Are you saying only heterosexuals should be screwed by the government? But the homosexuals are the ones who insist on getting the favor, are you saying you're for them being protected from themselves then?
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Shouldn't we consider the value in some things remaining taboo?
There was a time when showing two people in the same bed, even clothed, on television was a no-no. I remember the "Dick Van Dyke Show" never showed the main characters, although married to each other, in the same bed. They had separate beds. And back in the 1960's partial nudity on the silver screen was considered very racy, full nudity was scandalous.
Now, full nudity and profanity are both commonplace via cable or satellite TV. Even network stations have loosened up, and everyone in America got a good look at Dennis Franz's naked butt on NYPD Blue.
Not good.
So, whatever happened to our polite society? I remember when only bums and vagabonds wore their pants down around their butts exposing their undergarments in public. Now it's "fashionable." What a joke. Are we a better off society by breaking down our mores and violating our taboos, or is there a good reason for keeping them intact?
I think all this relativism is hurting us either directly or indirectly.
Sorry, wrong party.
No, what I am saying is what I wrote! Silly gugi! Oh no! Look at the exclamation marks! I'm turning into JMS! :P
I am not suggesting that any same gender sexual relationship would endanger anyone else's rights more than any traditional one. Only that this is the only time I think a government should have a mandate to step in and do anything. Of course this issue of the government granting rights not enumerated in the Constitution is apparently up to the voters in our local governments in the US, but if I were the only voter it would not happen. My personal view on the matter is that the government (for both my personal view of the immorality of homosexual relations and my personal view of the role of government) should not be giving such a relationship a title of marriage
Too late, you've been quoted :p
One of my biggest issues with these two issues in particular is the religious grounding of the arguments against both abortion and gay marriage. Last I checked, the bible said it was God's job to judge, not mine. I think it's unfortunate to use these arguments and perpetuate negative stereotypes of religion. Any God I'll respect loves. Period. I have no use for a vengeful God- those are human emotions, not those of a perfect being.
Also curious about how anyone can justify the argument that this is not the same thing as the civil rights movement of the 60's (talking gay marriage now). How is this not about civil rights? We're preventing a percentage of the population from certain rights simply because it's tradition or different than the "norm". I don't see how that can ever be acceptable under our Constitution. I only have faith that this country has a history of righting these wrongs, and hopefully it'll go the way of slavery, segregation, and having women as second class citizens.
I wouldn't want anyone to be gullible. The video is only a point in the discussion, not meant by me to be the end of any debate. On it's face it can be taken in just about any political direction.
Your point about change is on target. The question is whether the inertia that apparently resists the inevitable change gives us time to learn or whether the chaos that results from eliminating the tempering inertia is better. There are groups who thrive at either extreme.
I think philosophers have questioned how many times around the cycle of destruction and rebuilding we have to go before we realize the futility and develop a more stable social environment that is less polarizing and more tolerant.