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LDS II: The Mormons

deaman

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Welcome to the LDS continuation thread. Older posts can be found HERE. Feel free to quote or link to them as you see fit. The cut-off point was arbitrary. The only reason is due to the length of the thread. Thank you.
Posted By: Loss Davis





Why are there so many LDS Temple Divorces?

https://www.google.com/#q=lds+temple+divorce

On the average, how many children do LDS marriages adopt, in order to save their "eternal lives"?
 
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. . . I will just mention that I am not confusing Skyrider with any other poster when I suggest that his explicit statement that gay marriage laws apply to two gay men who will not have children is not good evidence that goof faith has been exercised in discussing the rights of children who actually exist in the world that actually exists around us, or the marital issues of a class of people half of whom are women, and if such a post is indicative of a concern for the rights of children and women it's an odd way to express it.

I'm sorry, but your syntax makes it impossible for me understand what you are saying. I'm not being evasive. Perhaps I can get at your meaning by asking some questions: 1) If I have said gay marriage laws should apply to two gay men who will not have children, how do you interpret that to mean
I'm not concerned about the rights of children (assuming that's what you mean?). 2) In at least two posts I have said that inasmuch as researchers have not reached consensus re. the effect of same-sex parenting on children, we should opt for the conservative approach and prohibit gay marriage; i.e., we shouldn't gamble with the welfare of children. I should note, however, that the Social Science Research peer-reviewed studies I posted a day or two ago cast serious doubt on the belief that same-sex parenting doesn't affect children negatively. As I noted, the old (2005) APA study, which has been cited by many pro-same-sex-marriage advocates for years, has at least one major methodological error that renders it all but useless.

I encourage you to restate your charge that I have not been concerned about children or women in this discusssion. Please use shorter sentences.
I will be pleased to respond.
 
Because you don't understand the statistical elements of those studies and you've chosen to believe the spin of biased conservative Christians like Christine Kim because it supports your religiously derived prejudices.

Are non-believers devoid of prejudices?
 
Squeaky violins and withered hearts and flowers aside. :)
There is absolutely NO circumstance which would warrant the adoption or fostering of children, or of fertility treatments, to enable those involved in the evil satanic practices of sodomy, homosexual activities, and all and any other sexual perversions... to provide a "role model", "example" and "parental" influences to the minds and emotional health of babies /children / youth, and to pollute the minds, spirit, and emotional health of the innocent.
The destructive nature of homosexuality and its related behaviours have devastating effects, not only for mortality, but far into the eternities... as chances to progress are forever lost.

Why not? In a secular state which is what the US is and Australia almost is, why shouldn't those involved in Satanic practices raise children? Why should your devotion to a fraud impact anyone else's decision to be a parent?
 
Can I remind participants in this thread that judging people by the demographics to which they happen to belong, rather than on their individual merits, is the definition of unfair discrimination. Women are, on average, shorter than men, but if you put "no women need apply" in a job advert because the job requires the successful applicant to be at least 5ft 10" you are illegally discriminating against the many tall women who could do it. Statistics only tell you that if you put "no-one under 5ft 10" need apply" in your job advert you will get more male applicants than female ones.

There are a great many same sex couples who are very obviously doing a much better job of raising children than a great many mixed sex couples. Even if it could be proved beyond doubt that children raised by mixed sex couples do better on average than children raised by same sex couples it would still not justify preventing all same sex couples adopting. It would just mean that you'd expect fewer same sex couples than mixed sex couples to meet the stringent requirements for adoption.

Great point! I can't speak for all jurisdictions but as a former foster parent I can say no one gets a license just because they are straight, white, or anything else. All are assessed on their ability to be parents. What I find both galling and offensive is the assertion by implication that leaving a kid in care is preferable to them being adopted by a loving gay couple. If you want to talk about bad outcomes, let's talk about kids who age out of foster care.
 
