The moral importance of correcting past and current injustices committed against races outweigh alternatives. — Judaka
The moral importance of correcting past and current injustices committed against races outweigh alternatives.
— Judaka
A moral responsibility by virtue of sharing the same skin color as the perpetrators of racial injustices, historical or otherwise? Perhaps you'd care to elaborate so more on this. — Tzeentch
Moral importance, NOT responsibility - we correct past and current injustices not by standing with the perpetrators, but by standing against them, regardless of skin colour. Not by assuming culpability for the actions of others, but by assuming a share in the suffering of those unjustly treated. — Possibility
By that I understand that participation in this act of correcting is entirely voluntarily and people should never be forced, since there exists no moral responsibility? — Tzeentch
On another topic, what exactly determines whether one should feel this moral importance, and on the basis of what? Does it extend to all forms of injustice? — Tzeentch
There we go. That's what you meant. As they say in forumspeak "FIFY". — Outlander
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