Beverly McLachlin & group sex: the Labaye ruling.Our readers should now be familiar with Canada's Supreme Court ruling of December 21, 2005, which declared group sex to be normal and harmless. Catholic Insight discussed its godless god·less adj. 1. Recognizing or worshiping no god. 2. Wicked, impious, or immoral. god less·ly adv. character (editorial February 2006); the preliminary elimination of community standards Community standards are local norms bounding acceptable conduct. Sometimes these standards can itemized in a list that states the community's values and sets guidelines for participation in the community. (Leishman, April 2006); and the arguments of the two opposing justices (Carrutkers, May 2006). Below, Richard Bastien exposes the Court's fallacy fallacy, in logic, a term used to characterize an invalid argument. Strictly speaking, it refers only to the transition from a set of premises to a conclusion, and is distinguished from falsity, a value attributed to a single statement. that morality can be neutral. (Readers are invited to approach their Members of Parliament for legislation to overrule The refusal by a judge to sustain an objection set forth by an attorney during a trial, such as an objection to a particular question posed to a witness. To make void, annul, supersede, or reject through a subsequent decision or action. the MacLachlin immorality IMMORALITY. that which is contra bonos mores. In England, it is not punishable in some cases, at the common law, on, account of the ecclesiastical jurisdictions: e. g. adultery. But except in cases belonging to the ecclesiastical courts, the court of king's bench is the custom morum, and . The above articles are on our website.) ********** The Supreme Court recently concluded, in a 7-2 ruling, that clubs that feature group sex and partner-swapping do not harm Canadian society and should not be considered criminal. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Beverly McLachlin justified this decision by noting that "over time, courts increasingly came to recognize that morals and taste were subjective, arbitrary and unworkable in the criminal context...." In making this statement, Beverly McLachlin has in effect declared that one of the basic principles underpinning the Canadian legal system is that the law should never be used to enforce morality. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , enacted laws should be morally neutral. This is not only wrong, it is absurd. It is impossible to conceive of Verb 1. conceive of - form a mental image of something that is not present or that is not the case; "Can you conceive of him as the president?" envisage, ideate, imagine any law that does not have a moral basis. Even a bad law has a moral basis, i.e. it is based on a false morality. One cannot imagine a law that does not have some kind of moral rationale. For example, the law that imposes gasoline taxes Noun 1. gasoline tax - a tax on every gallon of gasoline sold excise, excise tax - a tax that is measured by the amount of business done (not on property or income from real estate) is based on the notion that people who drive around town should in some way pay for doing so. The law that provides for our progressive income tax system assumes that some people ought to pay proportionately more for government services accessible to all. The law that sets speed limits is based on the moral idea that we need to be concerned about the safety of other people on the road. The judgment rendered by Beverly McLachlin is flawed not only because it suggests that laws can be devoid of any moral basis but, more importantly, because it is inherently inconsistent. People who insist upon upholding the concept of moral neutralism neu·tral·ism n. 1. The state of being neutral; neutrality. 2. A political policy or advocacy of nonalignment or noninvolvement in conflicting alliances and of attempting to mediate or conciliate in conflicts between states: (i.e. the notion that there are no universal objective moral standards by which our behaviour can be judged) are themselves non-neutral. It is logically impossible to commit to neutralism without committing to a particular value, whether it is social peace, tolerance, multiculturalism, individualism, etc. Any such commitment entails a violation of neutralism. This points to an even deeper problem, which is that there can be no such thing as moral neutrality. The problem is not that neutralism is something difficult to achieve. The problem is that it is unachievable. And it is unachievable because it is inconceivable. It is simply impossible to make statements about social life without expressing some kind of preference about the criteria that should govern such life. In short, neutralism is for cranks. Does that mean that, insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as morality and the law are concerned, there is no choice other than being either a fool or a bigot bigot - A person who is religiously attached to a particular computer, language, operating system, editor, or other tool (see religious issues). Usually found with a specifier; thus, "Cray bigot", "ITS bigot", "APL bigot", "VMS bigot", "Berkeley bigot". ? The answer is no, subject to two provisos: a) enacted laws should be based on an objective moral order; b) the law should enforce morality only when the public interest is at stake. As regards the first point, the origin of enacted laws is the natural moral law, a concept that was first developed by Roman legal scholars long before Christianity appeared. It is a non-sectarian defence of objective, universal moral principles. Judges can make decisions based on natural law because it is sustainable independently of any religious or philosophical argument. To refrain from killing, stealing or raping women is not the expression of a "subjective, arbitrary and unworkable" preference, but a universal, objective moral truth easily understood by people of all cultural backgrounds. Beverly McLachlin and her like would respond that the real issue is whether private acts, such as group sex between consenting adults consenting adults npl → adultos con capacidad de consentir consenting adults npl → personnes consentantes consenting adults npl , are harmful to society. The answer is that sex is both a private and a public matter. Our sexuality is meant to bond man and woman and to create new life. And the bonding and the creation of new life cannot be separated. Marriage and family are natural institutions through which human beings are created, nurtured, educated and socialized so·cial·ize v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es v.tr. 1. To place under government or group ownership or control. 2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable. . We first learn to interact with others through our parents and our siblings siblings npl (formal) → frères et sœurs mpl (de mêmes parents) . Only after that first stage do we learn to interact in society. And social scientists keep reminding us that, failing the proper family environment, children are less prone to be socially responsible. The upshot is that we need stable marriages and families, not because the Church says so, but because they are vital to the future of a healthy society. One cannot deny that enacted laws have a moral grounding without tacitly denying that there exists a natural law. If we believe that the law is a pure invention of the human mind, then what we have traditionally called justice is sheer arbitrariness. And every man and woman knows deep in his (her) heart that that cannot be so. Richard Bastien is the Director of the Catholic Civil Rights League for the National Capital Area and a member of the Editorial Board of Egards, a French quarterly journal (www.egrads.qc.ca) |
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