Originally posted by David Floyd
So, then, if your society (by which I assume you mean >50% of people with power to enforce their will) believes in slavery, and you don't have the power to resist slavery, then you have no right to be free?
Well, gee, I guess there really was nothing wrong with the Holocaust, or, to use a more current example, nothing wrong with Saddam Hussein gassing Kurds, right?
So, then, if your society (by which I assume you mean >50% of people with power to enforce their will) believes in slavery, and you don't have the power to resist slavery, then you have no right to be free?
Well, gee, I guess there really was nothing wrong with the Holocaust, or, to use a more current example, nothing wrong with Saddam Hussein gassing Kurds, right?
Social convention now makes the gassing of the Kurds wrong (by both Iranians and Iraqis) and the Holocaust too. Sorry, there's no "objective" wrong there, because the entire concept of right and wrong is a human construct, not an objective condition.
Social convention in the past (say the Roman empire) considered slavery to be A-OK, and genocide was quite appropriate if the barbarians continued to pester a la Carthage.
I'll agree with that, if we define society as a collection of individuals, with a majority being defined as >50% of power-wielding individuals, and if we change your use of the word "granting" to "recognizing".
This doesn't, however, change the basic facts - that certain rights are present regardless of what society says
(and your opposition to the Holocaust or gassing Kurds or slavery validates this position, regardless of what you say),
and that violating those rights is an immoral act (I can't imagine you think that slavery is moral, therefore it must be immoral).
Sure I have it. I just might be unable to exercise it without getting killed/imprisoned.
No it didn't. If the Southern States had a right to secede, then they STILL have a right to secede, regardless of the outcome of the war. Might and military power do NOT change objective truths and moral right and wrong.
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