In all fairness, it's a pretty nice speech, aside from the basic grammar and spelling errors.
Surprisingly, it's possibly the more honest of texts to come from this war, as it's come the closest to the truth: they aren't standing for anything, just burning. When you're left with nothing but the consequences of your own mistakes, I suppose you have nothing to rally around but the scavenging of some kind of "virtue" that comes only from mistaking suffering as validation, rather than that simple consequence.