Yes, the planet known as "mathematically literate."Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:56 pmOf course the 28/100 is better, Jesus Christ you seriously think in absolute numbers?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:51 pmSo the absolute numbers don't count at all?It's just the proportions? So if we have three criminals in a group of 10 people, our crime situation is improving when later we have 100 people and there are 28 criminals?
I can see the headline now: "Crime is improving, as we now only have 25 more criminals than we did before."
![]()
Are.. you from another planet?
Is morality objective or subjective?
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Do you know what a percentage is?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:00 pmYes, the planet known as "mathematically literate."Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:56 pmOf course the 28/100 is better, Jesus Christ you seriously think in absolute numbers?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:51 pm
So the absolute numbers don't count at all?It's just the proportions? So if we have three criminals in a group of 10 people, our crime situation is improving when later we have 100 people and there are 28 criminals?
I can see the headline now: "Crime is improving, as we now only have 25 more criminals than we did before."
![]()
Are.. you from another planet?![]()
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Oh yes. I'm soooo amused.Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:03 pmDo you know what a percentage is?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage
Atla: "Doctor, doctor...good news! My cancer's going away!"
Doctor: "Um...that's great...but...what makes you think so?"
Atla: "Easy. You remember my tumour was 4 lbs, right?"
Doctor: "Yesss....?"
Atla: "Well, 4 lbs was 3.5% of my total mass."
Doctor: "Okay..."
Atla: "So I figured out how to beat cancer. And as you can see, I ate until I became 300 lbs. During the same time, my tumour only grew to 5.5 lbs. So proportionally, that means my tumour is shrinking, and I'm being cured!"
Doctor: "Well..er...um...perhaps you should sit down...I have some things to tell you..."
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
That's a hilariously incorrect analogy, do you have more?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:12 pmOh yes. I'm soooo amused.Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:03 pmDo you know what a percentage is?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage![]()
Atla: "Doctor, doctor...good news! My cancer's going away!"
Doctor: "Um...that's great...but...what makes you think so?"
Atla: "Easy. You remember my tumour was 4 lbs, right?"
Doctor: "Yesss....?"
Atla: "Well, 4 lbs was 3.5% of my total mass."
Doctor: "Okay..."
Atla: "So I figured out how to beat cancer. And as you can see, I ate until I became 300 lbs. During the same time, my tumour only grew to 5.5 lbs. So proportionally, that means my tumour is shrinking, and I'm being cured!"
Doctor: "Well..er...um...perhaps you should sit down...I have some things to tell you..."
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
No, that'll do.Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:14 pmThat's a hilariously incorrect analogy, do you have more?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:12 pmOh yes. I'm soooo amused.Atla wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:03 pm
Do you know what a percentage is?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage![]()
Atla: "Doctor, doctor...good news! My cancer's going away!"
Doctor: "Um...that's great...but...what makes you think so?"
Atla: "Easy. You remember my tumour was 4 lbs, right?"
Doctor: "Yesss....?"
Atla: "Well, 4 lbs was 3.5% of my total mass."
Doctor: "Okay..."
Atla: "So I figured out how to beat cancer. And as you can see, I ate until I became 300 lbs. During the same time, my tumour only grew to 5.5 lbs. So proportionally, that means my tumour is shrinking, and I'm being cured!"
Doctor: "Well..er...um...perhaps you should sit down...I have some things to tell you..."![]()
If you can't see it, there's nothing more to be added. But I'm still vaaastly amused. So thanks for that.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Damn, most conscienceless humanlikes I ran across in the past, were usually smarter. What went wrong here?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I already straightened it out, thanks.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:47 pmAh, then you believe incorrectly. But we can straighten that out.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:31 pmThe religion of the majority of offenders was Islam, which looks to the same God as you do for its morality, I believe.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:00 pm
Religions are different, of course. They're not all the same thing.
Most mainstream Muslims would generally agree they worship the same God that Christians — or Jews — worship. Zeki Saritoprak, a professor of Islamic studies at John Carroll University in Cleveland, points out that in the Quran there's the Biblical story of Jacob asking his sons whom they'll worship after his death.
Do you know of any country where no one breaks the law? You can include the most religious ones. The reason for the late enforcement, from my understanding, was political correctness; the local authorities were afraid of being accused of racism. I can only hope a lesson has been learnt from it.IC wrote:That's not much of a victory. A law which is not effectively enforced is protecting nobody.Harbal wrote: It has been eliminated from things that are permitted under the law.
That's lame even for you, IC. Btw. I have no idea what social constructivism is..and the problem with social constructivism is that as soon as the numbers favour the abusers, abuse becomes tolerated and approved again. And then, there's no objective basis on which to protest that that is unfair.
