Wednesday, December 30, 2009
The Black Balloon
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Is the ‘Golden Rule’ really that perfect?
The Golden Rule is basically "Doing unto others as you would want them to do unto you." This ethical system sounds perfectly undeniable, but actually, it carries its own flaws in many cases.
First, it does not take others' autonomy into account, in general. A person cannot just do whatever s/he thinks is right to others without their consent. Everyone in my family thinks that anyone who has a fever must be coined to get better. When my grandfather has a fever, he always asks my mom, or aunt, to coin his back and chest. To them, coining is a right thing to do though it hurts. Thus whenever I have a fever, they coin me, forcibly. According to the Golden Rule, they are ethical; however, they clearly violate my autonomy to be free from coining and to just take some medication.
The Golden Rule involves putting a person in someone else's shoes, and this creates paradox. In the case of abortion, for example, if a person pretends to be in the raped mother's position, she will regard the abortion as an ethical act because it is her body. She has the right to do whatever she needs to do with it. Conversely, thinking from the baby's point of view, she will definitely say that the abortion is wrong because she does not want to get killed. Whose shoes to be in?
Like some other ethical principles, the Golden Rule is anthropocentric. It cannot be applied to cases that involve non-human living beings and physical environment. This is because they—animals and especially non-living things such as mountains, rivers, trees and the entire ecosystem—are excluded in the Golden Rule. People cannot place themselves their positions. If one person tries to use the Golden Rule in those cases, s/he will end up feeling guilty about having pets, eating meat, slapping mosquitoes, killing flees and lice, and even mowing the lawn and cutting trees for housing.
The Golden Rule, in addition, denies the distinction between good and evil. It would work perfectly well if there was no evil people. Unfortunately, this world is full of them. If in a society good people always treated bad people the way they want to be treated, there would be no jails, no punishment, and criminals would walk around freely committing crimes all over the place.
The Golden Rule also fails to take into account people with personality disorder. A sadist wants violence to and from others, but that is never ethical. A person with Dependent Personality Disorder always at least needs to depend on others but never even thinks to be the one that others would depend on. A person with Paranoid Personality Disorder always fines fault but all these are never her/his fault to begin with.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
I'm in love with...
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Using Animals in Goods Productions and Toxicological Tests
[This is my no-more-than-2000-word paper for my professional ethics class back in March 2009]
For tens of thousands of years since Homo Sapiens started to roam the earth, especially in the last ice age that coincided with the starting point of making and using tools by humans in late Paleolithic, people have been utilizing their exponentially increasing intelligence to gain advantages from their physical environments and biological surroundings.[1] They have been doing so over the course of many millennia, first merely for their survival. For example, people in the past used animal’s bones to make weapons for hunting and wrapped their bodies with animal skins to keep themselves warm enough to stay alive and to be able to walk around finding food.[2] However, while people keep getting more and more developed, as a rule of thumb, they become even more demanding. They expand their purpose of using animal way beyond a subsistence level, aiming to improve the quality of their everyday lives by ironically attempting to achieve the ever-increasing desire of physical convenience and safety and psychological satisfaction. This may very well explain why the use of animals that involves killing their lives, as time goes by, is becoming more common and more abundant, ranging from a relatively more heated discussed toxicological pre-marketing product testing to manufacturing a trendy Lacoste leather clutch bag.
People’s demands for ever-escalating modish lifestyle and especially health safety have helped stimulate the use of animals in commercial products and product testing, respectively. Animal skins—most commonly seen to be that of crocodiles—are used to manufacture a wide range of clothing products such as bags, purses, wallets, shoes, shirts, belts, hats, and the like. Coats, in particular, are made out of furs from various animals including beavers, foxes, goats, kangaroos, jaguars, leopards, lynxes, rabbits, sheep, skunks, raccoons, otters, and so on.[3] It is estimated that around 40 million animals every single years—over three fourth of them are from farms, and the rest are from the wild—are killed for their furs. Those fur products shovel 11.2 billion dollars, at least, for fur industry across the world each year.[4] Animals are also specially used to make decorative products and souvenirs. Elephants’ tusks and buffalos’, moose’s, dears’ and rams’ horns are proudly used in interior decorations. Plus, plenty types of shells of all sizes are made into pendants, necklaces, bracelets, and even rings. Furthermore, before marketing some particular products that can possibly cause physical irritation and harm to human, scientists conduct many painstaking tests repeatedly of the products on numerous types of animals such as rats, mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, dogs, cats, sheep, cows, pigs, birds, fish, frogs, and monkeys to find out whether there is a desired effect and an unwanted side effect. [5] According to Nature Magazine, in the three- or four-year time for each and every single chemical substance to be tested for toxicological purpose, an unimaginably huge amount of animals, from 5,000 to 12,000, are experimented without using anesthesia whatsoever.[6] In the testing process, healthy animals are deliberately injected with diseases or exposed to chemical constituents. For examples, in cosmetic testing process, rabbits’ eyes are sprayed with perfumes to check if there are signs of injure and irritation, and sunscreens tests are done on guinea pigs. These tests, as the Humane Society of the
[1] Potts, Richard B., 2008. Human Evolution [DVD]. Microsoft® Student 2009.
[2] Thomas, Pauline W., 2008. Early Costume History [online]. Fashion Era. Available from: http://www.fashion-era.com/ancient_costume/early-clothing-celtic-dress.htm#Early_Costume_History [Accessed 13 March 2009].
[3] Gillespie, Karen R., 2008. Fur Industry [DVD]. Microsoft® Student 2009.
