Is Resistance Ever Truly Moral? The Ethical Dilemmas of Falrus Civilians
- Joanna Monigatti
- Mar 15
- 2 min read
Dear Space Travellers

Stories often paint resistance in bold, heroic colors.
The rebel stands against tyranny.The oppressed rise up.Freedom triumphs.
But reality — and the world of Attack on Planet Falrus — is rarely that simple.
On Falrus, civilians live under the constant presence of an occupying force. Patrol ships drift silently in the sky. Curfews dictate daily life. Conversations are whispered, because even a careless word can attract unwanted attention.
In this kind of world, resistance begins quietly.
A hidden message passed between neighbors.A shipment that mysteriously “goes missing.”A technician who delays repairing surveillance systems.
At first, these acts feel small. Harmless, even. But each one carries risk. Because resistance does not exist in isolation.
Every action has consequences.
History teaches us that resistance movements can be powerful forces for justice. The French Resistance during World War II sabotaged Nazi supply lines. Underground movements helped bring down colonial regimes. Protest movements across the world have pushed societies toward greater freedom.
Yet those victories often came with terrible costs.
Acts of sabotage could trigger brutal retaliation. Entire communities were punished for the actions of a few rebels. Innocent civilians sometimes paid the price for resistance they never even supported.
This is the ethical tension faced by ordinary people on Falrus.
Imagine you are a civilian shopkeeper in a quiet settlement. One night, a rebel group asks you to hide equipment in your storage room. If you refuse, you may be helping the occupiers maintain control.
But if you agree and the equipment is discovered, the authorities might shut down your entire neighborhood.
What is the moral choice?
Is helping the resistance the right thing to do — even if it endangers others?Or is protecting your family and community the greater responsibility?
On Falrus, different people answer this question in different ways.
Some civilians secretly support the rebels, believing that freedom is worth any sacrifice. Others choose cautious neutrality, hoping to survive until the occupation ends. And a few decide to cooperate openly with the authorities, convinced that stability is better than chaos.
None of these choices are simple.None are entirely pure.
In oppressive systems, morality often becomes blurred. Survival itself becomes an ethical calculation.
Science fiction has long been a powerful way to explore these dilemmas. By placing human struggles in distant worlds, stories allow us to examine difficult questions without the weight of real-world politics.
Falrus is not just a planet under occupation. It is a mirror reflecting a timeless human problem: how people respond when power becomes unjust.
Resistance can be heroic.But it can also be dangerous, complicated, and morally ambiguous.
Perhaps that is why stories about rebellion continue to resonate across cultures and centuries. They force us to confront uncomfortable truths about courage, responsibility, and the cost of freedom.
Because the hardest question may not be whether resistance is moral.
The hardest question is this:
If you lived on Falrus… what would you choose?
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All my love,
Joanna



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