oh my! is that some kind of insinuation that rules dont apply to mods? id find that very hard to believe sir, and id remind you of Rules 1 through 3. id hate to see you censored simply because of a lapse in judgment.
Given that he is referring you to a dispute resolution mechanism, that would suggest that he is stating that rules DO apply to him (and by extension we can assume other mods); really now, I am sure you realised as much, you aren't arguing for the sake of it are you? *whips out a harisen in either hand*
But on the mater of objective morality I think there are a couple threads on the issue, so in so far as it relates to this thread, if there IS an objective morality and if we knew what it was, if we knew what god had (not) done and were we able to apply such a standard to god, would such an entity measure up? Well that is arguable, however regardless, we do not know what that objective morality IS, we have attempted to encode it in documents such as universal human rights, however different peoplehave come up with different standards on the issue, such as Immanual Kant's categorical imperatives.
If there is such disagreement on what objective morality is, that indicates that at least our PERCEPTION of objective morality is subjective. Thus we should instead focus our efforts on subjective morality.
So how does God's actions compare to your subjective perception of morality? Personally, I have always found the Abrahamic God to have demonstrated numerous ethical failures (many of which have been mentioned in this thread earlier so do not need to be mentioned again), but have never found the argument that God should be treated as a unique case (thus excluding his actions from being considered immoral) to have any logical basis. But the Abrahamic god is far from the only one, so to suggest 'God' is immoral or moral to me would need to refer to particular concepts of god; the OP refers to the creator God, however there are many such creator gods. For me therefore, I examine the act of creation separate to the rest of the actions of such a god, in which case, does creation ensure an entitlement to 'worship' from the created?
For me, no - gratitude yes, worship no.