| I think a great first step for this community would be to stop consuming media uncritically. There are a lot of people in my country, America, who are morally outraged and it confuses me because our country doesn't seem to have any problem invading sovereign nations and, as someone who protested those actions, my fellow citizens and our media have consistently smiled and supported those actions. Hollywood doesn't make films about the injustices of this aggression but rather, how it makes American soldiers sad to shoot little kids. A recent example is Iraq. It started with allegations from the US that weapons of mass destruction (WMD) were an existential threat that needed to be acted on. Most of us who consume media critically charged that the real reason was closer to Iraq's massive untapped oil reserves. The US went to the UN with these allegations and the UN said, we don't see the evidence of WMD. The US went to NATO and NATO didn't see it either. Some thought, that's it. Surely America won't just invade Iraq anyway. And... we did. And no weapons of mass destruction were ever found. Did we leave immediately, horrified at the war crime? Or did we stay and place our military bases at all the large oil wells? Journalism is so important because it plays a vital role in informing us. If we don't have good journalism, we end up just thinking and feeling what we're told. So maybe what we can do is to ask, "Were you and are you outraged about invading a sovereign for its resources -- which is a war crime? Have you posted or protested about that? Jumped up and down? And if not, why now with this? Is the difference because this time it's how you've been told to feel?" |
Every country in history has made mistakes and perpetuated violence against their neighbors or fellow countrymen at some point in history. But I don't think it's a sign of progress to say "this bad thing happened 20 years ago or 200 years ago or 1,000 years ago, so I should be OK with it now." It's OK to make a bad decision in the past and a better decision today.
Plus, no two countries, wars, circumstances, etc. are exactly the same. Comparing Ukraine to Iraq is missing the differences in the geopolitical, economic, cultural and ethnic state of affairs in the two scenarios.