This is topic Let's have fun with Ethics...... ;) in forum The Flameboard at Flare Sci-Fi Forums.


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Posted by Jubilee (Member # 99) on :
 
In Eskimo custom, hospitality is granted a higher moral responsibility than the sacriment of marriage. Because of this, a dutiful husband will offer his wife to an overnight guest, and a dutiful wife will be consensual to this sort of act.

Should we be allowed to judge wether this is right or wrong, given that we have grown up in different cultures, with different customs and morals?

Furthermore, is one Ethic possible since there are so many culture, so many customs, and so many different religions and morals?

Has there ever been a situation where someone has acted according to their "moral responsibility" and done something that would by this society's standards be considered Unethical?

:-)

*this is fodder for my thesis paper, so type away!*

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"You say don't fear your dreams, it's easier than it seems.
You say you'd never let me fall, from hopes so high.
But never is a promise, and you can't afford to lie." - Fiona Apple


 


Posted by Justin_Timberland (Member # 236) on :
 
Jubes, what class is this for?

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"Life is like a dick, sometimes you just wanna f**k it"
-Yun Zhu
USS Vanderbilt NCC-73121, Vanderbilt Class Starship
 


Posted by Aethelwer (Member # 36) on :
 
IMO, it's unfair to judge anything as "moral" or "immoral" unless it affects you in some way.

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Frank's Home Page
"He's Satan. And not the good kind. I hate him. If there is a god, I hope Jebus has him fry in hell." - DT, in reference to me
 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I sincerely doubt we're going to be able to solve the issue of ethical relativism, cultural relativism, and/or ethical subjectivism (And possibly emotivism!) in this thread.

Besides, as an on again/off again philosophy pseudomajor, I can ensure that you cannot have fun with ethics.

Also, I'm not sure this really needs to be in the Flameboard. Doesn't seem that inflammatory to me. Well, not yet anyway.

Ok, fine. Ethics. Well, let's look at it this way. Before we can address the issue of crosscultural ethics, we first need to decide whether there is anything for them to be concerned about. In other words, are there moral facts that can be classified as true? (Keep in mind that I'm not asking if there are universal moral facts. We'll get to that later.)

The answer to this question is usually, but not always, yes. The very existance of ethics as an area of study confirms our belief that it can be understood through inquiry. That is, there are indeed moral facts. I believe that X is wrong, and live my life accordingly. For me, the wrongness of X constitutes a fact. This belief may or may not be shared by the rest of my culture. For instance, in the United States, and indeed throughout the western world, killing a female member of your family because she has dishonored the family name is viewed as wrong. This value is not shared universally. But within our culture, such an action is wrong, and we agree about this enough to codify it in law.

Now then, the problem is that while I can believe that X is wrong, and that there is a moral fact that says that X is wrong, it does not logically follow that said fact is universal in application. Nor is it necessary for it to be so, at least from the viewpoint of an ethical relativist.

Of course, there is another angle to pursue. Namely, that there are no moral facts at all. Or at least that what we call morality is different for every person and hence useless as a tool to resolve conflicts in our everyday lives. What we know about human nature seems to disprove this idea. Everytime a child says that a punishment is unfair, they are appealing to a shared moral framework. (Of course, the fact that such an appeal doesn't work that often might be used to argue that there is no such universal ideal of fairness. A parent's idea is different from a child's, and so on.)

So, you tell me whether there can be shared moral facts or not and then we can move on.

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"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
Actually, I solved the problem of cultural relativism in Frank's "Ashes to Ashes" thread in the Voyager forum (much to Frank's chagrin, I might add).

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by Aethelwer (Member # 36) on :
 
Uh...no, you didn't.

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Frank's Home Page
"He's Satan. And not the good kind. I hate him. If there is a god, I hope Jebus has him fry in hell." - DT, in reference to me
 


Posted by Nim (Member # 205) on :
 
Oh this I gotta see.

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-At least I can get it up without biomechanical pumps.
-Try falling into a pit of lava, Moffy. Then see how horny you feel.

