Here is the reason why Clete, Steko, Tambora, JudgeRightly and their mutual admiration society are so wrong...
They should read the book of Job.
They are like Job's three friends, who spend their time defending God, saying God cannot be wrong for punishing Job. They insist, Job must deserve his punishment, or God would be punishing Job unfairly.
Yet Job throughout the Book of Job lists all the good he has done. Job has done more good than any other human, and bemoans the fact that he, the good one, is suffering while the evil folks are enjoying life. In essence, Job is saying he is being treated unfairly by God, and would like to tell God so, face to face.
Yet Job's friends keep on defending God. And in the end, God is fed up with His "defenders" and tells Job to pray for them.
The Book of Job has a lot of relevance to the discussion of what is "good".
Job thought that if he did his best to be "good", then that would ward off evil befalling him. This sounds fair. When God did not play ball with Job's philosophy, Job got a little whiney, especially as he was covered with sore boils.
Clete definitely thinks that God has to fit into his ideas of "good" just as Job thought he had God figured out.
But the Book of Job shows that God can do what the heck He likes, fair or unfair in Job, Clete, Steko, Tambora, or JudgeRightly's little philosophies. God is telling Job, and his friends, and all of us, that He will not be boxed in by our ideas regarding His righteousness.
God can do what the heck He likes, and if that involves Job suffering to prove his loyalty to God just so that God can go "I told you so" to Satan - then so be it.
Not Clete, Steko, Tambora, or JudgeRightly could ever come up with a formula which could ever define "good" or predict what God will do - because God does what He wills, and that will sometimes surprise Clete, Steko, Tambora, and JudgeRightly. They might not like God sending two she bears to tear up these "LITTLE children" for being mouthy. After all "sticks and stones will break my bones but names will never harm you". Surely no "good" God could ever do that? It turns out He can.