Imposing your views to change others. Free will exists.
2007-08-09 18:51:17
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Laws are the minimum standards which society is willing to accept for all members --enough people have agreed to draw a line delineating what is legal and what is illegal. A civilized society simply cannot function without defining what is unacceptable and punishing those who cross the line.
Morals and ethics, however, are personal. But they are important because they impact our behavior. The government cannot (and should not) legislate morality.
However, someone with no sense of ethics/morals can have a more devasting impact on others than someone who broke a law. The examples are myriad. For example, verbally abusing your children by telling them that they are worthless is perfectly legal, but will likely cause emotional harm that they may never get over. This will obviously lead to other problems such as depression and self worth issues (which often leads to chemical dependency & other problems--additionally they will likely treat their own children in this manner and the cycle will continue.
Hope this answers your question. I have to ask, however, why "interrogation" is morally wrong? "Interrogation" is when you ask another person a question (an "interrogatory" is a sentence in form of a question).
Perhaps you are referring to interrogation with force or some type of torture. But those situations would be illegal, not just morally wrong.
2007-08-09 19:18:42
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answer #2
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answered by snowdrift 3
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interrogation is neither illegal or immoral, any question is an interrogative statement. Do you think it is immoral to ask a gas station attendant where the restroom is? I would guess that you are not talking about interrogation but torture. Torture may be morally wrong but so is shooting someone in the head and then blending into a crowd, or setting off an IED with a cell phone and then acting like you are just calling a buddy. How about this, You condemn the person that engages in guerilla warfare as much as you condemn the questioner. If it was your son, daughter, brother, sister, husband,wife, or whatever that was the victim of an attack I highly doubt you would have posted this insipid question.
2007-08-09 18:54:38
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Morally Wrong Laws
2016-12-14 15:42:11
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/awx3m
Well this explains why my competitors are getting ahead of me. I'm going to get rid of all my staff. If they're 1 minute late, they're gone for tardiness !! If they raise their voice, they're gone for insubordination !! If something doesn't look right in the way they did their job, they're gone for failure to follow instructions !! I'm going to replace all my staff with illegals to remain competitive.
2016-04-03 05:14:01
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Tie Dye
Prius Drivers
"press 1 for English"
blogging
NAMBLA
Mullets
And what is wrong with interrogation? It is simply defined as direct questioning about a specific incident.
2007-08-09 18:49:58
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answer #6
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answered by Reston 3
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Definitely cheating within a relationship. Also? Lying (when not under oath). Trash-talking someone (socially, not in a context that could be called libel or slander). Cheating at board games, little league, gym class... really in any class.
2007-08-09 18:45:04
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answer #7
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answered by Vaughn 6
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Cheating
2007-08-09 18:42:14
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answer #8
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answered by Laymo 2
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You seem to have a very limited concept of morality, I'll gladly clue you in!
Adultery, fornicating, sex with animals or with the same sex, racism, cursing, disobedient to parents, prideful, cheating, lover of money, drunkard, lying, envy,
2007-08-09 19:25:30
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answer #9
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answered by 1776USA 2
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Envy, Gluttony, Sex before marriage, Excessive pride/Vanity, Worshiping false idols...........many, many things are morally wrong but completely legal by man's laws.
2007-08-09 18:47:49
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answer #10
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answered by Daydream Believer 7
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