Julian Baggini:
Out of sight, out of mindWe know slavery was an abhorrence, and that sexism and racism are wrong. Does that make our society more ethical? Not at all, argues Julian Baggini –
like generations before us, we make excuses for the clear injustices of our age......................
.....But if future generations were to look back at our period in history and judge that we
were grossly immoral, is there anything inaccurate in what they would say?
"At the start of the 21st century, Westerners enjoyed slightly cheaper goods only because they were indifferent to the welfare of those who produced them and supported a system which saw suppliers work for as little as they could get away with paying them. People pointed this out, and they could have eliminated the problem simply by paying just a little bit more for their basic goods - less per week than they spent on a couple of pints of beer on a Friday night.
"But they dismissed the critics as cranks and carried on as usual. They were convinced that, having abolished slavery and taken steps to eliminate racism and sexism, they had nothing else to feel guilty about.
Their complacency is warning to us, and to all times, that humans are always blind to the gross injustices that form part of the fabric of their everyday lives."MORE:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/05/03-3George Will (on This Week):
Right. And -- and, by the way, wind farms kill a lot more birds daily than are probably going to be killed in this oil spill.