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On Amorality: A rant on false moralism present in both the Right and the Left.


Mand'alor Dash

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(For your debating pleasure, I never delete comments. The staff still does, though; and I can't do anything about that. :( Please post responsibly.)

 

A few days ago, I declared myself to be amoral. What did I mean by this? I meant that I'm done with the idea that certain deeds are inherently wrong or right simply because they are. I'm done with the insistence that certain ideas are above logic or reason simply because one path is "moral." I'm done with buzzwords and thought-killing cliches being used to replace rational thought, and discourage dissent.

 

I'm fucking done.

 

The abortion debate is one such issue where morality has gone batshit insane. We have reached a point where neither camp wishes to confront the cold hard truth of what they advocate, and hides behind buzz-phrases to "encode" it behind a layer of illusory morality.

 

"Pro-abortion" doesn't sound buzzy and moral enough. You don't want the world to think you're in love with the idea of little babies being ripped from the womb and given the Freddy Krueger treatment, so if anyone asks, you aren't "pro-abortion," you're "pro-choice." Oh, so does that mean you support school choice? Or the choice to refuse service when you own a business, or for an individual to choose what goes into their own bodies? No? Then you aren't pro-choice, you're pro-abortion, and you're trying to hide behind morality. If you believe that life begins at birth, you are expected to make a biological argument to support this position, not call your opponents "misogynists" who just want to turn women into baby-slaves.

 

And don't walk away smug, "pro-lifers." Are you anti-war? Anti-death penalty? You think we should take an honest look at police brutality? Do you believe that the one and only good reason to kill another human being is that they pose a direct threat to another human being? No? You're not "pro-life," you are simply "anti-abortion," and wish to manufacture a false moral high-ground when asked about women who stand to lose 9 months of their lives due to being raped. If you believe that life begins at conception, you too are required to provide a biological argument for why you believe this.

 

Morality, or more specifically, the politicization of morality, is something that I will no longer support. The root of the problem is that as a human construct, a majority of moral decisions are completely subjective, and we are attempting to find reasons for why our own personal morality must be forced upon everyone else. We build hypocritical walls of morality designed to shield ourselves from responsibility, while simultaneously casting stones upon anybody else.

 

"Greed" is my favorite example of this giant glass house. Once you begin under the false premise that putting one's self and one's family over strangers is, by itself, morally wrong, how easy it becomes to cast blame.

 

I'm a semi-regular gamer. I've avidly followed the Mass Effect series since the very first game, and I have yet to regret any of my purchases. I think the series is of exceptional quality, but I also realize that BioWare and EA aren't making it out of the goodness of their hearts. A new game costs $60 US, and the DLC costs about $15 a piece. It's steep, but there's no trickery. In the digital age, there's no excuse for not knowing exactly what you are paying for. A business needs to make money. If you feel like their goods are not worth the asking price, then nobody is making you buy them. I haven't bought most of the DLC myself, because it really is pretty steep.

 

But there is nothing more entitled than to disregard the reality of the world, and demand that you have a moral right to a product that you have not paid for.

 

There is no trickery at foot. In any store, the game and its expansions are clearly listed as two separate items. If you only buy the one, do not feign outrage at not being offered the other one as lagniappe. But of course, you're right because greed.

 

A private company with a responsibility to its shareholders is selling its goods on an honest market. This is greed.

 

A consumer sees the prices for the goods offered, has the ability to look up every fact behind these goods at the swipe of a fingertip, and still demands that he receive goods for free because he bought another good. In some cases, the individual in question even steals the goods they want, rather than pay for any of it at all. This is not greed.

 

There is a presidential candidate currently in the top three, who runs on a platform of taking people's money by force and giving it to his voters. Guess who the greedy party is.

 

I'm greedy. And this is no rhetorical device. I am greedy by my own admission. I'd love to be successful, and I would put my own good over that of somebody I don't know, and I would expect them to do the same.

 

Most systems of morality do not consider this to be a righteous action. I don't care.

