1:
So every single word you have said has been a great big utter load of tripe, genocide in-fact doesn’t mean genocide, it is just something else which you haven’t bothered to think about when you wrote. English does change but you have been fairly sure of what you’ve said, heck you’ve argued quite vigorously with us, and we appear to be scoring points because you’re replying with your own counters.
You’re not making a point, you’re making one great big retraction or a series of small ones, you have oscillated between arguments, on the one hand you argued that everything is objective empirical facts] while on the other hand you have argued that everything is subjective [post modernist line on language], what the bloody heck is it? They don’t work to well together, there’s a certain cat in a box that begs the answer.
We shall see there is a pattern for this.
2. I am arguing that if someone wants to worship a flying spaghetti monster, and someone wishes to worship and omnipotent Judeo-Christian deity neither is less valid than any other, I’m not going to judge which is false or which is real because one could not what would be the test?
Where is their a strong case for suppressing false religions anyway Iran or a Catholic theocracy I haven’t heard of? I have never in my hearing every heard a strong argument for suppressing a false religion, what I hear is fanatics of varying shades advocating it, whether it be extremist Islamists, militant Atheists etc.
Someone mentioned reductio ad absurdum , I mention religions and suddenly gravity is bought into the argument, and no I’m not jumping from objective to subjective someone else seems to be guilty of that.
1. I see this annoying little thing, “other religions could have rational reasons for morality…” a hint of bias creeping in? Who’s to say any religion has a rational reason for morality, its subjective, and I don’t think its entirely rational or logical either.
2: Another rather staggering attempt to judge things which cant really be judged. Go and prove that a god or god doesn’t exist and then you can make that comment. Oscillating again?
3. Define bad, for someone with such a good knowledge of the English language, you seem willing to deal with the purely subjective rather badly. What you’re proposing is suffice to say inhuman for the vast majority of people, no it’s not a measure of bad, but its certainly a means of getting you hanged in the realm of public opinion.
But let’s examine that evidence; I find that idea of forcing people not to choose what they eat for there own good; with the explicit threat [and somebody nasty enough to do it] of seizing their children, sickening.
If one is more inclined to look at the law as some sort of guardian of morality or at least determiner of right and wrong, good and bad these might be of assistance.
HUMAN RIGHTS AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION ACT 1986 (FED)
Section 3.
Discrimination
(a) any distinction, exclusion or preference made on the basis of race, colour, sex, religion, political opinion, national extraction or social origin that has the effect of nullifying or impairing equality of opportunity or treatment in employment or occupation; and
I think social origin would be a reasonable fit, not perfect but it would work.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 (FED)
Section 4
"disability" , in relation to a person, means:
(a) total or partial loss of the person’s bodily or mental function; or
(b) total or partial loss of a part of the body; or
(c) the presence in the body of organisms causing disease or illness; or
(d) the presence in the body of organisms capable of causing disease or illness; or
(e) the malfunction, malformation or disfigurement of a part of the person’s body; or
(f) a disorder or malfunction that results in the person learning differently from a person without the disorder or malfunction; or
(g) a disorder, illness or disease that affects a person’s thought processes, perception of reality, emotions or judgment or that results in disturbed behaviour.
Now assuming that vegetarians are in-fact disabled, which I sincerely doubt, but this helps,
(1) For the purposes of this act, a person ( discriminator ) discriminates against another person ( aggrieved person ) on the ground of a disability of the aggrieved person if, because of the aggrieved person’s disability, the discriminator treats or proposes to treat the aggrieved person less favourably than, in circumstances that are the same or are not materially different, the discriminator treats or would treat a person without the disability.
It doesn’t matter if in-fact the person was disabled, what matters is the actions of the discriminator, if the discriminator were to think someone was in-fact disabled for the purpose of the act, then it would seem likely that in-fact you could be pursued pursuant to it.
I can go onto into what you may and may not say if you should so wish. But I think the law shafts you, so yes in a legal sense what you’re proposing is bad! In a social Darwinist, or Fascist or Utilitarian view in might be good… in a Malthusian world the fewer the people in the world the richer everyone is, of course if there were no people around then they wouldn’t be richer not would they. A good example of how to test a model, I think the standing claim on a neo-Malthusian model is that all things being equal, and the population at sustainable the less people there are the richer each individual gets.
And here's some fun, in a purely subjective world the will of the majority ie yourself is argument ad populorum.