Wow. It is almost as if you did not even bother to read any of the actual sources I provided, which could be found by clicking the actual links.

I can only suggest that you actually read http://futureofchildren.org/publica....xml?journalid=37&articleid=108&sectionid=699

Your link takes one to an article entitled "Gay Marriage, Same-Sex Parenting, and America's Children," published in Journal Issue: Marriage and Child "Wellbeing. The article is dated Fall 2005. In other words, it's eight years old. Keep that in mind.

The article's author writes under the subhead "What the Evidence Shows and Means." The author is referring to an APA report published in 2004 entitled "Resolution on Sexual Orientation, Parents, and Children." That report concluded that "Overall, results. . .suggest that the development, adjustment, and well-being of children of lesbian and gay parents do not differ markedly from that of children with heterosexual parents."

The author, referring to the dated APA "resolution," then states: "Our own review of the evidence is consistent with that characterization."

This is fresh, newly developed research on the topic under discussion in a field noted for the rapidity of changes in research findings? It is? Astonishing.

It gets worse. The author (perhaps it's author) state elsewhere in the article the following: "We believe both sides of the argument are right, at least partially."

So, SV, you cite an eight-year-old resolution and an article based on that resolution dated circa a year later as support for your contention that children are unaffected when raised by lesbian and gay parents.

Wow!
 
Squeaky violins and withered hearts and flowers aside. :)
There is absolutely NO circumstance which would warrant the adoption or fostering of children, or of fertility treatments, to enable those involved in the evil satanic practices of sodomy, homosexual activities, and all and any other sexual perversions... to provide a "role model", "example" and "parental" influences to the minds and emotional health of babies /children / youth, and to pollute the minds, spirit, and emotional health of the innocent.
The destructive nature of homosexuality and its related behaviours have devastating effects, not only for mortality, but far into the eternities... as chances to progress are forever lost.

While I do not want to let skyrider use this as an opportunity to continue to avoid the valid question about why homosexuality is a CJCLDS bête noir, but divorce is an occasion for support groups and counseling (given the difference in what Jesus, at least in the xianist canon, is said to have said about each), I do think it is important to point out that the behaviours of any pair of married, consenting adults in private cannot "pollute" the minds of anyone. What has happened today, in the fastness of my boudoir, that has, in any way affected you, or anyone (other than those consenting adults involved)?

Further, your "satan" is no more real than your 'god'--why should your superstitions be allowed to enforce behaviours invented to keep CJCLDS members in line upon non-members? Would you gleefully submit, if the situation were reversed? Suppose you were forced, under penalty of law, to publicly recite a decade of the rosary every day, or to affirm Sola Scriptura before you were allowed to marry, or to share property with your partner?
 
I should note, however, that the Social Science Research peer-reviewed studies I posted a day or two ago cast serious doubt on the belief that same-sex parenting doesn't affect children negatively.
This is utterly false. You would know this if you read my critique of the paper.

However, this very important question you keep ignoring:
What isn't false is that lower socioeconomic status has a negative impact on children.
Based upon this information, do you advocate for preventing poor people from marrying?
If not, then why do you advocate it for gay people?
 
I'm sorry, but your syntax makes it impossible for me understand what you are saying. I'm not being evasive. Perhaps I can get at your meaning by asking some questions: 1) If I have said gay marriage laws should apply to two gay men who will not have children, how do you interpret that to mean
I'm not concerned about the rights of children (assuming that's what you mean?). 2) In at least two posts I have said that inasmuch as researchers have not reached consensus re. the effect of same-sex parenting on children, we should opt for the conservative approach and prohibit gay marriage; i.e., we shouldn't gamble with the welfare of children. I should note, however, that the Social Science Research peer-reviewed studies I posted a day or two ago cast serious doubt on the belief that same-sex parenting doesn't affect children negatively. As I noted, the old (2005) APA study, which has been cited by many pro-same-sex-marriage advocates for years, has at least one major methodological error that renders it all but useless.

