What if that were true? How would it change the way you look at people who disappoint your moral standards? — Joshs
[Edit: Note the change in your original post from "What if it were true?" and your change to "What if my philosophy were true?" I responded to the former]
It doesn't change the way I look at people because it is true and I already look at people that way. Usually they are disappointing their own moral standards, but it's all part of the open conspiracy: "I'll look the other way if you look the other way."
My goal here is simply to remind people to engage in a little introspection when they say they are "doing it all for the kids" and those in the past "didn't know any better." That, and consider the historical record.
That should inform our decision-making and have us pay closer attention to the voices who speak against what we all know in our own little hearts to be true. Our history is not the lies we tell about ourselves, or the statues we put up. Our history is recorded in books and oral traditions and art and dance and the voice of the oppressed. In other words, the leading mind of the day on the issue of slavery back in the 1850s might very well have been a slave. Did anyone bother to ask? No? Why?
Anyone who spouts the white man's burden or racial superiority or what white, Eurocentric philosophers of the 15th, 16th, 17th century might say are the apologist who, in the most generous analysis, failed to listen to countervailing positions of the day.
The leading minds of the day are those who history and hindsight prove to have been correct, regardless of whether the dominant paradigm (white? Eurocentric? Whatever) debated with them. To assume they did not exist because they were marginalized, or not recorded, or because their works were lost, or have not yet been found, is to assume there was no debate at the time. If that were the case, then the dominant paradigm simply failed to ask the leading minds of the day. Such are the forces of conservativism.
And they would belt you in the mouth for impugning their motives. — Joshs
So you agree that the leading minds of the day are marginalized by the open conspiracy. I'm glad we got that settled.
It never occurs to either side that the other believes deeply that their approach is unimpeachably ethical. — Joshs
Because they don't. Everyone knows it's wrong. It's just the open conspiracy to allow it. There is not "two sides." There is one side. It's just that some folks admit they have a problem and others are in denial. That problem is usually best cured collectively but individuals are called hypocrites for not trying to resolve the problem alone.
You and all the apologist in the world can say "they believe deeply that it's okay to hold a little girl down and cut off her clitoris with a broken coke bottle." BS. You know it, they know it, I know it. And the little girl sure as hell knows it. And guess what? She's the leading edge expert on the subject.
Which is why I agree with Ken Gergen — Joshs
I spend days and countless words spelling out my position on natural law in another thread. I'm not going to reiterate now. Regardless, please, wherever you go with your arguments, please don't tell me what I'm thinking or what the logical conclusion of my point must be. And no hyperbole. Nobody is going to punch me in the mouth for pointing out their BS because I don't go around pointing out our collective or individual agreement to look the other way. I just look the other way. It's part of the conspiracy. But, if we take to heart what I have said, and record history, and listen to the voices of the little girls, it just might inform our decisions and create a culture that our children won't look back on with derision, or who won't feel compelled to make excuses for us based upon a non-existent ignorance.