lovemeorhateme
Well-known member
Having it better isn't the bar. If you were a black man in Selma in the 50s you never had it so good compared to your great grandfather, but better wasn't the bar. If you were a woman the year before Suffrage won the day you never had it so good compared to a women a few generations before that, and so on.
Ahhh the old race card again. See, sexuality and race are nothing alike and after a while one tends to get tired of hearing this same comparison made over and over again, ad nauseum.
Race is something one is born with and has absolutely no control over. It is a physical, immutable characteristic. There is no evidence which demonstrates people are born homosexual. Besides which, homosexuality is concerned with how someone behaves; how someone thinks and what they choose to do.
Some likely would, but they'd be irrational and the law shouldn't accommodate them.
I would say it's more than some, I would say it's the majority. Once doesn't need to have been part of the homosexual community for too long to know that the majority have an absolute disdain for Christians. So as far as the majority are concerned, they would say that the homosexual baker should be allowed to refuse but the Christian baker should not. It seems both you and I agree that this is an inconsistent position to hold to. The difference is I believe they should both be allowed to refuse service, you believe that neither should.
No, they're both wrong it they customarily allow their patrons to have slogans put on their cakes.
Why are they both wrong? Where does one draw the line? Should someone be compelled to print a slogan in support of a particular political party or cause if they strongly disagree with it?
And the opposing activist would declare his conscience being violated and his support being forced and they'd both be wrong to enforce that notion at law. So let's argue against irrational enforcement of subjective value and support a rational rule of law.
Go tell that to homosexual activists.
Same sort of thing from many zealots on the other side of it.
I didn't deny that, I'm just pointing out there are crazies on both sides.
Well, those at the radical end are going to call you that. Likely others who aren't might be put off by the "never had it so good" approach and I think you could understand that.
Unfortunately these days most are leaning towards the radical end. As for my approach, this is a web forum to share ones views. I'm not one to walk up to a homosexual and start insulting them or try to impose my opinions on them. I'm one to love them, talk about the hope I have found in Christ and do this with both gentleness and respect.
Then you'd have perpetuated a segregated South (and parts elsewhere) for generations. That sort of latitude promotes an unintended tyranny of the majority, which is one reason we're not a democracy. Another problem is your private business will utilize and benefit by public works. That is, you are taking benefit from programs and services and support from tax dollars, many of which will be supplied by people who don't agree with you.
No, I would have advocated a different approach to dealing with that problem. But once again, this isn't about race.
Same answer. If you don't have a problem writing a Catholic slogan or a Rotarian slogan on your work then you're in the business of putting things on your cake with or without your tacit approval of the ideas or parties.
There is a difference between doing something without your 'tacit approval' and being forced to do something which you seriously disapprove of.
lain: Like suggesting midgets have the same right to make the Air Force height requirement. Why even bother saying that?
Do you believe that it is possible for homosexuals to change? Do you even believe they need to change?
But given only the irrational could argue for that inequity and it isn't the actual point of any serious consideration of the actual laws and how they're examined why spend any real time on it? It's a bit like the conspiracy theorists for the most part. We know they're there, understand a lot of what they're saying and it moves and alters nothing at all. So outside of the novelty it gives the impression or can of someone attempting to taint a legitimate point by associating it with something no reasonable person would consider.
Are you admitting that most homosexuals are irrational? Because from much past experience I am very sure that the majority believe that there should be an inequity before the law and I've given you the example.
Last edited: