Thursday, March 19, 2026

  • Thursday, March 19, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

R. Chaim Soloveitchik, one of the towering halachic minds of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, was known for ruling that sick people must eat on Yom Kippur even in cases others considered marginal. Critics accused him of being maykil, lenient, on the Yom Kippur fast. His response has become something of a proverb: "Kulum ani meikil b'isurim? Adraba, ani machmir b'pikuach nefesh." "Am I being lenient on prohibitions? On the contrary — I am being stringent on pikuach nefesh (safeguarding human life.)"

The critics thought it was a question about one value. The rabbi revealed there were two. And once both values are visible, the criticism collapses : Yom Kippur is important, but there is another  value that dwarfs it.  The critic had been doing arithmetic with only half the numbers.

This is the structure of what I want to call the One-Dimensional Moral Fallacy: the reduction of a multi-value moral situation to a single axis, with all competing values quietly removed from the ledger before the argument even begins.

Moral decisions are almost never a choice between a value and its absence. They are choices between competing values — security versus freedom, immediate welfare versus long-term stability, the lives of your own community versus the lives of strangers. Serious ethical reasoning, whether philosophical or practical, requires holding multiple values in view simultaneously and making a considered judgment about how to weigh them in a specific context.

The One-Dimensional Moral Fallacy short-circuits this. It works by selecting one value — usually one that is genuinely real and genuinely matters — and presenting it as the only value in play. The competing values aren't argued away. They're simply not mentioned. Then the judgment is rendered as if only one side of the scale exists.

The result resembles moral reasoning. But structurally, it's closer to fraud: the conclusion was built into the framing before the first word was spoken.

Senator Bernie Sanders has been running a version of this fallacy so consistently, and so transparently, that his recent posts almost serve as a textbook illustration.

On the war against Iran's nuclear program, he wrote: "The war in Iran has already cost $22.8 billion. For $22.8 billion, we could: Provide Medicaid to 6.8 million kids. Build 2.6 million public housing units. Fund Head Start for 1.3 million..."

This looks like an economic argument, but it is actually a moral one, and the moral structure is that the  cost of war results in foregone social goods,  therefore the war is wrong.

But that syllogism only holds if you've erased the other side of the ledger entirely. What are the costs of not acting? What does a nuclear-armed Iran — or a more aggressive Iran emboldened by the absence of military pressure — cost in human lives, regional stability, and the security of American allies and interests? Do we only have to worry about immediate threats and ignore others, or do we choose to act before threats turn existential? Sanders presents none of these. There is no counterweight on his scale. He says x > y without defining y

His other recurring posts follow the same structure. Wealth inequality is rising. The billionaire class grows richer while ordinary Americans cut back on food and medicine. All of this may be factually accurate. But every post treats economic equality as the supreme and singular moral axis against which all policy is measured. Security considerations, tradeoffs, competing goods, the actual mechanisms by which redistribution affects economic productivity — none of these appear. The single axis does all the work. It isn't even clear that wealth inequality is immoral to begin with - the only value seems to be that it violates a sense of "fairness" but is fairness really a value? Should those who innovate or build successful businesses be penalized because not everyone can do that as well? 

Sanders may have a coherent worldview: Sanders genuinely seems to believe that economic equality is the master value that subsumes all others. The One-Dimensional Moral Fallacy isn't always bad faith. Sometimes it's a genuinely impoverished framework, applied with total conviction. But that doesn't make ignoring other considerations valid. The structural distortion is the same either way.

When the fallacy is deployed deliberately,  it becomes a propaganda technique. And it's a remarkably effective one, because it's hard to counter without sounding like you're defending the thing being criticized.

Tell someone "you're ignoring the security cost," and they can say you're changing the subject. Tell someone "Palestinian civilian deaths matter," and they can't easily be argued wrong — because on the single axis they've selected, they're right. The suppression of the competing value is doing invisible work; the audience doesn't know what's been left out because it was never mentioned.

Several identifiable moves characterize the propagandistic version:

Premise smuggling: A hidden assumption is inserted — "if harm occurs, it is unjustified" — and treated as the moral baseline without argument. This converts a contested judgment into an apparent axiom.

Counterposition suppression: Alternative framings — "what would the actor be obligated to do instead?" or "what competing duty constrained the decision?" — are excluded or treated as bad-faith deflection.

Causal flattening: The action is presented as: They did X → therefore immoral. The preceding conditions, constraints, and forced-choice scenarios are stripped away, replacing genuine decision pressure with linear blame assignment.

The result is a sort of moral monoculture — a discursive environment in which only one principle is permitted to exist in the frame.

Jewish law offers one of the most sophisticated worked examples of explicit multi-dimensional moral reasoning in any intellectual tradition. The principle of pikuach nefesh — the preservation of life — is understood to override nearly all other commandments. But notice what this structure actually demonstrates: it doesn't eliminate the other commandments. Shabbat still matters. The prohibitions still have weight. Pikuach nefesh outweighs them in specific contexts, after an actual weighing.

This is categorically different from saying "life is the only value." It's saying: we have a coherent hierarchy of values, and in genuine conflicts, life ranks near the top. The other values remain in view. The judgment is made between them.

There's a deeper issue lurking beneath the single-axis framing that Western philosophical universalism tends to obscure.

Most people, when thinking clearly and honestly, do not treat all lives as morally equivalent in the context of conflict. A parent who prioritizes saving their child over two strangers is not considered a monster; they're considered a parent. A soldier who accepts greater risk to enemy civilians in order to protect his own comrades is operating within a moral structure virtually every military in history has shared. The concentric circles of obligation — self, family, community, nation, humanity — are a basic structural feature of how moral responsibility actually works.

The IDF, when it conducts operations in Gaza or elsewhere, is operating within this structure. Israeli lives weigh more to the Israeli military than enemy civilian lives — as they should, and as every military in the world operates. The honest moral question is not whether this hierarchy exists (it does, universally) but where its limits are, what duties it generates toward non-combatants, and whether those duties were met.

The One-Dimensional Moral Fallacy, applied to Israel, typically involves select a single humanitarian axis of how Israel's enemy populations are affected by war, pretending universalism is the only legitimate moral framework and Israeli lives are not even in the equation,  and then condemning Israel for doing what every state in history has done and what any coherent moral system has to account for.

The One-Dimensional Moral Fallacy shows up in climate discourse, in immigration debate, in criminal justice. Pick a contested policy domain and you'll find one side — usually the more activist side — arguing almost exclusively on a single axis while treating any appeal to competing values as evidence of bad faith.

What serious moral reasoning requires — what any framework worthy of the name must demand — is that all the values at stake be named, placed on the scale, and weighed. Moreover, the weighing system itself must be declared: if someone thinks that the economic inequality of Jeff Bezos being a multi-billionaire and online shopping hurting local businesses is more important than Amazon saving millions of people countless hours shopping and hundreds of dollars individually, then that should be stated plainly.  Judgment rendered without the full ledger isn't judgment. It's a conclusion dressed up as reasoning.

That's what moral reasoning looks like. If only one dimension is mentioned, then it isn't an argument - it is polemic. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 



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Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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