Considering the example of Nazi Germany is being used as an analogy for the United States, a country not actually at way, taking allied bombing raids into account amounts to fighting the hypothetical.
Is it? I was mainly joking—but there’s an underlying point, and that’s that economic and political instability tends to correlate with ethical failures. This isn’t always going to manifest as winding up on the business end of a major strategic bombing campaign, of course, but perpetrating serious breaches of ethics usually implies that you feel you’re dealing with issues serious enough to justify being a little unethical, or that someone’s getting correspondingly hacked off at you for them, or both. Either way there are consequences.
It’s a lot safer to abuse people inside your borders than to make a habit of invading other countries. The risk from ethical failure has a lot to do with whether you’re hurting people who can fight back.
Considering the example of Nazi Germany is being used as an analogy for the United States, a country not actually at way, taking allied bombing raids into account amounts to fighting the hypothetical.
Is it? I was mainly joking—but there’s an underlying point, and that’s that economic and political instability tends to correlate with ethical failures. This isn’t always going to manifest as winding up on the business end of a major strategic bombing campaign, of course, but perpetrating serious breaches of ethics usually implies that you feel you’re dealing with issues serious enough to justify being a little unethical, or that someone’s getting correspondingly hacked off at you for them, or both. Either way there are consequences.
It’s a lot safer to abuse people inside your borders than to make a habit of invading other countries. The risk from ethical failure has a lot to do with whether you’re hurting people who can fight back.