The Ethics of Struggle.
For bringing about change, the purpose and drive of the change should be for the sake of the greater good. If the entire motive behind the change is not for the benefit of the people whose lives are affected, then the change is unjust and due to the whim and greed of an individual, most likely. With this idea in mind, if the end goal is to revolutionize the lives of those affected for the better, then if those people are, in turn, hurt or even worse, killed, is that not in itself counterintuitive? Of course, there is the argument that some fundamental changes may hurt the current generation but benefit the newer generations greatly for the foreseeable future. When great changes are to happen, people are bound to struggle and get hurt, however, those pains and sacrifices should happen at the will of the people being hurt themselves. A nation cannot change truly if the people themselves do not wish to be changed or have changed. A sacrifice is supposed to be the loss of something precious willingly by an individual, for a greater benefit, but a sacrifice without the willingness of the sacrificer, especially from a higher power, is really extortion of the people and their rights. I believe that there is no line per se, for what is reasonable to sacrifice for bringing about change, even death is necessary for most changes throughout history, however, those lines of what is ethical and unethical should be determined by the will of the people. If the people deem a sacrifice too great, yet a higher power still goes through with said sacrifice, then that is unethical. Of course, this ideology is skewed in a democratic view and as such is extremely dependent on the faith of the large populace’s intelligence and willingness to sacrifice for the greater good, which oftentimes humans will not do. As comes with democracy, disagreements will happen, and some will believe change should be made, while others believe the opposite. As such, the greater power of the government must arise and decide on the best course of action; however, either way, one group will suffer unwillingly, either suffer by sacrificing unwillingly, or suffer by the lack of change. By this, suffering is inevitable, however, the amount of suffering that is tolerable is subjective. Excerpt 3 from Chapter 6 of “A Problem from Hell: America in the Age of Genocide” describes and lists out the hell that had become of Cambodia, based on accounts from refugees. Of the things listed, a few they described were how they could no longer travel, feed, learn, flirt, and pray of their own accord. Citizens essentially became zombies who obeyed the orders of the higher authorities with no consideration for their own well-being. Once the people become unable to control the course of their own lives and the future of their society, that is likely when the suffering has become too severe. In scenarios in which this has become a reality, what should happen is the UN and influential states such as the US should step in to maintain order, even at the sacrifice at state sovereignty as state sovereignty’s purpose is for independence of the state for the benefit of the people however, if the individuals themselves do not have independence to even a tiny degree, the state shouldn’t deserve it either.