JohnK
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2005
- Posts
- 44,227
But who is defining the line? By the way I'm not saying they're right. They have a different belief to us.This argument only holds to a certain point. While it may hold true for democratic countries, it probably doesn't for totalitarian regimes. And which countries are we usually critical of?
In which circumstances do you think it would ok for your daughter to be denied education, be married at 12, be raped, be prevented from holding a job, be denied every opportunity that a male might have? I think there's a line where we can actually say there's a 'right and wrong'.
There are countries that execute drug dealers. Should we force them to change their laws?
There are countries that execute mass murderers. Should we force them to change their laws?
There are countries that force citizens to idolise dictators, oppressors, monarchs etc and yes @dajop they do kill you for not feeling the same. I don't agree with it but you can't force them to change their views. North Korea is one right? Myanmar is another right?
There are countries that have strong religious beliefs? Should we try to change their beliefs?
I mentioned Africa and Central/South America earlier that have serious issues where basic human rights are ignored where warlords and drug lords rule with fear. Entire communities are wiped out and we are powerless to stop them. The same thing you mention about 12 year old girls happens there as well.
We live in a cruel world.