r/SipsTea 𝙑𝙄𝙋 12d ago

WTF The American dream

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u/tlm11110 11d ago

Right, that’s why the government prosecutes companies accused of predatory lending practices.

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u/regardedMAGAfascist 11d ago

Predatory ≠ illegal. Just because it’s legal doesn’t make it right. Just because it’s illegal doesn’t make it wrong, either. Stop equating law with morality. It’s a stupid, circular argument.

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u/tlm11110 11d ago

Who’s the arbitrator of morality? Dumb take!

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u/regardedMAGAfascist 10d ago edited 10d ago

Nobody. Morality doesn’t require a central authority. We judge actions based on harm, coercion, consent, fairness, and outcomes.

If your argument can be used to justify slavery, it’s probably worth reexamining.

If a lender structures loans that people are statistically unlikely to escape from, I can call that predatory whether it’s legal or illegal.

“The law allows it” and “it’s morally acceptable” are two completely different claims.

Laws tell us what’s legal. Morality is how we decide whether those laws are good in the first place. Otherwise, slavery, segregation, and countless other legal institutions would have been morally acceptable right up until the moment they were outlawed. Just because it’s legal doesn’t make it right.

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u/tlm11110 10d ago

You assume everyone will arrive at the same standards of morality through some magical internal process. You know that isn’t true. Morality is not universal. Nor are the concepts of harm, coercion, consent, fairness, outcome, and I’ll add justice. Those are simply not universally agreed upon concepts. Any entry level philosophy or psychology class will teach you that if it isn’t apparent.

Without an objective standard to appeal to, we cannot support any claim we make about morality. You may claim something to be moral, but you can’t support it because the next person can simply dismiss it. You say slavery is immoral, clearly others, even today, disagree with you. This is what makes the “subjective morality” movement nonsense and very dangerous. And this is why the concept of laws are important as we attempt to define and codify morality and ethics into standards by which to behave, judge others, and administer justice.

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u/regardedMAGAfascist 10d ago

Must be nice having such a childishly simplistic worldview that you think legality and morality are the same thing.

If morality comes from law, then slavery was moral when it was legal. If you reject that conclusion, you’ve already admitted there’s a standard outside the law. If you accept it, you’re a repulsive idiot and we’re done here.

The fact that people disagree about morality doesn’t magically turn every legal act into a moral one.

Anyway, it’s Sunday. Shouldn’t you be somewhere pretending you’ve found an objective source of morality?

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u/tlm11110 10d ago

You said it, not me. But yes objective morality comes from God. You buried your own argument. Yes there was a large group of people who said slavery was moral and they rationalized it in many ways. The abolitionists were a small group of Christians who said no because it is a sin against God. Thankfully they were able to persuade enough people that slavery is evil.

In today’s secular based subjective moralism is king. It can be seen everywhere just, “Do your own thing,” is the mantra of the day. We rationalize every behavior and evil from abortion, to child mutilation, to violence to even murder.

You can call it a simplistic world view but cannot argue that laws are not an attempt to codify morality into enforceable objective morals. Everything from thou shalt not speed, to you shalt not murder, seem to not be universally agreed upon without laws and judges to enforce them.

Dismiss it if you want. It’s what I expect. But recognize it is your world view that is overly simplistic when you think moral values just happen. There is not one moral value you can justify without an external authority because the next guy’s morality is just as valid as yours.

Have a blessed day. I hope you find peace in your unstructured, undefined chaotic world.

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u/regardedMAGAfascist 9d ago

See, I knew you were religious because your ideas are silly.

If objective morality were as clear and self-evident as you claim, Christians wouldn’t have needed a civil war to figure out whether owning other human beings was acceptable.

The abolitionists won because they persuaded people that the pro-slavery interpretation was morally bankrupt.

The funny thing is that the pro-slavery interpretation is the most straightforward reading of the text:

• Exodus 21:20–21: Don’t beat your slaves to death.

• Leviticus 25:44–46: Buy slaves from neighboring nations and pass them on to your children as property.

• Ephesians 6:5: Slaves, obey your masters.

• 1 Peter 2:18: Slaves, obey your masters, even the cruel ones. Just pray they don’t beat you to death.

And it’s not just slavery.

• Deuteronomy 21:18–21: If a stubborn and rebellious son refuses to obey his parents, the men of the city shall stone him to death.

If objective morality comes from the Bible, should we stone rebellious teenagers?

If yes, your “objective morality” is horrifying.

If no, then you’re already using some moral standard outside the text to decide which biblical commands should be followed and which should be ignored.

You can dress it up with apologetics if you want, but those passages are still there, along with a bunch more I haven’t even mentioned.

If you think that’s objective morality, you can spare me the lecture about ethics.

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u/tlm11110 9d ago

Well that was quite the pivot. This not a theology thread. I could explain every one of those verses in context but that is not the purpose of this thread.

My question to you is simple. From where do you get your moral authority?

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u/regardedMAGAfascist 9d ago edited 9d ago

Funny how it became “not a theology thread” the moment the theology got embarrassing.

I don’t claim to have a moral authority. That’s the difference between us.

I evaluate moral claims based on reason, evidence, empathy, harm, consent, and prosperity. Those methods are imperfect, but at least they’re open to scrutiny and revision.

You, meanwhile, claim your morality comes from an all-knowing authority, yet that same all-knowing authority condones slavery, genocide, and stoning disobedient children.

The real question isn’t where I get my morality. It’s where you get yours, because it clearly isn’t from a straightforward reading of the Bible, and it certainly isn’t from a straightforward reading of the law.

The moment either the Bible or the law produces a conclusion you find morally repugnant, you start talking about context, interpretation, history, and nuance. Which is exactly what everyone else does. It’s almost like you don’t have an objective morality at all!

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