It's perfectly reasonable if you're encouraging and rewarding a relationship that benefits society to not encourage and reward every other relationship in existence! By all means explain why you aren't here likewise calling for government recognition of any and every other imaginable union by this same logic.Yes and as a secularist I too am somewhat interested in any social benefit that encouraging a traditional heterosexual marriage may give society but at the same time discriminating against those who don't want a heterosexual relationship is not reasonable imo.
It.However my own view is based on a what I perceive as a practical benefit to society while I suspect yours is based simply on a strict adherence to an ancient scripture, and then to have it imposed on people who don't.
Doesn't.
Matter.
I have the right to vote based on whatever the hell basis I like. What you suspect that might be based on is completely and utterly irrelevant to my right to vote.
You don't even get to insist people who vote do so on the basis of what is of practical benefit to society. You don't even get that power over other people's votes. Be thankful then that this is what I base my vote on, whether I disagree with you or not.
And, by the way, do you remember when you said this?
"Wrong, you simply want whatever you have decided is just and right, albeit derived (mindlessly?) from an ancient scripture, imposed on all, including those of us who dare to decide our own relative morality."
That was you being a blazing hypocrite.
I have no idea what you're saying here. A secular majority doesn't need to impose their non-secular views on minorities? Would a secular majority even do that? :dizzy:It doesn't matter to me particularly how individuals decide how to vote, that isn't the point. What I am saying is that civilised secular majorities should not need to impose their non-secular views on minorities just because they can control the levers of powers.
Are you saying a civilized society shouldn't have to impose non-secular views on the minority? Is that what you meant? Because that's stupid. So long as any idea can be both secular or non-secular this is a completely ridiculous thing to base the acceptance or rejection of anyone's right to vote. And also impossible.
This doesn't make any sense. :idunno:Where do you get the idea from that you have a right to impose on minorities your ideas of marriage or morality particularly when clearly all could have what they wanted given a bit of understanding and tolerance?
Who said it did? What are you babbling about? :liberals:IOW, you should live your life and let them live theirs, but simply being in a majority and winning a secular vote doesn't somehow justify or make your doctrinal view right and proper. :AMR:
We're talking about whether people have the right to vote based on religious principle aren't we? How the heck does "live and let live" apply to voting? Why doesn't this apply to you as well?
You haven't. All I'm getting is that you're firmly convinced no one should have the right to vote based on any principle, idea or belief that appears in a religion somewhere. Which is just ludicrous.Sorry but you rather lost me again here.
Hopefully I have covered my response sufficiently above?
Not to mention the vast majority of our laws currently do appear in various religions. Many of them put into place by people voting in an entirely non-secular manner.
Because you're being a bigot.I simply don't accept that you have shown anything other than a dogmatic religious belief is involved here, but if you have laid out proper secular rational reasoning somewhere then it seems to have escaped my attention, please do cite it.
See, I haven't really said anything at all about how I base my vote on anything, secular or non-secular. Be it on religious belief or science or scrying tea leaves. What we've been talking about is whether people have the right to vote or exercise their power over government policy in a democracy,based on whatever belief they like, be it secular or non-secular.
The reason why you're so sure everything I've said boils down to dogmatic religious belief is that you're being bigoted. Your brain is so chock full of rejecting dogmatic religious belief and denying the right to vote based on dogmatic religious belief that all you hear from anyone challenging that notion is a bunch of :blabla:.
No, I'm saying you're being a bigot because you're incapable of following along in a discussion of whether or not it's reasonable to limit people's right to vote entirely to the secular.Apparently though you are now claiming that I am being bigoted for not tolerating your bigoted intolerance of homosexuals.:think:
So shoot me.
1) This makes absolutely no sense in light of what it's in response to.Again you seem to think that by winning a democratic vote somehow makes you right, it doesn't of course it only puts you in charge.
2) How do you figure that and who cares anyway? Doesn't have anything to do with whether you're right to limit what basis others have the right to vote on.
This is why you have the right to vote as well.Except Mary that when you win that vote and get put in charge (heaven forbid) you will apparently not even consider tolerating or allowing for other (gay?) lifestyles, which would probably only be an abuse of power imo, not right and proper.
Instead of spitting battery acid at the thought that other people you disagree with have the right to vote and advocating having their rights abridged, maybe you should satisfy yourself with that. Like every other reasonable, rational, non-bigoted voter out there does.
And, again, you don't see anyone suggesting you have your right to vote taken away. Nor so much as limited in any way.