Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri Nov 14, 2025 11:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Nov 14, 2025 11:45 pm
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri Nov 14, 2025 11:43 pm
NO! That's not what I'm asking. If someone is destitute in a society and someone else in that society owns far more than they need or can use, does the destitute person have any claim on the exorbitantly wealthy person's resources? It's a straightforward question and one that can either be answered "yes" or "no".
Okay, let's try again.
Gary is destitute..defined as...what? Anyway, Gary is destitute, let's say. Mike has more goods. Gary is convinced that Mike has more goods than he can need or use. Does Gary have a right to rob Mike?
That's the question.
So you think that it's "robbery" if the state intervenes and uses some of the wealthy person's wealth to help the desperate person? Is that correct?
Well, Gary...what are you going to do if Mike doesn't agree with your assessment of his level of goods? Are you going to use the government to rob him? Or are you asking, should Mike feel bad, and so give you something voluntarily? What if what he gives you voluntarily isn't as much as you think you're entitled to? Are you going to rob him then?
Besides, Mike is a secularist. Why should he think he owes you anything, even if you were starving? Secularists don't have any moral commandments, and have no accountability to God, they think; why should Mike feel he has to give to you from what he's earned, merely because you have less? Maybe Mike thinks you didn't work for it. Maybe you did, but fell on hard times. But either way, why should Mike give what he has to you?
Now, if Mike were a Christian, then maybe we could say that he ought to be charitable, because God says charity is a moral duty. But that's two ways different from what you're asking: first, because its voluntary, not forced, and secondly, because Mike does not believe in Christianity, so is quite convinced there is no moral duty to give charity.
So what are you going to do now? Are you going to rob him?