Absolutely. You can't?
I believe he was saying the same thing I just said, only in a much more eloquent and lawyerly way.
so why did he mention outlawing condoms before he mentioned Sharia law?
are you worried about condoms?
Absolutely. You can't?
I believe he was saying the same thing I just said, only in a much more eloquent and lawyerly way.
Well, if it serves other purposes, what reason can you give to deny it to homosexual couples?
Here's the actual exchange:
All I pointed out is that procreative status is not a precondition acknowledged in any jurisdiction in the country. Far from begging the question, I pointed out that you are applying a standard to homosexuals which is not applied to anyone else despite the fact that it could be.
No, actually you said "Marriage presently only exists between a man and a women," which is most emphatically not true, unless you doubt that a number of jurisdictions have actually started issuing marriage licenses to homosexual couples.
Don't you know? 93.7% of all statistics are made-up on the spot. I'd very strongly doubt that anywhere near 90% of all couples are fertile given that a hefty chunk of the population of women have gone through menopause and therefore are no longer fertile. And that doesn't even being to take into account other causes of infertility. Or, for that matter, prepubescence.
I don't deny that homosexuals don't typically procreate together.
But it's irrelevant to me. That's not what marriage is about. I don't know if you've ever read through a state's marriage statutes, but one of the things you'll notice is that there are lots of provisions that have nothing to do with children. These vary by state, but they include things like protection against spousal abandonment, legal implications of the union to medical treatment, and property rights, and finances, and inheritance, and all sorts of stuff that is totally applicable to anyone regardless of gender. Many of them probably actually make things simpler on the government. Denying this to any group has to be justified by some strong compelling reason. Nothing that anyone has suggested rises even close to this level.
Yeah, pretty much. Welfare abuse is a big problem. Now, are you really going to tell me that you believe that in an ideal world, we would deny marriage certificates to all couples that can't or won't produce children biologically related to both parents? I'd like a straight answer on that question please.
Ahh so you're taking the view that mankind knows better how to manage its affairs. I see. Secularism seems to be working out just fine doesn't it. I advance "religious rhetoric" because it's GOD's creation not ours, I respect HIM and love HIM because of it, you mock HIM.Your confusion appears to run deeper than that. You're advancing religious rhetoric and I'm discussing how our secular Republic functions and should in relation to its expressed principles.
I'm not trying to argue anyone out of their faith, only suggesting we had that sort of thing once and it's a great deal of the reason we fled to a land where we could establish a secular republic. 30 Years War anyone? :nono:
That's an empty sleeve waved with gusto.
Then stop making them. :think:
Then lucky for me I never claimed it does, because that would have been embarrassing, let me tell you.
I refer you to the previously noted means by which they can biologically produce children and the point made that in this they are not principally different from any other couple incapable absent assistance.
Do you imagine the child will produce itself? :squint:
And if the point is walking on water and not the evidence of your divine power you'd be right. :thumb:
Not really. For instance, they can't be a heterosexual couple. Else, it's a bit goofy. Many a heterosexual couple can't procreate, so they adopt or by some artificial means arrive at the obstructed desire, assuming they have it. In this principle a homosexual couple can similarly find their way to the mark. So what you're banking on is an arbitrary valuation of the ability of two people within a marriage contract to propagate. What you haven't begun to establish is why this distinction should control a blessed thing.
I understand that you believe that's what happened. I never advanced the notion that the only thing the government was doing was binding a contract. That isn't and hasn't been my argument.
What's with the acoustics around here? What I've said is that the issue is no more one that should be put to a vote than whether Catholics should be allowed to marry.
Rather, it's the respect of each man's right to his own conscience that's at the heart of our secular Republic. I happen to think that's a swell idea. I don't want the Catholic Church to outlaw condoms or some peculiar Jewish or Islamic notion to find itself impressed upon me as law. There are, frankly, things that are your business and those which are only between the individual and his or her conscience. That this escapes you is double proof of the need for the very separation you mistakenly attribute in origin.
