
Where, in that passage, do you see an iota of "both sides" or "moral relativism"?!? What Le Guin wrote was pure moral clarity. I guess I shouldn't be surprised it went over your head, after so much else did.
Since you apparently have a tin ear for skilled novelists showing moral truth with art, I guess we'll have to do it the tedious way, with argument.
Your apologetics are aiding and abetting an ongoing humantiarian outrage perpetrated by Catholics.
You appear to be confused about who are the apologists and which arguments are apologetics. This thread is an extended exercise in arson apologetics.
Only then if America is an extended effort in Treason Apologetics...
You say that as though rebellion against King George III, a man who got the king job by being the true and lawful heir of William
the Conqueror, is a violation of
morality. Are you familiar with the distinction between
malum in se and
malum prohibitum? Why on earth would you expect an analogy like that to carry any weight in a forum full of
republicans? Go find some monarchists to sell your false moral equivalence to.
George III had no grounds for being ruler other than "Might makes right"; so when you imply treason against him is
malum in se you're invoking "Might makes right" every bit as much as Toranaga was when he said "There are no ‘mitigating circumstances’ when it comes to rebellion against a sovereign lord!". That's taking morality off the table. You and Toranaga were both replacing morality with force so you were both inviting the answer Blackthorne gave Toranaga: "Two can play at that game."
Yes, the Declaration of Independence was treason apologetics. Duh! Pretty darn good treason apologetics too, if you ask me. So, to repeat the question I earlier asked you that you never answered:
what's your point? There's nothing wrong with writing apologetics for a
malum prohibitum.
The founding fathers were outlaws for a crime against the King in London. The arsonist is an outlaw for a crime against his own clan, against his fellow indigenous people. He burned down the church some of his own neighbors prayed in. That's a
malum in se.
Also, ironic that you tell "you are not an oracle", and then quote the words of someone who, in the very work quoted, admits to being an oracle. And you use her words as if she were.
I use her words because I see the wisdom in them. Where the devil did Ursula K. Le Guin ever demand to be taken on faith?