No. Individuals are ultimately responsible for policy and the consequences of the policy. There is a direct causal line between say, the legality of semi automatic weapons and the means to make those weapons fully automatic in the USA and deaths caused by adapted semi automatic weapons. No one is saying that the congressmen and women who consistently refuse to change the law want to see gunshot deaths, or that the individual perpetrators don’t bear responsibility, but the people who have the power to set the conditions in which these things happen bear some culpability for them happening. Similarly, I would not say that the government intended to cause distress and perhaps deaths by its approach to benefits assessments, but if a link between the two can be proven, the government, and individuals within it, should be held accountable. If, as I suspect, it’s an incompetent system, they also bear responsibility for setting up something which is not fit for purpose.
I didn’t read Stroller’s list because it was too depressing, and the subsequent exchanges weren’t very uplifting either. I have no idea if a causal link between unjust (I.e outwith the rules - even if you don’t agree with the rules they are what the assessments have to be made against) refusal of benefits has lead to deaths. I would imagine that if it could be proved legal action should result, perhaps brought by the groups campaigning against this system (obviously the individuals directly affected are in no position to do this). Strikes me that this would be a more fruitful avenue to take than issuing propaganda.
But let’s not go down a route where individuals in positions of power can contract out moral responsibility.
Why are you so anti American?