I am using ethics in the sense of human freedom.TWRule said:I'm using "ethics" in the sense of the science of human freedom - in which case the main value is freedom and everything grows from that. If you believe in free will, the system I've been describing is the most self-consistent that I know of. If you don't - well then you're right, there are plenty of other systems you can come up with (though ethics would no longer be the science of human freedom but something else). Then again, if you don't believe in free will, it's sort of pointless to talk about a justice system anyway since no one could rightfully be held responsible for their actions. Morality, and actions based off of it, are indeed relative, but that is not the sort of action being discussed here. Morality and ethics are often used synonymously, but there is an important distinction we should honor.
It doesn't matter what the source of the oath is. There is no such thing as "governmental ethics." People just have to take responsibility for their own actions, whatever that might entail. Of course, that means that everyone needs to be held responsible for their actions, including the corrupt prosecutor. Your courtroom oath is not solely to him or the government in particular, but to all the citizens of your nation. His need to act justly toward you is part of the rules he agreed to upon taking his job.
If you follow-through with your oath which he coerced you into and it's later discovered what happened - you are absolutely blameless, but he can be punished. Likewise, if you refuse the oath and he follows up his threats - again, punishment is only warranted for him. If you take the oath but then purposely obstruct justice, then you can be held accountable for an ethical violation to everyone's right to the operations of a fair justice system (even though the prosecutor would still also be punished later if people found out what he did). You are not only affecting the prosecutor here, but everyone involved. Therefore even a moral cause may not absolve you in the ethical sense.
The thing is, you have a more or less blind faith that governments and individual justice systems actually functions as some kind of "guardians" of human freedom, which they have never done in reality. They are merely masquerading as guardians of individual liberties in order to fulfill fulfill the needs of the powerful to assume self-perpetuation. The bullshit about safeguarding "freedom" is just a sham in order to fool people into thinking that it's what these institutions do and that it makes them important and worth keeping around and even let them INTRUDE on our personal freedom in order to supposedly "safeguard" it.
I however do not buy into this masquerade. Personal freedom is something you have to TAKE, because it can't be given. Thus when an institution is trying to coerce me into something with threats of taking away my freedom or somehow sabotage my freedom, I fight back rather than buy into their bullshit.
It is the only ethical and moral thing for me to do. I have to show this institutionalized act of coercion that coercion will not generate any benificient results when used against people who consider themselves "free". Playing along their arbitrary rules and sham courts only solidifies their opinion of me as a slave and not as a free individual.