Mal Fletcher considers the growing fear in society of all things traditional
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In this he was ably supported by passionate clerics like Bishop Tutu.
These heroic activists for human rights did not challenge social ills in the name of some ill-defined and unproven "new" morality.
They demanded a return to an even more primordial sense of right and wrong, which precedes the modern state. Their call was for a more not less traditional moral system.
They saw injustice not as a sign that moral evolution must occur, but that long-forgotten and sometimes universal moral standards must be re-applied within recalcitrant societies.
Obviously, the fact that something is traditional makes it neither necessarily right nor helpful. But what we seem to be moving toward is a tendency, perhaps because it suits sectional interests, to abandon all traditional morality out of hand, simple because it has been around a long while.
Sometimes the fact that something has a long pedigree,
especially within freedom-loving societies, might be seen as evidence
that it works and is worth preserving.