
Originally Posted by
Brinne
There are things that I, myself, put value in - animal welfare, for instance - that becomes compromised when a situation arises that means those values and other values clash, such as "aversion to human cost and suffering [distinguished, subjectively, on my part, from human convenience.]" I know some people in the case of the Ancients like to jump on that as "see, they're hypocrites and betrayed their own values [and thus they can't complain at being annihilated by Venat]" but it's a natural part of being human and existing in the world, and negotiating with tragedy and complex situations. Ordinarily, I think most people would sympathize with an animal rights activist, or an environmentalist, making the choice to give up on a group of animals if it meant saving a group of humans without accusing them of hypocrisy - unless there's already a pre-established investment or material/emotional benefit in interpreting their choices in a universally negative way.
There is legitimately nothing the Ancients did wrong that we ourselves, as a human society, (correlated with the societies of the Sundered) are not also guilty of. This is much of the core of why the in-narrative and fandom arguments that it's acceptable and good that they were wiped out on the basis of their collective societal "sins" is rather mind-boggling at best - and that's without getting into posturing about how we're somehow "better" or "more resilient" or "not a Dead End" compared to them when the only reason we survived was due to massive amounts of intervention and direct assistance on their part.