I encourage you to restate your charge that I have not been concerned about children or women in this discusssion. Please use shorter sentences.
I will be pleased to respond.

http://futureofchildren.org/publica....xml?journalid=37&articleid=108&sectionid=699

http://www.apa.org/about/policy/parenting.aspx

Why are you avoiding the divorce issue?
 
Squeaky violins and withered hearts and flowers aside. :)
There is absolutely NO circumstance which would warrant the adoption or fostering of children, or of fertility treatments, to enable those involved in the evil satanic practices of sodomy, homosexual activities, and all and any other sexual perversions... to provide a "role model", "example" and "parental" influences to the minds and emotional health of babies /children / youth, and to pollute the minds, spirit, and emotional health of the innocent.
The destructive nature of homosexuality and its related behaviours have devastating effects, not only for mortality, but far into the eternities... as chances to progress are forever lost.
You are as wrong about this as you are about the earth being hollow and the fantasies of Joseph Smith being real. What genuinely decent and moral people find evil, destructive and a bad role model for children is hateful bigotry like this. Thankfully such opinions become less common in civilised societies with every year that passes, and will eventually be consigned to the dustbin of history.
 
I'm sorry, but your syntax makes it impossible for me understand what you are saying. I'm not being evasive. Perhaps I can get at your meaning by asking some questions: 1) If I have said gay marriage laws should apply to two gay men who will not have children, how do you interpret that to mean
I'm not concerned about the rights of children (assuming that's what you mean?). 2) In at least two posts I have said that inasmuch as researchers have not reached consensus re. the effect of same-sex parenting on children, we should opt for the conservative approach and prohibit gay marriage; i.e., we shouldn't gamble with the welfare of children. I should note, however, that the Social Science Research peer-reviewed studies I posted a day or two ago cast serious doubt on the belief that same-sex parenting doesn't affect children negatively. As I noted, the old (2005) APA study, which has been cited by many pro-same-sex-marriage advocates for years, has at least one major methodological error that renders it all but useless.

I encourage you to restate your charge that I have not been concerned about children or women in this discusssion. Please use shorter sentences.
I will be pleased to respond.

It's getting increasingly hard to search this long thread, and especially hard to find references about which we continue to argue page after page. I took a little time to search, but it is too tiresome to do again. I hope this will do it:

I refer you first of all to post 8848, a subject that has come up before, in which, to an anecdotal case cited by Loss Leader, in which no children are involved, you state "You cite an individual, special-circumstances case. What if laws affecting the entire citizenry were passed using that criterion? Moreover, if he were to be married, would he love his partner more? How so?"
You then claimed limited understanding or confusion in post 8874 when, referring to that post, I suggested marriage involves more than the question of whether a person love his partner.

In a further exchange debating whether Mormons consider homosexual activity a sin, or whether the idea of "sin" is somehow not included in the characterization of an activity as morally impermissible and forbidden, as Mormon sites seem to concur. I pointed out that if one criterion for the morally impermissible is (as Mormon rules seem to imply) any extra-marital sex, and if at the same time Mormon rules make homosexual marriage impossible, then clearly the protection of marriage is out of the question, and they are in a double bind. Your response to that was, verbatim, in post 8910 the following:

"Marriage was instituted primarily as a means to raise children with legally sanctioned protection. What protection do two adult males, who will not have children, receive as a result of being married? Perhaps you're referring to financial matters."
In a response to the issue I raised regarding gay marriage in general, your response was to refer to "two adult males, who will not have children." This as part of a long argument, repeated page after page after page, of which the post referenced was a part, in which I have made the point that protection of children in marriages (an issue we both consider central) must include those who actually exist, including those who actually are part of gay based families. If you did not understand that I was making that point after page after page after page of repetition, then "limited understanding" is a gross understatement. I am alleging that your response did not include mention of women, and did not include: (I will break this up for the comprehension of those who cannot grasp long sentences)

1: existing natural or adopted children of gay persons;
2: Women;
3: gay persons who intend to adopt children;
4: gay persons who intend to become parents of children.

