| | I would like to offer another idea about this controversy, in the form of a question.
Why do some of you think that profound moral importance attaches to pronouncements made by the President of the United States, in this instance on the topic of the bad behavior of the Iranian State toward its subjects?
What is the source of this alleged moral gravitas?
My comment above might appear snide, but I ask the questions sincerely. No one here enjoys the spectacle of Iranian murdering and bullying.
There is a related point I'd like to mention. In just the past two years, the freedom of Americans has come under continuous withering assault. Our economic system has been transformed before our eyes, in the form of de facto nationalization of the bank system; draconian inflation of our money; quantum leaps in uncontrolled Federal spending and borrowing; the nationalization of huge insurance firms, industrial manufacturers, and housing finance; and the grant of vast new regulatory powers to the Federal Reserve System. The American way of life has been permanently altered, from a system of heavily burdened capitalism, to one of state capitalism...the beginning of economic fascism.
People who live unconsciously think this is not that big a deal. They are mistaken. They think that "our grandchildren" will have to pay the bills, but they're wrong again. We are going to pay those bills right away, in the form of immediate economic disintegration and declining real incomes. Our Elected Moral Spokesman, the President, will see to it that all of us have much less freedom, pay much higher taxes (income, value-added, and inflation), pay much much higher interest rates, and struggle with far more difficult lives. If you think this is hyperbole, please...stay tuned.
In light of the rapidly diminishing state of American freedom, I find all this heated discussion about freedom in Iran rather remarkable. We're experiencing an epic crisis in the US, history-making events that will profoundly change the lives of every American. Yet the top political priority of many people who post here appears to be the state of freedom in Iran, a country with a long tradition of ideals hostile to individualism!
This is philosophical confusion. In morality, the value of generosity is necessarily subordinate to the value of productivity; one must first produce to be able to give. In politics, the highest moral priority must be to secure one's own freedom; only then should one crusade for the freedom of foreign populations. For without freedom, one cannot accomplish much of anything.
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