09-22-2012, 05:51 PM
again being honoured for killing or for being brave is different from having honour, often honour makes other people angry.
disobeying an order because it's wrong...that's honour abiding by a set of rules or concepts.
a soldier may kill on a broad scale but an honourable soldier will not kill a child unless it's through fear of death. and even them some men would rather die. again, crime is not an honourable act though it could be; a mother whose prepared to kill her husband in order to stop her child being molested. honour sometimes has little to do with being good to the masses.
disobeying an order because it's wrong...that's honour abiding by a set of rules or concepts.
a soldier may kill on a broad scale but an honourable soldier will not kill a child unless it's through fear of death. and even them some men would rather die. again, crime is not an honourable act though it could be; a mother whose prepared to kill her husband in order to stop her child being molested. honour sometimes has little to do with being good to the masses.