 

But what of those moral principles rooted in sound logic? Surely, there must be merit to those, right? Take the case of racism. Obviously, racism must be a grand moral principle because it is illogical to judge somebody on skin color instead of merit. How can this be an issue?

 

Well, way back in the year IDFK A.D., some logical man looked at how his neighbors were mistreating and prejudging people based on superficial properties without any attempt to get to know them, and decided that it didn't make a lick of sense. Racial prejudice was (rightfully) considered illogical, and the term "racism" was coined as a shorthand for this phenomenon. Then, thanks to a whole bunch of centuries where racism got out of hand, and committed many grievous wrongs, it was adopted to become a moral issue. I won't deny that the good guys won a couple of important wars thanks to this, but as soon as you fast forward to the 21st century...

 

 


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Even when morality adopts a principle from logic, it manages to pervert the premise beyond recognition. But it gets better.

 

The third image is a tweet from SJW activist Suey Park, infamous for pioneering the "cancel Colbert" campaign after comedian and left-leaning commentator Stephen Colbert made a joke about Asians. I like Colbert. I think he's a very funny man. I don't really agree with him on politics, but he's a likable enough sort that that never really becomes an issue.

 

This sentiment was not shared by conservative columnist Michelle Malkin, whose politics were the occasional subject of jabbery on Colbert's behalf. #CancelColbert happened at a time when I was a somewhat stereotypical moralistic conservative, and I held a great deal of respect for Ms. Malkin. She managed to flush away every single last bit of it with only one tweet.

 

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Above, you see a conservative activist joining an SJW censorship movement out of immediate political convenience, and hiding it all behind the false guise of morality.

 

I'm fucking done.

 

I was inspired to write this after having just read Watchmen. 30 years late; I'm aware. While I was reading, I found something of a bond with Rorschach, of all people. Mind you, I don't share quite the extent of his misanthropy, or his "New Frontiersman" politics, but there were moments where his sheer cynicism echoed through my brain like a scream in a cave. In particular, one relatively minor moment from the oh-so eventful chapter 6:

 

(This actually is a spoiler. Do not open unless you have read the book.)

 

 


Dr. Malcolm Long: Walter, is what happened to Kitty Genovese really proof that the whole of mankind is rotten? I think you've been conditioned with a negative worldview. There are good people, too, like...

 

Rorschach: Like you?

 

Dr. Malcolm Long: Me? Oh, well, I wouldn't say that. I...

 

Rorschach: No. You just think it. Think you're 'good people'. Why are you spending so much time with me, Doctor?

 

Dr. Malcolm Long: Uh...well, because I care about you, and because I want to make you well...

 

Rorschach: Other people, down in cells. Behavior more extreme than mine. You don't spend any time with them...but then, they're not famous. Won't get your name in the journals. You don't want to make me well. Just want to know what makes me sick. You'll find out. Have patience, Doctor. You'll find out.

 

 

Morality is a disguise. Worn by ideologues to silence dissent, by consumers to cast blame, by leftists to line their pockets, by SJWs to bully their fellow man, by evangelicals to enforce holy law, by Michelle Malkin to censor detractors.

 

Logic was born when man looked upon the world, and judged it in his own eyes. Morality was born when he declared his interpretation to be the only one.

 

 


"I looked at the Rorschach blot. I tried to pretend it looked like a spreading tree, shadows pooled beneath it, but it didn't. It looked more like a dead cat I once found, the fat, glistening grubs writhing blindly, squirming over each other, frantically tunneling away from the light. But even that is avoiding the real horror. The horror is this: In the end, it is simply a picture of empty meaningless blackness. We are alone. There is nothing else."

 

 

I'm fucking done.

 

I am amoral.

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Thought I'd add something.

 

If you believe life begins at conception, you need to not only show evidence of that but also show that life itself contains value. If you're amoral, you can't assume moral premises of any kind, including ones that assert that human life has worth.

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Thought I'd add something.

 

If you believe life begins at conception, you need to not only show evidence of that but also show that life itself contains value. If you're amoral, you can't assume moral premises of any kind, including ones that assert that human life has worth.