Said every man with a different idea of what constitutes that to the next fellow. Happy jihad. lain:
:e4e:
No. I'm taking the view that men differ on what God wants, that where those differences don't impinge on the right of the other our conscience and not the mob, should rule. Or are you fine with the idea of following Islamic law if the majority says so, because that's what you open yourself to when you move from a secular society into the realm of religious opinion establishing the right of law, instead of influencing it in value by way of the character it instills in its adherents.Ahh so you're taking the view that mankind knows better how to manage its affairs. I see.
Show me a state in the history of government that's done better than we have at expanding liberty and right. So yes, warts and all, we haven't managed the horror of that 30 Years War you might want to Google, tearing ourselves apart over distinctions in our understanding of the Holy.Secularism seems to be working out just fine doesn't it.
That's not our difference. That's you telling yourself that your notion of God's creation should be the rule. And so says the next zealot and with no more authority. Wars have been fought over footnotes in that sort of system. Look to the horrors of Europe and our escape to found a different sort of society.I advance "religious rhetoric" because it's GOD's creation not ours,
I haven't mocked God any more than you've advanced reason. That's just a foolish vanity on your part confused as virtue, but given your love of the declarative in lieu of calm and deliberate rationality it's not particularly surprising. For my part, I'll withhold judgment on whether you love God or the sound of your own self righteous voice more. :think:I respect HIM and love HIM because of it, you mock HIM.
Super. Now it's your turn: humility. lain:So hopefully you understand what "procreation" means at this point.
Well, no. Marriage is a contract that has (as contracts will) certain advantages between the parties to it. That's more the rule than the exception you're wanting to fashion...By way of example, a corporation is formed by contract and has advantages in law because of it. It enjoys tax breaks and much of the authority of an actual person.Here it is again with hope that 7 times is the deal-breaker: Marriage is more than a mere contract, it is government aid.
I don't know how to break this to you gently, but my argument has everything to do with the issue and is advanced as a means to settle it.Your argument has nothing to do with the issue; we are not arguing that homosexual couples should be precluded from drawing up a contract.
Any number of things, but we don't vote on whether the law should be equitably applied, whether black men are entitled to the same rights as white men, by way of example. And you and I have the self same right to contract. So should the next guy--even if we don't particularly care for the fact he uses his contract to a purpose that offends our moral sensibilities, absent that compelling secular interest and argument that you've yet to advance.What constitutes a votable concern?
No. That's your presumption, but that's all it is.Then you'll have to hop off that anti-cigarette train and the anti-marijuana one and a number of others.
It would be. Luckily, we're not. You're trying to make a secular argument turn on your religious principle. We had that once before and, wisely, turned to a means less likely to provoke the sort of human catastrophe that was the 30 Years War, by way of example.A man-made document--the Constitution--is an odd thing to put all of your weight on when we are talking about moral issues.
From that bastion of secular, objective argument, The American Catholic.Here are a number of secular arguments against gay marriage for those interested:
1. A Secular Argument Against Gay Marriage
Many heterosexual couples are producing no or one child in their reproductive lifetimes. Should we next legislate/mandate their conduct? If not it's an empty drum he's beating...though it is at any rate given the world wide population boom, the ability of couples to adopt and the previously mentioned ability of homosexual couples to procreate, if non traditionally. Of course all this assume that procreation should have a thing to do with the establishment of the right, which is utter nonsense and dogma disguised as something more and rational.1. Traditional, heterosexual marriages are good and necessary for the survival of society through procreation.
About half, on average, and of those that fail financial pressures and other factors are almost as frequently at the root.2. Traditional marriages survive and thrive when spouses are faithful to one another.
Dogma. This is no more a secular argument than my dog would be a cat if I gave called him that. It isn't a sexual union; it's a union with a sexual component. An important component, to be sure, but only that.3. Faithfulness is undermined by social indifference to the nature and purpose of sexual unions.
Declarative, unsupported nonsense, unless you begin with the assumption that marriage is about children, which is a particular dogmatic, religious view and nothing else.4. Homosexual “marriage” is/would be both a product of, and a contributor to, such indifference.
Ergo, this "argument" isn't much more than a series of assumptions in support of Catholic dogma.5. Ergo, homosexual marriage harms traditional marriage.
From that bastion of secular, objective argument, The American Catholic.
All of three paragraphs in and the author intones,
"In the case of homosexual unions, however, any act that places them on the same level as traditional unions will necessarily send a message to everyone in society, including children, that it is a matter of indifference whether one marries a person of the same sex or of the opposite sex."
