LuluLovesDisney
<font color=red>If you're not outraged, you're not
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2005
- Messages
- 5,274
Well, Bicker, count me in.
I just ordered it, too.
I just ordered it, too.


I don't want to speak for the poster you were responding to, but I took his post to mean that we teach moral relativity these days. What is right for you and me, for instance, may not be right for somebody else. We don't speak of an inherent truth or any moral absolutes.LuluLovesDisney said:Not true. I am a teacher and I am required to teach THREE "Character Education" lessons a year and describe them in an essay, include my lesson plans and send them to a director in the school. Yes, I teach in public school. We are not allowed to proselytize, teach religion, show favoritism to certain religious beliefs, etc. However, teaching children the consequences of lying, stealing and cheating is perfectly acceptable and encouraged by many schools. In fact, my boss laminated a poster explaining "Academic Integrity" and asked all teachers to post it in their rooms. Mine's prominently displayed.
My character lessons this year were on:
Acceptance of others (different colors, religions, etc.)
Self sacrifice (giving up something you want, or even your own safety, for someone else)
and
Choosing between what you think is right and what you are told to do (by a friend, a law, a promise, etc.)
While we have a long way to go, this is certainly not unconstitutional- it's a requirement for us.
For the record, it isn't unconstitutional to teach children that lying, stealing and cheating is wrong. It is unconstitutional for the government to tell people which god to worship. The 10 Commandments don't tell people that cheating is wrong. The 10 Commandments do tell people which god to worship.Darian said:I think the 10 Commandments have something to say about all that. Since it is now unconstitutional to teach our children that lying, stealing and cheating are wrong, well, I'm not surprised by the devolution of our society. The value of a human life has been degraded as well.
salmoneous said:For the record, it isn't unconstitutional to teach children that lying, stealing and cheating is wrong. It is unconstitutional for the government to tell people which god to worship. The 10 Commandments don't tell people that cheating is wrong. The 10 Commandments do tell people which god to worship.
Lanshark said:Bicker,
People defending cheating are looking for justification for their actions. Many times people will post about "cheating". I've never figured that one out. The pattern is always the same. First they post that they are cheating and ask if everyone thinks it's ok. Usually other cheaters will post and say they are doing nothing wrong. Those are the enablers. They're the ones the cheater wants to post.
Next you'll get the morally superiors saying that cheating is wrong. A bunch of morally superiors will then jump on the cheater. Pretty soon the cheater's sycophants will jump on the morally superior posters defending the cheater's right to cheat.
Here's where the tables are turned. The cheater becomes the victim. The morally superiors become the bad guys and the cheater has received his justification.
People might actually listen to the morally superiors except they're so darned arrogant.
End of my analysis
Now there's a good idea!cardaway said:Maybe if they cut it down by a few.
Maybe we could add a few too. Think anyone'll mind?Darian said:You can thank the "worst generation" - the hippies and yippies and other 60's radicals for discarding the best aspects of our culture and embracing treason, selfishness, cowardice and social changes which eliminated personal accountability, duty to one's country and fellow man as well as any sort of moral responsiblity for their own actions. Yes, even the lack of courtesy in our present time can be laid at their feet. Yes, the 60's were a dark and evil blotch on the history of the world. That is the legacy of the 60's.
bicker said:As you alluded to, businesses typically comply with the "letters of the" law, if not what some would interpret as its "spirit". By contrast, many members of the general public seems to have little concern about violating letters or spirit. I cannot help that the lack of integrity in the general public, which goes deeper than that in the business realm, is what drives those in positions of power in the business realm to violate "spirit". After all, each and every business decision-maker is also a member of the general public, which is a much larger and arguably stronger force in our society.
Reading posts on the DIS, it seems clear that many people don't care about the spirit of the law or even the letter of the law. Their standard is "what can I get away with." Take a look at the DDP threads where people are saying, "I know Disney has now made the rule clear in writting, but until they put an enforcement mechanism in place the rule doesn't count".momof2inPA said:What amazes me is the complete lack of business ethics in our current culture. Everyone is always trying to not violate the letters of the laws, while completely violating the spirits of the laws, followed by a quick trip to church on Sunday. I don't think the Bible would condone this type of behavior.
Darian said:If a person believes that we are just evolved animals, then behaving like animals only follows and should come as no surprise.
Amen!!! Just look at the way people drive now!!!!mickman1962 said:The problem with the book is that the people who really need it don't know it as they don't think of themselves in that light.