QUOTE(smorpheus @ May 5 2005, 01:09 PM)
I think this debate is interesting.
I tend to agree. It's good to tend to agree. It makes people feel all happy inside and interested in listening to you.
QUOTE
While I agree whole-heartedly with many of the pacifistic thinkers in this thread concerning the absolute merits of non-violent action,
I tend to agree, but I think that things can sometimes be a bit too complex to really make a cookie-cutter judgement on.
QUOTE
I think some moderation in those views needs to be taken.
I tend to agree, but the space between two different extremes is not always the answer.
QUOTE
On the other side of the coin, we have people in this thread who believe violence is the solution to all problems, and that pacifism is a sign of weakness.
I tend to agree, though sometimes it
will be taken as a sign of weakness. In most cases, however, dogged, cold persistence is good enough.
QUOTE
To seriously consider those arguments, it requires the thinker to remove themselves from the belief that life, all human life that is, is with value. This is certainly not something I would ever consider.
Oh, while I largely tend to agree, I
do value the life of the guy attacking me. I just value my own life a lot more.
QUOTE
I think that defensive and strategic violence is the only solution in many of today's polictical and oppressive climates.
I would be more inclined to say that violence may become a part of geopolitical tactic, and the doors should not be closed to it. To any given problem,
its best solution. However, I tend to agree.
QUOTE
Certainly, America would not exist without violent resistence against an oppressive government body.
Oh, America would have existed, but we'd all be eating scones. Besides, the Brits were coming over here to make beef with US, not the other way around, and it's not our fault they came over here with their guns pointed at us. Neither is it our fault that they'd stretched themselves so thin that the only people they could afford to send over were silly incompetents and green recruits. I tend to agree if you were saying that America might not be independent now if it had not come to blows.
QUOTE
I also believe that there are violent movements in the world today that have effected positive progress for their causes,
I tend to agree, for there are plenty of cases in which unfortunate actions became a necessary evil.
QUOTE
specifically the Zapatista in the Chiapas. Would the Zapatista be more effective without violence? I'm not sure, but my guess is that their climate and geo-political situation of that area of Mexico requires them to take the actions they have.
I think they should do whatever it was that those guys up in Canada did, making one fifth of the country Nunavut, but I tend to agree.
QUOTE
In the United States, however, at least since the 20th century, violent resistence has never worked(except in very limited cases), while non-violent resistence has consistently been an effective method of change from the activists in Women's Suffrage to the Civil Rights movement.
I tend to agree, and this is possibly because one of the things about making changes in representative democracies is that there really is such a thing as bad publicity in the world of politics, and being seen as a bad guy is bad for you.
QUOTE
Certainly this is testament to the strength of our country that violence is not accepted by activists, nor by the government itself against it's own citizens (although recent cases in NYC, Seattle, and Philadelphia shows a change towards the worse on the latter).
I tend to agree, but I think it's also a proof of the effectiveness of representative democracy. It makes the world a lot safer for politicians, too, so it even makes the leaders happy.
QUOTE
Globally, I agree that Non-Violent tactics would be more successful than Violent tactics in certain situat