As Yagyuu Munenori observed, in reference to the above, to take up arms when there is no other choice, “Is also part of the Way of Heaven”. He explains, “If you do not understand why this is so, the answer is that the leaves flourish and flowers bloom in spring, but leaves fall and trees wither with the coming of Autumn.” Or in other words, War is Yang. Peace is Yin. Both are necessary parts of the whole.
This I will agree with, and I have already admitted to being thrown off my center and towards the Yang, but I am finding it difficult to return to the center when more gasoline is deliberately poured on the fire that is Iraq.
Hastrman;1845824 said:
to have gone to war in Iraq could be seen as violence of a different sort, a violence that allowed the excessively Yang government of Iraq to persist (this is a Taoist concept, that Yin and Yang can be viewed as their opposites if you only change perspective). The invasion, itself Yang, can be viewed as similar to certain techniques of the Onmyou (Japanese reading of YinYang) mystics, who sometimes
added Yang to Yang or Yin to Yin, in order to force it back into equilibrium by achieving critical mass of the imbalanced force.
This assessment shows up nowhere in the Tao Te Ching, nor Chuang Tzu, nor do I agree with it. The tao is achieved by leaving it alone. Forcing the tao to work against itself to return it to balance is to go against it.
I am not against war since there are times when its time comes, but the war in Iraq was a bad idea from the start, and attempting to re-build it before the war has ended is folly.