TheRiov wrote:
Yes, but 'life' is among those fundamental rights.
Addressing your edit:
TheRiov wrote:
In the example, exploiting someone's desire to exercise the right to life, to exercise his own right to profit does not create a morally neutral situation.
Did anyone say that the hypothetical man in the hypothetical story acted morally? Or, did someone (the person you responded to with the "right to life" argument as a matter of fact) say:
Quote:
The man acted immorally and in a socially unacceptable way. Why? He took advantage of the situation the woman was in.
Looks like you are trying to create a straw man again, in the face of people's statements.
The existence of grocery stores does not create a morally neutral situation either?
TheRiov wrote:
Our laws MUST reflect the hierarchy of rights--that life is chief among them.
Where does morality enter in?
TheRiov wrote:
I understand that you find that all these 'fundamental rights' are equal, so you feel that its an acceptable response to the threat of loss of property to respond with loss of life.
This is the heart of the schism here. You value material possessions equally with human life. Some of us see a quite different equation.
Your understanding of what people think is erroneous.
If someone steals from me, they are taking something that it took part of my life to acquire, either through labor to make, or through paid employment to buy. That theft shows that they are willing to "take" my life, and that my rights mean nothing to them. By taking that part of my life that I have devoted to acquiring said goods, they have effectively made me their slave. I will not live in slavery, and will not allow my family to be enslaved; anyone who attempts to make me their slave will be stopped with extreme prejudice.
TheRiov wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
You're declaring that the law has no room in it for morality? Or that the practice of law should be divorced from morality?
Why bother having laws in the first place then?
Oh, I'm sure that
you're ok with law being married to morality; as long as it's
your morality, right?
No. Morals exist because they form a framework for a sustainable society. The laws reflect that morality. In the past, social controls existed to enforce morality beyond laws-- In some societies they still do. Shunning, excommunication, honor codes, etc serve to enforce moral codes when there is no legal code to cover a situation.
In a society where such social controls no longer exist, we must increasingly turn to the law to the provide the same set of social controls.
So, once again, whose morality are you going to espouse as being married to those laws?
TheRiov wrote:
The net effect is the same. The problem is that many people (yourselves included) want to keep laws separate, and as a last resort. That's all well and good, and a noble goal. BUT you must then provide another social control that will serve its function. A zero accountability or accountability only measured by one's ability to enforce it with violence, (such as you advocate Elmo), or with money (such as Khross advocates) is not sustainable, and is therefor not 'moral'
You just stated that morals and laws are distinct. According to your statement above, social controls are used to enforce morality; without those social controls, the laws must fill in. Should the laws reflect the social controls that exist in other places? Should we adopt honor codes from the countries where it is acceptable (if not expected) to kill your daughter or wife for besmirching a man's honor?
How about a little closer to home? Should our laws reflect the social controls of the time of the Puritans' moral panic. Surely they attempted to uphold their societal values and interests using highly effective methods, should we codify those into law?
How about closer to our time? Should we enforce the morality of 1950's US in our laws? Or how about Current gang culture? They have societal values they place emphasis on...
Again, whose morality do you wish our laws to be married to?
TheRiov wrote:
Not at all. humans are social creatures. Our biology programs us to interact in a sustainable way. Anti-societal tendencies get evolved out of the gene-pool.
Bull, if our "biology" programs us in any way, it programs us to act in the way most beneficial to ourselves and our offspring. Our biology does not enable us to look past the next feed or ****. Sustainability has nothing to do with biological imperatives.
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko