -- I really, honest to goodness, don't consider engaging in incest. I just don't think about it. Now I may have a more powerful censor in my head than some folk do, and God knows I haven't been in combat myself, so I'm not the best example to go by. Maybe many soldiers think it but will have a harder time talking about doing it.
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For someone I've known longer, as you say, I find it easier to chalk things up to a bad day or (more likely) an unfortunate attempt at a joke.
Gee, I don't know: are you into punishments? ;-)
As a general rule, no. :) I am, however, 1) in a very strange mood, 2) not particularly feeling like working, and 3) not very good at casual flirtation. :) So I took the opportunity that presented itself.
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As a general rule, no. :)
Ah; that makes a difference to the approach, of course. Shall you be sentenced to eat a minimum of two chocolate chip cookies today? ;-)
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I'm rigid enough about it that I can't contemplate such situations without an angry response; occasionally, that makes it difficult to consider the thoughts of others that might seem to excuse or balance the scales. Learning to accept that the circumstances are fluid is a key.
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I knew once we hammered this down to a mathematical discussion, it would be much easier to figure out. :)
Well, you know, I'm all about expanding my horizons. What would you suggest if you thought I would enjoy the punishment aspect? ;)
Wow, how sad is this? I knew my cookie willpower was almost nonexistant, to be sure. But I actually sat here and seriously debated accepting two completely imaginary cookies in lieu of flirting further. I am a sick, sick man!
WARNING: My knowledge of the military comes mainly from "Asterix the Legionaire"
I think what makes it blurry is that in unconventional war, it's really really hard to tell who the combatants are. So a soldier out in the field is thinking about attacking innocents all the time--because he doesn't know if they're innocent. Smiling ten-year-old Iraqi is running towards the convoy--the soldier has to be asking himself questions like, "Does he have a bomb? How much time will I need to shoot him if he does have a bomb? What's the longest I can take to work that out?" Then the kid stops running and waves, and the soldier thinks "whew, he was an innocent after all" and throws him a Hershey bar.
That's the sort of thing the Geneva conventions were meant to fix. If all the soldiers wear uniforms, then everyone not wearing a uniform is a civilian, and is safe. The soldiers have agreed to wear "shoot me" signs, to protect the non-soldiers. So if one side stops fighting in uniform, they're deliberately hiding behind the civilians.
Sorry... rant over now.
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It's one of my most firmly held beliefs that if you want to know what a person is like, just listen, because they'll tell you.
(Not that misunderstandings don't happen - but that I believe they happen far more often because one hears what one wants to hear and not otherwise, than because one hears what isn't actually said.)
Re: WARNING: My knowledge of the military comes mainly from "Asterix the Legionaire"
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