>Communities are not fungible, but they are also not permanent.
The same is true of individual humans. And yet, that is not a great argument for killing them.
>Communities are not fungible, but they are also not permanent.
The same is true of individual humans. And yet, that is not a great argument for killing them.
He not implying impermanence is an effective primary argument for killing a community, as in "This community is impermanent, therefore we must destroy it" in a vacuum. Additionally, humans and communities occupy different ranks in a moral hierarchy. I'm not sure your point is coherent.