ETHICS should control a country. I had hoped that people
in Australia might have started to think of ethics for any other person in this
country after the murders in Christchurch, New Zealand, just over a week ago.
The Australian federal government and state governments owe Australian’s
population, including A&TSI people, citizens, LGBTI people, visa holders,
immigrants, and refugees, habitable relationships. No person should live under
unfair government, insufficient fulfilled care or even homelessness. Sacred and
different religions are a personal choice. Every person has rights, but when a person takes another person’s rights away, has s/he
broken the law? That is what the murderer did for the Muslim community in
Christchurch.
The reader needs to read some global comments about
ethics in this blog. The reader can also go onto the websites I have given.
This is a plead, for everyone in Australia, to become aware of ethics. Ethics are not run by churches (Pell was charged with child abuse).
Ethics are not run by Centrelink (robodebt should never exist!). Ethics are not
run by coal mines (coal is no longer needed for the entire globe – read about
it!). Ethics are not run by political parties (the difference between
politicians and ‘normal’ people are astonishing). Ethics are not run by racism.
Ethics are not run by war. Ethics are not run by individuals who set their bar
very different than every other country.
Ethics must be prudent for all people in this country, and indeed in the globe.
“As cultural, social, environmental and
technological changes transform the world, the demands placed on learners and
education systems are changing. Technologies bring local and distant
communities into classrooms, exposing students to knowledge and global concerns
as never before. Complex issues require responses that take account of ethical
considerations such as human rights and responsibilities, animal rights,
environmental issues and global justice."
“How people see the world is generally informed by
their own cultural experiences, values, norms and learning. From the earliest
periods of colonisation, views about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
cultures and social organisation (including their values and mores) were based
on ill-informed perceptions and assumptions. These perceptions arose from
inappropriate comparisons of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander world to
the spiritual, social, political and economic perspectives of European
colonisers.”
“Ethics is the process of questioning, discovering
and defending our values, principles and purpose. It’s about finding out who we
are and staying true to that in the face of temptations, challenges and
uncertainty. It’s not always fun and it’s hardly ever easy, but if we commit to
it, we set ourselves up to make decisions we can stand by, building a life
that’s truly our own and a future we want to be a part of.”
Globally, ethics are defined.
WHO will “respect the dignity, worth, equality,
diversity and privacy of all persons.”
"The ethics of care ... supports concepts and
practices that render polities more democratic and more caring so that all
voices within the political fabric will be heard and heeded and get the
effective opportunity to co-shape plural understandings of collective wellbeing
and the institutions that foster it."
Jorma Heier, lecturer at the political theory department of the
University of Osnabrück, Germany, looks at Political Repair
And yet it is often ignored...
And yet it is often ignored...
“I am intrigued by the question: how can the
movement of refugees lead to conflict? For example: a migrant needs to leave
his home country because of oppression but finds himself in a new country again
marginalised and excluded from society, it is an immense problem for the
us-them polarisation which dominates the migrant debate... Contemporary debate
is dominated by fear.”
Bernie Deekens, Project manager for Utopian
Unemployment Union (UUU)
“The term ethics ... refer to rules or guidelines
that establish what conduct is right and wrong for individuals and for groups.
For example, codes of conduct express relevant ethical standards for
professionals in many fields, such as medicine, law, journalism, and
accounting... ethics provides a framework for understanding and interpreting
right and wrong in society.”
“[No one should] identify ethics with religion.
Most religions, of course, advocate high ethical standards. Yet if ethics were
confined to religion, then ethics would apply only to religious people. But
ethics applies as much to the behavior of the atheist as to that of the devout
religious person. Religion can set high ethical standards and can provide
intense motivations for ethical behavior. Ethics, however, cannot be confined
to religion nor is it the same as religion.”
Manuel Velasquez, Claire Andre, Thomas Shanks, S.J., and Michael J. Meyer
Manuel Velasquez, Claire Andre, Thomas Shanks, S.J., and Michael J. Meyer
“...discussion
in this area has been grounded at least as much in the distinction between the
free and the constrained as it has been in those between the good and the bad
or the right and wrong... in what has likely been the single most widely
influential contribution to current discussion about ethics within
anthropology...”
Joel Robbins
It’s physical, nonphysical or metaphysical.
Joel Robbins
It’s physical, nonphysical or metaphysical.
“Some things in the universe are made of physical
stuff, such as rocks; and perhaps other things are nonphysical in nature, such
as thoughts, spirits, and gods. The metaphysical component of metaethics
involves discovering specifically whether moral values are eternal truths that
exist in a spirit-like realm, or simply human conventions.” Kant said “although
emotional factors often do influence our conduct we should nevertheless resist
that kind of sway. Instead, true moral action is motivated only by reason when
it is free from emotions and desires...”
(IEP also defined ‘war’: Denis Diderot said that war is "a
convulsive and violent disease of the body politic...")
There is so much reading for anyone, even school
children, but if you have learned or will learn about ethics, and live your own
life inclusive of all other people’s
rights, then perhaps this country could improve.
It really should
improve.
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