I was making a Google search for some information for a homily I gave last weekend. I needed, “Examples of things that are legal but immoral.” The last entry on one site said this:

“But if you're talking about actual morality (which is relative, not absolute), not the fake stuff religions claim, almost anything that's legal can, in some instances, be immoral. Legality is orthogonal to morality (IOW, one has nothing to do with the other)”
There is a lot of rich, fertile soil to dig in here. Probably because the cows have been standing over it too long.
So what is “actual morality?” Morality is the extend that one (or a group) can say something is right or wrong. If it is completely subjective, than I cannot say that something is right or wrong for someone else, only myself and those who either agree with me or that I can force to be obedient. Therefore, it may be illegal for me to let my dog do his business on you lawn, but I may think it moral. After all, dogs have rights, he enjoys the freedom, his gift to you is good for your lawn. And prevents filling up landfills.
The owner of the lawn however thinks it is completely immoral. He does not want my dog’s gift on his lawn, does not want my dog trespassing, does not think it is good for the environment, and is upset he is going to have to go outside and pick it up.
There is something we can do legally here of course, but is there anything we can say morally of morality is relative or subjective?

The paragraph would be better written:
“But if you're talking about actual morality (which is absolute, not relative), not the fake stuff relativists claim, many things that are legal may be immoral. Legality is orthogonal to morality only insofar as there is a basis for absolute morality.”
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I have determined that the "Devil Strip" is very correctly named. Reflecting on all of the unpleasant dog earth biscuits left there have led Akron residents to this aptly termed nomenclature. I am a dog lover. But biscuits are biscuits...
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