And you can call it, this thread is dead.Stas Bush wrote: It does not. But why should it? A materialist recognizes that at some point in history the conditions allow one system, and at a later stage another system. Clearly I'm not going to castigate Mesoamerican natives for having a violent culture - back at the time it was inevitable. The point is that we cannot have it now. Same goes for Nazism. It was an objective fruit of the circumstances, if you're so willing. A materialist cannot and will not subscribe to subjective emotions. I may not like fascism and nazism, but I understand that their birth is as preordained as that of the tsunami or that of the earthquake, except they're social processes.
Your stance has morphed considerably, and this new position completely undercuts any possibility for you having any position. The second you state that ethics are determined by material conditions around us and that ethical exclusions, and adjudication in general, come second not only to categorization but to societal mindset you lose the chance to have any basic set of ethical beliefs or values. Put another way, you are creating a system wherein anyone can determine that their conditions are akin to those of the Nazis, Aztecs, Turks, whomever and that the normal rules that would govern play go out the window. In such a world they may decide that committing mass murder, enslavement, whatever is 'preordained' and that what they are doing is not just acceptable but inevitable and beyond reproach. Anyone anywhere, at any time, can simple stand up say "Child of my times" and get their gun.
What you're advocating for isn't consequentialism as much as it's ethical opportunism, ethics according to how much you feel you can give out, and if you do anything questionable it’s not your fault, it's pre-ordained. There is no way to discuss differing systems with you because there is nothing that you stand for, and no position that you take that you can't willingly give up if it proves to be the slightest bit inconvenient intellectually.
Ethics in name only.