ohhh boy...
This always reads to me as "this is why we need hard times." I don't think whoever wrote this really thought about its implications. This also sets up a dichotomy between "hard" people and "weak" people, as if those things make the measure of a person's worth as a human being.
Sorry not sorry, but this quote always reads like an excuse/apology for dumping on people who were fortunate enough to not have to live in hard times. Being capable is good. We should reward capability and also make an enviroment that fosters it. We should all hope and work for a world where the average person doesn't have to live like a "warrior" or whatever.
The Roman empire was built on violence. Their foundational myth includes rape. People need to read actual history more.
there's also not enough being done to prevent the circumstances that lead people to a state of mind where they will murder someone. Tell someone who grew up poor in an environment where everyone around them grew up with trauma and abuse, passing those things along to their progeny, to "take more personal responsibility." When our emotions get high, our prefrontal cortex becomes inhibited. Imagine a life of trauma. Imagine only knowing poverty and abuse because everyone around you is always in survival mode. We need to keep people safe, and we also need to work towards a world where people don't grow up like that.
When it comes to thsese topics, I feel like hardly anyone asks, "why are these people acting like this?"
Like, do you actually think someone wakes up and goes, "I think murder is a cool thing to do today?" How is it not obvious someone is not in their right mind when they do something like that? This doesn't mean they get a free pass. They need to be restrained, rehabilitated, whatever. It means something led to that level of mental illness. It would be nice to see more people focusing on fixing the causes instead of the symptoms.