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Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 00:56
If I had a penny for every time the phrase "imposing your morality on everybody" (and its ilk) was used in the Backroom, I could buy Creative Assembly and maybe SEGA, too. The phrase is usually used to strike out against arguments for making laws the user disagrees with.


Person A: I think we should outlaw XYZ.
Person B: Stop imposing your morality on anybody!
Awkward pause.
Person B then usually follows with a wry comment on the religious or political beliefs of Person A.

I was under the impression that most, if not all laws involved imposing one persons' morality over another. If this is the case, then the objection that one person - or one group - is imposing his or her morality over another person or group is hardly an objection at all!

So if some morals must triumph legally over others, then whose morals win? Should the majority decide the morals? Or does morality come from some other source?

Papewaio
08-10-2005, 01:14
Person A: I think we should outlaw XYZ.
Person B: Stop imposing your morality on anybody!

As person A I would reply: Why? You just tried to impose your morality on me?

Azi Tohak
08-10-2005, 01:19
Morality being decided by a majority would be a nice idea. But hey, I would love to see everyone in the backroom agree on what to drink with their steak at supper one night. So that won't work, too many different things to disagree on.

And as much as some people might (heck, will) dispute this, laws come from religion. For America, it is a combination of the 10 commandments and the New Testament. Actually, I think that is true about most any western nation. Eastern nations have their own religious sources for their laws.

You are right Alex, laws are about imposing one groups morality on anothers. But the fun part is deciding who gets to impose what on whom.

Azi

Steppe Merc
08-10-2005, 01:21
Well since I'm usually person B, I'd say that because I'm more often in favore of allowing, rather than restricting, I'm not impossing as much as what person A wants to do, since it is often more restrictive.

Byzantine Prince
08-10-2005, 01:23
Person A: I think we should outlaw XYZ.
Person B: Stop imposing your morality on anybody!
Person A has no right to demand such outrageous things if they are not rectricted by the constitution and the carter of rights and freedoms. Somehow they sometimes suceed and everytimes they do they ruin society.


That is all. ~:handball:

Sasaki Kojiro
08-10-2005, 01:24
Who gets to "impose morality"?

Whoever is right.

PanzerJaeger
08-10-2005, 01:41
So if some morals must triumph legally over others, then whose morals win?

The Right. We cant afford to play a relativity game with the amoral(immoral) leftists who seek to tear down our society.

If some pinko tells you your imposing your morality on him, tell him its for his own good. :bow:

Kagemusha
08-10-2005, 01:59
We live in a democratic society. The majority gets to impose it's morality on the minority.

I totally agree. ~:cheers:

Grey_Fox
08-10-2005, 02:11
Whoever is right.

Who decides what is right?

Azi Tohak
08-10-2005, 02:13
Lawyers and University Professors and whoever screams the loudest.

Azi

Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 02:20
Well since I'm usually person B, I'd say that because I'm more often in favore of allowing, rather than restricting, I'm not impossing as much as what person A wants to do, since it is often more restrictive.
So laws should be made (or remain unmade) so as to be as least restrictive as possible?

Example argument: banning alcoholic consumption for people under the age of 18. One side says "don't ban it" (or "remove the ban") while the other side supports the ban to reduce alcohol-related fatalities among teenagers. The morality of people (children, even) under 18 drinking alcohol is a fuzzy subject - the Ten Commandments don't bar it, and most (to my knowledge) religious systems don't cover it. But those who support the ban want (arguably) to save people from themselves (and, perhaps, save others as well).

Who is right in this case? Well, it is very likely that people could disagree on it, and that there would be no general consensus on whether one option is more moral than another. Who decides? In a democracy, like Cube pointed out, the majority does. So in a democracy, Person B really has no grounds to complain about the imposition of one morality over another.



Person A has no right to demand such outrageous things if they are not rectricted by the constitution and the carter of rights and freedoms. Somehow they sometimes suceed and everytimes they do they ruin society.


That is all.
I'm not sure I understand you (and I'm not sure I want to ~;p). Are you saying that Person A cannot impose his morals unless they are in the Constitution and this vacuous "charter of rights and freedoms"? First of all, in the US anyway, there is no charter of rights and freedoms outside of the Constitution. Secondly, consider this example.

