major_west: (crazy in the rain)
major_west ([personal profile] major_west) wrote2010-01-31 04:19 pm

122 - WHOA THERE finally addressing some flood issues

I've been here for nearly two years now, and while others may have seen results, I have not. It's become clear to me that no matter what course I'd have taken, the end result would have been the same: they live. My men and I die. Perhaps, if I had been a better man-- by whatever metric you wardens measure it by-- I'd have had no second chance at all. My death would have brought peace, a darkness, whatever it is those who do not end up on the Barge receive... and nothing more.

In light of that, I must admit that I've even less reason to repent. I'm quite attached to consciousness, to simply being and feeling alive, even if it's in death here.

Survival is all that matters.

[identity profile] kingfor-aday.livejournal.com 2010-02-01 02:50 am (UTC)(link)
A fair point, I don't deny it. It's sickening to know that there's nothing you can do to prevent deaths, one way or another, it is. But repentance is not about how the situation may have turned out, in the end, it's not about going back, and doing over again. Because we don't get foreknowledge of what happens, how things are going to end. We make moral decisions blindly, most of the time; we may be able to guess, we may be able to try and work it out, but generally, they're not made knowing the result of them. It's about the fact that you made decisions which were clearly morally questionable, without knowing the result of any of the other possibilities.

[identity profile] major-west.livejournal.com 2010-02-01 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
When you have to shoot your countrymen the moment you suspect them of infection, there isn't any room left for morally sound decisions.