Aizle:
Really? I'm making assumptions? My observations aren't verified by your text? I don't think you're reading the same quote I am, then; after all, since it's apparently nuanced and subtle, I must be missing some implied meaning that somehow vacates the philosophical contradictions with your stated position and the reality you advocate. So, I'll give you a more complex textual analysis and you can tell me what "nuanced" definitions of words you're using and specify your position. Or, I can stand by my conclusion that the paragraph is just feel-good nonsense that doesn't accurately reflect the opinion you're having difficulty expressing.
Aizle wrote:
All I've stated is that belief in equality being a tenet of good citizenship means "equality under the law" in my book.
Alright, this is generally acceptable thesis statement, but it needs some explication:
1. "Equality under the law" is both ambivalent and ambiguous, as there are several levels of law that affect any given individual. Consequently, you should specify whether this is local law, state law, federal law, international law, common law, Constitutional Law, or Natural Law. After all, "equality under the law" in a philosophical sense can point to all, any, or none of these various laws that affect an individual. I could assume you're talking about law as statutes passed by various governments that concern an individual, but then we run into jurisdictional and equivalence problems.
2. Equality itself is still vague and nondescript. Equality has several general definitions that may or may not apply to the philosophical discussion. It has even more field specific definitions that may or may not apply to a philosophical discussion based on what brand of metaphysics and epistemology we want to engage. Consequently, I ask again, what do you mean by "equality"?
Aizle wrote:
Not that everyone should be totally equal, each in their own saltbox house with a white picket fence.
You state this, but each of your examples in turn contradicts this statement.
Aizle wrote:
It means that is someone commits a crime, the poor guy should get the same punishment that the rich guy does that the Chinese guy does that the white guy does, etc.
Wealth is very much a deciding factor in the ability of individuals to defend themselves from the charges brought against them. Consequently, to demand "sameness" in punishment indicates that one must demand "sameness" in defense. Even assuming any party compared is found guilty, why should the individual with a better lawyer not be able to argue for some degree of clemency or leniency in sentencing? Yet, by your own words, "the ... guy should get the same punishment that the ... guy does that the ... guy does that the ... guy does, etc." Despite your declaration, you are specifically requesting a sameness of outcome. In fact, you use a serial tautology to do so: a guy is a guy is a guy is a guy, etc.
Aizle wrote:
It means that public schooling should be of the same quality regardless of if you live in a poor neighborhood or a rich one, in the city or in a rural area.
Once again, by your own admission, you're advocating a state of sameness. In this case, you also explicitly qualify that wealth should not be a determining factor in the state of the outcome: "quality education". Obviously, this requires redistributing monetary investment, much of it often voluntary, from high wealth concentrations to low wealth concentrations. It requires redistributing talent in the same way. And, more to the point, it demonstrably contradicts your overall qualifying standard: that outcomes should not be totally equal.
Aizle wrote:
It means that if you're in love with someone and want to make a commitment to them you should be able to get married, regardless of what gender your partner is.
The current standard already is already equal in the sense you've used it in every example. Your new standard merely changes the qualifying attribute from "opposite sex" to "person one loves". As such, it's still advocating a sameness of outcome, but remains mostly inconsequential and poorly chosen for the discussion at hand.
Aizle wrote:
It means that if you're a citizen of the United States that you have the same base opportunities as anyone else does.
Your final standard is ultimately the most self-defeating of them all. Quite simply, allowing a parent's wealth to affect the opportunities of even a single individual defeats it. The "same base opportunities" means that for equality to exist, in the sense you are using it as a measure of sameness, a parent cannot use their own accumulated wealth to affect the educational opportunity of their child; else, they do not indeed share the "same base opportunity" as someone else.
You have rejected the above arguments, but your language supports them quite clearly. Consequently, I return to my original series of questions: what is equality? Every example you've given is measured by the joint metrics of sameness and outcome. Since that is not the "nuanced" and "context" driven meaning you want, I again ask you to specify your position. If those statements do in fact constitute your opinion, then it is either internally inconsistent or focused on an equality of outcome and not an equality of opportunity.
Aizle wrote:
You're making a **** ton of assumptions there that aren't true and aren't supported by my text.
Except, I've made no assumptions. In fact, I'm only drawing conclusions based on the statements you have made. If you find them in error, then correct your examples and explication.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.