You are Person A. You wish to ban the action of kicking another person in the shin (I know, you probably want that to be legal ~;p). I am Person B. I want to kick you in the shin (this is hypothetical). The Constitution is silent on the issue of shin-kicking and strangely, local law is too. So you decide to make a law banning shin-kicking. I protest that you are imposing your morality on me and there is nothing in the Constitution saying I can't kick you in the shin. What do you do? Besides kicking me repeatedly in the shins.

That's just an example. I don't think the Constitution protects shin-kicking. I also in no way condone the senseless kicking of shins - be they liberal or conservative shins, white shins or black shins, heterosexual shins or homosexual shins. Red Sox shins, however, are fair game.

I'm not sure if that answers your comment or if I misunderstood you, BP.


Whoever is right.
So, you are not a relativist, Sasaki? I apologize for mentally mislabelling you into the same category as JAG et all. ~;) However, I fear that the deciding or discover of who is truly right is about as easy as deciding whose morality "wins".

Big King Sanctaphrax
08-10-2005, 02:24
I think that the imposition of morality is only reasonable in cases where what you are concerned with affects people apart from the person actually performing the action. Nobody should have the right to impose their morality on people's private lives.

Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 02:28
Fair enough. But how do you define what affects just the private life of one person and not society (or segments of society)?

I could and would argue that homosexual marriage, the issue in which the imposition of morality complaint is used the most, is a concern of society.

Byzantine Prince
08-10-2005, 02:43
I'm not sure I understand you (and I'm not sure I want to ~;p). Are you saying that Person A cannot impose his morals unless they are in the Constitution and this vacuous "charter of rights and freedoms"? First of all, in the US anyway, there is no charter of rights and freedoms outside of the Constitution. Secondly, consider this example.

You are Person A. You wish to ban the action of kicking another person in the shin (I know, you probably want that to be legal ~;p). I am Person B. I want to kick you in the shin (this is hypothetical). The Constitution is silent on the issue of shin-kicking and strangely, local law is too. So you decide to make a law banning shin-kicking. I protest that you are imposing your morality on me and there is nothing in the Constitution saying I can't kick you in the shin. What do you do? Besides kicking me repeatedly in the shins.

That's just an example. I don't think the Constitution protects shin-kicking. I also in no way condone the senseless kicking of shins - be they liberal or conservative shins, white shins or black shins, heterosexual shins or homosexual shins. Red Sox shins, however, are fair game.

I'm not sure if that answers your comment or if I misunderstood you, BP.

What don't you inderstand? If the person is trying to ban white people from let's say drinking, there's a charter here in Canada that prevents that from hapening. IF you want kick someone's shin, you can't because obviously that's assault, and may I add a piss poor example.

If someone like Hilary is trying to ban the game Grand Theft Auto, hypothetically, that would breach some law of needless censorship I'm sure, and so it's impossible. The constitution is not absolute though, so there's always gonna flexibility in what should banned and what shouldn't. But not that much.

ICantSpellDawg
08-10-2005, 02:56
What don't you inderstand? If the person is trying to ban white people from let's say drinking, there's a charter here in Canada that prevents that from hapening. IF you want kick someone's shin, you can't because obviously that's assault, and may I add a piss poor example.

If someone like Hilary is trying to ban the game Grand Theft Auto, hypothetically, that would breach some law of needless censorship I'm sure, and so it's impossible. The constitution is not absolute though, so there's always gonna flexibility in what should banned and what shouldn't. But not that much.


the funny thing, tho - is who the hell wrote the constitution in the first place?

some old dead white christians (or deists - whatever the current belief is)
who says that what they wrote was the way things should go?

why is this the rock on which my life is based?

do the dead get a say in my life today just because they happened to beat the king? because might makes right they get to say what can and cannot be changed?

this is a never ending arguement - people with no respect for authority shouldnt use the defense of the constitution as a reason for their aims. it is a cover

Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 02:59
What don't you inderstand?
Specifically, I was confused over your use of the English language:

Person A has no right to demand such outrageous things if they are not rectricted by the constitution and the carter of rights and freedoms. Somehow they sometimes suceed and everytimes they do they ruin society.
To me, that leterally means: Person A has no right to demand [the banning of certain things] if [the bannings] are not restricted by the Constitution and the charter of rights and freedoms. Somehow [Person A] sometimes succeeds and [every time] [Person A] does [Person A] ruins society.

