A group of children
are playing near two railway tracks, one still in use while the other disused.
Only one child is playing on the disused track, the rest on the operational
track. The train comes, and you are just beside the track interchange. You
could make the train change its course to the disused track and save most of
the kids. However, that would also mean the lone child playing by the
disused track would be sacrificed; or would you rather let the train go
its way?
Let's take a pause
to think what kind of decision we could make.
Most people
might choose to divert the course of the train, and sacrifice only one child.
You might think the
same way, I guess.
Exactly, I
thought the same way initially because to save most of the children at the
expense of only one child was rational decision most people would make, morally
and emotionally. But, have you ever thought that the child choosing to
play on the disused track had in fact made the right decision to play at a
safe place?
Nevertheless,
he had to be sacrificed because of his ignorant friends who chose to play
where the danger was.
This kind of
dilemma happens around us everyday. In the office, community, in politics
and especially in a democratic society, the minority is often sacrificed for
the interest of the majority, no matter how foolish or ignorant the majority
are, and how farsighted and knowledgeable the minority are.
The child who
chose not to play with the rest on the operational track was sidelined.
And in the case he was sacrificed, no one would shed a tear for him.
The friend who forwarded me the story
said he would not try to change the course of the train because
he believed that the kids playing on the operational track should
have known very well that track was still in use, and that they should
have run away if they heard the train's sirens. If the train was
diverted, that lone child would definitely die because he never thought
the train could come over to that track!
While we are all
aware that life is full of tough decisions that need to be made, we may not
realize that hasty decisions may not always be the right one.
1 comment:
they are just kids and they don't know the implications........
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