 

This is something I have considered. Logically, I consider it a dead end. Obviously, no good came from mass loss of human life from events such as the Holocaust or the Great Leap Forward; so rather than chase my tail into nihilistic oblivion, it's simpler to just say that the average human being, until proven otherwise, is of more use to the world with his heart beating than without.

 

I don't consider it a moral because it's not an absolute. Osama Bin Laden and Che Guevara are of more service to the world as corpses, but they are far from the average human being.

 

In other words, I'm a cynic, not a nihilist.

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I'm definitely not amoral, but agreeably throwing morals into places where it doesn't concern them is irrelevant and foolish. I think it's annoying when someone justifies political, economic, or social ideas with "BECAUSE IT'S THE RIGHT THING TO DO!" or something similar. Here's the reality: people won't always share the same morality that you do, so placing it anywhere where it doesn't concern it basically means that only your morality is correct and everyone else that isn't with me is wrong.

 

That's why I've taken a more moderate position in politics, especially when I realized that some liberals like to use their "superior" morality to justify stuff like gun control or free healthcare or free education. I can be up for any of these, but I want to see solid proof, not sentimental BS and "appeal to the commom man" rhetoric.

 

I disagree more with the philosophy of cynicism, though, not because of the concepts of it but what people have used it for. Based on my experiences with debating I always feel like people use pessimism, cynicism, or defeatism to paint themselves as the intellectual "realist" while berating the patriot or the optimist as the delusional and ignorant reactionary. It honestly just pisses me off.

 

Other than that, pragmatism over morality in the realm of politics and economics. If you need to crush a gnat, best do it with a sledgehammer. :P

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I disagree more with the philosophy of cynicism, though, not because of the concepts of it but what people have used it for. Based on my experiences with debating I always feel like people use pessimism, cynicism, or defeatism to paint themselves as the intellectual "realist" while berating the patriot or the optimist as the delusional and ignorant reactionary. It honestly just pisses me off.

 

I agree that pessimism and realism are not one and the same. Saying the sun is going to explode tomorrow is certainly pessimistic, but you'd have a hard time finding an astronomer who can back that claim up.

 

There are delusional morons on any side. What they have in common is that most of them (not all) love to stand atop a high moral horse and preach about how their way is the only way to see the world. Others use their "morality" to justify actions that are beyond despicable, since no train of logic or rationality would have ever led there. Seeing too many of those people in the world is what made me a cynic.

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First I just want to say, good blog; it was well thought out and well written.

Now, about the way you're regarding morality...

I like to think about this in a way that looks at the "cause of the cause."  In this case, I believe that is: Laws must exist.  But the thing about social issues (such as abortion) is that there are too many people on both sides, such that any outcome is never a true "win."  But nonetheless, there must be a law (for obvious reasons) about abortion (one way or the other, regardless).  The existence of the "need" for the law, in itself, causes more problems than the law's stance on the issue.

So, as to the way you describe both sides, in terms of abortion, whether or not you're right about the way they describe their reasoning for their stances, you've got to take in mind the fact that there doesn't exist (and didn't exist) and other route to any other current possible situation.  Ergo, inevitability. 

With my predisposition in understanding that it's an inevitable "thing" for people to sugarcoat their stances, for either side, I'm not so sure I can follow what you mean by saying you're amoral (in terms of abortion specifically).  

Moving on to racial issues...

Simply put, I agree with you. 

Next, SJWs...

I really just don't like them, lol.  I don't have much to say about them.  I agree with your view on them.  

---

As a side note to all of this...

As much as I hate having to use this word... I believe there exists two types of "moralities" - an objective one, and a subjective one.  Now, understand that I believe nobody can judge their own morality or anyone else's on an objective level - only may we judge it subjectively.  The "objective" morality I speak of is in a different sense - I see it as "does a moral exist in this [situation]." If it does or doesn't, that is the objective morality I'm talking about.  But one's *view* on what that morality *is*, is the subjective part.  

Of course, that is my own subjective view on the matter.

In simpler terms: interpretation is subjective morality.  For example, how we here on the forums sometimes debate over the morals of MLP episodes... The way I see it is that "of course, a moral exists in the episode" - but how we each interpret what it is and our views on it is the subjective part.