 


Posted by bryce (Member # 42) on :
 
Ethics are decided by the people with the most power. I will say I think there is an ethical struggle right now in the U.S. and perhaps most of the world because there is not a dominate ethic out there. Our current thinking of equality and whatever else they call it tells us that there is not set correct ethic.

I beg to differ, but...

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"Without any doubt, the mystery of our religion is great:
He was revealed in the flesh,
vindicated in spirit, seen by angels,
proclaimed among Gentiles, believed in throughout the world,
taken up in glory." -Paul
*First Timothy 3:16*

 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
*Points at Frank's post*

See, I told you he was chagrined, therefore my previous statement must be true. Check out the aforementioned thread for my clever description of the cultural relativism problem (which proves that it doesn't need solving because it is essentially an unstoppable natural process of the universe).

Frank, just go back to eating your Big Mac and reading WWF magazines and admit I'm right.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by Aethelwer (Member # 36) on :
 
"See, I told you he was chagrined, therefore my previous statement must be true."

You just said that because I disagree, you must be right. That's like saying you're immortal right after dying or something.

All you proved is that fads exist. I could have told you that. Meanwhile, the world has ~250 distinct nations. Even the US and Canada are different with regards to things like firearms. Actually, even the US states are very different...compare someone in New York to someone in Arkansas.

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Frank's Home Page
"He's Satan. And not the good kind. I hate him. If there is a god, I hope Jebus has him fry in hell." - DT, in reference to me
 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
Frank, I can't believe you're lowering the argument to the level of nitpicking over faulty logic. Since when does an argument have to be logical? Quit whining and admit I'm right. The days of a single human culture are just around the corner. Buy your Air Jordans now and avoid the rush.

Warning! Argument $$$poilers Follow!
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In case you couldn't tell, I'm pulling Frank's chain here. Because it's fun. Also because I'm right about the inevitability of cultural amalgamation and he's wrong. Please don't ruin my fun and tell him. Thank you.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
Oh, and actually, I didn't say I'm right because you disagree with me (although many here would think that a fairly solid argument) but rather I'm right because you're chagrined about it. Please see below.

cha�grin (sha-grin') noun
A keen feeling of mental unease, as of annoyance or embarrassment, caused by failure, disappointment, or a disconcerting event: "To her chagrin, the party ended just as she arrived."

Excerpted from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition Copyright � 1992 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V., further reproduction and distribution restricted in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved, so there.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Something is wrong when it hurts other people unnecessarily.

This, I think, is as close as you come to a universal ethic. And even then, you have varying definitions of "hurt" and "unnecessarily" and in some cases "other people."

For instance: Surgery hurts. But it can be necessary to prevent death (Christian Scientist claptrap notwithstanding). Therefore it is not wrong.

Punishment and discipline can hurt, but it is also necessary, in moderation. Therefore it is not wrong. This differs from beating, which is abusive overkill, and thusly wrong.

Smoking or consuming other hazardous materials alone, under controlled conditions, is harmful to the user, but not to anyone else. Therefore it is not wrong, simply stupid.

However, exposing other people to the potential of harm, say, by creating gouts of secondhand smoke, or driving while intoxicated, IS wrong.

Under most circumstances, harming killing another human being is wrong. This wrong is balanced, or negated, when the human being in question is seeking to harm or kill other human beings. (Logic surrounding such things as abortion is fuzzy here, and depends upon finding a working definition for 'human being.' I haven't done this yet.)

By the above logic, voluntary euthanasia is not wrong, as it is essentially self-harm intended to prevent a greater suffering. Nonconsensual euthanasia, however, would be wrong (unless previously specified as the desire of the individual in question.)

Okay, that's how I see it.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi

[This message has been edited by First of Two (edited March 07, 2000).]
 


Posted by Simon on :
 
Is it then wrong to manufacture cigarettes?
 
Posted by Jubilee (Member # 99) on :
 
Why, it's for my Ethics class of course...

And I beg to differ, Sol... This IS fun, and CAN become inflammatory.