Anyone care to play spot the presumption?
lain: Beyond that, replace sex with race and welcome to 1955.
He also attempts the "every man at an oar" argument. Declining rates of population in the West require us to act. But as those reading along here should understand, homosexual unions needn't be childless by at least a couple of differing paths.
Many heterosexual couples are producing no or one child in their reproductive lifetimes. Should we next legislate/mandate their conduct? If not it's an empty drum he's beating...though it is at any rate given the world wide population boom, the ability of couples to adopt and the previously mentioned ability of homosexual couples to procreate, if non traditionally. Of course all this assume that procreation should have a thing to do with the establishment of the right, which is utter nonsense and dogma disguised as something more and rational.1. Traditional, heterosexual marriages are good and necessary for the survival of society through procreation.
About half, on average, and of those that fail financial pressures and other factors are almost as frequently at the root.2. Traditional marriages survive and thrive when spouses are faithful to one another.
Dogma. This is no more a secular argument than my dog would be a cat if I gave called him that. It isn't a sexual union; it's a union with a sexual component. An important component, to be sure, but only that.3. Faithfulness is undermined by social indifference to the nature and purpose of sexual unions.
Declarative, unsupported nonsense, unless you begin with the assumption that marriage is about children, which is a particular dogmatic, religious view and nothing else.4. Homosexual “marriage” is/would be both a product of, and a contributor to, such indifference.
5. Ergo, homosexual marriage harms traditional marriage.
Ergo, this "argument" isn't much more than a series of assumptions in support of Catholic dogma.
TBC... :squint:
I was simply noting from the outset that the founder of that feast has a perspective and it isn't objective. Given what he advanced as argument, my suspicion seemed amply born out, your ongoing knack for the declarative notwithstanding.Emotional bias without argument, a good start from TH, we'll see this kind of ad-hom approach throughout :thumb:
Then you aren't seeing it. The presumption (and one with an echo in the population portion) is that sexuality (at least so far as the homosexual is concerned) is a matter of choice.Seems like a rather objective statement to me, but I suppose you're just looking for things to grumble about.
Another fine declaration without any attempt to demonstrate how the assertion is what you purport it to be. Or, in other words: beans.Speaking of presumption:
Question begging 101
Who said it has to, or should? Merely noting that the distinction between the two couples isn't much of one on this front.Artificial paths at best, certainly not what you want your society's population to depend on.
Which point? The one anyone who can add understands or the other, the one he means to support which isn't nearly as iron clad?The point isn't really contestable from a historical or realistic point of view.
No, it really isn't. From the U.S. Census on the subject:The world wide population boom is something you made up,
Given you thought this "argument" was worth considering you'll forgive me if I don't credit the next one as something to shiver about pre-consideration. As for the first part, I'm happy to let my answer stand review.The argument is from a societal point of view and you've failed to answer it. The Harvard paper elaborates on your misnomer by elaborating on the government's interest in sexual unions.
It sounded good at the outset, but then you spiraled into the earth with the baseless assertion that I've held any position other than the unassailable point: marriage remains a contract of a very specific nature and equity demands a better than arbitrary denial of the right. His attempt to transform Catholic declaration into objective fact without mechanism, by force of assertion alone isn't much of an argument.Declarative, unsupported nonsense, unless you begin with the assumption that marriage is an arbitrary grouping of things, which is a particular dogmatic view and nothing else.
Silly bit of goofery, given I'm rarely out of temper and almost never with an honest, if under thought and errant, opinion. Doesn't mean I won't pants someone attempting to foist it off on me.Ergo, this "reply" isn't much more than reactionary temper tantrum thrown without a mind to even see the arguments, much less understand them.
I was simply noting from the outset that the founder of that feast has a perspective and it isn't objective. Given what he advanced as argument, my suspicion seemed amply born out, your ongoing knack for the declarative notwithstanding.
Then you aren't seeing it. The presumption (and one with an echo in the population portion) is that sexuality (at least so far as the homosexual is concerned) is a matter of choice.
Another fine declaration without any attempt to demonstrate how the assertion is what you purport it to be. Or, in other words: beans.
