YOUR strawman bullshit, don't you mean, Nick? It was YOU who tried to equate a cop defending his own life with the principle of committing defensive genocide.Nick wrote:OK, time to strip out Patrick's strawman bullshit (i.e. completely missing the point of the cop/maniac analogy, extending it in all sorts of ways which I never supported,
You keep pretending that there is a substantive difference. There isn't.as well as claiming 'circumstances justifying xenocide are remotely conceivable' is the same as 'genocide of other human groups is OK'), consolidate and summarise. . .
No, I find it reprehensible on First Principles; also because OSC totally failed to consider any other alternative which his own plot affords but which he either didn't want to consider to make an illegitimate argument in the first place or because he is simply a piss-poor writer.Your (Patrick's) viewpoint:
Starting from the premise that systematically destroying another group (another species, or a sub-group of your own species) is not only always morally wrong, but can in fact never ever be justified at all, you see Ender's Game as reprehensible because it sets out to contrive a situation where xenocide is seen as an unfortunate necessity.
(this part edited for typos)My viewpoint:
Patrick, the part of your stance I have a problem with is the never ever part. You assume it is true, and immediately switch off the analytical part of your brain with respect to that assumption. When someone challenges you, all you are left with is mindlessly repeating "xenocide is never acceptable", "xenocide is never acceptable, "xenocide is never acceptable" like a goddamn broken record.
Gee, I guess it's not acceptable for the same reason raping children is never acceptable or shooting people at random is never acceptable or shoving people into ovens is never acceptable. It's called a Moral Principle. I'm sorry that you don't seem to understand what one of those actually is.
Amusing. If that's what you wish to call the peculiar mental process which finds genocide an acceptable alternative, be my guest.Verilon and I, along with Orson Scott Card, keep the analytical parts of our brain engaged, and ask the following questions:
No.*"Is it even remotely conceivable that in very restricted circumstances, xenocide might be considered as a viable course of action?"
We keep having this argument because you've swallowed Orson Scott Card's bullshit hook, line, and sinker. You keep missing the point: trying to dredge up an argument which justifies genocide as an acceptable solution to a war is illegitimate from the get-go. And in addition, the conditions of OSC's OWN DAMN PLOT undermines his own thesis. Doesn't it even bother you that one of the principle arguments you've been making in support of Card's view —that communication was impossible, therefore no negotiation was possible, therefore genocide— is destroyed in the book by the Hive Queen's telepathic exchange with Ender?This is the real sticking point - we question an assumption that you believe to be self-evident, and you are left with nothing other than repeating "it's self-evident". If it was really self-evident, we wouldn't be having this argument.
Which in and of itself does not justify genocide.So, what do I think the conditions justifying xenocide might start to look like? Well, the following is a starter list - I suspect an actual collection of all of the conditions might be even more stringent:
*The enemy constitute a clear and present danger to the survival of the human species.
Which also does not justify genocide. The Nazis weren't willing to negotiate or compromise either.*The enemy have not displayed any characteristics which might be taken to indicate a willingness to negotiate or compromise.
Which is why you keep trying to do so. It is certainly not physically impossible.All attempts at establishing any form of communication have failed.
In other words, building up your home system defences to an overkill level has an unacceptably high probability of failure?*Any and all available defensive strategies have an unacceptably high probability of failure.
THEY have got to come to US, across interstellar distances. Containment doesn't enter into the picture in the paradigm of a space war.*Any and all available containment strategies have an unacceptably high probability of failure.
Which leaves either building up forces sufficent to conduct an all-out offensive or building up your in-system defences to inflict an unacceptably high cost in blood for the enemy warfleet.*Any and all limited offensive strategies have an unacceptably high probability of failure.
Ah. Simply bombing their planet into the Stone Age, leaving the aliens without the means any longer to even build steam engines much less field warfleets, cannot achieve the aim of removing the alien threat?An all out offensive (potentially resulting in racial destruction) has a lower probability of failure than any of the other strategies.
And we're right back to your bullshit false analogy of the cop and the maniac, aren't we? To even pretend that there is an equation here is beyond ludicrous. I've already outlined the concept of proportional response, which you simply decide to dismiss as a strawman. Your genocide test fails on the grounds of proportional response to threatThis is a far cry from your strawman distortion of 'justifying genocide'. It is, in fact, the exact same list of criteria used on a person-to-person level by the cop who decides to shoot the maniac. A cop shooting an offender will shoot for the chest - getting fancy and trying to hit the gun or a limb is seen as unnecessarily chancy.
No, you just keep making the same simplistic argument that because it's Aliens, it's not genocide.No instance of attempted genocide in recorded history has met even one of those criteria. By questioning our assumptions, we are in a stronger position to vilify genocide, because we can point to the fact that not one of my criteria could possibly be meant by combatants of the same species.
If that were even remotely true, then Card wouldn't have been trying to make a huuuuuuge play of justifying the argument of his first book in the succeeding book. The fact that Card has to write a scene where the Hive Queen tell Ender that she understands and forgives him for wiping out her entire race says that either Card doesn't really believe his own thesis, or he knows that it can't withstand close examination so he's going to try to pretend that forgiveness from the victims makes everything all better.In Ender's Game, OSC set out to satisfy those criteria by constructing an enemy with orthogonal sensory apparatus, and an industrial output which exceeded that of humanity by several planets to one. He succeeded well enough that he actually makes a plausible case for justifiable xenocide. Whether the situation in Ender's game actually satisfied them. . . well, if the answer to a moral question is obvious, it is hardly worthy of the name "moral dilemna" is it?
And as far as the Bugger industrial capacity was concerned: the fact remains that, at STL velocities, the entire force of the Bugger war machine would not be hitting Earth all at once. The fact that they evidently were not able to hit Earth with everything they had in either attack wave points to that.
Pity that the Hive Queen making telepathic contact with Ender destroys that theory. Pity that Joe Haldeman dealt with a more or less similar situation in his own novel The Forever War and did so far more intelligently. Funny, you came to this whole "aliens who won't communicate" argument because you really couldn't answer the argument that a means of communcation was possible when you denied any such thing earlier in the course of your challenge.In the real world (without OSC's weird philotic physics), orthogonal sensory apparatus is highly unlikely. However, a scenario where communication is impossible simply because the other side isn't interested in listening is a remote possibility.
That's called changing the rules in the middle of the game.