So far, none of you have gone in-depth with my questions, however.... i'm slightly disappointed. *L*

------------------
"You say don't fear your dreams, it's easier than it seems.
You say you'd never let me fall, from hopes so high.
But never is a promise, and you can't afford to lie." - Fiona Apple


 


Posted by Aethelwer (Member # 36) on :
 
Dane: Please some back when you're willing to have a rational argument, then.

I'll address Jubes's questions:

Should we be allowed to judge wether this is right or wrong, given that we have grown up in different cultures, with different customs and morals?

We can judge it according to our own beliefs, but we shouldn't necessarily act upon them.

Furthermore, is one Ethic possible since there are so many culture, so many customs, and so many different religions and morals?

No, despite what certain childish forumgoers might think. People are different enough that people can never agree on this sort of thing. Look at gun control, abortion, etc.

Has there ever been a situation where someone has acted according to their "moral responsibility" and done something that would by this society's standards be considered Unethical?

Well, for years the USSR was considered "evil." Now that it's been eliminated, Russia, its core nation, faces serious economic problems.

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Frank's Home Page
"He's Satan. And not the good kind. I hate him. If there is a god, I hope Jebus has him fry in hell." - DT, in reference to me

[This message has been edited by The Shadow (edited March 07, 2000).]
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Simon: No, since no one HAS to smoke. You can produce a product, that doesn't mean anybody has to BUY it. I think it should be up to the individual to choose to destroy themselves, as long as they don't make other people suffer in the process.

And yes, I also believe that we should not pay for medical benefits for people who are sick as the result of a self-damaging behaviour (not including mental illness). It's what we call 'tough for them.'

Re: Jubes Q's: I'll agree with Frank on point one.

I say that a common value CAN be found, but it's something very simplistic, like the example I put above, and it will always be conditional.

As for point three... I would think a good example might be Oskar Schindler. By the common thought of his time, nation, and people, what he was doing in helping the Jews escape was wrong. But he saw it a different way.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Whaddya mean no indepth answers? My post constitutes a necessary first step, gosh darn it!

But, since we don't appear to be interested in that...
Universal ethical principles? Yes, tenetively. Though that raises the huge issue of how much of our behavior is dictated by biology. (Quite a bit, or not much, depending on whom you ask.)

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"You are stupid and evil and do not know you are stupid and evil."
--
Gene Ray, Cubic
 


Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
"Something is wrong when it hurts other people unnecessarily."

Unfortunatly First, you step on you rown argument barely a line later when you say:

"For instance: Surgery hurts. But it can be necessary to prevent death (Christian Scientist claptrap notwithstanding). Therefore it is not wrong."

In one sentance you made a comment which could "hurt" Christians, was "unnecessary", and, also, untrue.

You then step on your own argument with:

"By the above logic, voluntary euthanasia is not wrong, as it is essentially self-harm intended to prevent a greater suffering. Nonconsensual euthanasia, however, would be wrong (unless previously specified as the desire of the individual in question.)"

So your saying that people should be allowed to commit euthanasia, as long as they are not Christians? Or is it because you think that refusing surgery that could save you is silly?

Okay, you needed a heart transplant. there wasn't one available. You were going to die. Except that science was now able to clone you. Suppose they grew a clone, but without a head. Would you take that clones heart? Some people woulnd't, just because the very idea would be abhorant to them. People who refuse surgery feel the same way about being cut open.

Different religions have different ethics the same way different cultures have. You can't say "I understand that, even if I don't agree" in a situation with different cultural ethics, but then not in a situation with different religious ethics.

You can't condem an entire religion for the acts of a few people. You blabber on about the Crusades and Whitchunts a fair bit. Still, I don't see you slagging off Germany for the actions of the Nazi party.

You First, are at times a religious racist (if there is such a thing).

