Is that purely because we believe we have the status of moral agents, and a duty to carry out acts we deem moral? Or is it because North Koreans also have the status of being moral agents, and that's why we have a duty to them?
The answer to those questions would clarify for me whether we are supposed to consider North Koreans members of the in-group or the out-group
If they are moral agents toward whom we might have a duty, that sounds like we ought to consider them in-group.
But if they are out-group, why would we have any duty to liberate them?
But if they are out-group, why would we have any duty to liberate them?
When you've decided you don't understand the question, I'll happily rephrase it.
Forgot to ask, why we should spend blood and treasure liberating members of the out-group. How is that putting in-group needs first?
I'm saying people don't vote for it.
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If you convince them of what they should want, they'll vote differently.
A war of aggression, for me, is always immoral.
He is a sex offender, and not because he engages is consensual acts that some might find offensive.
A meritocracy guided by secular values may be your preference but others may hold to religious values as superior, that it is religious values that have elevated us above the savagery, cruelty, and viciousness of secularism.
Do you mean something like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness?
One troubling example: the rights of the woman versus the rights of the fetus versus the interest of the state and the country.
You do not know that we could take over North Korea without grave consequences. This points to a problem with ideological wish fulfillment.
Interesting example since Gandhi was opposed to the very thing you say is needed - power and domination
I agree that toleration should have its limits, but the problem remains as to what ought to be tolerated?
Send me a link to the sex offense that he was charged with, or the reasonable evidence that he should have been convicted (of some sex crime). — Bob Ross
Regarding the accusation of rape, the judge gave to the jury "the narrow, technical meaning of that term" under New York law as it existed at that time, which defined rape as forcible penetration with the penis, as Carroll had specifically alleged. The jury rejected her rape claim, but found Trump liable for a lesser degree of sexual abuse than rape. In July 2023, Judge Kaplan clarified that the jury had found that Trump had raped Carroll according to the common definition of the word. In August 2023, Kaplan dismissed a countersuit and wrote that Carroll's accusation of "rape" is "substantially true". — Wikipedia - E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump
That's what I've been trying to tell you: democratic nations don't "take over" other countries to fix those other countries' morality. It would have to be done by either coercing or misleading the people: i.e., by undemocratic means. So, what superior values are you imposing on another non-democratic government?I'm saying people don't vote for it.
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If you convince them of what they should want, they'll vote differently.
People haven’t ever voted on when to go to war—that’s not how republics work I’m afraid. — Bob Ross
Who attacked the Nazi regime just to improve its morals?Is going to war with the Nazis to stop the Holocaust a war of aggression? — Bob Ross
Again, you seem to have missed the point. A meritocracy guided by secular values may be your preference but others may hold to religious values as superior, that it is religious values that have elevated us above the savagery, cruelty, and viciousness of secularism. — Fooloso4
It sounds like you don’t believe in personifying the State; and I would just briefly note that in a representative republic you have to—the government represents, to some sufficient extent, the people. You can’t separate any member of the government, or the government in totality, from the people in proper republics.
That’s incredibly immoral. That’s like saying that an individual should only secure their own power and advance their own interests as much as they can—what about caring about other people? What about moral law?
This is so obviously wrong, though. You are saying, e.g., that an nation shouldn’t interfere with mass genocide in another nation. It’s nonsense.
The reason I used those terms, is because it is true; and your terms do not accurately portray the point.
For example, india doesn’t have just a problem of a repressive government: their society, the legacy of castes, is still enforced by everyone at a societal level. The society itself still embodies the view that the untouchables are worthless scum—you can’t mask that with “it’s a repressive government”. — Bob Ross
That’s true; but wouldn’t you agree Talibanian Afghanistan is a prime example where it is warranted?
Send me a link to the sex offense that he was charged with, or the reasonable evidence that he should have been convicted (of some sex crime). — Bob Ross
And they, my friend, would be objectively wrong. I don’t care about people’s opinions—this theory is governed by facts. — Bob Ross
Do you mean something like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness?
:smile: — Bob Ross
Most of the dilemma revolve, like abortion, around people not understanding how rights actually work. — Bob Ross
You do not know that we could take over North Korea without grave consequences. This points to a problem with ideological wish fulfillment.