To apply that route of thinking to your position in your blog blog here - when you say that you're amoral, you're saying you don't have a subjective view (or possibly rather, don't care to have one) on the morality of the issues, right?

Essentially what I'm trying to understand is whether or not you agree that morality exists by default in the way I see it or not...  

(And I'm not saying it exists everywhere.  The question of "should I try to find a spot to park my car closer to the entrance, or just park back here away from it while this spot is already open in front of me" holds no moral value).

~ Miles

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With my predisposition in understanding that it's an inevitable "thing" for people to sugarcoat their stances, for either side, I'm not so sure I can follow what you mean by saying you're amoral (in terms of abortion specifically).  

 

The entire post was written as a stream-of-consciousness, which is why it reads more like a rant than a scientific journal. One major point of this that I possibly didn't do very well in elaborating was my view that morality is a disguise.

 

Complex issues, requiring an incredible amount of logic and evidence to debate effectively, are effectively reduced to soundbites and buzzwords because it's easier to build an echo chamber. Morality is built inside of these echo chambers, and screamed at max volume whenever people don't want to argue like adults.

 

Pointless buzzwords that serve no logical purpose, draped in a guise of morality. This is what has taken over political discourse in our world. I have an opinion on abortion, I just don't drape it under undeserved righteousness.

 

 

 

As much as I hate having to use this word... I believe there exists two types of "moralities" - an objective one, and a subjective one.  Now, understand that I believe nobody can judge their own morality or anyone else's on an objective level - only may we judge it subjectively.  The "objective" morality I speak of is in a different sense - I see it as "does a moral exist in this [situation]." If it does or doesn't, that is the objective morality I'm talking about.  But one's *view* on what that morality *is*, is the subjective part.  

 

So, when a Muslim man beheads his wife in an honor killing, you are not disturbed by the fact that there are millions who consider his actions "objectively moral?"

 

One can "interpret" morals to their heart's desire, but this does not change the fact that all existing schools of moralistic thought can, have, are, and will be used to promote atrocity. Whether it's the middle east, the DPRK, or the Soviet Union, once enough people believe that something is "right" simply because it is, that is the course that history will take. And it usually does not end well.

 

 

 

To apply that route of thinking to your position in your blog blog here - when you say that you're amoral, you're saying you don't have a subjective view (or possibly rather, don't care to have one) on the morality of the issues, right? Essentially what I'm trying to understand is whether or not you agree that morality exists by default in the way I see it or not...  
 

 

I believe that morality is a construct of the human mind, either built within a man's mind to justify or temper his own actions, or indoctrinated into his mind by somebody else.

 

In either case, the idea of moral principles superseding reality is what I despise. There is no shorthand to life. There is no cheat guide to making good decisions. There is no checklist to being a "good person," and putting on a righteous mask does not score you a shortcut.

 

I am amoral because I own neither the checklist nor the mask.

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The entire post was written as a stream-of-consciousness, which is why it reads more like a rant than a scientific journal. One major point of this that I possibly didn't do very well in elaborating was my view that morality is a disguise.

 

Complex issues, requiring an incredible amount of logic and evidence to debate effectively, are effectively reduced to soundbites and buzzwords because it's easier to build an echo chamber. Morality is built inside of these echo chambers, and screamed at max volume whenever people don't want to argue like adults.

 

Pointless buzzwords that serve no logical purpose, draped in a guise of morality. This is what has taken over political discourse in our world. I have an opinion on abortion, I just don't drape it under undeserved righteousness.

 

Ahh okay I get what you mean.

 

So, when a Muslim man beheads his wife in an honor killing, you are not disturbed by the fact that there are millions who consider his actions "objectively moral?"

 

One can "interpret" morals to their heart's desire, but this does not change the fact that all existing schools of moralistic thought can, have, are, and will be used to promote atrocity. Whether it's the middle east, the DPRK, or the Soviet Union, once enough people believe that something is "right" simply because it is, that is the course that history will take. And it usually does not end well.