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"Sometimes I wish the planet would be scoured with cleansing fire. Other times I just wish Frank would be."
Sol System
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
First, Liam, "Christian Scientists" (as opposed to "Christian" Scientists, which I think you mistook, are a cult/sect founded my Mary Bakker Eddy, who believe that prayer can cure any physical ailment, up to and including cancer, leukemia, and severed limbs. They are not indicative of Christians in general AT ALL and, since they refuse to allow their children to receive medical treatment, thereby frequently resulting in the deaths of said children, my 'harm' by calling their beliefs 'claptrap' is minimal, if not totaly accurate, and, like surgery, is done in the hopes of alleviating, however slightly, the suffering caused by them by preventing it being done to another.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Furthermore, your analogy between my criticism of Christianity for its crimes and percieved lack of criticism of Germany for Nazi crimes is false and flawed.

Germany, as a society, is not responsible for the Nazi acts. Germany has repudiated and condemned Nazism and their acts. Germany is a country and an ethnicity. Nazism is a value system and a lifestyle choice. Those Nazis that remain (NeoNazis, Aryan Nation, etc.) are likewise reviled by me (Oh, I could tell you my lurid fantasies of breaking up a KKK rally with a hideous display of force, but what would be the point?)

Dissimilarly, Christianity has yet to fully repudiate its actions during the Inquisition and Crusades and Witchhunts (although I hear the pope may be taking steps in that area.) As followers of the same value system that gave rise to the atrocities, they are as responsible as those who continue to follow OTHER value systems that have had similar effects.

My intent when I criticise is not to condemn today's Christians (Indeed, my initial statement did nothing of the sort), but to remind people that it happened once, and that there are still those among them who would like nothing better than to see it happen again.

I don't care if Christian Scientists refuse surgery for themselves. That's fine, from my standpoint, as it constitutes evolution in action. It's when they refuse surgery for people who aren't being allowed to choose for themselves (their children) that I get annoyed. because that IS harming others.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Baloo (Member # 5) on :
 
quote:
Christianity has yet to fully repudiate its actions during the Inquisition and Crusades and Witchhunts (although I hear the pope may be taking steps in that area.) As followers of the same value system that gave rise to the atrocities, they are as responsible as those who continue to follow OTHER value systems that have had similar effects.

???

I hereby repudiate the actions of all the strangers (now dead, unless there's a few immortals I'm unaware of) who "justified" reprehensible actions and atrocities during the Crusades, the Inquisistion, and Whichhunts, by invoking the name of "Christianity".

I liken those actions to those of a cop who, upon stopping some poor fool who is not familiar with the law, decides to collect a "fine" on the spot, rather than writing a ticket. Even when corruption is entrenched, that does not make it legitimate, nor is it justified. When people do evil, they generally try to rationalize their actions so they don't have to admit what they did was wrong. The halls of infamy ring with the echoes of "It's not my fault!" and "You made me do it!" The "Church" (both Catholic and otherwise) has done a lot of things that had nothing to do with right or wrong, but plenty to do with ensuring their power base remained uneroded.

As far as immutable ethics are concerned, I believe some do exist. In the case of Eskimo hospitality, for instance, it might be ethical for him to offer the "services" of his wife, but individually, for me, it would not be ethical to take him up on his offer. For him, he is only offering everything he has to show his hospitality. For me, however, he is offering something that, from my perspective, only he has an unquestionable right to (of course, she has a co-equal right to him, but that's another issue).

From another perspective, it's customary to perform "female circumcision" in some cultures. If all viewpoints are equally valid, then it's perfectly acceptable for the males of that culture to ensure their females remain sexually unaware and subordinate to the males in their society. If you disagree, then perhaps we must admit the possibility that there is, in fact, a universal set of rules for ethical conduct.

Since each of us has a vested interest in his or her own ethical standards, it may well be impossible to come to an agreement on what the universal set of rules might be. After all, if there is a universal ethical rule set, it's very likely that it may condemn something you're fond of doing.

--Baloo

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"Helping Tomorrow Feel Superior by Scoffing at Yesterday."
--James Lileks [Motto of The Institute of Official Cheer.]
http://www.geocities.com/cyrano_jones.geo/


 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
I most definitely said that wrong. Sorry, I was in a hurry.

What I mean to say is that those who currently follow the ideology of an organization which in the past has done bad things, have a moral responsibility to:

1: Own up and admit to the fact that these things were done. Or, if you subscribe to the belief (dubious, I think) that such acts were carried out under the 'guise' of Christianity, that they were ALLOWED to happen by the 'good' people.