I interpreted it to mean what I posted earlier. :book:


What don't you inderstand? If the person is trying to ban white people from let's say drinking, there's a charter here in Canada that prevents that from hapening. IF you want kick someone's shin, you can't because obviously that's assault, and may I add a piss poor example.

If someone like Hilary is trying to ban the game Grand Theft Auto, hypothetically, that would breach some law of needless censorship I'm sure, and so it's impossible. The constitution is not absolute though, so there's always gonna flexibility in what should banned and what shouldn't. But not that much.
This is also confusing to me. And I didn't think it was that bad an example.

Basically, what you are saying is "You can't impose your morality on me because that's against the law." Which is in itself an imposition of morality. On Canada.

Papewaio
08-10-2005, 03:16
the funny thing, tho - is who the hell wrote the constitution in the first place?

some old dead white christians (or deists - whatever the current belief is)
who says that what they wrote was the way things should go?

why is this the rock on which my life is based?

do the dead get a say in my life today just because they happened to beat the king? because might makes right they get to say what can and cannot be changed?

this is a never ending arguement - people with no respect for authority shouldnt use the defense of the constitution as a reason for their aims. it is a cover

Just remember that that consitution has been changed and updated, although not as much as a Microsoft program patching.

Also the current law and its interpretation will differ somewhat to the law that existed when the consitution first came into effect.

Byzantine Prince
08-10-2005, 03:17
Why are you confusing things? There's no way someone can ban something simply because it's immoral. If that were true then threesomes would be illigal.

Things don't work that way. 'Imposition of morality' holds no bearing, and is semantiaclly contradictory. My morality is not the same as your morality, but my sense of justice has to be the same as yours, or else one of us is going to jail for sure. ~;)

Papewaio
08-10-2005, 03:20
BTW It could be argued that morality is independent of law but a valid law is dependent on morals. Moral outcome is the consequences from ones actions. You can lie, cheat and steal but at some level there will be negative feedback for negative actions on a social and individual level.

Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 03:25
There's no way someone can ban something simply because it's immoral.

Absurd. Murder is immoral. So is shin-kicking (arguably). Both are banned. Because they are immoral.


Things don't work that way. 'Imposition of morality' holds no bearing, and is semantiaclly contradictory. My morality is not the same as your morality, but my sense of justice has to be the same as yours, or else one of us is going to jail for sure.
Who makes laws? Legislatures. Legislatures, nine times out of ten, are made up of human politicians. These politicians use someone's morality in making legislation - either their own perception of what is moral or their constituents' perceptions. When these laws are legislated, the morality of either the politicians or their constituents is being imposed on the people represented by that legislature.

So, "Imposition of morality" does hold bearing and is not semantically contradictory.

JimBob
08-10-2005, 03:28
Society as a whole decides. If you want to kill someone society has decreed that you can not. Now you can choose to live with that, or you can leave find some other people and form a society where killing is okay. And the dead should never get a vote. To paraphrase Chesterton "Tradition is the means by which the dead majority prevent the rule by the oligarchy of those who merely walk the Earth."

Alexander the Pretty Good
08-10-2005, 03:32
And the dead should never get a vote. To paraphrase Chesterton "Tradition is the means by which the dead majority prevent the rule by the oligarchy of those who merely walk the Earth."
When do the dead get a vote? In the Constitution? That's also absurd. To literally apply ithat line of thinking would require society as a whole to update its descisions every time there is a murder trial - because the past laws against murder could be made by someone already dead.

Strike For The South
08-10-2005, 03:48
We live in a democratic society. The majority gets to impose it's morality on the minority.

Not true we live in a republic made to protect the minoity so the mob dosent run them over wiht here morals ~:cheers:

Gawain of Orkeny
08-10-2005, 03:55
The only difference between a Republic and a Democracy is that you get to choose not to vote for the guy who allowed morals you don't agree with to enter the system.

No in a republic there are certain things that the majority may not change. It doesnt come up to a vote.

Steppe Merc
08-10-2005, 03:57
Good point there Gawain, though I may not neccassarily like that fact all the time.
But otherwise, if the majority of people t hought those who have extra marital sex should all be stoned to death, that means that that would become law, just because that's what the majority believed.

