• 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    the real problem is when those murderers come home and feel sad. Will somebody think of the poor state sanctioned murderers!!

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        The only thing that seems to curb their baser impulses is the haunting memory of the horror they committed.

        It’s not the soldier with PTSD who should scare you. It’s the sociopath who came back seemingly normal.

      • Venia Silente@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Agree. If the system is codified to allow them to get off absolutely free, in terms of legal culpability, at least they get to pay in some other form. Compared to their victims being, ya know, dead, a somewhat-modicum of eternal torment seems reasonable.

        • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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          28 minutes ago

          The closest thing to their victims haunting them.

          If someone has PTSD for something that happened to them, like being victims of abuse or being invaded by westerners who killed your family, then PTSD is valid. but I think PTSD is not valid if that person is the one committing those atrocities, that should be diagnosable as guilt and something they have to live with. Therefore, I think war criminals crying about PTSD and have flashbacks of driving over children on a tractor, then fuck you, that is not PTSD and it distracts from actual PTSD victims.

      • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        people downvoting you can fuck off.

        In a just world they would face consequences for their actions. instead the closest thing they get is to “feel sad about it” then the whole state bends over backwards to coddle them and make them feel good.

        Fuck off, I hope the guilt of their actions haunts them till their dying breath. They choose to enlist when they were legal adults. if an 18 year old gets drunk and runs over some children no one would care about them. but if an 18 year old signs up to kill children in the other side of the world it’s ok? they are then called heroes and given discounts?

        yhea, we can vent on how the states encourages it, but by the end they willingly signed up to murder people. what did they expect?

        • KT-TOT@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          For many it is their only hope of escaping poverty or owning property. “Convenient” for the state that this is the case.

          Desperate people are willing to do horrible things. To what extent are they to blame for being exploited? The state’s policies allow and encourage poverty, destitution, and desperation, then exploit it.

          I don’t think one is just or even absolved by their exploitation, but I can have empathy.

          The state doesn’t treat veterans much better than dogs. Some get to leave with work experience, savings, and education, others get to crawl in the streets until they starve.

            • KT-TOT@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              34 minutes ago

              I don’t have any sympathy for those who joined from a position of privilege. I acknowledge that is likely the majority of service members.

              There’s also the many, many poor rural children that join for nationalistic reasons, already far down the path to fascism.

          • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            We can talk all about that. but the moment they agree to play the government game and make their lives better by destroying lives somewhere else they are now part of that system and not it’s victims. Same with all those ICE agents.

            Have empathy with them until they decide to be a class traitor. If it was up to me they would be in jail to mellow with their PTSD. not in the general public.

            • KT-TOT@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              21 hours ago

              Same as joining a gang. Participate in violence and you get a roof over your head and maybe a couple meals. Wether or not it makes them “bad people” or “class traitors” doesn’t change the pressures and incentives at play. There are few alternatives and fewer viable ones.

        • GeeDubHayduke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          then the whole state bends over backwards to coddle them and make them feel good.

          You should do stand-up. That’s pretty funny.

          • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            How often it calls them heroes? or gives them healthcare (still shitty because it’s America, but more healthcare than the general population)? or makes it socially unacceptable to criticise them, like I’m doing now and bootlickers are downvoting men and complaining.

            fuck em all, you know how easy it is not to get PTSD from murdering people in poor countries? it’s super easy, just don’t sign up to kill people in poor countries.

        • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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          27 minutes ago

          Yes, because the way to cope with cycles of abuse is to perpetuate it.

          Do you recommend that people should beat their kids if they got beaten up as kids?

          • Maeve@kbin.earth
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            22 minutes ago

            That’s not the point. The point is that fully funded, comprehensive health care rather than over-funded death and destruction would give people emotional survival skills beyond perpetration of aggression.

            • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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              11 minutes ago

              Still their fault the moment they decided to become the abusers and inflict more horrors on the world. that is a choice they made.

              But yhea, healthcare and education should be universal and not tied to being a mercenary for the empire