But how is that 'just'?Greatest I am wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 9:15 pmThat is rather obvious, but ----Age wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 3:42 pmIs it possible to discriminate and it be 'just'?Greatest I am wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 12:18 pm
Most moral people will call discrimination without a just cause evil and fight the bastards who do it. Right?
Regards
DL
If yes, then please explain, and with examples please.
Every law has a compulsion to discriminate negatively against a certain sub-group of our society.
That could be the murderer demographic of rapist for two examples.
Is ABSOLUTELY EVERY one who has been discriminated against negatively done what they have been separated and discriminated into, and against?
Also, 'laws' themselves are NOT 'just' at all. Laws are made to punish, and that is obviously NOT 'just' at all.
I asked is it possible to discriminate, and it be 'just'?
Discriminating negatively against one human being for any reason is obviously NOT 'just'. Obviously, if any thing is being done negatively against another human being, then that is NOT 'just'.
Well I CERTAINLY DO NOT and WILL NEVER discriminate 'negatively against' any human being at all.Greatest I am wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 9:15 pm If you do not discriminate negatively against them, should you know of one and the law learns of it, you will likely end in jail.
But I have just worked out that it is possible to discriminate 'between' human beings and it being neutral, and thus 'just'.
I had previously, up to just now, seen the word 'discriminate' as only being only a negative connotation. So, just another example of how it is far better to NEVER assume anything at all.
Certainly not from what you have just said. I obviously now KNOW of what your idea of what you sadly call "just discrimination" looks like. But what you have described is the EXACT OPPOSITE of what 'just discrimination' is and would be.Greatest I am wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 9:15 pm Do you get the idea of what just discrimination looks like?
Regards
DL
I worked out what 'just discrimination' is from what "others" have said, and was then able to discriminate between was is right and 'just' discrimination from what your obviously wrong and 'unjust' discrimination is. So, thank you for answering my clarifying question here.