minoanmiss (
minoanmiss) wrote in
agonyaunt2022-12-02 12:39 am
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Dear Prudence: Moral DIsagreements
How do I respond to a person doing something I morally disagree with that they are very excited about? I’ve found myself in many conversations over the past year where acquaintances, coworkers, distant family, or other not-close friends give me an update that makes me uncomfortable.
Examples include: “I’m visiting Hawaii during a drought,” “I’m trying to adopt a baby and fighting the birth mother for custody,” and “I’m going on a mission trip to Uganda to convert people to Christianity.” These are all things I don’t super agree with, but the person speaking often sees as positive or totally innocent. Do I just say good luck? Do I share my concerns? I feel like a self-righteous buzzkill if I react honestly, and like I’m silently endorsing their actions if I don’t.
—Paralyzed By Politeness
Dear Paralyzed,
This is hard to answer because it’s not about the words you say in conversation. It’s about the relationship you want to have with people who do things that you find morally objectionable. And only you can make the calculation about where certain actions fall on the “I would have made a different choice” to “Wow, you’re actually a force for evil and I don’t want to be close to you” spectrum in your mind. I’m guessing that a friend making a poor choice for the environment in a world where we could all stand to interrogate our actions might not rise to the same level as someone committing to a legal fight that you see as seriously hurting a specific child. But I don’t know! Either way, here is your guide.
If you think what the person is doing is so messed up that it makes you question whether you even really want to be friends with them: “Wow, that actually sounds kind of wrong to me!”
If you disagree with the action but not enough that it changes your opinion of the person or your desire to have a relationship with them: “Wow, how long will the flight be?”
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2) I posted this in part for self-centered reasons. I have a former friend whom I let drift away in part because I found we really disagree on politics (for instance they approve of the 1/6/21 insurrection). Recently a mutual friend contacted me about something valuable that this former friend wanted to give the two of us because they can't use it, and thus about getting me and Former Friend back in touch. I responded to both of them politely but now I need to figure out how much this valuable thing is worth to me vs my integrity, and if I want/ought to tell Former Friend and Current Friend why I let the friendship attenuate (I'm pretty good at keeping in touch with people when I want to be). So I'm extra interested in what people here think of this question.
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In your situation, it's a little more complex. Do you know what Current Friend's politics are, or how much they value the valuable thing? I live in an generally very blue city in a county that's got some purple stripes, and I could very easily say to a friend "Yeah, I stopped talking to them when I found out they supported the insurrection," and know they would 100% understand my decision and would be just as horrified with me, and then we could decide together whether having the valuable thing was worth continuing to interact with this person and/or how much of a relationship accepting the thing would make me/us feel obliged to have.
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You have a good point there. Also, this is the kind of advice about context about which I think Prudence should have gone into more detail.
Current Friend is to the left of me (in ways I admire) let alone Former Friend. Current Friend has also had a lot of stress (everything from multiple family members dying recently to being a woman of reproductive age in these United States) and I'm not sure how productive heaping this on her would be of me to do. If she hasn't discussed politics with Former Friend that may well be a deliberate decision on her part that I shouldn't challenge.
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You might be getting hauled into HR?? Why? You are entitled to voice your opinion just as much as your coworker is allowed to brag about her son's missionary work.
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But HR's first move would probably be to tell you *both* to stop discussing religion at work.
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You mean proselytizing? I don't think that has a place at work, so yes, I hope HR would tell them to stop discussing religion.
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They also should not proselytize on company time, of course.
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Yeah, I agree that the advice is useful to me. I have lots of friends whom I love dearly who make choices I wouldn't. Hell, if I scolded everyone who shops at Amazon, or who works at Google, I would have zero friends. And nor do I think those are appalling choices, to be clear, they're just ones I wouldn't make, just as I make choices every day that my friends disagree with!
But there are some things I think of as actively evil. "Travelling to Hawai'i during a drought" isn't (to me) evil, it's making choices the LW wouldn't make in a complex and fucked up world, where tourism is both harmful and vital for Hawaiians. "Fighting the birth mother for custody of a baby you want to adopt" is, in most cases, go directly to the evil box, do not pass go, do not collect $200. If I knew someone doing that and they weren't dissuadable, I wouldn't want to be friends with them or with anyone who still is friends with them.
In a co-worker case it's different, agreed. You can't tell your coworker that mission trips are evil, but you can ask them to not talk about it in the workplace, and you can possibly involve HR. But, say, if your co-worker told you they're trying to convince family to buy crypto (evil, sometimes socially acceptable, and not technically religious) you'd have a harder time getting HR involved.
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But it is not that unusual for me to hear "cousin's ex's aunt wants to get rid of $thing and we thought of you, could you use it?" (And vice versa - "We have $thing that is theoretically valuable but very few people can use, I remember that a person you used to invite to your Christmas parties was into $thing, I don't remember their name but you probably have contact info, do you think they'd be interested?") Passing things around that way does have some effect on social ties, don't get me wrong, but they are (often deliberately) very weak social ties, and it's more of a pay-it-forward than pay-it-back sort of transaction. In that sort of situation I probably wouldn't think twice about anyone's political affiliations or moral choices.
I also sometimes think that maintaining those sort of weak social ties with people who have bad politics can be an ethically good act, not a violation of my integrity at all. Interacting in positive ways with people whose ideology opposes reality is often a key part of giving them the tools to crawl out of their echo chamber, and having those interactions be based around really weak social ties like mutal-aid sorts of things is a way to do that without having to actually, you know, listen to them talk about it, or staking any of your own emotional well-being or integrity on them not being assholes.
On the other hand there are people who aren't used to that same sort of culture who use that sort of gifting as a starting point to try to build a stronger relationship, or who will think of it as a debt owed, and that's an entirely different situation.
So I guess the point I am rambling toward is that if you think "put you back in contact" means "this person wants to rebuild the friendship back to where it was and wants to start with a gift", it's a different question than "we know the friendship is attenuated, but this is the sort of interaction it can still support along that tiny remaining thread, and we just want to find somebody anywhere in our extended network who can use $thing".