I think you'll find they are doing that to avoid trouble.England's in trouble: I wish it were not so, but it is. Native Englishmen and Englishwomen are aborting their babies or preventing them.
Let's say that were not a gross exaggeration; how would my becoming a Christian help to prevent it?The recent immigrant waves clearly have different practices, and are having lots of children and inviting lots of relatives. The demographics are shifting fast. Even now, as you know, there are areas of England where Sharia is effectively in force, and neither police nor the public is doing anything about it. And there are very different practices and attitutdes in those communities. The law follows the demographics.
The fact that we tried shows that we, at least, hold moral standards, and I doubt that God would have been mentioned much in the conversation, so the credit for our attempt wasn't his.IC wrote:We tried. There was too much money involved. They wouldn't listen, and the public just wanted to see football. Nobody cared.Harbal wrote: If any do approve of it, I suppose it will be the morally outraged who will tell them they must not.
No, they don't assimilate, it's true, but I don't see what bearing that has on where our morality comes from.Wouldn't it be nice to imagine that's how it's going to play out? But you and I are too old for such naivete, I think. Have people come over and assimilated? Or have they set up ghettos in Birmingham, or Rotherham, or Newham, and carried on as they see fit?
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
That's what your liberal commentator says "Muslims would agree..." Better go ask Christians and Jews. Or even conservative Muslims.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:27 pmI already straightened it out, thanks.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:47 pmAh, then you believe incorrectly. But we can straighten that out.
Most mainstream Muslims would generally agree they worship the same God that Christians — or Jews — worship.
And then you'd best ask the Muslims why their "god" has different commandments, a different 'prophet,' and even different particulars of history (such as what Abraham did) from what Christians and Jews say the Torah says. And you should ask them for the manuscripts showing the truth of their claim that the differences are due to "corruptions in the manuscripts."
Then you'll know.
No; but Rotherham was a good deal worse than one or two people breaking the law. And as you point out, lots of people knew it was going on, and "The reason for the late enforcement, from my understanding, was political correctness; the local authorities were afraid of being accused of racism."Do you know of any country where no one breaks the law?IC wrote:That's not much of a victory. A law which is not effectively enforced is protecting nobody.Harbal wrote: It has been eliminated from things that are permitted under the law.
So, fear of political correctness can trump law. That's a pretty terrifying realization.
Sorry. It's just the term for the view that morality (or anything) is merely "constructed" by social forces or situations, and thus isn't objectively necessary or inevitable.Btw. I have no idea what social constructivism is.![]()
No doubt. But they've got trouble coming.I think you'll find they are doing that to avoid trouble.England's in trouble: I wish it were not so, but it is. Native Englishmen and Englishwomen are aborting their babies or preventing them.
I wasn't speaking of that. You and I were debating whether socially-based "morality" would survive. It's pretty clear it can't survive any serious demographic shift, unless, as you hope, the incoming dissenters assimilate.Let's say that were not a gross exaggeration; how would my becoming a Christian help to prevent it?The recent immigrant waves clearly have different practices, and are having lots of children and inviting lots of relatives. The demographics are shifting fast. Even now, as you know, there are areas of England where Sharia is effectively in force, and neither police nor the public is doing anything about it. And there are very different practices and attitutdes in those communities. The law follows the demographics.
Which, so far...
Actually, it should be. Because although we've forgotten it, there's but one rationale proving that all people deserve dignity...the Christian assertion that people are "made in the image of God."The fact that we tried shows that we, at least, hold moral standards, and I doubt that God would have been mentioned much in the conversation, so the credit for our attempt wasn't his.IC wrote:We tried. There was too much money involved. They wouldn't listen, and the public just wanted to see football. Nobody cared.Harbal wrote: If any do approve of it, I suppose it will be the morally outraged who will tell them they must not.
Once we forget that, who's to say that the migrant workers aren't "inferior" to their arab overlords, and "deserve" to be killed, as you see from the video they were.
Well, we're going to lose the demographic shift. That's pretty clear now. So more than ever, we need a way to say, "I know you did X in your country, and it was approved and allowed; but here, we need to tell you that was objectively wrong, and we cannot allow you to continue it, because it's just not objectively right to do that."No, they don't assimilate, it's true, but I don't see what bearing that has on where our morality comes from.Wouldn't it be nice to imagine that's how it's going to play out? But you and I are too old for such naivete, I think. Have people come over and assimilated? Or have they set up ghettos in Birmingham, or Rotherham, or Newham, and carried on as they see fit?
