pbleighton, on Apr 3 2006, 09:11 PM, said:
I think that your objection to a political discussion with a moral component in the context of this thread is that you are reluctant to agree with criticisms of your country (even though at some level you agree with them somewhat, as you said), muting moral criticism of policies with talk of political consensus and lawyer-like "your honor, opposing counsel can't PROVE it's immoral". Of course I can't prove it. Most political discussions, even those with little moral content, are rarely provable. This is why the injection of a moral dimension makes you nervous.. "all the bash america posts make me sad..."
As you are a Christian (and as an atheist, I knew it before you said so), something in the back of your head must be telling you that Jesus would agree with these criticisms.
Peter
i think you completely miss my point.. i don't object at all to arguing anything based on morality... what i object to is the use of the argument while being unable to tell anyone what standards are being used when an act is deemed immoral..
it is philosophically inconsistant to argue that a thing is immoral within the context of a subjective morality... when 2 people view the same occurrance, and one calls it moral while the other immoral, both are correct (if morality is subjective, nobody can say for sure who is wrong)... the whole argument is diluted when one of the pillars upon which it is based can be either black or white... this is elementary
i can easily argue any point based upon morality... i've already stated that if i did so, i'd be against most actions taken by most governments most of the time (the ends/means thingy)... but i can do that because i do believe in objective morality... for this reason, morality can't be one's reason for either condoning or objecting to an act (in the context of this discussion), because the concept itself is, at best, fuzzy for one while not for the other... we can object to actions taken by the u.s. gov't on political grounds, or on economic grounds, or on any other number of grounds... but when we object on moral grounds, we need to at least have some basis that gives us the right to call a thing 'immoral'... if subjective, my morality is every bit as valid as yours, therefore you can never be "right" using that argument...
as proof of subjective morality, you state "It changes over time - slave ownership was considered proper for millennia - including in the Bible."
taking that as a true statement, make your case for subjective morality... read mike's post first
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)