SemperJase said:
Yes, it is different. Soldiers get paid for their service. They still have rights (like voting).
Not always. In several societies, draftees are not paid (for example, in ancient Greece it was cheper to field an army than a navy, since sailors had to be paid, and drafted citizen-soldiers weren't). At many points in history, draftees had no rights to vote.
In many societies, draftees have no right to vote or similar political rights. In Pakistan and Saudi Arabia for example, draftees have no voting rights. In the sformer Soviet Union draftees had no voting rights. If that an equivalent to slavery.
I note you failed to answer my other question: was ancient Greek society evil? It viewed slaveholding as a virtuous act. Does that make their society evil?
You've gone to a lot of trouble to set up a complex what if. I find the scenario irrelevant. They were not imprisoning an evil god. If they were the actions still would have been good.
It isn't a very complex what if scenario, nor is it one that doesn't use genre conventions. Boiled down to the essentials it is:
(1) Evil god is imprisoned in a magical prison
(2) Orcs need humanoid sacrifices to keep prison secure
(3) Orcs kidnap humans to use as human sacrifices
This could easily be the plot of a Conan novel, or an Elric novel, or something involving any number of other classic genre staples and fit right in with the rest of the collection.
The question is not whether they
were or not, the question is
did you know beforehand? The orcs are attempting to accomplish a positive good: sacrifice of the few to save the many. You interfered with that. Are you still good?
Actions are not defined as good or evil because of their outcomes. A correllary is the end does not justify the means.
So you disagree that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few in some circumstances?
This assumes that extortion is not evil.
No, it assumes it is less evil than wholesale slaughter.
Respectively: yes, not available for all combatants, and we did not kill any helpless orcs.
So you let the helpless orcs go free?
It is clear that no matter what I say (from the fact that you make conclusions without the answers), you have determined our motivations were to kill orcs and revel in slaughter.
Thus far, you have provided no evidence that this was not the case. You appear to have pursued no other alternatives before wading in swords swinging. That indicates to me that you did little reflection other than to note that your character sheet had a "G" on it, and the orcs had an "E".
In fact our motivations were to free the people that were wrongfully kidnapped, not free for all slaugther. We did not kill anyone that did not raise a weapon against us. In addition to not killing women and children and non-combatant males, we freed other enslaved orcs rather than killing them as evil creatures.
But you killed the other orcs wholesale. I note you did not bother to answer several of my questions, such as: Is death an appropriate penalty for kidnapping? On what authority do you decide that death is an appropriate penalty? On what authority do you decide that you are entitled to enforce it?
It amazes me that people are trying to define the rescuers as evil and the orcs who kidnapped, enslaved and tortured people as good.
You are the one espousing an absolute moral code. You have maintained that your actions were
absolutely good, and that they
could not possibly have been evil in any way. This is a foolish statement for you to make. There have been several points made that have indicated that your actions
could very well have been evil. Given that your stance is that there is no way what you did was evil, it doesn't have to be likely that they were evil to compeltely falsify your argument, only possible.
You feel you were on rock solid moral ground with respect to your actions. That is silly. You weren't. You were on
probable moral ground, but that is not what you have claimed.