I do not believe that my inability to find any of those subjects in the cited sentence is due to limited comprehension on my part.

So now, just to put the record straight, and be done with this:

You, Skyrider44, and I both, I believe, agree in part that central to the issue of marriage is the matter of how children are to be protected and nurtured. It is, among other issues, one of the core issues that I am told the Vermont Supreme Court considered when rendering the historic judgment that resulted in civil unions.

It may well be that the ideal situation is a happy, heterosexual pair of parents with children they want. I certainly hope so, because it's what I grew up in, and I'd like to think I came out moderately well. But the world is far more complex. Many people do not fit into that category, and many children exist who do not, cannot and never will find themselves in that category. A real life consideration of the welfare of children who actually exist in the world, and children who actually will exist in the future, will not be reached by forbidding the families that actually exist and will exist from enjoying the protections and obligations of marriage.

I will end this little diatribe, however, by pointing out that I favor "gay marriage" for several reasons, and consider it a positive step for society in addition to the matter of child welfare, An argument against my position would have to show conclusively that the institution of single sex marriage itself would have a net harmful effect on the society that actually exists at this moment. My job is, I believe, much less demanding than yours. If you are to argue that considerations of child welfare make gay marriage inadvisable, you will have to find cogent arguments, and those arguments must include an explanation of how the existing children of homosexual parents, with or without partners, would be harmed by allowing their parents to marry the people they love. That is a very hard argument to make. It has not happened yet. Limited comprehension is not an asset here.
 
Your link takes one to an article entitled "Gay Marriage, Same-Sex Parenting, and America's Children," published in Journal Issue: Marriage and Child "Wellbeing. The article is dated Fall 2005. In other words, it's eight years old. Keep that in mind.

The article's author writes under the subhead "What the Evidence Shows and Means." The author is referring to an APA report published in 2004 entitled "Resolution on Sexual Orientation, Parents, and Children." That report concluded that "Overall, results. . .suggest that the development, adjustment, and well-being of children of lesbian and gay parents do not differ markedly from that of children with heterosexual parents."

The author, referring to the dated APA "resolution," then states: "Our own review of the evidence is consistent with that characterization."

This is fresh, newly developed research on the topic under discussion in a field noted for the rapidity of changes in research findings? It is? Astonishing.

It gets worse. The author (perhaps it's author) state elsewhere in the article the following: "We believe both sides of the argument are right, at least partially."

So, SV, you cite an eight-year-old resolution and an article based on that resolution dated circa a year later as support for your contention that children are unaffected when raised by lesbian and gay parents.

Wow!


Wait...when was that opinion piece by a conservative xianist organization, the only one upon which you keep relying, published?

What about the Australian study?

What about the fact (yes, fact) that no study (out of more than 50) yet has shown a significant difference in the children's development, based on the genders of the parents, as opposed to, for instance, the SES of the parents?

What about the fact (yes, fact) of the demonstrated disadvantages of being raised by the state?

Why do you continue to evade the divorce question?
 
<respectful snip for space>

http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2013/03/18/peds.2013-0377.full.pdf

"On the basis of this comprehensive review of the literature regarding the development and adjustment of children whose parents are of the same gender, as well as the existing evidence for the legal, social, and health benefits of marriage to children, the AAP concludes that it is in the best interest of children that they be able to partake in the security of permanent nurturing and care that comes with the civil marriage of their parents, without regard to their parents' gender or sexual orientation." (p. 1381)

http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/126/1/28.full

"Our studies show that adolescents who have been raised since birth in planned lesbian families demonstrate healthy psychological adjustment and thus provide no justification for restricting access to reproductive technologies or child custody on the basis of the sexual orientation of the parents." (that one's from 2010)

http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Goldberg-and-Smith-2013-JFP1.pdf

