Chapter 327
Words:653Update:22/06/25 09:03:55
Regardless of whether it was the aboriginals or Great Xia, this war would be the harshest one in decades.
Some people felt that using poison was a good choice, and I used to think so too.
However, after thinking about it carefully, the consequences would be huge.
First, the war would have little to do with the aboriginals. A hundred bottles would be enough to wipe out hundreds of thousands of Great Xia soldiers. What did the war have to do with the aboriginals?
Second, what would the military think? If Ren Baqian did this, the value of the military would be halved.
Third, it was estimated that the top ten experts in the world would form a team to assassinate Ren Baqian. The danger was too great. Even if he hid in the palace, the empress wouldn't be able to protect him.
Fourth, what would the aboriginals become if they didn't experience blood and fire? After a long time, would the aboriginals still be as valiant as they were now? After a few decades, they would become flowers in a greenhouse.
Fifth, what would the young aboriginals think of war and human life? They would not take it seriously or look down on it. A few bottles would solve the problem without blood or sacrifice. Why would they care? (I think this point is very important.)
Sixth, and then on to the fifth point. Since the aboriginals didn't care about war and human life, what would they think of the people from other countries? Would they kill anyone they didn't like?
If the new generation of young people grew up without experiencing war, blood, and fire, and only knew that other countries allowed them to do whatever they wanted. What would happen then? One could imagine how tyrannical it would be.
Seventh, war could push forward the progress of human civilization. The major changes in human history were inseparable from war.
What Ren Baqian wanted to do was to push forward this process of progress and not rely on himself. He wanted to wipe out everything that could be born in this world.
There were still many problems with this simple list of seven points. However, these seven points were enough.
Especially the second, fourth, fifth, and sixth points.
This wasn't simply a matter of reducing the number of deaths.
It was a matter of the human heart.
In times of crisis, it was possible to use poison gas to influence the course of the war.
Using a few hundred kilograms of poison gas at the start of the war would make it a joke. The consequences would be equally serious in the future, and it would be more serious than the death of tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people.
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