[4] Firth, L., 2009. Key facts . The Animal Rights Debate [online], 169. Available from: http://www.independence.co.uk/shop/science-and-health/issues/the-animal-rights-debate
[5] Ibid., West, L., 2009. How to Find Products Not Tested On Animals: Boycotting Animal Testing and Buying Cruelty-Free Products Save Animal Lives [online]. Available from: http://environment.about.com/od/greenlivingdesign/a/animal_testing.htm & N/A, 2009. Animal Experimentation: The facts [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/using/facts.shtml
[6] N/A, 2009. Animal Testing [online]. Wikipedia. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_ testing
[7] Ibid.
[8] Jeantheau, M., 2004. Animal testing: Cosmetics, Personal Care Products, and More [online]. Grinning Planet. Available from: http://www.grinningplanet.com/2004/10-12/cosmetics-animal-testing-article.htm
[9] N/A, 2009. Cosmetic Animal Testing: Cosmetic Industry [online]. ClearLead Incorporation. Available from: http://www.clearleadinc.com/site/cosmetic-animal.html
[10] Ibid.
[11] N/A, 2009. Animal Experimentation: The Facts [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/using/facts.shtml
[12] Firth, L., 2009. Key facts . The Animal Rights Debate [online], 169. Available from: http://www.independence.co.uk/shop/science-and-health/issues/the-animal-rights-debate
[13] N/A, 2009. The Cast Against Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_3.shtml
[14] Wood, E. Ethical Considerations in the Use of Laboratory Animals for Research and Teaching at the
[15] N/A, 2009. The Cast against Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_3.shtml
[16] Wood, E. Ethical Considerations in the Use of Laboratory Animals for Research and Teaching at the
[19] N/A, 2009. The Cast for Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_2.shtml
[20] N/A, 2009. Introduction to Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights.shtml
[21]
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Friday, December 4, 2009
Think globally, act locally, and start individually
My First Volunteer Job
In 2006, I volunteered to work as an environmental and psychological counselor to help physically and mentally abused minors at a local non-governmental organization named
First of all, the initial advantage that emerged from this pro bono work is being able to be acquainted with what has truly been happening to Cambodian under-age people, especially female children. During working there, I was allowed to read the organization’s data that gave me detailed information about causes leading to prostitutions and using drugs. I was shocked to know how vulnerable Khmer kids can be. Some children staying there whose age were just around 7 to 14 years old had been subjected to brokers and smuggled again and again up to 6 times throughout the country and even abroad. As the name of my position implies, this job also enabled me to have very personal talks with all the kids there. Through this, I could profoundly understand how difficult the kids had felt about their unforgettable afflictions and what a relief that they were rescued and secure. Knowing all these information could truly help me be more careful about my own siblings, it also encouraged me to contribute more in other NGO funds.
In addition to being aware of the inconvenient fact as I said above, this job also benefited me by providing a good opportunity to help the kids without having to spend money but with my knowledge that was always ready to be used. By doing this job, I was able to easily apply my theoretical lessons into reality as well as to help the children gain awareness of the nature and comfort in their communities when they get back. I taught them my in-that-time-newly learned environmental lessons on how to make compost and convert their compact and unused soil to be fertile for gardening and farming. Likewise, I also helped them recover their feelings so that they can sooner go back and fit in with their communities. In short, this job let me have a strong hope that I could a least help a handful of people in becoming environment-friendly and once-again comfortable dwellers in their communities.
Last but certainly not least, the most significant advantage arising from this unwaged work was nothing else besides adjusting a big piece of my personality. I have changed for the better since then. It is such a shame to speak out the fact that I had been so racist, particularly toward Vietnamese and Thai people, before I took the job; nonetheless, I am so proud to say that I am not anymore. Instead of being discriminated, I personally think that both the Vietnamese and Thai kids living in the organization were even more pitiful because during my working period there, we often had conversations, and it was so hard and frustrating that they could not speak their minds at all besides showing pathetic faces and shedding their countless drips of tear. Furthermore, I have also become more considerate. I have most of the time reminded myself about the victimized kids before I spend much money on something, and hence I have never been so spendthrift ever since.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
“Girl makes the grades despite her disability”
By Prum Seila & Nou Vannsan
The Phnom Penh Post, November 4, 2009.
Edited Version
While her classmates write with their hands, Duk Chhavy, 14, is not as fortunate as her peers and relies only on two feet in daily activities such as studying.
Sareun, Chhavy’s mother, recalls the harsh judgement that surrounded Chhavy’s birth.
“My neighbours told me it’d be better to let Chhavy Die,” she said.
Sareun said that before Chavvy turned a year old, she and her husband separated as they were unable to come to terms with her handicap.
But Sareun was determined.
“I could not let my daughter die,”she said. “I will do everything to help her.”
Sareun’s relatvies give her physical and moral help, and Chhavy gets help from her mother and her relatives, who have never thought of sending Chhavy to school and be with other kids.
At first, Chhavy’s classmates teased her with names like “crippled girl” and avoided playing with her. Even teachers of Svaysor Primary did not believe that she was able to hold a pen and fit into their class.
However, with her perseverance and with the support from Save the Children Norway, Chhavy was able to study at Svaysor Primary.
[...]
Chhavy has achieved remarkable grades that are comparable to her peers, and she dreams of taking dance and singing lessons and having access to libraries. She is preparing for entry into high school next year. “Chhavy has never asked people to raise her up whe she falls, the only thing she can’t do is to clothe herselft,” her mother said.
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Panha: I am always overwhelmed by stories like this.