Fine, now I have.
If you just say "sin" without any qualifier, then logically that means any sin, which rather obviously includes sins which are crimes as well.
Oh, please. They have their own category, a real category with real consequences in the real, here and now world. No one needs to consider rape and murder in the same category as the "legal sins" because they are already considered, even by people who don't believe in sin, to be bad. They are in a category that overshadows "sin". No one says "you shouldn't murder because it is a sin" because there are overwhelming here-and-now, this world, clear, and unrelated-to-the-disapproval-of-one-particular-version-of-the-concept-of-god reasons not to murder.
But fine, I've clarified. It doesn't matter, I guess, whether you REALLY misunderstood or if you misrepresented on purpose.
Not everything in the 10 commandments is a crime, but a number of rather important ones are. So don't blame me because what you wrote didn't match what you meant.
"Two" is indeed a number, but it doesn't match up with what you seem to be implying when you say "a number of important ones are [crimes]."
...Unless you take a very, very narrow view of "bear false witness," and interpret it to mean
only "bearing false witness against another in a court of law," in which case it's three. Doing that is torturing the commandment a little, though, at least in my view...and "three" still doesn't
really match up with what seems to be implied when you say "a number of important ones are [crimes]"
Actually, now that I think about it, you have to take a fairly narrow interpretation of "thou shalt not kill" in order for that to qualify, either. So now we have one that's pretty widely interpreted, one that you need to qualify somewhat, and one that needs to be qualified so much that you're no longer talking about the commandment that christian people follow. That's it. Is that what you meant to imply when you said "a number of important ones are [crimes]"? If it is, it's not a very strong argument in your favour...
You still haven't answered the question. Now that you know I didn't mean crimes, do you still think this is a misrepresentation of the fundamentalist community?
This argument is... ironic. When people criticize abstinence-only education, they usually talk about how it doesn't take the reality of human behavior into account. Well, neither does this argument of yours. People aren't going to serosort, and many won't practice safe sex. Plus, of course, it's quite disingenuous. Either you're amazingly ignorant about the epidemiology of AIDS, which I doubt, or you're trying to hide the rather key role that super spreaders (ie, really promiscuous people) had in spreading the disease.
I'm not promoting a rose-eyed view of human sexuality. Lots of people do practice safe sex and serosorting, but I never said everyone does or will. I'm just pointing out that you said that the spread of AIDS is related to promiscuity, but that isn't so. It's related to unsafe sex. If you mean the RATE of spread, particularly in the eighties when it wasn't understood what was going on, then yes, sure. But the whole reason it was so easily spread by promiscuity in the eighties was precisely
because it was not understood. (Unless you want to claim that the rate of spread
hasn't changed since the cause was found...)
Anyway, the point was that
promiscuity in and of itself isn't bad. Unsafe sex with non-fluid bonded partners may be a bad choice, and taking unnecessary risks might not be the best way to live your life, and being a lying douchbag is certainly not on any list of how to live ethically, but what do any of those things have to do with
promiscuity being bad? Again, you can't use the argument that "promiscuity is bad because it spreads aids" if you are talking about the lesbian community, for instance. So if you want to argue that
promiscuity is bad, you need to find a reason that is inherent to promiscuity, not to other bad decisions that may or may not go along with promiscuity.
You claimed that the gay community could benefit from prudery, and used AIDS as an example.
Personal prudery can help individuals from contracting AIDS, sure, but so can practicing safe sex.
Political prudery, the kind you explicitly say you're talking about, is the whole reason for the mess in the first place. The political prudery, in the 80's, of the country in general and the christian right and the Regan administration in particular, squashed the spread of knowledge about the disease. Knowledge that changed the course of the epidemic once gay people got seriously angry about the conspiracy of silence. Knowledge that would have changed the course of the epidemic earlier, had it not been squashed by people who were motivated by
political prudery.
That might be relevant if I was suggesting that all gays become prudes, but I'm not. But just as prudes are a vocal minority among the general population, a vocal minority of prudes among the gay population WOULD make the gay population better match the characteristics of the general population.
Tsk. First of all, for clarity, since I misunderstood your use of prude at first and so has at least one other person, you really ought to specify that you mean political prudery, or the desire to police the sex lives of others.
Second, what?
Why should the gay community match the entire range of ideas that the general population holds? Why does that need to happen?
My point:
1.The majority of people in this country don't care what other people are doing with their junk.
2.Homosexuals don't care what other people are doing with their junk.
3.The views of homosexuals line up with what the majority view.
Why do we need a minority of homosexuals to line up with the thinking of a minority of the population? What purpose does that serve? You seemed to think it will help them win over
fundamentalists. I don't, and have said why. So you moved the goalposts. You said it will help them come into alignment with the views
of the public at large. I said it wouldn't do that, either, because most people are not political prudes. So your rebuttal is that we need gay political prudes...for balance? What?
Also, please tell me what you meant when you said I would be surprised at the number of christian fundamentalists "wouldn't exclude" gay people. What, exactly, is your claim? What does "wouldn't exclude" mean?
Finally, since I believe that you are not arguing honestly, I would appreciate it if you would quote my replies in total, as I have done for you, so that others can see what you are NOT replying to.