Nothing new here. Debate's over, but I'll make a few observations.
East of Eden wrote:cnorman18 wrote:
Did Obama promote vicious and false gay stereotypes? THAT'S what makes you a bigot, as I've already explained,
You mean as you've already lied about.
Third time you've called me a liar. I'm not, and since you can't show that I am, what does that make you?
Don't accuse me of "having a fit" and personally insulting you if you're going to do the same.... and, of course, I have to note that you avoided answering the question in favor of just tossing an insult.
So I'll ask it again: Has Obama tossed around vicious and false gay stereotypes, as you have? I'll withdraw the term "bigot," but I'll stand by that; it's a fact.
Is that supposed to be a reasoned response? You haven't dealt with a single objection to Cameron's work that's been posted here; not one. You've just dismissed them without any response or defense of any kind, except "I agree with him, so he must be right."
I haven't analyzed Cameron's work and neither have you...
The criticisms of his work speak for themselves; they are accurate and cogent objections to his methodology, not his politics.
Refusing to examine the actual STATEMENTS, EVIDENCE, and REASONING of his critics and simply attributing their criticisms to political differences amounts to dodging the critics' actual arguments.
...but I have no doubt most of the hostility to him comes from having a differing opinion on the wholesomness of the gay lifestyle. Those who question global warming get the same treatment. It's the Saul Alinsky MO used by the left of isolate and attack.
Nice offtopic political rant. But let's not look at what Cameron's critics actually have to SAY, and consider whether or not their criticisms are valid; no, no, can't do that.
Anyway, this thread is not about Paul Cameron...
I didn't bring up his flawed and worthless research.
I suspect what you object to is the article I posted on the health risks of gay sex by Dr. John Diggs, which had 129 footnotes. Amazing how you just dismiss that out of hand because it goes against your PC thought.
Wasn't one of those footnotes to the long since discredited 1978 San Francisco study, of which the authors themselves said that it could not be used to determine ANYTHING about homosexuals in general?
Ah, yes, so it was. That study was the first reference Dr. Diggs cited, in the second paragraph. So much for academic rigor and medical objectivity.
Where? What was your answer? No one here has seen it, and neither have I.
Prove me a liar. Quote where you answered that question. I can't wait.
No problem. Heterosexual couples provide a mother and father, gay couples never do. The rare heterosexual couples of the same sex you bring up (I've never heard of it in real life) are not an optimal situation.
Uh,
that's not an answer. Here's the question again:
"Okay, then explain to me how it's NOT hypocritical to claim that all these "problems" that you claim are your reasons for opposing gay marriage DO NOT APPLY to STRAIGHT people."
All you have done is repeat your hypocrisy without explaining it. You STILL won't advocate same-sex heterosexual couples, or any of the other nonconventional arrangements I've mentioned, being prohibited from raising children.
That remains PROOF that you're only concerned with
homosexuality and not parenting; and that means your fake "reasons" are blatantly hypocritical.
YOU STILL HAVEN'T EXPLAINED WHY THAT ISN'T TRUE. Why can't you do that?
That's true; what makes it a non sequitur is that it had nothing whatever to do with the point it followed and to which it was supposedly intended to be a response.
Your opinion again.
Okay, let's look; I can do this for weeks. I intend to.
Here's what I posted:
"Okay, then explain to me how it's NOT hypocritical to claim that all these "problems" that you claim are your reasons for opposing gay marriage DO NOT APPLY to STRAIGHT people."
And here is what you wrote in "answer":
"Here is a definition of marriage for you:
"A contract made in due form of law, by which a free man and a free woman reciprocally engage to live with each other during their joint lives, in the union which ought io exist between husband and wife."
Two men or two women or a man and three women don't don't make a marriage."
Please explain how that answers the question.
And good luck with that.
(1) There's nothing wrong with supporting ANY idea, for ANY reason; there's nothing constitutionally wrong with fundamentalists opposing gay marriage, and there's nothing constitutionally wrong with liberal Christians supporting it. I've posted this on this thread before, at least three times.
(2) The problem of constitutionality only arises when a bill becomes a law; further, it can only be declared unconstitutional and revoked if there is a court challenge to it, which is the case we're discussing on this thread. I've posted that before too.
(3) NOT prohibiting something infringes the rights of no one. Three or four times, at least.
(4) Therefore, a law which does NOT prohibit anything is constitutional whether it's based on religious ideas or not. Again, multiple posts.
