As former JWs we were part of a highly moralising religion. We have experienced the disastrous consequences of it in terms of hypocrisy, judgementalism or pathologic guilt. Most of us have changed our "moral parameters" drastically, but how far have we gone in questioning morality itself?
Do you still believe in some (personal or social) "ethical code," even if it's worlds apart from the JW system? Do the categories of "good" and "bad," "right" and "wrong," play an important part in your life and/or talk? Or do you tend to see morals as basically pointless, even though perhaps socially unavoidable? Do you feel the need to teach some "moral values" to your children, for instance?
My question is not about what you think is "good" or "bad," nor even what the distinction is "based on"; it's rather whether you believe in such "absolute values" or not, beyond the simple logic of causes and consequences. And that is not about religion: there might be amoral believers and moral unbelievers...
Just thought it might be an interesting discussion with such a nice bunch of apostates.