"As expected, family type was unrelated to childrens' adjustment. This finding is consistent with earlier work, and provides support for arguments that prospective adopters should not be discriminated against, in policy or in practice, based on sexual orientation." (p. 440; this one's from 2013)

http://mccaugheycentre.unimelb.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/786806/simon_report_.pdf
(This is an interim report form the Australian longitudinal study)

"On measures of general health and family cohesion children aged 5 to 17 years with same-sex attracted parents showed a significantly better score when compared with Australian children from all backgrounds and family contexts. For all other health issues there were no significant statistical differences."

http://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/art...ow-parents-work-together-more-important-their

" A new study by psychology researchers suggests that whether parents are gay, lesbian or straight, how well they work together as a couple and support each other in parenting is linked to fewer behavior problems among their adopted children and is more important than their sexual orientation". (from 2013)

http://news.stanford.edu/news/2010/august/gay-study-083010.html

"The census data show that having parents who are the same gender is not in itself any disadvantage to children," he said. "Parents' income and education are the biggest indicators of a child's success. Family structure is a minor determinant." (from 2010--penultimate paragraph is worth reading)

...and so on.

Perhaps you might consider addressing the divorce issue?
 
What I would also like to know is where the idea comes from that marriage is an institution that was implemented to create a stable environment for children?

Most cultures for the longest time raised children communally. Marriage had nothing to do with that and everything to do with property.
In fact, none of the religious commandments against homosexuality say anything about children. It all seems to boil down to the fact that the writers of the commands felt it was 'icky' and thus forbidden.
 
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How is it, that a marriage sanctioned by the God of Love, Creator of the Universe, ends up in divorce?

Doesn't God know any better?

It looks as if He doesn't exist.
 
I'm sorry, but your syntax makes it impossible for me understand what you are saying. I'm not being evasive. Perhaps I can get at your meaning by asking some questions: 1) If I have said gay marriage laws should apply to two gay men who will not have children, how do you interpret that to mean
I'm not concerned about the rights of children (assuming that's what you mean?). 2) In at least two posts I have said that inasmuch as researchers have not reached consensus re. the effect of same-sex parenting on children, we should opt for the conservative approach and prohibit gay marriage; i.e., we shouldn't gamble with the welfare of children. I should note, however, that the Social Science Research peer-reviewed studies I posted a day or two ago cast serious doubt on the belief that same-sex parenting doesn't affect children negatively. As I noted, the old (2005) APA study, which has been cited by many pro-same-sex-marriage advocates for years, has at least one major methodological error that renders it all but useless.

I encourage you to restate your charge that I have not been concerned about children or women in this discusssion. Please use shorter sentences.
I will be pleased to respond.

See Dick and Jane.

See Mommy and Daddy.

Mommy and Daddy are poor.

See Dick and Jane get bad grades.
 
. . . Does being sexually abused put one on welfare?

To the extent that being sexually abused destroys a person's self-esteem, that person could well end up on welfare. Obviously, however, there is no black-and-white answer to your question.

Or does being on welfare and unemployed correlate with higher incidence of abuse?

Again, there is no one-size-fits-all answer to your question. I tend, however, to think there is a correlation between being on welfare/unemployed and a higher incidence of abuse.

2.) Children from low economic families and divorce are worse off.
So, do you believe because of point 2 that we should outlaw divorce or prevent poor people from marrying? Please answer this question. it is very very important.

Regardless of what I believe, the actions you describe in your hypothetical scenario cannot be implemented in our representative democracy.

Thank you. but, as you can see, one must read the original sources so that you can know what the limits are to the study.

Good point, and I don't disagree.
 
. . . There are a great many same sex couples who are very obviously doing a much better job of raising children than a great many mixed sex couples.

A "great many" and "very obviously" require documentation. So what is your source for your claim?
 

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