From kragen@dnaco.net Thu Aug 20 13:30:03 1998 Date: Thu, 20 Aug 1998 13:30:00 -0400 (EDT) From: Kragen To: sdenbest@qualcomm.com cc: dave@scripting.com Subject: conscientious objections Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII X-Keywords: X-UID: 1302 Status: O X-Status: Steven Den Beste said: And my grade school classmates would say "Well, what if you're in the front line with a machine gun and the enemy are charging and the only way you can save your life is to fire? What would you do, huh? Huh?" . . . It wasn't until I was an adult that I finally understood and had an answer: If I was in that situation as a conscientious objector, then I had already committed an immoral act even before pulling the trigger. The situation you describe is one variant of a larger problem, though. If I'm alone in my house with my fists and someone breaks in and begins to beat my face in, I'm in a similar situation -- but I haven't done anything immoral to get there. Your answer, which appears to be that the burglar has put me in a position where I have the choice of dying or fighting, and thus it's the burglar's responsibility if I do either of these immoral acts, does not seem right to me. The right thing for Mr. Clinton to do would have been to not screw Monica Lewinsky in the first place -- not to be silent about it later. The right thing to do later would have been to obey the law and tell the truth to the millions of people to whom the President's honesty is a matter of life and death. This is not the responsibility of the special prosecutor. In any difficult situation, I can find misdeeds of others without which my situation would not be difficult. This never absolves me of responsibility for my own actions in that situation. Kragen