agreed, but i don't think the poster in #33 finds it at all amusing
Ok I'll bite.
That quote assumes a universality to what is "just" and what is not. That is to say it's an objective determination of the truth of right or wrong. I say not; I say it's subjective.
Example: If I want to do a bit of landscaping in my back yard, maybe I'll put a brick walkway across it. Maybe that walkway will need a couple steps at one point. The law says if I build a run of three or more steps it'll need a handrail. I say: Get out of my back yard.
The point is to protect others from my actions. There are lots of people who believe in this law.
There is no way to prove one side or the other to this argument. It is and will always be a subjective determination forced into an objective decision. There is no "pure" truth to the question.