Borgholio wrote:Yes, because we know now that he did. That was not clear in the beginning.
Exactly. We know that he did. Which means that one of the ifs you mentioned before ("IF he deserted") is satisfied. This is basic logic.
That is far from certain. Individual soldiers say they were tasked specifically with finding him, the Pentagon denies it.
This means that the other if in your argument ("IF they sent a rescue party just for him") is still unsatisfied. Too bad that even assuming both ifs are met, I still disagree with the conclusion ("THEN the deaths could be attributed to him").
That the soldiers would have died anyways whether they were searching for him or not? No, I still think that's bullshit.
Look, man, I've already told you, I tried this ridiculous strawman on for size and it didn't fit. My position is nothing more than 'we should accept that soldiers in war sometimes die in the fulfillment of their duty', with a side of 'we can uselessly play with what ifs all day, but it won't change anything that happened'.
No, I don't think you read it. You really expect this article to go in depth on the thousands of other desertions that occurred just to further prove a point that the military cares less about desertion than a POW or MIA?
I don't expect anything from this article. It was
you who expected something: that it'd shore up your position. It doesn't. Tough luck.
I am unable to find any information online about a difference between deserters in the US and those on deployment. Perhaps it doesn't happen often enough for there to be a clear trend either way. Can you find anything to support the idea that there IS a difference?
Holy shit
your inability to find information is exactly why you shouldn't go ahead and assume. Don't form theories when you've got jack in the way of data, is it hard? I also assumed, but I did base it on something: that an active deployment area is different from a posting in a US base.
No, you parsed it incorrectly. Again. I never said they wouldn't care once they found out he was in the hands of the enemy. He went missing on June 30, 2009, he was marked as missing July 1, marked as captured two more days later with the first video proof coming two weeks later from the Taliban. That is not enough time to draw any conclusions. Would they have gone door to door if he had simply vanished without a trace and nobody released a video showing him in captivity? Somehow, I doubt it. They would likely have used drones to scour the desert for a body and asked civilians for information and given up after a period of time if they didn't find any leads.
Yes, pretty likely. But that is still doing something, and way more than what they do for deserters inside America (that is, nothing).
There are indeed aspects of military and civilian justice that are very different, but - we can count on the core aspects of it being the same. Murder, rape, assault, negligence resulting in death...why should serious offenses be so different?
It is, most emphatically, not the same. One of the core aspects, and the reason your analogy fails, is that desertion is not an offense under civilian law; indeed, the very concept of desertion is meaningless in civilian law.
Counter argument to what? "No Man Left Behind" is a noble idea but it doesn't excuse culpability for deaths on your behalf when you did something you shouldn't have been doing in the first place.
Except for the fact that there is no direct link between Bergdahl and these deaths.
You're probably right, they probably will because it'll be easier and have less backlash. There are as many people who think he's a hero as there are who think he should be drawn and quartered.
I don't fit in either camp, chief.
For fuck's sake dude...you're one callous son of a bitch.
It is callous, yeah. I admitted so. It is ugly as well, because it reflects upon an ugly situation. However, it's even worse to be unable to accept that sometimes things happen outside of your control. It's even worse to look for someone to pin all the world's fault on them. Bergdahl can be punished for being a deserter, or simply absentee without leave. However, that's as far as his
legal responsibility goes. The relatives of the dead can still blame him, and I'd certainly blame myself if I was in his shoes. But the law can't go around blasting people with disproportionate retribution.
What, I should fuck off because I believe the soldier's deaths shouldn't be handwaved away?
No, you should fuck off because your reaction to my initial comment was a strawman coupled with belligerent stupidity, and you've kept this tempo throughout. Perhaps if your first instinct wasn't "go for his jugular RARGH", you'd come across as less of a dumbass and I wouldn't be telling you to screw yourself. But here we are, aren't we? Go fuck yourself.