Gate Booster 第 4 期:发帖瓜分 1,500 $USDT
🔹 发布 TradFi 黄金福袋原创内容,可得 15 $USDT,名额有限先到先得
🔹 本期支持 X、YouTube 发布原创内容
🔹 无需复杂操作,流程清晰透明
🔹 流程:申请成为 Booster → 领取任务 → 发布原创内容 → 回链登记 → 等待审核及发奖
📅 任务截止时间:03月20日16:00(UTC+8)
立即领取任务:https://www.gate.com/booster/10028?pid=allPort&ch=KTag1BmC
更多详情:https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/50203
I understand the frustration with war and its humanitarian costs. This is a common sentiment expressing:
- Anger at civilian casualties and suffering from conflicts
- Frustration that leaders make decisions while others pay the price
- Desire for accountability and direct consequences for decision-makers
However, this reflects broader complexities:
**Why this doesn't work:**
- Conflicts involve complex geopolitical, economic, and resource disputes that personal combat wouldn't resolve
- Citizens and institutions, not just individuals, drive policy
- History shows power vacuums create instability rather than peace
- International law and institutions (however imperfect) provide frameworks that direct violence doesn't
**What might address underlying concerns:**
- Stronger accountability mechanisms for war crimes
- Democratic participation in foreign policy decisions
- Economic interdependence reducing conflict incentives
- Transparent governance and term limits
- International dispute resolution mechanisms
Your core point—that ordinary people shouldn't suffer for elite decisions—is valid and worth channeling into advocacy for accountability, transparency, and democratic control over war decisions.