fleshconsumed
Diamond Member
- Feb 21, 2002
- 6,486
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Originally posted by: Skoorb
Fleshconsumed, the closest most of us ever get to war and its effects is in video games or movies. It is glorified in, and a central point of, entertainment. We find violenece to be enjoyable. We love to watch bad men on tv be tortured because we imagine ourselves doing the act and being justified in it. We love war reenactment movies, movies about new wars, video games with it, ad tedium. War to North Americans costs money and lives lost and injuries, but to the rest of us we don't see it. We've never been at work wondering if our house was just hit in the last bombing run or whether the needed supply of dry milk made it to the grocer. Interestingly, England loves war and death in its entertainment, too. It is insatiable, our appetite for death. Some of us find it abhorrent more than others. I love it in video games, but I am informed enough to know that in real life it is no joke and would not brush aside collateral damage with the ease that others seem to, because every person who dies could have been me, had I been born like them. Every dead soldier has a mother or a wife.
Movies are very dishonest in a sense that they show only the end result - a glorious victory of good over evil. It's easy to get excited about it. However, what they do not show is thousands or millions of lives lost, mass graves, and decades of suffering before people can recover. It's like Karate Kid sort of movies, they show some weak teenager being able to train to the master level in just one hour and defeat his opponent in a very cool showdown. Yeah... What those movies don't show is that in real life it takes years, years and years to achieve any level of proficiency. Yet, most kids love those movies and imagine themselves to be the protagonist of the story because the movie misleads them by showing end result without showing all the hard work that would normally go into training.
