RangerDave wrote:
In my opinion, charity and mercy are moral virtues and their absence is a moral failing (i.e., they are moral obligations), yet they are, by definition, entirely about giving that which the recipient has no right to demand. A man who never deprives another of their rights/entitlements, but who is otherwise utterly selfish, ruthless, and unforgiving, is not, in my view, a moral person.
I agree with this position. However, though I may dislike the morals of the person in your example, and exercise my freedom to not associate with them, supporting a position that forces them to surrender what is theirs because of my moral compass is equally immoral. If they chose to be ruthless, then that is their decision, and just as with the homeowner here, they can live with the consequences.
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No, I don't take anything close to every pro bono case that I could, but like I suggested in my last post, charity (like morality in general) is not an all-or-nothing proposition. I'm more charitable than some and considerably less charitable than many others. That doesn't make me a hypocrite; it makes me imperfect. That said, I don't think legal work is particularly analogous to emergency services. Yes, people often need lawyers because they find themselves in sh*tty circumstances, but it's rarely, if ever, an emergency situation that can and must be addressed on the spot: "Omg, the bank is foreclosing on my house! Quick, Random_Lawyer_01, I need you to run over to the courthouse right now and file for an injunction on this case you know nothing about!"
You must not do any family court, as that is exactly what happens, though it involves TPRs, etc.
However, my point was that if you followed what you put upon the FD here, responding to all emergencies potentially makes it impossible to actually perform for those clients that are paying to you zealously advocate their position. Could the FD have put out the fire? Sure, but given this is a rural area, so likely no hydrants, they would be expending the water in the tanks to do so... expending the oxygen in the tanks to do so... incapacitating a truck to do so (takes time to put the hoses back, etc). Should they be held responsible, or even accountable, because they had to make decisions about the limited resources, and their obligation to those that entered into an agreement with to provide services?