I never claimed to the contrary—you sidestepped my hypothetical — Bob Ross
I agree that toleration should have its limits, but the problem remains as to what ought to be tolerated?
Fallacy of the heap. — Bob Ross
And pay for that Superpower military, which is crucial. That now the debt service cost more than the whole defense budget is telling. And there's absolutely no reason why the country won't continue to use it's credit card from USD's global role.To pivot a little, I would say you are underestimating the power of European/American banking and it's allies.
America's debt is just a way of fleecing the American labour and business sectors to finance it's bankers and elites. — Swanty
But still part of nationalism. And this is why people will get upset of a troll-like thread called "in support of Western supremacy, Nationalism and Imperialism". Perhaps a similar thread like "in support of of Marxism-Leninism, the good aspects of the Marxist ideology" would be for someone reasonable, but for others it would be deliberate trolling. Yet someone could post a thread like that and tell us of all the positive aspects of the ideology, and there are in PF many who consider themselves Marxists. Where he (or she) would go astray is to deny the negative sides of this totalitarian ideology and go for the insanely ludicrous idea of "if it weren't for Stalin". Or Mao, or Pol Pot. Luckily (in my view) the Marxists here do understand the complexity and the perils of totalitarianism and I respect that.They are a different form of nationalism. — Bob Ross
I see the obvious downsides of nationalism (when it becomes radical), like fascism, but it seems wrong to go to the opposite extreme and deny any nationalism and imperialism whatsoever. — Bob Ross
Except the US didn't go to war to stop the Holocaust.Is going to war with the Nazis to stop the Holocaust a war of aggression? Sure. — Bob Ross
Except the US didn't go to war to stop the Holocaust.
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Have the historical facts straight, Bob.
Is going to war with the Nazis to stop the Holocaust a war of aggression? Sure. Is it immoral? Not at all. Explain to me my flaw in reasoning here, without pointing out the red herring that in WW2 the US didn’t join until they were attacked (or a more general statement outlining it for other countries and when they joined).
And this is why people will get upset of a troll-like thread called "in support of Western supremacy, Nationalism and Imperialism".
Perhaps a similar thread like "in support of of Marxism-Leninism, the good aspects of the Marxist ideology" would be for someone reasonable, but for others it would be deliberate trolling
So no, Bob, you simply cannot bypass the ugly aspects of ultranationalism and jingoism as "a different form of nationalism" and then contnue talk about it positively.
. But in that case, the whole ideology is against democracy, portrays other human beings as the enemy and justifies a violent revolution to be justified, as least as the 19th Century ideas went.
We have Trump's admission that he grabs women by the pussy.
when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. ... Grab 'em by the pussy
On Tuesday, May 12, 2023, the Manhattan jury of nine men and three women found the former president liable for sexually abusing and defaming Carroll and awarded Carroll $5 million in damages.
Please cite those facts. You like to throw around terms such as 'objectively'. I know you will not agree but values are not facts. The fact is, however, that the belief in equality comes from Christianity not secular sources.
What does this mean? Do you think this stands as a reasoned argument?
In his recent book constitutional scholar Jeffery Rosen argues that the term 'the pursuit of happiness' as used by the Founders traces back before the philosophers of Liberalism to the classical philosophers such as Aristotle and Cicero. The pursuit of happiness is deliberative and public minded. It is not self interested but a matter of the 'common good' and 'general welfare'.
The right to the pursuit of happiness is not the right to do whatever you think will make you happy or even the right to do whatever you want as long as it does not impinge on the rights of other
No. the fact is that the dilemma of abortion does not resolve. It is a stand off of conflicting rights.
Your hypothetical? Do you mean "without grave consequences"? The actions taken by one nation against another should not be based on improbable hypotheticals.
Do you think that real world problems are like the difference between stopping the Nazis and stopping people from eating vanilla ice cream?
The caste system was officially outlawed in 1950 but it still persists in certain parts of India. From what I understand, it is highly controversial in India. It is wrong to say that it persists everywhere in India.
The Taliban is a wicked force and promotes wicked policies, but I wouldn't say that Afghan society is degenerate. There was pre-Taliban Afghanistan.
