As a writer, I've tried to avoid strong opinions about morality. You just want to present things as they are and let the viewer come to their own conclusion.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Call me old-fashioned, but I believe that morality is not just a matter of opinion.
I like moral judgment to emerge from the reader. We are being sold a very simplistic morality by our leaders at a time when nuance and understanding are at a premium.
I do think that there are gray lines of morality in a newsroom, when it comes to some stories. The best-intentioned journalist still has a difficult mission, to try to boil down people.
Morality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people whom we personally dislike.
Morality will perform all this; and Morality is the fruit of Illumination.
Observe decorum, and it will open a path to morality.
Nothing I write ever has a moral. If it seems to a reader that there is one, that is unintentional.
In some ways, what I learned is that you can take a character and breathe with them, and it's up to the audience to interpret rather than you putting moral stamp on the character.
Morality is the theory that every human act must be either right or wrong, and that 99 % of them are wrong.
When it's a moral grey zone, the audience has to think about what they feel and what they think is right or wrong. You want to affect your audience and make them think.