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In this video, we examine how religious moral frameworks can create ethical dilemmas by treating certain individuals as lesser and imposing ritualistic ideals of purity. For instance, in Deuteronomy 22, we find that a rape victim is forced to marry her rapist, reflecting a framework that not only treats women as property but also labels them as ritually impure. This ritualistic impurity creates a barrier to marriage and perpetuates injustice. Religion regularly says that morality comes from God, but if this is so, why would it create ritualistic ideas of purity that made the “most moral action” to marry one’s rapist? The judgments and norms placed on a woman who had sex didn’t come from nature; they came from religion. It created an environment where she needed a husband, yet would not be able to find one because she was considered impure to begin with. This isn’t the kind of moral framework you would expect from an all-knowing God. It is the moral framework you would expect from very flawed humans operating with ideas of superiority, dogma, and ritualistic cleanliness. Just by removing these outdated norms and the notion of ritualistic impurity, we can ensure that a woman is not unfairly judged or deemed unmarriageable simply because of her circumstances. Ultimately, this highlights that by discarding these problematic frameworks, we pave the way for a more just and ethical society. If this came from god, how are we morally better off by removing it?