Groups can act in what we might called an immoral fashion, that doesn't mean they haven't learned to work together. It doesn't mean either that the leadership of the group isn't acting in a compassionate way towards the members of his group.
I was once coming in from 3 months in the bush. That's 3 months of humping up in the mountains with only a couple of hot showers, and a few hot meals. We had humped it back in to a point where we could be picked up by trucks, no need for choppers. I was the first one to the trucks. As I walked by the leed truck the driver said to me, "what's the matter you can't hump it the rest of the way"? My first instinct was to kill him. Not a , gee I'd like to kill that SOB, but the real deal. Kill him. As I walked past his truck towards the last truck in line I thought he better not say that to anyone else because they WILL kill him. As a went a few more feet I heard a commotion behind me. I turned around and a good friend of mine was up on the running board of that first truck with the barrel of his weapon against the head of the driver and his finger on the trigger. I turned around, went back, and talked my friend down off the running board.
I was the leader of the first group to the trucks. It was my job to understand my men and anticipate problems. It was my job to be compassionate towards my men. That included caring for them to the point to where they didn't do something that could get them in trouble, like killing another American, no matter how much I wanted to kill the driver myself.
This is how leadership works. One foot on the pedal, the other near the brake. Aggression mixed with compassion.
Some slob can reproduce, sure. A Tiger that has a genetic predisposition to go blind later in life can reproduce also, but his line won't last long. Neither will the line of a slob, who beats his wife, and ignores his children.
Why would I care about trying to figure what a god that I don't believe in thinks is right when life itself offers so many lessons?
bsb