Originally posted by Nick Batzdorf:
No, because you're treating this like an algebra problem.
No. I'm treating this like a philosphical/logical "problem" - which it is.
All you've said is that I'm unrealistic and a simp, supported by false mathematics (lots of gays = lots of minors, freedom = blind people driving).
I said no such thing about you, nor did I imply it. I think you are a bright guy.
Nor did I suggest the equations you put forth up there. YOU were the one who decided to announce "how many gays" there are in the U.S., in an inapplicable attempt to support an overly-simplified argument about how large clases of people should not be 'discriminated" against.
What I
HAVE been saying is: a truly MATURE discourse on this topic, intended to try and actually resolve any portion of it would have to go beyond convenient, tossed off little phrases like "It's nobody's business who marries who" and "it's a 'swing your arm to the point of someone else's nose' country."
I have simply tried to point out that a real, honest discussion of the issue has to go well beyond those oblique general statements - which are often applied incorrectly. Talk about what IS really happening, NOW and continue to talk, in the same terms, about what WOULD REALLY happen, in the future if "gay marriage" were to be recognized. All of it.
Certainly insurance companies are affected by having to cover spouses. There's always a finanicial impact. Discrimination might well be cheaper. And your point is?
AGAIN - my point is there IS a financial impact - to A LOT of people/businesses.
And there are MANY OTHER points of "impact" - all of which need to be considered - instead of flippantly announcing "It's a private matter."
I find it really hard to believe that you STILL aren't getting that basic point.
By the way, the word "marriage" seems to be an absurdly major sticking point for a lot of people. Would it change anything to call it "civil union?" After all, that wouldn't be redefining anything.
WOW.
This, coming from the guy who said we should all have "equal rights."
Who's side are you on?
Any idea what some of the main arguments in support of maintaining separate school systems, water fountains, neighborhoods, etc. for blacks and whites in the earlier part of this century were?
Does the phrase "separate but equal is NOT equal" ring a bell?
The civil rights movement in this country was basically FOUNDED on the idea that JUST the act of segregating people into different classes - even if they get the same benefits, is in-and-of-itself, deterimentally discriminatory.
So, now you leave me wondering. 'Cause I certainly wouldn't have thought you would take that position. Would a "separate, but equal" insitution of "union" or some other euphemism for "gay marriage" be OK with you?
Or (as I would have thought) do you really need to see "gay marriage" treated (and labeled)- in ALL respects - as just "marriage?"
*******
Anybody else find themselves realizing that ALL of these issues are not so clear cut as we'd like them to be when we just announce some quickly arrived at, generic statement about how we think things "ought to be?"
- if only everything were really, REALLY simple...