Desdichado
Hero
I don't, because in the real world there's no such thing as orcs and orcs are not meant to stand in metaphorically for any real world population or anything like that, i.e., there isn't a moral dimension to that implied setting that is translatable into morals in the real world anyway.That's kind of what worries me about the alignment section of 5E that talks of how orcs follow the alignment of their god as if they were hard-wired to be like that. It seems too dogmatic about the alignment of creatures that just about goes beyond essentialism. I find the moral implications of such an implied setting to be disturbing.
That said, just because I don't find it disturbing doesn't mean that I like it, because I don't. I think the notion of orcs being, by essential nature, nothing but cannon fodder for the "heroes" is incredibly uninteresting. I like the notion that orcs are humanoid (as per their creature type) and humanoids at least, if not necessary every other monster type, is capable of sufficient moral independence to be more than an alignment caricature.
Their culture might well be violent and evil, and the same could be said for many real-life cultures anyway (my hobgoblin empire is a cross, in most respects, of Imperial Rome with Nazi Germany with more feral beasts of burden, like increased size hyenas as mounts for cataphracts, etc.) But to say that all individual hobgoblins must be lawful evil because of hardwired alignment standards imparted by their god just isn't a very interesting concept to me to explore further.
Then again, and this is a conversation for another thread, I don't really have much use for alignment anyway at the best of times. Once you get rid of alignment, a lot of blatant and latent D&Disms start to stand out. Too many of them are based around alignment to make any sense in a game that doesn't really use it.