Originally posted by Kuciwalker
It reinforces those common values - not in those people sufficiantly deviant to violate them, but in the general population.
It reinforces those common values - not in those people sufficiantly deviant to violate them, but in the general population.
A statement of principles has, I suppose, a unifying effect. (That's not well worded, but I'm not entirely sure how to describe it.)
You sound like Heinlein at his worst.
And, of course, one of those common values is that these people do not have rights
What's really funny is that this is not a unifying statement at all. Most (?) Americans probably believe it, but a significant minority do not. And that minority is probably concentrated among the most productive members of society (not that they form a majority even in this subset). And such a statement is going to be morally repugnant to those who believe it to be untrue. So your unifying statement is actually a divisive one.
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