<p>So I asked a girl to make me a fake id. Unfortunately she made it in school without me knowing and now I'm in the principals office getting yelled at. They said if she didn't make it at school id be 0 trouble but I never asked her to make it at school. They suspended me for forgery/plagiarism. Is this even right? Should I even be introuble with the school? Answers please </p>
<p>Actually this is probably a lower level felony in my state. Count your blessings. </p>
<p>Pretty sure you’re trolling, but if not, welcome to the consequences of having zero character and integrity. I know of people who’ve gone to jail for faking their id for numerous reasons. You got off too easy in my opinion.</p>
<p>Did you admit to requesting your friend make a fake ID? If not, I say you should take the school district to court. They cannot prove that you asked her to make the id so you should be good.</p>
<p>Don’t listen to what the others say about “zero character and integrity”. Legality does not imply morality. You make your own morals based on your opinions. You did nothing objectively wrong.</p>
<p>@Jay520 “You make your own morals based on your opinions.” </p>
<p>So using that same logic, I could murder someone because that’s the moral I made based on my opinion that murdering people helps them escape their own, probably sad, lives. There is a clear right and wrong, and making a fake ID is one of them. If you’re not old enough to have a fake ID, then maybe, just maybe, there’s a reason why the minimal age for whatever it is you want to do is what it is. That said, I do apologize for being snarky OP.</p>
<p>@southerncharm95 </p>
<p>Yes, you could kill someone and, if you believe that it’s morally acceptable, then there would be nothing objectively wrong with your action. Nothing makes your moral code any less valid than any other moral code. There is no “clear” right and wrong; it’s just that cultures tend to label their subjective preferences as things that are “right” when in actuality they are no more than just arbitrary inclinations. There is no moral duty to follow the arbitrary inclinations of your culture. It’s all subjective.</p>
<p>In practice though, if you kill someone, you will probably go to jail and/or people won’t like you. So you probably should not do it if you value your own life. But this is for practical reasons rather than moral reasons. As for the ID, I’m sure there are reasons for the age restrictions. Are they good reasons? Maybe, but they still wouldn’t be moral reasons. They would just be some arbitrarily defined reasons created to suit the desires of the society. They wouldn’t be based on any form of objectively morality.</p>