Slavery, the sort used at the World Cup, serves as a good example of that. We cannot allow the working-to-death of captive migrant workers to become a thing that happens in England.
And if we lack that conviction, and lack the power any longer to control our own laws, then we lose, and things that you and I find grotesque and evil -- like the practices in Rotherham -- become quite practical under the law of the land.
That may happen anyway. But at least it's best to be on the right side of objectively morally right.
- FlashDangerpants
- Posts: 8819
- Joined: Mon Jan 04, 2016 11:54 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Whatever. What we learned here is that the limiting factor is and will remain your inability to comprehend other people's arguments. It's why you didn't understand the Frege part of Frege-Geach, and why you can't tell a non cognitivist from an error theorist or a fictionalist (that last thing being roughly what Harbal said earlier about it being as-if there is a moral truth while not actually believing in such).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 3:09 pmMy point is that what you describe also allows the opposite: as much rape and slavery as your society, or any society, will tolerate, and provides absolutely no basis upon which you can object.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 2:52 am My point that what I describe does permit us to do all the moral activities that we are used to stands. And your claim that we can't does not.
I did account, many times, for the fact that there is ample scope to object to things you deem immoral within the activity of moralising that humans do all their lives every day. Just as there is scope for juman societies to create games that have rules about what moves are legitimate, and fashions that have rules about what colours go together (this is absolutely not to say that rape is the same as wearing a red shirt with green trousers so fuck off in advance).
The only thing your objection ever had is that there is not grand truth to the matter making me right and some other guy wrong when I say he shouldn't steal my money. That's the worthless basis of the objection you clkung to all the way throughout that conversation, but it only demonstrated your profound inability to comprehend the rules, norms and expectations of our moral workings as human constructs with changeable parameters. The problem was you, and this really is often the case.
Not that you read all that. You saw whichever sentence you wanted to argue with, and cut it out from the rest, and learned as little as ever.
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Well, not everybody is happy to be cavalier about those issues. But okay.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 6:08 pmWhatever.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 3:09 pmMy point is that what you describe also allows the opposite: as much rape and slavery as your society, or any society, will tolerate, and provides absolutely no basis upon which you can object.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 2:52 am My point that what I describe does permit us to do all the moral activities that we are used to stands. And your claim that we can't does not.
"Just as..."I did account, many times, for the fact that there is ample scope to object to things you deem immoral within the activity of moralising that humans do all their lives every day. Just as there is scope for juman societies to create games that have rules about what moves are legitimate, and fashions that have rules about what colours go together (this is absolutely not to say that rape is the same as wearing a red shirt with green trousers so fuck off in advance).
And yet, when he does, you'll complain that he's done wrong. Hard to sustain, when your "don't steal" amounts to no more than "Flash doesn't like you to steal from her." Your prospective thief might not care...The only thing your objection ever had is that there is not grand truth to the matter making me right and some other guy wrong when I say he shouldn't steal my money.
As for the rest, as you see, I did cut it...but only because it was ad hominem stuff devoid of substance and well beneath any necessity of response, or even of note. You'll forgive me for that, I'm sure. You're very gracious.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
God is God, as far as I'm concerned; I'm not interested in the arguments about whose God is the real one, or the best one.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:46 pmThat's what your liberal commentator says "Muslims would agree..." Better go ask Christians and Jews. Or even conservative Muslims.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 5:27 pmI already straightened it out, thanks.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 4:47 pm
Ah, then you believe incorrectly. But we can straighten that out.
Most mainstream Muslims would generally agree they worship the same God that Christians — or Jews — worship.
And then you'd best ask the Muslims why their "god" has different commandments, a different 'prophet,' and even different particulars of history (such as what Abraham did) from what Christians and Jews say the Torah says. And you should ask them for the manuscripts showing the truth of their claim that the differences are due to "corruptions in the manuscripts."
Then you'll know.
Even worse, political correctness can change the law.So, fear of political correctness can trump law. That's a pretty terrifying realization.
Whether we are made in the image of God is debateable, but what isn't is that we are made in the image of each other, we are all of the same kind, and that is rationale enough.IC wrote:Actually, it should be. Because although we've forgotten it, there's but one rationale proving that all people deserve dignity...the Christian assertion that people are "made in the image of God."Harbal wrote: The fact that we tried shows that we, at least, hold moral standards, and I doubt that God would have been mentioned much in the conversation, so the credit for our attempt wasn't his.
Once we forget that, who's to say that the migrant workers aren't "inferior" to their arab overlords, and "deserve" to be killed, as you see from the video they were.
