EdenOne: Our world may not be the "best of worlds", as Leibniz has put it, but it's the best of the feasable worlds to produce intelligent life as we know it. I wonder if a planet without moving tectonic plates (and the consequent earthquakes and tsunamis) would be able to produce and sustain life as we know it, especially intelligent life such as ours. Perhaps that's the acceptable trade-off for life itself to exist.
This is simply ignoring the real issue through speculations.
Lets try this on for a change:
Suppose I was a geologist and I was at the beach a few hours before the Tsunami hit. A friend at my geophysics institute call me to tell me about the earthquake and hear if I am allright, and shortly after I see the water go out.
I immediately realize a very large Tsunami is incoming.
I then turn around, walk away from the beach, take a taxi and save myself. The majority of the people on the beach who was not warned perish.
YES OR NO:
Could I have acted in a more moral fashion? What if I claimed to love the people who died that day on the beach? is my actions still indicating I did my best morally?