Hard-edged realismđź«©

ray

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What bothers me isn’t the idea of peace itself. There’s nothing wrong with it. What bothers me is the staged, performative version of it.

We’re encouraged to believe that cruelty is just a misunderstanding. That if we remove weapons from films, soften our language, and avoid ever offending anyone, people will somehow become better. As if evil were just a result of bad editing and the wrong choice of words.

But meanwhile, somewhere a war is happening. Somewhere the strong take advantage of the weak. Somewhere help is exchanged for humiliation. Somewhere children quietly hurt other children and animals,without any ideology at all, simply because they can.

And you start to realize the problem isn’t the movies.
The world isn’t “sometimes” cruel. It is cruel by default. That isn’t a tragedy-it’s just how things are. Denying it is like denying gravity. You can try, but not for long.
At the same time, calling cruelty absolute evil is also an oversimplification. It feels comforting, but it doesn’t help.

Cruelty isn’t a philosophical idea. It’s a tool. Like a knife. It can be used to cut bread, or to do things you don’t want to think about before sleeping. The issue isn’t the knife-it’s the hand that holds it, and the intention behind it.

There is cruelty that exists for pleasure, control, or humiliation. It is primitive and destructive. It doesn’t need explanation-only consequences.

And then there is firmness that is necessary. When someone must be stopped because they won’t stop themselves. When boundaries must be defended. When softness turns into an invitation for harm. It isn’t pretty or comfortable, but without it, the world quickly belongs to those who never hesitate.

A person who gives up the ability to be firm doesn’t become kind. They become easy to use. Usually by the wrong people.

That’s why “let’s just be kinder” sounds good, but doesn’t really work. It ignores one simple truth: kindness without strength is just a request. And sometimes, it’s a request no one intends to respect.

It’s far more useful to learn to tell the difference. Between real harm and real necessity. Between manipulation and genuine suffering. Between empty words and real meaning.

Filtering information, critical thinking, inner discipline-none of it sounds exciting. But it works. Unlike slogans.

And yes, even your body matters. Not for looks, but because weakness rarely goes unnoticed.

The world won’t become softer just because we describe it that way.
But you can become a little less naĂŻve.
And sometimes, that’s enough.
 
The last words of John Brown (first American executed for treason after leading slave rebellions) were: "I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land can never be purged away but with blood. I had as I now think: vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed; it might be done".

Unfortunately, everything good in our lives has been the direct result of violence and bloodshed. It's how it's always been. With modern conveniences we have distanced ourself from what happened just a generation before us. How do you handle the realities of the world that we live in? Does this bring despair or does it encourage you to look for community to support those who you can?
 
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