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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank

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To: Lane3 who wrote (7693)3/6/2001 5:17:03 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) of 82486
 
"...but I do not agree that it's moral to squirm out of a promise because it's inconvenient. It's just less immoral than the alternative."

I was out for a while on errands. I have to strongly disagree here. The immoral choice that exists is the one given not the one taken.

1. The given was a promise that could not with good conscience or right mindedness be kept. I did not make that choice you gave it to me as the circumstance under which to operate.
2. If the given "promise" to keep a secret were one that I had allowed then it would have been allowed under the presumption I stated. That is, that I would not agree to keep a secret about a plan to commit an evil act. Its not at all like your friend who plays with the facts to deceive a friend who calls on the phone.
3. The person who then discloses a plan to commit an evil act has violated the conditions of the promise to keep a secret (a trust) by attempting to implicate me as a co-conspirator. The "promise" then is null and void. It no longer exists and I am free to disclose at will. I have played out this scenario in the case of a disclosure of a plan to commit suicide. I confront the person with the fact that the promise is no longer valid under these conditions and that I will have to proceed in a responsible manner.
I see absolutely no act of deception on my part or attempt to deceive. I do feel a little squeemish in the sense of the discomfort felt but there is no immorality on my part of this struggle.
It is not a matter of convenience at all, it is a matter related to the conditions of the deal (promise). When the conditions are not present the deal is no longer valid. I made that clear in my original response, you seem to have ignored it. Right?
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