Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism
The cognitive process of explaining away the human cost of anti-communist campaigns by appealing to the geopolitical anxieties, ideological fervor, or "complexities" of the Cold War (or its modern equivalents). It treats state violence as an understandable, if regrettable, overreaction to a perceived existential threat, removing active moral responsibility by citing the pressures of the era or the provocations of the targeted groups.
Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism Example: A historian arguing, "While the Vietnam War led to immense civilian casualties, it must be understood within the context of the U.S. policy of containment, which was a rational response to monolithic communist expansion as perceived at the time." This rationalization does not celebrate the harm but drains it of its human horror, transforming burned villages and massacres into abstract outcomes of a "rational" strategic doctrine.
Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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