(5) Therefore, when discussing the repeal of laws against gay marriage, there is no First Amendment religious-freedom concern; no one's rights are violated by NOT outlawing gay marriage. Those who don't believe in it aren't required to do it. Posted any multiple times.
As the SCOTUS hasn't decided whether or not Prop. 8 is a violation of anyone's rights, the above is your opinion.
Which is what you say when you have no arguments in reply. If you do, why don't you post them?
Why don't you
dispute any of the points above? Where are your arguments against them?
Do you really think "that's your opinion" proves anything at all?
Isn't that just one more way you've found to avoid having to actually post coherent and meaningful, not to say logical, arguments, and actually respond to those of others?
It is interesting watching the mental contortions whereby you declare liberal Christian attempts to influence policy to be 'OK', and conservative Christian attempts at the same to be 'bad'. That is where your hypocracy comes in.
And your own, shall we say,
disingenuousness comes in when you can write that directly under statements of mine which absolutely prove it false. Notice the passage in blue.
So, right out front, you think that "religious freedom" means the freedom to dictate the beliefs and practices of EVERYONE - but only for Christians. NO ONE ELSE IS TO HAVE ANY RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AT ALL, but must kowtow to Christianity and live by its precepts.
That's the clear meaning of what you just posted.
No it isn't, it's a twisted caricature. I believe in the free excercise of religion, whether those religious beliefs lead a Christian (or other religion person) to oppose the Iraqi war, abortion, slavery, the death penalty, gay marriage, or whatever.
Fine, I agree with you. But that's not what we're discussing here, as you must know by now, but still keep pretending you don't.
Where we DON'T agree is when you claim,
as you absolutely did in your last post, that religious freedom for Christians means that Christians have the right to impose their beliefs and practices on everyone. That's about as ludicrous and wrongheaded an idea as I can imagine, and is absolutely laughable to anyone who knows the ABC's of constitutional law. It's ridiculous, and the Founders would have laughed at you and thrown you out of Independence Hall.
Once again, the reason for someone else's vote is none of your business.
But the reason for a LAW is EVERYONE'S business. If the reason is to enforce a religious belief or prohibition, it's unconstitutional.
If we Jews were able to get a law passed which prohibited everyone in the US from eating pork,
for religious reasons but through a majority vote, do you really think that would be constitutional, not to mention simply
right?
We have freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.
We certainly do have freedom from OTHER PEOPLE'S religions. You are free from Islam, in that no one requires you to follow Muslim beliefs and practices. I'd like to be free of Christianity, and not have you or anyone else require me or anyone else,
including gay people, to follow Christian beliefs and practices.
That is the meaning, intent, and purpose of the establishment clause of the First Amendment. Your trying to limit it to the prohibition of the establishment of
a particular denomination violates both every court decision on the subject
ever made, as well as
the plain sense of the language of the amendment itself. As I've pointed out before (sigh), it says, "establishment of RELIGION," not "establishment of A religion" - yet ANOTHER point that you carefully delete and avoid responding to.
You seem to have a real problem when the democratic process doesn't go your way.
You seem to have much a bigger problem when the judicial process doesn't go YOUR way. The authority of the courts is in the Constitution too, you know, and you don't get to pretend it isn't there. The PEOPLE don't get to decide, sorry; the PEOPLE get to decide, but only
within the limits of the Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme Court. There simply is no higher authority in American law. If the Court rules that gay marriage is a right protected by the constitution, then it is such a right. That's the end of the national debate. Period.
Just as you don't understand my position, I don't understand Obama's support in the last election. However, I don't question his supporter's motives and call them names. I assume them to be people who love our country and want the best for it, although I consider them misguided. Whether I like it or not, Obama is POTUS for the next few year, and I wish him the best but will point out, hopefully respectfully, where I think him wrong.
I didn't vote for Obama, and I agree with you on your attitude toward him. I think much of what he and the Democratic Congress are doing is wrong too, or at least misguided; but not all.
All that is irrelevant to this thread, of course.
It's funny Christians get the rap for being smug, intolerant, judgemental, quick to condemn, etc.,
Yeah, isn't that strange? Gee, I wonder why.
...when actually the group doing the most of those things is the secular left, as you have demonstrated on this thread.
Except I'm not a member of the "secular left." I am a religious Jew and primarily conservative on most issues. This just isn't one of them. Sorry, but I'm not part of your vast leftwing conspiracy; you'll actually have to deal with my arguments instead of dismissing them because of their source, as you have most of the information on this subject.
Feel free to keep this up forever. I will.