Which point? The one anyone who can add understands or the other, the one he means to support which isn't nearly as iron clad?
No, it really isn't. From the U.S. Census on the subject:
"The world population increased from 3 billion in 1959 to 6 billion by 1999, a doubling that occurred over 40 years. The Census Bureau's latest projections imply that population growth will continue into the 21st century, although more slowly. The world population is projected to grow from 6 billion in 1999 to 9 billion by 2044, an increase of 50 percent that is expected to require 45 years."
Given you thought this "argument" was worth considering you'll forgive me if I don't credit the next one as something to shiver about pre-consideration. As for the first part, I'm happy to let my answer stand review.
It sounded good at the outset, but then you spiraled into the earth with the baseless assertion that I've held any position other than the unassailable point: marriage remains a contract of a very specific nature and equity demands a better than arbitrary denial of the right. His attempt to transform Catholic declaration into objective fact without mechanism, by force of assertion alone isn't much of an argument.
Silly bit of goofery, given I'm rarely out of temper and almost never with an honest, if under thought and errant, opinion. Doesn't mean I won't pants someone attempting to foist it off on me.
:e4e:
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the French try using their conscience to guide them. If I recall correctly that effort resulted in a revolution. Following one's conscience would work great if he knew who gave him his conscience in the first place.No. I'm taking the view that men differ on what God wants, that where those differences don't impinge on the right of the other our conscience and not the mob, should rule. Or are you fine with the idea of following Islamic law if the majority says so, because that's what you open yourself to when you move from a secular society into the realm of religious opinion establishing the right of law, instead of influencing it in value by way of the character it instills in its adherents.
Show me a state in the history of government that's done better than we have at expanding liberty and right. So yes, warts and all, we haven't managed the horror of that 30 Years War you might want to Google, tearing ourselves apart over distinctions in our understanding of the Holy.
That's not our difference. That's you telling yourself that your notion of God's creation should be the rule. And so says the next zealot and with no more authority. Wars have been fought over footnotes in that sort of system. Look to the horrors of Europe and our escape to found a different sort of society.
I haven't mocked God any more than you've advanced reason. That's just a foolish vanity on your part confused as virtue, but given your love of the declarative in lieu of calm and deliberate rationality it's not particularly surprising. For my part, I'll withhold judgment on whether you love God or the sound of your own self righteous voice more. :think:
Super. Now it's your turn: humility. lain:
Well, no. Marriage is a contract that has (as contracts will) certain advantages between the parties to it. That's more the rule than the exception you're wanting to fashion...By way of example, a corporation is formed by contract and has advantages in law because of it. It enjoys tax breaks and much of the authority of an actual person.Here it is again with hope that 7 times is the deal-breaker: Marriage is more than a mere contract, it is government aid.
I don't know how to break this to you gently, but my argument has everything to do with the issue and is advanced as a means to settle it.
Any number of things, but we don't vote on whether the law should be equitably applied, whether black men are entitled to the same rights as white men, by way of example.
And you and I have the self same right to contract. So should the next guy--even if we don't particularly care for the fact he uses his contract to a purpose that offends our moral sensibilities, absent that compelling secular interest and argument that you've yet to advance.
No. That's your presumption, but that's all it is.
It would be. Luckily, we're not. You're trying to make a secular argument turn on your religious principle. We had that once before and, wisely, turned to a means less likely to provoke the sort of human catastrophe that was the 30 Years War, by way of example.
:e4e:
Here are a number of secular arguments against gay marriage for those interested:
1. A Secular Argument Against Gay Marriage
2. Judaism's Sexual Revolution: Why Judaism Rejected Homosexuality
3. What is Marriage? (Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy)
4. The Secular Case Against Gay Marriage
-zip
:e4e:
I read most of the 1st and 4th links.
From the first link:1. Traditional, heterosexual marriages are good and necessary for the survival of society through procreation.
2. Traditional marriages survive and thrive when spouses are faithful to one another.
3. Faithfulness is undermined by social indifference to the nature and purpose of sexual unions.
4. Homosexual “marriage” is/would be both a product of, and a contributor to, such indifference.
5. Ergo, homosexual marriage harms traditional marriage.
I do not see how those points are connected. :idunno:
#1 is a given for the most part. Without procreation, a society dies out.
