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Monday, March 19, 2007

A Lesson In Moral Reasoning

The White House and the thugs that reside there, are bereft of MORAL CLARITY
It was weapons of mass destruction, America and the Coalition went to war for wasn't it?

READ MORE: Joseph Nye, Iraq

I was recently at a dinner in DC at which a prominent neo-conservative columnist took issue with a politician who said the Iraq War was immoral. The pundit argued that our intentions of removing a mass murderer and promoting democracy were highly moral. But if we have learned anything from this war, it should alert us to be wary of such oversimplified claims of
moral clarity. Even if we grant purity of intentions, this is shallow moral reasoning. We should judge morality in three dimensions -- intentions, means and consequences -- and this war fails on the last two counts. Imagine that I offer to drive your child home after a party. I ignore the slick road conditions, drive too fast, skid off the road and your child is killed. I can plead good intentions of trying to get your child home quickly, but by my neglect of appropriate means and the full range of possible consequences produces a catastrophe that is not excusable even if I had good intentions. To defend this (or any future war) on the basis of the moral clarity of our intentions is impoverished one-dimensional moral reasoning. Whatever the president's motives, his inadequate attention to means and the full range possible consequences makes this an unjust war. That is my lesson for this anniversary.

LinkHere

Number Of Iraqi Civilians Slaughtered In America's War on Iraq - At Least 655,000 + +


Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed (Officially acknowledged) In America's War On Iraq 3,218


Cost of America's War in Iraq
$409,364,138,199
To see more details, click here.

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