ICantSpellDawg
08-10-2005, 04:07
Good point there Gawain, though I may not neccassarily like that fact all the time.
But otherwise, if the majority of people t hought those who have extra marital sex should all be stoned to death, that means that that would become law, just because that's what the majority believed.


but the supreme court would, most likely, strike the law down based on the fact that it was unconstitutional

even though the majority believed it and the majority would be governed by it, dead people's laws that didn't even pretend to have divine inspiration trumped the will of the majority

i smell archaic paternalism...

the fact is - the supreme court votes to stop laws based on a superlative morality (one whose legitimacy and roots i dont fully understand). it trumps majority rule.

if one believes in social darwinism or agnosticism, there is no real reason for this to happen - majority rules - superlative "morality" is a non-issue

i believe that this nations laws are based on the constitution, the bill of rights, european christian thought and the testaments, old and new.

i dont believe in any of it, but it is the way that the country was designed to work

to change the foundation would be to change everything, even the things that we tend to be comfortable with.

i am just not sure that from such a nihilistic perspective that there really is any impetus to actually change the system

bmolsson
08-10-2005, 08:25
Morality should never be imposed if it doesn't give a collective benefit. Also everyone in the collective should have a choice to leave the collective if they disagree.

ichi
08-10-2005, 18:12
The rules should be based on the collective will of the people, but constrained to prevent mob rule or the oppression of the innocent minority by the whims of the majority. They should be based on the theories of fairness and equality.

There must be a method to assess the will of the people, which in turn must be tempered through review by individuals who have selected to ensure fairness and equality. Pretty much like the Constitutional Government of the United States of America. Democratically elected representatives and a strong judiciary to review it all.

You can't impose morality. You can impose punishments and sanctions against those who act illegally. But that won't stop people from trying to impose their morality on others.

ichi :bow:

Don Corleone
08-10-2005, 18:18
Well since I'm usually person B, I'd say that because I'm more often in favore of allowing, rather than restricting, I'm not impossing as much as what person A wants to do, since it is often more restrictive.

No Steppe, you're not. You frequently say that people that have religious leanings shouldn't be allowed to engage in discourse on politics. I like you, a lot, and I respect a lot of your other viewpoints, but this sort of secular fundamentalism is every bit as intolerant as islamic or christian fundamentalism.

Azi Tohak
08-11-2005, 00:28
The rules should be based on the collective will of the people, but constrained to prevent mob rule or the oppression of the innocent minority by the whims of the majority. They should be based on the theories of fairness and equality.

There must be a method to assess the will of the people, which in turn must be tempered through review by individuals who have selected to ensure fairness and equality. Pretty much like the Constitutional Government of the United States of America. Democratically elected representatives and a strong judiciary to review it all.

You can't impose morality. You can impose punishments and sanctions against those who act illegally. But that won't stop people from trying to impose their morality on others.

ichi :bow:

Well spoken. It doesn't always work... but we're not perfect.

Azi

JimBob
08-11-2005, 06:28
When do the dead get a vote? In the Constitution? That's also absurd. To literally apply ithat line of thinking would require society as a whole to update its descisions every time there is a murder trial - because the past laws against murder could be made by someone already dead.
Do we know what a metaphor is? The dead do not literally get a vote, but when a decision is made because 'it's tradition' the dead are figuratively 'voting' through tradition.
You don't get what I'm saying. You should not be tied to the past, the thinking 'well yesterday we did it this way, we should always do it this way' is wrong. Saying that everytime there is a murder trial we need to rethink the laws is wrong, because right now people agree that killing each other is bad for reasons other than tradition. A better example would be that earlier in time, it was considered strange and even wrong for a woman to do anything but stay at home and raise a family, why? tradition, man work, woman cook. Is it good to keep life that way because tradition? Or should we say 'hey, why should things be this way, what if the man wants to raise the family and the woman wants to work. Let them do it.'

Steppe Merc
08-11-2005, 17:50
No Steppe, you're not. You frequently say that people that have religious leanings shouldn't be allowed to engage in discourse on politics. I like you, a lot, and I respect a lot of your other viewpoints, but this sort of secular fundamentalism is every bit as intolerant as islamic or christian fundamentalism.
Ok, you've got me on that one. :bow:
Though it is unfair (and foolish) to try and ban religous folks from politics, I admit, the minority of nuts has gotten me paranoid towards religous peoples, in particular their politics.