 

??? What ???

 

Of course I'd be disturbed.  I think you misinterpreted me...

 

Let me use your prior example of abortion... On one side, people say the moral is allowing the woman to make her own decision rather than taking it away from her - on the other side the moral is not taking away the life of the unborn child.

 

My view is that both of those are valid moral arguments...

 

But I subjectively think it's immoral to take the life of an unborn child (aka, I'm pro-life [or anti-abortion as you say]).  

 

In other words, even though I understand that they are arguing from their own moral perspective, I view their stance as immoral.

 

I'm not amoral like you say you are.

 

I believe that morality is a construct of the human mind, either built within a man's mind to justify or temper his own actions, or indoctrinated into his mind by somebody else.

 

In either case, the idea of moral principles superseding reality is what I despise. There is no shorthand to life. There is no cheat guide to making good decisions. There is no checklist to being a "good person," and putting on a righteous mask does not score you a shortcut.

 

I am amoral because I own neither the checklist nor the mask.

 

I can't say I agree with you on this.

 

Essentially you're saying morality doesn't logically exist.  

 

I believe it does logically exist.  Just because something may be a construct of the human mind doesn't mean it doesn't exist in reality.  

 

To be honest, the more I think about it, for one to say he is amoral sounds slightly socio/psychopathic.  

 

Not that I'm saying you are - I'm saying that I think you're explaining yourself in an odd fashion.  

 

~ Miles 

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Let me use your prior example of abortion... On one side, people say the moral is allowing the woman to make her own decision rather than taking it away from her - on the other side the moral is not taking away the life of the unborn child. My view is that both of those are valid moral arguments...

 

But for the concept of morality to have validity, two polar opposing actions can not both be valid and moral.

 

This is why I contend that the issue lie in the hands of biology. There is no "biological relativism" or nonsense like that to muddy the issue.

 

Simply put: Subjective morality defeats itself, and objective morality leads to atrocity (as is the case with honor killings)

 

 

 

But I subjectively think it's immoral to take the life of an unborn child (aka, I'm pro-life [or anti-abortion as you say]).   In other words, even though I understand that they are arguing from their own moral perspective, I view their stance as immoral.

 

Let me explain it like this: You believe them to be immoral. They believe you to be immoral. These premises can't simply be argued against one another. They rely on moral ideals that exist only in the minds of those who already agree with them. It's like an Englishman debating a Spaniard, neither understanding the other's language.

 

"Choice" and "life" are banners which masquerade as arguments. It gets even worse when camps start referring to their opponents as "anti-choice," or "anti-life," as if the issue has been boiled down to the point that it's completely light and dark. No point inbetween.

 

 

 

I'm not amoral like you say you are.

 

I'm not telling you to be, but I am asking you to keep a tally of how often ideologues substitute meaningless, esoteric moral arguments in the place of substance.

 

The governor of my state recently signed a $15 minimum wage despite acknowledging that it made no economic sense. Guess what word he used to defend it.

 

 

 

I can't say I agree with you on this. Essentially you're saying morality doesn't logically exist.   I believe it does logically exist.  Just because something may be a construct of the human mind doesn't mean it doesn't exist in reality.  

 

Constructs of the human mind have no physical form. They don't necessarily "exist" per se, but some can be said to be accurate representations of reality. Mathematics, for example, is a carefully constructed series of rules and operations designed to work in tune with a wide variety of fields. Science, economics, history, music... Math has been proven to accurately predict and describe the workings of the world in a way that morality has not.

 

 

 

To be honest, the more I think about it, for one to say he is amoral sounds slightly socio/psychopathic.   Not that I'm saying you are - I'm saying that I think you're explaining yourself in an odd fashion.  

 

:\

 

I know you didn't mean it that way, but there really is no nice way to say that.

 

I'm an emotional sap just like anyone else. I hug dogs and cry at the end of movies :P. Feeling is great, just don't let it dictate the way the country is run.

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*Shrug*

I guess we're at an impasse.

Oh I'm an emotional sap as well, btw.  :blush: 

~ Miles

 

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