Kishkumen wrote:Remember, the question is not what you and I find immoral, honor, or even what many Americans have long assumed was immoral, but what we can conclude is inherently, universally immoral.
Given universal, objective morality doesn't exist, I hope we had more foresight than to make this our standard. More realistic is the standard that one apply a consistent moral philosophy.
For example -
True. Consistent with my position are two items. First, if there is a law against it, the law applies to all regardless of one's views or claim of religious exemption. But second, in a liberal democracy such laws are subject to modification and change with the agents of said change being the people from whom the authority of democractic government is derived. The LDS Church assuming it knows best what is in the interest of the adult membership, thus justifying it's manipulation of facts is anti-Democratic. I think I made that point earlier in this thread. It's a core principle, though. And consistently being applied.Some would in fact argue that laws against bigamy are an affront to Western liberal values of our day.
Teach in proselyting or devotional services? Don't know. The church is weird in how it overlaps history and religious teachings anyway. Actively manipulating the narrative around the Church's history and hiding it's history even in the context of teaching about it's history in classes and texts about it's history? Hmmm. Yeah. The fact it does so to maintain authoritative control of the membership is immoral.I do not find it to be obviously immoral that a church would not teach the totality of its history in proselyting or devotional services.
The Dersh is arguing the office of the President, a branch of government embodied by one human being, is above standards of law and order that claim misconduct by the executive branch is not checkable by other branches of government so long as the Executive Branch believes its actions are in the interest of the nation. That's stupid. So is claiming the Church is not subject to questions of moral behavior if they are sincere in the belief their deceiving the membership is in their best, eternal interests. The content of belief is a distraction. The application of ethical principal requires a blindness to such favoritism or partisanship to be rightly called just.Moreover, the issue becomes more complicated when comparing the actions of an individual man with those of what is essentially a committee. Dershowitz is defending the misconduct of a single president in a particular system. The idea that an elected official would compromise national security in pursuit of the goal of re-election is, for me, an easy question to decide, as without a certain degree of national security, there is nothing left to protect.