Morals fall into the category of things that cannot be objective, in the same way as the assertion that apples taste nicer than pears does. Even so, whether we realise that or not, our moral convictions very often feel like objective truths, and we act upon them as if they were. We could always do better, but as long as our society's morality is founded on good moral principles, we should never be too far out as long as we don't lose sight of them. The trouble with religious morality is that most of us are not religious experts, and have to rely on those who are to tell us what is what. And what is what inevitably turns out to be what they want it to be. That's how it once was, when the Church dominated the State and society. If that were still the case, we would still be persecuting homosexuals, and denying women the right to abortion. Now, the Church follows society, even though it tends to drag its heels. I want it to stay that way.Well, we're going to lose the demographic shift. That's pretty clear now. So more than ever, we need a way to say, "I know you did X in your country, and it was approved and allowed; but here, we need to tell you that was objectively wrong, and we cannot allow you to continue it, because it's just not objectively right to do that."
Slavery, the sort used at the World Cup, serves as a good example of that. We cannot allow the working-to-death of captive migrant workers to become a thing that happens in England.
And if we lack that conviction, and lack the power any longer to control our own laws, then we lose, and things that you and I find grotesque and evil -- like the practices in Rotherham -- become quite practical under the law of the land.
That may happen anyway. But at least it's best to be on the right side of objectively morally right.
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I thought that was perhaps the case. But at least you could easily find out that He's not the same one, the one the Muslims claim. They would like to say they follow in the same tradition, since theirs is not old enough; there's just no warrant for believing that. Really, theirs starts with Mo's misreadings of the beliefs of an odd sect called the Nestorians and his broken remembrances of what he had heard about Torah. But Mo himself, as Muslims will all freely tell you, was, and remained, illiterate all his life.
Indeed so. Very troubling.Even worse, political correctness can change the law.So, fear of political correctness can trump law. That's a pretty terrifying realization.
I don't think it is, for the simple reason that resemblance doesn't make an argument for equivalency. There are powerful ways of telling the story -- like the Social Darwinist narrative, for example, or Randianism, or Nietzscheanism -- where some people are thought to be just plain better than others, and more deserving of the lion's share of resources. And some such views, such as those of the eugenics crowd, even hold that the race is better off if the "inferiors" die.Whether we are made in the image of God is debateable, but what isn't is that we are made in the image of each other, we are all of the same kind, and that is rationale enough.
So we do need some way of assuring ourselves that we have a right assessment of what human beings are worth. And mere resemblance doesn't provide enough for that.
That's assumptive, of course. And were it correct, it would mean that "Do not kill" would be on parallel with, "Killing tastes nice/doesn't taste nice." Too bad that tastes differ, in that regard.Morals fall into the category of things that cannot be objective, in the same way as the assertion that apples taste nicer than pears does.
Yes, that's true. But likewise, the moral convictions of northern Pakistanis that their family honour has been offended, so they must rape your sister in order to restore their honour would feel like an objective truth to them.Even so, whether we realise that or not, our moral convictions very often feel like objective truths, and we act upon them as if they were.
But "we" are not the problem. The problem is that not everybody believes what "we" believe, and we need grounds for saying to such, "Even though you believe X, you are simply wrong about that, and we shall not permit it here."We could always do better, but as long as our society's morality is founded on good moral principles, we should never be too far out as long as we don't lose sight of them.
You're right: that IS a problem. But it might not be a terminal one. It takes very little real research to find out basic things about differences among religions. And philosophy is very helpful, too: for while it cannot always tell us much about morality itself, it often alerts us to basic incoherencies and inconsistencies in the moral propositions others offer to us.The trouble with religious morality is that most of us are not religious experts, and have to rely on those who are to tell us what is what.
Okay. What when society ends up following the new religions? For as demographics shift, that will become inevitable. Will we not still need a way of saying, "Though you are in the majority now, and hold the political power, still, you have no legitimacy in enslaving/raping/oppressing/etc.? Will not the suffering need some grounds for at least knowing what wrongs are being done to them? And should not a clear, political case be made for the enshrinement in law of some very basic rights, like free speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of conscience, and freedom of belief?Now, the Church follows society, even though it tends to drag its heels. I want it to stay that way.
But on what shall we base such freedoms, if we have convinced ourselves that freedom is just a formality invented by our perishing society, with no more endurance than it has?
-
Gary Childress
- Posts: 11762
- Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 3:08 pm
- Location: It's my fault
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Why is it troubling to you that "political correctness" can change the law? If a law is demonstrated to be a bad law, causing injustice, then don't you think it might be good to change that law? Would it be better to leave laws in place if they are demonstrated to cause or facilitate injustice?
