![]()
Okay, keeping in mind that this is the US we're talking about, what exactly is the "clear difference"?
Homosexuality is a behavior.
Racial background is not.
![]()
Okay, keeping in mind that this is the US we're talking about, what exactly is the "clear difference"?
Homosexuality is a behavior.
That remains to be seen.Huntster said:SSM is already "outlawed" in most areas, because it doesn't fit with the legal definition of marriage.
Nor is sexual orientation a behavior. The difference is not quite so clear, wouldn't you say?Homosexuality is a behavior.
Racial background is not.
Religion is a behavior. Should we discriminate based on that?Homosexuality is a behavior.
Racial background is not.
so if I never had sex with a man, I woudln't be gay?Originally Posted by Huntster :
Homosexuality is a behavior.
Okay, point taken again, but, though it likely harms my ends, it shouldn’t harm my means or my position.
Is there anyone even wanting this, though, personally? Let them speak. Isn’t it less of an issue and more of a tool for the other side to distract?
That's a fairly good point you have there. If people of the same sex aren't allowed to marry, it would only make sense to me that people of the religion shouldn't be allowed to married as well. It would cause a whole bunch of problems in the short term, but in the long term we might be better off.Religion is a behavior. Should we discriminate based on that?
. I've been to a lesbian marriage and know several married gay couples. They are married religiously and socially. The only thing they lack is government recognition of their marriage and the privileges that go along with that recognition.
so if I never had sex with a man, I woudln't be gay?
You would never be engaged in homosexual behavior.
Originally Posted by Huntster :
SSM is already "outlawed" in most areas, because it doesn't fit with the legal definition of marriage.
That remains to be seen.
However, it does not answer my question: Do you support outlawing SSM?
Originally Posted by Huntster :
Homosexuality is a behavior.
Racial background is not.
Nor is sexual orientation a behavior. The difference is not quite so clear, wouldn't you say?
Religion is a behavior. Should we discriminate based on that?Originally Posted by Huntster :
Homosexuality is a behavior.
Racial background is not.
You're very, very close. You just need to connect the dots.There's something else that they are lacking. Hint: It's a legal thing. If you can guess what it is, you won't need me to educate you about why there are legal issues related to a man fathering a child with someone other than his wife.
If Upchurch can't guess, would anyone else like to take a stab at it?
Then you do support outlawing homosexual behavior, namely you'd like it to be illegal for them to marry one another.I support the state constitutional amendment voted on and overwhelmingly passed in the state of Alaska (where I am a resident) which defines marriage as being between one man and one woman.
Originally Posted by Huntster :
so if I never had sex with a man, I woudln't be gay?
You would never be engaged in homosexual behavior.
Wow, if you're right, with work, kids, and other obligations, I can't remember the last time I was a homosexual (In some jurisdictions, I'm not sure I ever was). You've cured me! Now, where's that marriage license they give out to all those non-gays?
Huntster, you aren't directly discriminating against homosexuals or an orientation or a behavior. You are discriminating on sex.
Edit: In fact you'd promote the behavior, if the anatomy were different.
The question is why can you deny people rights, and responsibilities, and often take their taxes disproportionately for their anatomy?
Absolutely true. Do you have a reason to continue the government promotion of one set of religions and the discrimination against other sets of religions in light of that very same amendment?Religion is a belief, and it is already well and specifically addressed in the very 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution, as well as most (if not all) state constitutions.
Usually down at the superior court.
Congratulations!
Yup. That includes heterosexual sexual activity outside of marriage.
No, I wouldn't.
I'm not taking anybody's taxes. I'm paying them.
Absolutely true. Do you have a reason to continue the government promotion of one set of religions and the discrimination against other sets of religions in light of that very same amendment?Originally Posted by Huntster :
Religion is a belief, and it is already well and specifically addressed in the very 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution, as well as most (if not all) state constitutions.
You wouldn’t promote two people going and getting a marriage license from the state, if they were one male and one female and, say, raising kids? You clearly don't promote it if they are one female and one female and raising kids, but you don’t promote legal marriage for the first couple either? Can’t be true.
I'm not taking anybody's taxes. I'm paying them.
Somebody paved your roads.
Somebody pays for your military protection.
And it’s not out of the goodness of their hearts, typically , that most gay couples pay more in taxes.
They don’t pay more in insurance premiums either because they want you to pay less.
So, again, why was it wrong to do that when it was race, but okay when it’s sex (anatomy not “doing it”!)?
But there are religons that do not support your beliefs about gay marriage. If a church wishes to perform gay marriages, and you come out and say they cannot because of your religous beliefs, that means you are forcing your religon upon them. The First Amendment states that you can't do this (which is why it is technically a blasphemy in many religons), so in any serious discussion of US foreign or domestic policy, you can't base your position purely on religon. You have to have something more solid than invisible sky pixies or vague semantic arguments, and I just haven't seen that from you.Religion is a belief, and it is already well and specifically addressed in the very 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution, as well as most (if not all) state constitutions.
You're very, very close. You just need to connect the dots.
You're right. They don't have a marriage license, the document that the state governments use to legally acknowledge the social and sometimes religious marriage two people have. That's the point.