Guardsman Bass wrote:
But if you believe that they ought to be the functional same under California law as heterosexual marriage, then why quibble so much over a symbolic definition? You sound like the separate-but-equal advocates, who argued way back when that it was okay to forcibly segregate blacks and whites as long as the facilities were perfectly equal - but if they are perfectly equal, then why segregate at all? It's nothing but a symbolic preference on your part, but the government, and particularly the court system, doesn't exist to enforce the majority's symbolic preferences - it exists to support their constitutional rights and promote their welfare.
Why indeed quibble? Because it IS symbolic, and it's an important symbol to many people who believe that it should maintain its traditional definition. I'm aware that these arguments are the same, by and large, as the ones that were used to advocate racial segregation but I believe that the comparison ends there. There are no "gay only" stores, "straight only" lunch counters, or anything of the like. As you said, it's a symbolic preference on my part and I don't believe that defining marriage as between a man and a woman does anything to reduce anyone's constitutional rights or demote their welfare.
Look, nobody's going to force your church or any other church to perform a gay wedding. Most gays probably wouldn't even want to be married in a church that treated them with nothing but hostility. All those churches - including, I'm sorry to say, the LDS Church, which has been at the forefront of these battles for decades - are free to be as discriminatory as they want in the confines of their own chapels vis a vis weddings. So why the hell is it such a problem for people like you?
Perhaps you're not aware that any church which does NOT recognize same-sex marriages could be classified as a "hate group" and sued? This would cause hundreds of churches to either compromise
their beliefs or lose tax-exempt status.
Broomstick wrote:
However, I can assure that that is NOT the case in many other places in the US. California allowing gay marriage to continue, though, may benefit other couples elsewhere through the full faith and credit clause where a marriage legal in one state must be recognized in all states - I think it will take a trip to the Supreme Court to really make it stick, but it's one more blow for civil rights that are truly for all.
That's exactly what has been proposed on the Prop 8 websites (both for and against). I too feel that this issue will shortly be before the Supreme Court.
I noticed that MRDOD's post attacked you in particular and yet you seem to think it's an attack on all conservatives. Strawman much?
Agreed, that was a poor strawman and a dirty tactic. I apologize for that dishonesty.
MRDOD wrote:
Fact 1: You believe homosexuals do not deserve to be able to be married.
Agreed
Fact 2: You believe that homosexuals are attempting to hijack the concept of marriage.
Not the "concept" but rather using this opportunity to define it themselves WITHOUT a ballot measure but instead using a ruling by the state supreme court
Fact 3: You believe that homosexuals are doing this in order to force acceptance of homosexuality upon society.
Agreed[/quote]
[/quote]Fact 4: You believe that homosexuality is not condoned by the majority of society, and therefore it is completely morally indefensible to support gay marriage, because the majority is always right.[/quote]
I'm saying that the majority of Californians did condone
same sex marriages in 2001 and that I do not condone it now. I did not say that supporting gay marriage is morally indensibile, in fact there are many strong arguments out there. I'm saying that I do not support it because of my own beliefs.