I suggest the opposite is the case: you cannot unify any member of government with any of the people it rules over. It’s impossible for someone to represent people she’s never met, for example, and the wants and needs of the people she has met shift to such an extent that to keep track of them all would be impossible. People are only nominally represented by politicians.
I’m not saying the state should do that, only that they cannot do otherwise.
- Jefferson to Madison, January 30, 1787Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem. Even this evil is productive of good. It prevents the degeneracy of government, and nourishes a general attention to the public affairs. I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.
Imperialism is the expansion of power and jurisdiction. One cannot give aid by establishing a permanent institution and ruling over the victims.
Imperialism suggests occupation and the expansion of power. Implying that this is an act to save victims is nonsense.
That's what I've been trying to tell you: democratic nations don't "take over" other countries to fix those other countries' morality
Who attacked the Nazi regime just to improve its morals?
And why do you think shifting the subject in every exchange is going to convince anyone of your own moral rectitude?
A war of aggression, for me, is always immoral.
Is going to war with the Nazis to stop the Holocaust a war of aggression? Sure. Is it immoral? Not at all.
There is no actual objective wrong, only conventional wrongs, yes
Usefull for what, to be able to declare war?
It's neither totally realist nor anti-realist I think. Morals are very real in that they exist as conventions for people to follow within certain groups, and are therefor not merely subjective expressions or choices of individuals... but they are also not the things you go looking for and can find as objective facts in the world. We create them over time.
If you are suggesting that Western culture (whatever that may be) is better in EVERY single way that matters I would want to see how you are calculating this?
One such example would be how well other countries around the world have managed to separate religion from state (China and Japan had to create a concept for Religion to talk about monotheistic traditions in the late 19th century)
In Australia the culture has survived in spite of the attempts of erasing it during colonization.
The difficulty is in showing how we can evaluate this in any objective manner.
I created a thread sometime ago regarding the premise of 'better languages' and it was met with equal hostility. Some people are just not willing to talk about such ideas.
I do think European Culture is probably better than US Culture simply because it is not anywhere near as homogenous as US culture. European culture is a patchwork of various traditions and ideas that have rubbed up against each other, and contended with each other (often violently), for millennia.
The biggest issue is defining what is meant by Western Culture and whether or not the term is at all useful.
Is supremacy, nationalism and imperialism necessarily 'bad'. I think not.
That is not a sex crime to grab a woman “by the pussy” if she let’s you do it. — Bob Ross
Traditionally, yes, it comes from Christianity. I am not sure how deep we want to get into this — Bob Ross
The fact that a farmer is good at farming is not hypothetical: it is not relative to the beliefs or desires you have about it, nor that I have about it. This is a form of objective goodness — Bob Ross
No. the fact is that the dilemma of abortion does not resolve. It is a stand off of conflicting rights.
I can tell you that is certainly not the case; although, like I said, people think that because they don’t understand how normative ethics works. — Bob Ross
No, but my point is that we don’t have to have an exact formula of what to tolerate to agree that a nation should step in to stop the Nazis. — Bob Ross
Come on Bob. I think you know better! Not all women let "a star" do it. And to assume ahead of time that they will is a rapist mentality. But I see that you do go on to admit he is a rapist.
If good at farming means producing an abundance of crops
Rather than looking to ethical theory we need to look at what is actually going on.
And it is not as if there is no dispute on this between those who do understand normative ethics, unless you mean that to understand it is to agree with you
We might agree that there are cases where we should step in, but this ignores the larger question of when we should step in. Should we step in to stop the Russians or the Israelis or Hamas?
I was just noting that what he said was not an admission that he rapes women. — Bob Ross
You missed the point: if you are a moral anti-realist, then you can’t say there is such a thing as being actually better or worse at farming. — Bob Ross
The fact that a farmer is good at farming is not hypothetical: it is not relative to the beliefs or desires you have about it, nor that I have about it. This is a form of objective goodness — Bob Ross
Rather than looking to ethical theory we need to look at what is actually going on.
The circumstances can inform our ethical decisions, but there’s more to it than that: you can’t purely empirically determine what is right and wrong. — Bob Ross
On the point I was making, there isn’t much dispute. It is uncontroversially true, for the vast majority of ethicists, that politics should be governed by ethics (ultimately). Ethics is about right and wrong behavior afterall. — Bob Ross
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