Who else would try to convince others that Cheaters never succeed in profiting?

    • sebinspace@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      My favorite response to “why do bad things happen to good people?” is “what makes you think they were good?”

      • neo@feddit.de
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        10 months ago

        I don’t understand. I think bad things (e.g. cancer) can happen to everyone (e.g. small childrens/babies, selfless people…). Is your argument that no one is really good?

        • Smeagol666@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          It’s easier for religious people to believe in original sin than to accept that one day they’re going to die and they won’t get to meet Space Santa.

          • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Damn, Space Santa sounds so cool. Where can I meet him? Does he have buildings dedicated to him that I can go to?

            I should make a religion out of that.

        • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺@feddit.de
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          10 months ago

          The argument is that you cannot really know. You don’t know everything a person did. You don’t know the motivations with which they act. You cannot look into their heart.
          That is why you should refrain from judgement over a human in his entirety. You can and sometimes should judge individual acts that you have witnessed or are proven.

          This is explicit the Bible i.e. Matthew 7:1 and the Qur’an i.e. 1:4. I don’t know how it is written in the Torah, but generally in the abrahamic religions the final judgement is reserved to Allah, as He is the only one to truly know a human.

          But also outside religion, why is it that anyone should rise to judgement of whether someone is “good” or “bad” in face of serious illness or injury? Saying someone is good so he doesn’t deserve cancer implies that there is people who deserve cancer.
          I know the statement is usally meant to signal compassion. The compassion should be unconditional though, as it is a fellow human that is suffering.

          • BorgDrone
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            10 months ago

            The argument is that you cannot really know. You don’t know everything a person did. You don’t know the motivations with which they act. You cannot look into their heart.

            Yeah, we shouldn’t judge Hitler. Sure, we know he had millions of people killed, committed genocide and wrote a book detailing his exact motivations, but you cannot look into his heart and don’t know everything he did, so we should not judge him. He might just have been misunderstood and actually a really nice guy.

            /s

            You don’t need to know everything a person did to judge them. Good deeds do not erase bad ones.

            • Maybe include the second part of that paragraph i wrote:

              That is why you should refrain from judgement over a human in his entirety. You can and sometimes should judge individual acts that you have witnessed or are proven.

              But given the example of Hitler. Why is it important to consider the person in his entirety as evil? Aren’t the intention and act of genocide by themselves an evil that needs to be condemmend and prevented?

              I find Hitler and Fascism are great examples, because the story of the fascists being evil people is a form of “othering”. They are the evil people, but we are not the evil people. This can all to easily lead to ignorance to how easily Fascism can spread and infect any people. And we see it in the way Germans wiggled themselves out of responsibility for their crimes after WW2.

              To quote the Ausschwitz survivor Karl Stojka:

              „Und das haben Menschen gemacht, so wie du, du und ich. Diese Leute kamen nicht von einem anderen Planeten. […] Es waren Menschen, so wie wir. Und nicht Hitler hat mich verhaftet, nicht Göring, nicht Goebbels. Der Greißler, der Hausmeister, der Schneider, der Schuster, der Bäckermeister, die haben auf einmal eine Uniform gekriegt, eine Hakenkreuzbinde, und da waren sie die Herrenrasse…“

              And this was done by people like you and me. These people were not froma different planet. it was people like us. Not Hitler inprisoned me, not Goering, not Goebbels. [It was] the storekeeper, the house caretaker, the tailor, the cobbler, the baker. They suddenly received an uniform, a swastika armband and there they were the master race…

              Or to say it with a caricature In Nuremberg and other places - “but he had ordered me to it”:

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The most common, if subconscious, response is: “bad things happened to them so they must be a bad person”.

    • Whelks_chance@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I like this, but having skimmed it I didn’t find a description I connected with.

      For whatever reason, I feel the world isn’t “just”, but I personally will have a better life if I do good things. It’s rooted in selfishness rather than celestial balance.

      • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The world isn’t just. The universe isn’t just. Both of those have no concept of just.

        Society is better when people try and act like good people. So I do that.

      • jettrscga@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Sure you can alter circumstances to an extent and that’s probably the best way to live life. But all the good in the world doesn’t stop a freak car crash killing you or being struck by lightning. And while being struck by lightning is used synonymously with an act of god, I don’t think it actually means you deserved it. That’s the issue with the just-cause fallacy. It takes a huge spoonful of selection bias to only notice the people who did deserve it.

        In my opinion the idea of karma is a convenient crowd control mechanism to prevent people from taking action to fix their situation when they have faith that the universe will magically balance itself out.