The Brits have always loved their cruel witch-hunts and persecutions. I had vaguely expected a new age to dawn with the twenty-first century but recognize now (after reading many recent postings) that it was a vain hope and that they are becoming worse.
Is it not one's moral duty to show kindness to every other person in all circumstances?
Is it not one's moral duty meekly and compassionately to accept the possibility of one's own fallibility?
Sometimes this is called "Christian kindness," but my experience is that in practice many more Buddhists display this virtue than do "Christians."
Is morality any longer taught to the general population, and if so, where and by whom?
Here is a long article about humanity's Golden Rule, or Ethic of Reciprocity: "Do as you would be done by," and its exemplification among a multitude of groups down the ages: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Rule
Is it not one's moral duty to show kindness to every other person in all circumstances?
Is it not one's moral duty meekly and compassionately to accept the possibility of one's own fallibility?
Sometimes this is called "Christian kindness," but my experience is that in practice many more Buddhists display this virtue than do "Christians."
Is morality any longer taught to the general population, and if so, where and by whom?
Here is a long article about humanity's Golden Rule, or Ethic of Reciprocity: "Do as you would be done by," and its exemplification among a multitude of groups down the ages: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Rule
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