amicus
Literotica Guru
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- Sep 28, 2003
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[B]Sorry if I've jumped on your bandwagon Liar, but I had to reply.[/B]
There is a news item of recent, about a kidnapped girl child located 18 years later.
Do you have an opinion on that? Do you think it would be, could be, should be an universal opinion?
Depriving someone of their freedom is wrong. If there is universal acceptance of your constitution, it must be accepted as wrong universally, isn't freedom one of the basic tenets of it?
There is an opinion against the death penalty in capital crimes, usually held by the left and some deviant religious cults. What is your opinion?
If killing people is wrong, how can it suddenly become right for the state to kill people? Not in my name! I might add that I am liberal and atheist.
What you, and some others, object to in my posts, is a statement of absolutes which most shy away from, especially on social issues.
It is absolute and I know it and express it; that to take the life of an unborn child for any reason other than to save the mother's life, is a crime and wrong and should be treated as premeditated murder by both the mother and the physician.
That is only an absolute under your moral standard, not everyone else's. According to my moral standard abortion is fine up to 18 weeks as the foetus has no possibility of becoming viable. It's wrong to perform abortions, but fine to kill adults is that it?
That is what you don't like about my posts; you are unwilling to even contemplate moral absolutes.
When are you going to realise that there are no moral absolutes? Morality is learned from the people around us and the society we live in. Some of us have the intellect to develop our own moral standards and live by them.
In this current debate concerning socialized medicine, most seem willing and ready to sacrifice the rights of others, doctors in particular, for the 'greater good' of free health care for all.
With rights comes responsibilities, though I'm not sure how the doctor's rights are being infringed they have the responsibility to treat the sick, whether they can pay or not. Even lawyers do pro bono work!
I postulate that it is an absolute moral axiom that you cannot force another to do your bidding and still claim to be human.
There are thousands of dead plantation owners and slavers who would disagree with you, many built churches on the backs of slaves! By their moral standards slavery was a good thing.
It is not difficult to understand my philosophy, Liar, and you know that. The problem is, that so many others have built a layered world view on sacrificing the individual to the group, that to acknowledge even one small part of the primacy of the individual would destroy your entire philosophical foundation.
It isn't difficult to understand your philosophy, it is totally egocentric! If people don't believe what you believe they are wrong. Everyone should adhere to your moral standards because they are, in your opinion, the only moral standards. Where is the individual sacrificed to the group? Where does contributing to the common good infringe on your individuality?
That is why some are irritated by my posts; I remind them that they have the capacity to be human and somewhere along the way, lost it.
The final sentence says it all, you are so bloody arrogant you believe that everyone who doesn't conform to your world view is sub-human. No wonder you irritate people.
~~~
Hello, Teloz the Virgin, and welcome to the Author's Hangout, a place for writer's and others to exchange opinions and points of view.
And, thank you for the opportunity to expose your shallow dogmatism.
"...Depriving someone of their freedom is wrong. If there is universal acceptance of your constitution, it must be accepted as wrong universally, isn't freedom one of the basic tenets of it?"
The bolded portion of your statement above is a moral absolute.
The rest of your paragraph is vague and confused and rather meaningless. The Constitution of the United States did not 'create' the concept of individual human freedom, it merely acts to protect it. Individual human freedom is an universal self evident truth by definition and is not granted; it is innate.
"...If killing people is wrong, how can it suddenly become right for the state to kill people? Not in my name! I might add that I am liberal and atheist."
"If killing people is wrong..." You mean to say you don't know, that to take an innocent human life is wrong/immoral?
The following exposition of values includes the use of concepts and abstractions which most Liberal Atheists seem unable to cope with.
It is not carved in stone, handed down from some fuzzy faced God that human life is sacred; it is, rather, an intellectual process which begins with the acknowledgement of the self evident axiom that, "I exist", I am.
Values, morals, ethics, are involved with those things that are beneficial or harmful to support the initial axiomatic observation, which is, "life exists, I have life, I am living, thus that is and must be my basic and primary value; that of human life.
There are conflicts between those who possess life, even wars, somewhat of a 'given' through all of human history. Why?
One who possesses, 'life' has a corollary right to protect and defend that life one has. When another threatens that life, that person 'forfeits', no longer has, that right to life. I will assume you are capable of extrapolating that 'individual' imperative to protect his own right, to that of a mutual association who delegate the responsibility of protecting and defending life, to those best suited to do so.
They would be called, guards, policemen, soldiers; certainly you must have run across reference to them somewhere in your reading?
That should dispose of your doubt about what life is, why it is the fundamental value in any moral system and why one has the innate right to protect and defend that right.
Now what other drivel did you spout?
Ah, yes, you are confused about the concept of universals and absolutes; typical.
"...That is only an absolute under your moral standard, not everyone else's. According to my moral standard abortion is fine up to 18 weeks as the foetus has no possibility of becoming viable. It's wrong to perform abortions, but fine to kill adults is that it?"
Aargh..talk about ego maniacs; your moral standard, stated in absolute terms of course, permits you to kill a human child in the womb for the first 18 weeks of life. How generous of you! Izzat arbitrary on your part? Scientifically noted to be not viable? A whim? Guess work?
Here is the clear and absolute definition of human life: a new, totally unique in all of time and space, human being, begins life at the instant of conception. If that is too complex for a Liberal Pussy to comprehend, then pray tell, what is created at that instant if not human life? A Pollywog? A computer chip? A DNA regenerated dinosaur. An alien? A blade of grass?
No, my slow witted acquaintance, it is and can be but one thing and one thing only, A is A, it is what it is: a human life.
This will be the last of your inanities that I address:
With rights comes responsibilities, though I'm not sure how the doctor's rights are being infringed they have the responsibility to treat the sick, whether they can pay or not. Even lawyers do pro bono work!
I know this will be difficult for you to comprehend, but imagine you are a medical doctor. You spent vast amounts of money, yours, others or stolen by taxes, and ten years of difficult studies, then perhaps an internship before you have a service others are willing to purchase.
Now, suppose I, in my omniscient and omnipotent beneficence(hope I spelled that right), decide that I need your services two thousand miles from your home in a dusty Reservation for Native Americans.
You will work the hours I determine, you will provide only the services I approve and will dispense only the medication I accept.
Are you still not sure how your rights are being infringed upon?
The second of the Constitutional rights protected, after Life, is Liberty, and if you do not understand the word, it means individual freedom to live your life as you choose without infringing upon the rights of others.
Like one of the characters along the yellow brick road, "If you only had a brain..." (I paraphrase)
the always amiable Amicus
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