This is presuming that might makes right, that a moral authority comes by any quality of age, intelligence, strength, law, etc. I don't. Therefore I can just as easily conclude that a god or gods view on morality is just as POV based and subject to that POV.
You are a little mixed up here.
1. Might only applies to enforcement. I did not say anything about whether God being powerful makes anything he demands true.
2. Your also confusing what I stated to show that God's morality is objective with what it takes for his morality to exist. I assumed his existence as part of an "if then" argument.
3. I also pointed out in exactly what way it is that I meant it is objective in that those duties which his nature imposes on us are not products of the adherents opinions. I do not think that God's moral nature is subjective in any way nor does there exist anyway anything could be more objective but I did state in exact what way I meant objective in my claim.
4. However just for the heck of it lets go beyond the way I used objective. If the God of the bible exists then God's nature is not the product of anyone's opinion (including his own) and has never not existed. God holds sovereignty over every event, every entity, and all truth. It is the primal truth from whom all contingent truth has it's foundation and meaning. That is why Jesus told Pilate that he himself was THE truth, not A truth. If you think any objective fact what so ever exists then God's claim to objective truth is infinitely greater. If you do not agree then please petition Webster to remove the meaningless word "objective" from the dictionary because it has no meaning in your world.
I also am inclined to point out that having a god does not mean a. That god is a moral authority b. The word of that god is recorded correctly. c. The believer picks the correct revealed text or teaching. d. The interpretation of the reader of that word is correct and thus can say that even if I did believe a god were a moral authority, all believers in that god were still acting upon their own personal interpretation of that god's wishes. And it's been shown scientifically that when believers are asked 'What would Jesus do' they do not reach for the memory centers of their brain, as you would when recalling a command, but they reach for their opinions to find their moral compass (
http://www.pnas.org/content/106/51/21533.abstract ). Thus, still subjective.
You misunderstood again. In what you quoted I was not inferring to any random concept of God. In the concept of God I have faith in, the answers are provided in the characteristics I found preexisting in the Bible's description of God. I can give you an avalanche of reasons why I believe that God exists but that is another and very involved issue. The God I believe in is the highest possible moral authority (not even a theoretical God can have greater claim). Then you launched into the grossly mistaken (but always expected) response to a point about moral ontology with an argument from moral epistemology. (in fact a Christian can do nothing to stop this mistake from occurring, I used to explain upfront the thing that should not be stated in response, it didn't help so I gave it up). Nothing I have said is the slightest bit affected by what humans do. It is irrelevant to what I claimed if anyone ever recorded God correctly, transmitted the Bible perfectly, or chose scriptures incorrectly. With the exception of the Bible's description of God my points are still as inevitably true even if the Bible did not exist.
Also, your link is irrelevant because it is also only relevant if I had made an epistemological argument which I didn't. I made an ontological argument which even if the conclusions at your link were true they would not apply. I did not say humanity got God's morality wrong or right because it does not matter in this context. If any moral intuition any person has actually corresponds to a single actual moral fact then God must exist. If he does not then no objective moral facts can possibly exist and everyone is necessary wrong. Only with God does any objective right exist for anyone to be.
Finally, the atheistic worldview does not exclude objective foundations. Most atheists I know are some form of consequentialist, which judge the value of behaviors and moral positions based on objective measure of their impact the balance of happiness and reduced suffering in a given society. While most acknowledge that individual perspective makes margin for error (and I'll remind that religious have margin for error too, see above), the process by which they make moral judgments isn't arbitrary.
Consequences are irrelevant, any specific behavior is irrelevant, margins of error, and 6 billion different preferences and opinions about what morals are right and which are wrong are irrelevant. I am discussing what is necessary for anyone's moral opinion to correspond to a single objective moral fact, or another way of saying it, what God's existence and absence would mean concerning moralities existence. Virtually nothing you have said or the links you have provided have applied to those arguments.
Here is an excellent video series that explains logical morality from atheistic worldview:
http://viewpure.com/7iRCexvcDS8?start=0&end=0
I read your link, it does not apply. Unfortunately I debate at work when not busy and we have a DOD server which does not allow me to look up videos but this maybe a good thing because you do not see to understand what I was saying.
Please look up: Mallum en se', Mallum prohibitum, divine command theory, and moral epistemology v/s moral ontology. It will save us a lot of time if you wish to discuss this issue. So far I spent all my time trying to untangle what I was saying from what you thought I did. If you care about this issue reading about the issues I listed should interest you and you can get the basics concerning all 4 in less than an hour. Please feel free to ask me about them if you do not understand them.
If your sincere about these things I will even find good links for those 4 subjects and provide them to you, but I do not want to spend days re-inventing the wheel here.