Thursday, September 16, 2010

"There is a lot of causes I'd die for, but none in which I'd kill for." Gandhi

How dare we, pray for fruits of victory but not hopes of peace. If our prayers are two sided, we look at a dual sided blade. For safety of one we spill blood on the other, in my logic spilling our own for sake of a peace (a good) that Gandhi calls ''temporary for the evil it does'' has longevity. Descendants of murdered fathers, innocently killed mothers and orphans seeking justice of a ''ideal'' enemy. Not even a person to person vendetta, but a national hatred. A perpetual irrational disease of vengeance dealing blows to the innocent, alien, orphan and widows creating a burn for a self serving victory that is left to a cyclonic destruction. Just to rise again and escalate further till the ground is red from our blood, sin and injustices. Continuing until something stops the flow, stops the fall, to let true justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream

"A good man would try to spare lives as possible but a great man would stop such injustice before it occurred."

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Is this idealistic perspective based on my definition of justice, injustice, righteousness and irrational self-serving idea of justice?

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