| | Robert Bidinotto wrote:"... morality presupposes freedom of choice in the face of rational alternatives. Where the use of force and coercion deprive you of any rational, life-serving options ... then no morality is possible. In such a situation, you shouldn't deem any coerced victim as "immoral" for trying to make the best of a bad, harmful situation."
I think that was Paul Larkin's point of view. He couldn't help it. He had to live, didn't he? Maybe it was Dr. Bob. He had no choice because men are irrational brutes who will not listen to reason. He had to live, didn't he? If you were in a concentration camp, would you suck up to the guards to get favors? If so, how should the rest of the people view you? As a rationally self-interested man in an untenable situation, or as a collaborator, and therefore as their oppressor?
RB: "At the point of a gun, no fully "moral" options are possible" Someone applying for a scholarship is not facing a gun. They are facing an invitation to meet a hold-up man at a pre-appointed time and place at which he will "return" to them some of the loot he has taken from some other people and from them.
RB: "... being taxed to pay for your neighbor's education, OR accepting offsetting government education grants yourself simply to avoid financial and competitive ruin..." Do you know any Catholic families? They pay taxes to send other people's kids to public schools and still manage to send their own often larger families to their own schools. Do not over-dramatize the sitiuation. There is a difference between life-and-death and financing education. Speaking of the Papists, does the fact that their neighbors tax them for schools they do not support give the Papists a right to steal from their neighbors?
RB: "... if the Nazis came to your door and ... " The Nazis came to my door and gave me a form to fill out so that I could apply for a scholarship to Hitler University. I threw it away. Do not justify the people who filled out the form and got government money for education.
RB: "If you say ... at the expense of those, like you. ... Your unilateral observance of "rights" in a coercive context will drive you... " Was that the rhetorical "you" or the Mike Marotta "you"? None of that applied to me.
RB: In metaphysically "normal" circumstances -- i. e., under freedom -- the principles of morality are practicable, so one wouldn't be moral if he used government to gain unfair advantages over others: that would truly be a violation of rights. But under governmental force and duress, rights aren't recognized, and one is not trying to obtain unfair advantages: one is simply trying to survive and minimize unfairness imposed by others, and not be taken advantage of. The aim is simple self-defense.
First of all, what are metaphysically normal circumstances? Any possible circumstance is metaphysically "normal." What can the phrase "metaphysically abnormal" mean? Does that mean those times when the laws of reality sort of hold, but not quite?
You say that in a free society, it would be immoral to use the government take advantage of other people. I say that in a free society that would be impossible by definition. The fact that it is possible is evidence that this is not a free society. I point out, furthermore, that the Constitution of 1789 granted to the government the power to maintain post roads and to coin money and to regulate the value thereof and to lay and collect taxes. All three of those are examples of government force and duress and according to your point of view would justify anything by anyone on the excuse that they were simply trying to survive and get by, say, as a tax collector or postman or port inspector or die sinker at the Mint.
RB: Since rights are no longer recognized under coercion, it is no violation of anyone's "rights" to take self-defensive actions in a governmentally imposed welfare-regulatory state.
Unless, perhaps, your goal is to become a policeman or some other well-defined and Objectivistically permitted government career, getting a government scholarship so that you can become a biologist or a philosopher or a computer programmer is participating in the coercion. Even then, I have to ask if becoming a policeman in a police state is the proper course of action for an Objectivist. Self-defensive actions do not include joining an oppressor group and ganging up on others.
RB: "... in the face of a gun, [morality] does not apply..." In America, there is no gun pointing at those who apply for government scholarships or apply for government jobs. Our social context allows wide latitudes in personal choices.
RB: "... you are forced to seek your self-interest by more primitive means." That rhetorical "you" again. I am not forced to seek my self-interest by primitive means. As I read you, however, I see you identifying the existence of evil in the world as your excuse to be evil yourself. I read your words as: "Some man somewhere has a gun, therefore, I can steal from my neighbors."
RB: "Do whatever you must in order to survive, and to return to morally normal conditions." If "doing whatever you must to survive" is irrational, then it prevents the return to "morally normal" conditions.
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