NOTE: I am not here saying that any particular formulation of a law is bad or good. I'm simply saying that we humans must determine what is bad or good and from there it must be demonstrated to others that it is either bad or good and why.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 7:39 pmExcept for resemblance to God, at least in image. Then it makes an argument.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 7:20 pmI don't think it is, for the simple reason that resemblance doesn't make an argument for equivalency.Whether we are made in the image of God is debateable, but what isn't is that we are made in the image of each other, we are all of the same kind, and that is rationale enough.
I wonder what thoughts of human equality the Christians had in their minds when they were going off to the crusades. I know, that was a long time ago; I'm sure all Christians look upon all other religions as equals now.There are powerful ways of telling the story -- like the Social Darwinist narrative, for example, or Randianism, or Nietzscheanism -- where some people are thought to be just plain better than others, and more deserving of the lion's share of resources. And some such views, such as those of the eugenics crowd, even hold that the race is better off if the "inferiors" die.But isn't that the way it is? Some people do kill just because they like the taste of it. And an alarming number of people do seem to like the taste of it when they are given free rein to indulge their appetite; when the social restraint is removed. I don't seem to think the SS were under staffed in Nazi Germany. And that could have happened in any part of the world, and still could under the same conditions. It wouldn't make any difference to such people if you convinced them that morality comes from God, they would still justify their killing somehow. If God created man, and required him to behave within a prescribed set of moral standards, why do you suppose he gave him such a brutish and vicious underlying nature? Free will isn't much use against an irresistable impulse, so if it was meant to be a test, I don't think it was a fair one. God can tell you it is wrong, but it is society that makes it feel wrong.IC wrote:That's assumptive, of course. And were it correct, it would mean that "Do not kill" would be on parallel with, "Killing tastes nice/doesn't taste nice." Too bad that tastes differ, in that regard.Harbal wrote: Morals fall into the category of things that cannot be objective, in the same way as the assertion that apples taste nicer than pears does.I daresay it would, but why would they be convinced otherwise by your argument moreso than mine?IC wrote:Yes, that's true. But likewise, the moral convictions of northern Pakistanis that their family honour has been offended, so they must rape your sister in order to restore their honour would feel like an objective truth to them.Harbal wrote: Even so, whether we realise that or not, our moral convictions very often feel like objective truths, and we act upon them as if they were.I don't see why we need to persuade them about the grounds, and I'm not sure we even could, so when we say, "we shall not permit it here", we will have to say it all the more forcefully.IC wrote:But "we" are not the problem. The problem is that not everybody believes what "we" believe, and we need grounds for saying to such, "Even though you believe X, you are simply wrong about that, and we shall not permit it here."Harbal wrote: We could always do better, but as long as our society's morality is founded on good moral principles, we should never be too far out as long as we don't lose sight of them.I've said this to you before, but that is not an argument for the existence of God and objective morality, it is only an argument for convincing people of it, whether it's true or not. Honestly, I don't know if our moral landscape would look nicer if we all believed what you say we should, I only know that I don't like the idea.IC wrote:Okay. What when society ends up following the new religions? For as demographics shift, that will become inevitable. Will we not still need a way of saying, "Though you are in the majority now, and hold the political power, still, you have no legitimacy in enslaving/raping/oppressing/etc.? Will not the suffering need some grounds for at least knowing what wrongs are being done to them? And should not a clear, political case be made for the enshrinement in law of some very basic rights, like free speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of conscience, and freedom of belief?Harbal wrote: Now, the Church follows society, even though it tends to drag its heels. I want it to stay that way.
But on what shall we base such freedoms, if we have convinced ourselves that freedom is just a formality invented by our perishing society, with no more endurance than it has?
- Immanuel Can
- Posts: 27622
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:42 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Because "political correctness" is not part of the legitimate political process. It does not invite discussion, debate or reasoning. It does not care about precedent or general human rights, or freedom, or achievement and merit, or the will of the people. In fact, it hates all those things and aims at undermining them in the interest of a single-minded Leftist ideological agenda advanced by bullying.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 8:13 pmWhy is it troubling to you that "political correctness" can change the law?
Here's how it works, simply put. One calls everybody who disagrees with one a "racist-sexist-homophobe-Islamophobe-transphobe-bigot-oppressor" until they cave in, and you run the show. It's a game run by bullies and granted by cowards and conformists. It lacks integrity, truth, wisdom and intelligence, and ends up serving only the interests of the elite manipulators in the media and big business.
So that would be why. Good reasons, I think.