Whose morality?<https://mail.google.com/articles/politics/432-whose-morality>

Tuesday, 09 February 2010 08:18
*Seeking points of reference in the Zuma debate*

On the eve of his first full-blooded *State of the Nation Address *in
parliament and with the ash of the celebratory fires of his fourth wedding
barely cold, President Jacob Zuma – with news breaking about a baby born
outside wedlock – triggered a furious debate on the question of morality in
public life. It is a complicated subject, interwoven with diverse cultural
heritages in which we sought a few fixed points of reference.

In an attempt to keep our contribution to the debate divorced from the
details of the Zuma affair, the first source we chose is a piece on a blog
written in January last year by the prolific social commentator, Pitso
Tsibolane.

With reference to moves at that stage to get Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and
Tony Yengeni elected into parliament, he wrote: “Clearly, the two remain
popular within their party and despite their dubious moral standards (based
on their criminal convictions), they seem to be seen as good political
leaders.

“This certainly raises the question: should politicians, despite their
popularity and prominence, be subjected to moral standards?

"In the US, impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton were instituted as
a result of events relating to the sex scandal with his intern. Clearly, the
lies, the denials and the conduct of the president – a political leader –
mattered to some so much that his fitness for high office was questioned
very seriously.

“Was if fair for a well-performing president, who brought economic
prosperity and relative peace like Clinton, to be in such trouble for having
consensual sexual relationship with another woman while he was married?
Should morality have been set aside for the sake of politics?” Tsibolane
asked.

He comes to the conclusion that “one thing seems to be certain about
politics and morality: in the long term, amoral and immoral political
leadership will result always in the downfall of politicians and societies
that ignore the link between the two. Such nations resemble a heavy ship as
it tries to navigate rocky seas without a compass.

*Universal morals?*

On the more purely philosophical front, we had a look at an article under
the heading, “The Moral Imperative Argument” by Rabbi Yitzchak Coopersmith
on the *Kiruv.com* website (www.kiruv.com/SSI/article).

“Most people believe in the existence of a universal ethic – that right and
wrong are real, objective values which prevail for all time and cut across
every geographic and societal boundary line; in short, that some things are
categorically good and others are unconditionally evil,” he writes.

Addressing the question of where these concepts of right and wrong stem
from, he points out that theories by anthropologists and sociologists
generally fall into three categories:

They are determined solely by the society in which we live;

Morality is essentially a social contract among members of society and
describes the means by which human society can survive and flourish; and

Morality is simply an expression of personal taste or opinion and completely
subjective.

Rabbi Coopersmith argues that on closer examination, each of these
explanations is flawed and therefore cannot be the catalyst for a universal
moral ethic.

All societies agree on many of the fundamental principles of morality.
Individual societies merely direct the application of these principles.
Extremely diverse societies, separated by thousands of miles, vastly
different from each other in almost every cultural way – somehow share a
common definition of murder;

If survival is the only test, why does the belief in right and wrong in many
instances actually threaten physical survival and motivate individuals to
sacrifice even his/her life in defence or fulfillment of a moral principle;

One need only to define the term “personal opinion” to realise that this
could not plausibly be the force that created a universal ethic.

He then argues that the only reasonable source for a universal eternal
standard of right and wrong is a universal, eternal Being. “By definition,
human beings are limited; their personal whims or opinions cannot create
anything absolute or universally binding. Only God, who is beyond time and
space, who is unaffected by the shifting sands of history and culture, can
create a set of standards which, as an expression of His will, reflect
universal and eternal truth.”

Rabbi Coopersmith concludes that “we take right and wrong very seriously. We
will, at times, make tremendous sacrifices for moral principles. We may
spend large amounts of time and effort; some of us may even give our lives.
We never cease to evaluate the actions, morals and political positions of
others. The manner in which we conduct our lives demonstrates that we are
aware of an absolute standard of morality.

“Thus, if morality is real and absolute, the only remaining explanation for
its existence must be that it is imbued within us by God, whose authority is
likewise timeless and absolute.”

http://www.leadershiponline.co.za/articles/politics/432-whose-morality


News is something someone, somewhere doesn’t want to read. The rest is PR.—
Claud Cockburn

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

Reply via email to