Chris's Personal Wiki :: rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMorality Commentshttps://cks.mef.org/space/rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMorality?atomcommentsDWiki2014-01-04T23:21:11ZRecent comments in Chris's Personal Wiki :: rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMorality.By Chris Siebenmann on /rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMoralitytag:CSpace2:rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMorality:8a22e36b92998a97499f7a675111614934a94b52Chris Siebenmann<div class="wikitext"><p>Setting aside the philosophical for the practical, I think that it's
far from established in the show that there is anywhere inhabitable
outside of the grasp of the Cantus humans or that the Cantus humans
consider the queerrats dispensable. Given how much work and attention
the Cantus humans devote to controlling the queerrats, I think in fact
that queerrat labour is probably quite important to the lifestyle of
Cantus humans.</p>
</div>2014-01-04T23:21:11ZBy lesterf1020 on /rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMoralitytag:CSpace2:rtblog/anime/ShinSekaiYoriRebellionMorality:e19cead44dff136763e034766c62ba93db622ed6lesterf1020<div class="wikitext"><p>I have never been a fan of binary options. I believe that false dilemmas have lead to a great many tragedies over human history. The Quearats had many other options beside slavery or genocide, the best of which was probably simply escaping. The show established that there wasn't a very high "human" population and that there were many areas that "humans" didn't live in or were even aware of. While the humans would probably have taken action if all of the quearats fled they would not have noticed if a colony or two disappeared. If the quearats engaged in a long distance migration I find it hard to believe that the humans would have hunted them just so they could have slaves they barely needed.</p>
</div>2014-01-04T13:21:09Z