Quoting a comment:
I'm just saying that people shouldn't be awarded for doing something wrong.
Firstly, the badges do award people doing good things. Secondly, it is pointless to hope that no one will succeed in gaming the system.
On the first point, I will make an anecdote out of my own posts. I have recently got Disciplined in the following manner: I posted a quick answer before thinking of looking for a duplicate. After finding the duplicate, I closed the question against it and deleted my redundant answer, which by then had +4 score. As for Peer Pressure, I don't have it, but I came close once, when I wrote an answer while doing something else. That resulted in a decent explanation accompanied by untested broken code. It got two downvotes before I got rid of it; I'm quite sure it would have gotten a lot more in a higher traffic tag. In both cases I did the right thing, and in the end everyone was happy.
On the second point, one could argue that many other badges can also be won through questionable means. My favourite example is Archaeologist. "Edit 100 posts that were inactive for 6 months." Improving a large number of long-neglected posts -- sounds great, right? Well, it's not so great if the edits consist of adding code formatting as emphasis to a hundred posts. In fact, someone has already made this very complaint about Archaeologist. The complaint isn't persuasive, though. If we have gamified incentives, it is unavoidable that at least some people will game the system. In the case of badges, that is a cost of using them to promote good behaviour -- and I have no reason to believe the actual cost is unreasonable in the cases of Peer Pressure, Disciplined or, for that matter, Archaeologist.