The "I was just following orders" comment, is the hill from which you can clearly see the Godwin river, so I wouldn't go there.
Refusing orders and the law is a very complicated dilemma. Anyone claiming that it's as easy as pie, is probably a fanatic of some sort .
It's a personal judgement a person should make on an ad hoc basis: What are the implications of his act on the overall scheme of things, and what are the implications of his refusal on society. It's the cases in which the act he's personally doing, i.e. not the occupation in Iraq, generally, but his role in it, is weighed against the damage done by him refusing to serve in it.
I see his role in the occupation of Iraq to be marginal enough, and pretty much harmless, in the worst case, and beneficial in the best case. The only serious harm is the threat of him getting killed, (as happened, very sadly but didn't happen to many others) . Meanwhile, I see little to nothing beneficial in him refusing to serve, and some seriously bad sides, too, like the certainty of him getting some jail term.
Refusing orders and the law is a very complicated dilemma. Anyone claiming that it's as easy as pie, is probably a fanatic of some sort .
It's a personal judgement a person should make on an ad hoc basis: What are the implications of his act on the overall scheme of things, and what are the implications of his refusal on society. It's the cases in which the act he's personally doing, i.e. not the occupation in Iraq, generally, but his role in it, is weighed against the damage done by him refusing to serve in it.
I see his role in the occupation of Iraq to be marginal enough, and pretty much harmless, in the worst case, and beneficial in the best case. The only serious harm is the threat of him getting killed, (as happened, very sadly but didn't happen to many others) . Meanwhile, I see little to nothing beneficial in him refusing to serve, and some seriously bad sides, too, like the certainty of him getting some jail term.
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