#2 is pretty good too. Marriages are best when the spouses stay true to each other.
#3 is where he loses me. I assume that the purpose in mind is procreation....so is he saying that the reason to be faithful is because you are supporting children? And without children there is no need to be faithful?
From zippy's 4th link which I found to be more compelling than the 1st, what I think is the pivotal paragraph.....
...When a state recognizes a marriage, it bestows upon the couple certain benefits which are costly to both the state and other individuals. Collecting a deceased spouse’s social security, claiming an extra tax exemption for a spouse, and having the right to be covered under a spouse’s health insurance policy are just a few examples of the costly benefits associated with marriage. In a sense, a married couple receives a subsidy. Why? Because a marriage between two unrelated heterosexuals is likely to result in a family with children, and propagation of society is a compelling state interest. For this reason, states have, in varying degrees, restricted from marriage couples unlikely to produce children.
2 questions.
Who agrees that marriage benefits are meant to be a subsidy for producing children?
And if you do, is that subsidy targeted at only biological children?
I'm afraid of rattlesnakes...but I can show you a rattlesnake.I'm afraid you're mistaken on a number of fronts.
Which isn't what noting a previously uncontested recognition of tax breaks does...Noting that my argument from government aid is sound
Well, no. No, it doesn't. Here's a novel idea for you: demonstrate how.already marginalizes your position.
Not come fashion week. lain: Else, society once valued white men over any other and gave them perks in violation of the equitable principle that all men are created equal and endowed by their creator, etc. Seem like a good idea to you?Heterosexual couples are worth more to society than homosexual couples.
Not it at all really. Supra and prior.That's a point you won't unmake that serves as a basis for "inequity" (as you like to call it) from the get-go.
All right then, to make a point I shouldn't have to: no. The tense I used was present. We don't.In fact we do and did,
The government has a fundamental obligation to guarantee equal rights to its citizens.1. The government has objective interest in traditional marriage as a means to a healthy society.
Separate but not entirely equal?It does not deny the homosexuals contract, it denies them marriage, which is more than contract via the arguments I speak of.
A matter of dispute. "We hold these truths to be self evident..." and all. They are or they aren't. I don't believe the former is something decided by a show of hands.2. Realistically, morality and law are nothing but a societal vote
Didn't.You've again ignored a giant point in my reply.
Would you say the same thing about Catholics? My answer to the point you think was ignored was in the question that you, well, ignored.I think the onus is on you to demonstrate that we cannot vote homosexual marriage out in good conscience,
I have one. The fellow down the street has one. And if his says that Catholics shouldn't be allowed to vote or live in Protestant neighborhoods or marry because Protestant values are of greater importance to the nation I'll oppose the attempt in the spirit of equity under law.Religion:
Here is my religious argument,
Actually I tend to speak my mind and say what I mean. I don't see the advantage or reason in doing otherwise. There's simply no good reason to undermine the principle that serves to keep our social compact from falling into the hands of a mob mentality.Thoughts? On a whim I would say that you believe homosexuality is a sin somewhat dogmatically, that you don't argue against it secularly because you don't see anything objectively and rationally wrong with the thing in itself, even if you claim that you disagree for other reasons on the surface.
Argue against someone's sexual preference? Not rationally. Now how a person chooses to express that preference is another matter, whether homo or hetero.Could you argue with an atheist against homosexuality in a non-dogmatic way? :think:
I've never said that marriage should be denied to homosexual couples based on the argument in question. That depends on the definition of marriage. The argument merely shows that heterosexual couples deserve more support from the government and a higher societal status. I explained all of this to you earlier in a visitor message. :idunno:
Then you've simply misunderstood the youtube video and its import. I figured you'd understood it. :idunno:
I don't know the specifics; I know there is a federal DOMA and that no one in the U.S. has successfully and definitively incorporated gay marriage. So I'd say you're the one being disingenuous here.
You're reaching, those cases are nonsensical for your argument in the first place
and I don't think any respectable percentage of new marriages fall into that category anyway.
:squint: How serious is your denial?
You're ignoring the distinction that TH has been ignoring: contract vs government aid.
No, I think that would be eugenics.