2: Commit, personally, to insuring that such things never happen again, if they can help it. This means standing up to persons in your church who act as though that is what they want. You know some, doubtless. It seems that everyone does. If you don't, there's always Pat Robertson.

I do not insist that these things be remembered because I hate Christians. I don't. I insist these things be remembered for the same reasons that the Jews who survived WWII insist the holocaust be remembered. So that noone ever tries anything like it again. Ever.

"First they came for the Jews, and I did not stand up, because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the homosexuals, and I did not stand up because I was not a homosexual.
Then they came for the Romany, and I did not stand up because I was not a Romany.
Then they came for the Catholics, and I did not stand up because I was not Catholic.
And then they came for me... and there was no one left to stand up for me." -- A Survivor of the camps, I don't know who.

So I stand NOW, and I will not be moved.
Because I don't want those lines ever to be drawn again. And you don't want it either.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Elim Garak (Member # 14) on :
 
First of Two, that's a great quote. I have the author somewhere. I'll go find it.
 
Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
I read on CNN today that the Pope copied Baloo and apologized for all those things too. What a copy-cat. Next he'll be saying he invented the internet or something.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by The Talented Mr. Gurgeh (Member # 318) on :
 
A simple rule of thumb in ethics is:

If something harms, or impinges on the rights of, someone, it is unethical.

Contradictions occur when peoples interests are in direct opposition.ie. one can't always make an ethically correct decision. That's the way of nature.

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Try not.
Do.
Or Do not.
There is no try.


 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
That's certainly the utilitarian take on the whole thing. That is; right actions are those that increase pleasure or at least decrease pain for the largest amount of people.

But that's hardly the be all and end all of the topic, I think.

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
One of the main flaws in Utilitarianism is that there are people who derive a great deal of pleasure from harming other people. Sadists, and such. So if the Sadist's pleasure is greater than the victim's pain...

Yecch.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Sadists aren't even particularily necessary. If, for instance, a large amount of people would receive a great deal of pleasure from watching Roman-style exhibitions, utilitarianism demands we do so.

Of course, that's the theory as originally laid out. It's been modified quite a bit since then, most notably by John Stuart Mill, who would refute such an example as I just laid out by arguing that, in the long run, harming innocents is self-destructive behavior.

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Yes, but MUCH self-destructive behaviour can be considered pleasurable, at least at the time.

Drinking, smoking, drugging, carousing...

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Ah, but that's where Mill's idea of an objective scale of pleasures comes in. He essentially says that not all pleasures are equal, and that some are "high" and some are "low". Some critics point to this distinction and say that Mill wasn't really a utilitarian after all.

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
I dunno. Most people I know wouldn't consider drinking to be solf-destuctive. At least, not the way we do it. If you do it like George Best (Americans, please insert your own favourite alcoholic there), then it is extrememly self-destructive.

I'm a bit of a fan of carousing too.

BTW First, that post from me came after a week of only getting 4 hours of sleep a night, so it came out a bit harsher than intended. Sorry. Still, what do you think of the Pope's apology?

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"Sometimes I wish the planet would be scoured with cleansing fire. Other times I just wish Frank would be."
Sol System
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Liam: s'Okay. I didn't get mad. Actually, it made me think a bit.

I think the Pope's message was a start. But like many religious leaders who commented, I don't think it was all that much. It was a pretty generalized statement. But on the whole, it's a good start.

However, as I understand it, the statement was directed as a prayer to God for forgiveness, when it should have been directed at those harmed (or the decedents thereof). That would be superior.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Baloo (Member # 5) on :
 
?!?

decedent n : someone who is no longer alive

First, I think you meant to say "decendents".

Am I right?

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"Lassie, her ears pricked up!"
--Atoth the Tamarian [From "Star Trek: Door Repair Guy"]
http://www.geocities.com/cyrano_jones.geo/


[This message has been edited by Baloo (edited March 18, 2000).]
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
Yah, yah. You point out my typos, I'll point out yours.

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 




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