You dont understand moral philosophy, your questions and assertions are just strawmen.
Sorry if I have offended you, that was not my intent... and if my post falls flat, and I demonstrate a lack of understanding of the details of you worldview... please forgive me my ignorance. My goal was to help you see that if humans are unable to determine, objectively, that one moral action is better than another one, the end result will inevitably be a very ugly existence, much like that which exists for the poor souls who live in North Korea. The result of moral relativism is might makes right, and since it has become apparent that Alexander Tyler is going to be proven right eventually, the might that is most likely to prevail in the future is not a western democracy. Please, show me a reason to think I'm wrong here.
See, my point is that, ultimately, from a purely human perspective, you are correct. We, as humans, have proven, over and over again throughout history, that we absolutely cannot consistently make morally good choices, and we certainly can't always agree on what morally good even is! Yet, deep down, we all have this longing for justice... for things to be made "right". Despite our differences, cultures around the world have astoundingly (not always exactly) similar ideas about what constitutes right and wrong morality. No individual person can always determine exactly what the "moral" thing to do is, but we are all aware of a DESIRE for things to be good and right, and almost all humans desire to do what they see as "right", even when they have to admit that they have done things knowing they were wrong when they did them. Humans, fundamentally, are flawed. We desperately need help. No philosophy, no code of laws, no religious text (even the Bible!), can give us right guidance on every decision we make in every circumstances we face. Philosophies, at their best, help us understand ourselves and the world around us better. Religious texts, at their best, can give us a worldview (not very different from a philosophy), and guidelines to follow that are trustworthy, but sometimes these guidelines conflict. Do I tell the truth, and allow this evil person to find the child sex slave I rescued, and am hiding in my basement from being recaptured? Or do I lie, and send this evil person away empty handed, and save this child from a horrible fate? Do I pick up this gun, and stop a person bent on doing unspeakable evil unless I stop him immediately? But killing is not good...
Ultimately, we need a good Counselor to be with us always, who knows exactly what the right thing to do is, in every situation. We need to be forgiven, over and over again, for not doing what is right, and for doing what we know to be wrong. All too often, we need to be told that what we have done, or are about to do, IS wrong. We need to be told that such a Counselor even exists, and we need to know enough about His character so we can recognize His voice when He speaks. We need to know, above all, that caring genuinely about the good of others, just as much as we care about the good for ourselves, is absolutely the most important thing in our relationships with others. We need a hope that ultimately, things will be made right. I NEED THIS! WE...ALL... NEED... THIS! Even if you don't believe He exists, at least acknowledge that some part of you WISHES He did, even while you are appalled at some of the things you see in this world, and some of the things you read in His word. Ask yourself: if there is no objective moral truth, and ultimately yours is no better than anyone else's, WHY, then, are you appalled at what you see and read? What if those things you're horrified eyes see are, as the Bible says, the consequences of God's judgment on an evil, cursed world, or the actions of a person doing something terribly wrong? What if those passages in the Bible that you are appalled at are copyist errors, or interpolations from self serving copyists/editors (not saying they are, just asking a pointed question)? What if the core of what the Bible teaches actually IS reality?
Why are we so desperately in need of exactly what the Bible tells us God has created us for? Indeed, why are there millions of people, from all kinds of backgrounds, who claim to have experienced exactly what the Bible promises? Why is there anything at all, and how did it come to be? And, seriously, if we're all just independent moral agents, and no morality is inherently superior to another, why does your posts indicate that you are here, not to better understand us, but really trying to convince us that your viewpoint is superior, and ours is just wishful thinking and delusion?
I do not desire to insult, but to challenge you to consider these things from a different perspective than what you have been, just as your posts have done for us, even when I sometimes felt insulted by what I read... I really SHOULD desire to understand how you see things. In the end, really trying to see things from another's perspective, as challenging as it may be, is really quite rewarding, and may actually help us make the world a better place to be. And maybe, just maybe, we might come to see things in a way that we never have before, and be better for it. Hope this helps...