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In this war, all the nations use the airplanes to detect the enemies' information. The detector should find out where their hostile troops are, which city shall be attacked first, which fortress shall be well-protected, all these information lead to a comprehensive military plan. If the detector conceals some important message, or hold back some vital details, he shall be accused of a shameful betrayer.
If a blind man walks without his stick, and passes by a toilet, a knave happens to see that but never give him a notice. When this blind man drops in it, the knave gets lots of fun from this misfortune. We shall say this knave has a terrible character and lacks of conscience.
All these reflect the ethics for a nation, for a human-being, and for the secular affairs. If we do not bear to see a blind man drops deep, when we see tens of thousands souls fall into a crisis and fight each other before death, should we keep silence, or rouse their conscience and preclude this fighting?
Citation
Josephus Mo, “Faith exists in conscience,” War in other words, accessed November 21, 2024, https://warinotherwords.exeter.ac.uk/items/show/19.