The whole reason I come here at all is to waste my time.
Touché.
However, in context to this particular thread, it just seems more...noticeable.
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The whole reason I come here at all is to waste my time.
I'm not under any illusions that I'll get Sovereign Dream to support same-sex marriage. I'm mainly participating in this thread so that people on the fence can see my side.Is this thread really still going on? I figured it would die out around page 10.
The OP has his opinion (and blog) and, apparently, won't even listen to those who give any form of criticism (constructive or otherwise).
It just seems like everyone is waiting their time.
Oh he's sent is plenty of homosexuals. We need the ones who are repressing their gay inclinations to realize and embrace their true nature instead of trying to get all the other gays to repress their inclinations too.
Of course its sad when people break up, I didnt say otherwise. But it happens. Gay marriage wont affect that, though. No one will get a divorce because of it. Sometimes relationships just dont work out and while tragic, its better then forcing people to live together when their love has left. That is not a constructive environment for a child.Yes it is if marriage is the comprehensive union . . .
Furthermore, who says that we should be promoting individuals having children with someone and then leaving them to hook up with another man/woman? That's precisely what we don't need! If a gay man wants to have a child, then what he would be obligated to do, keeping in mind the best interest of any children he may have, is to marry a woman and commit to her for life and attempt to have a child with her wherein the child may be provided a relationship with a mother and father.
Yeah, sometimes a debate just start living its own life, lol.I agree but I think its too late at this point.
Furthermore, who says that we should be promoting individuals having children with someone and then leaving them to hook up with another man/woman? That's precisely what we don't need! If a gay man wants to have a child, then what he would be obligated to do, keeping in mind the best interest of any children he may have, is to marry a woman and commit to her for life and attempt to have a child with her wherein the child may be provided a relationship with a mother and father.
Most of the time, conception cannot occur. The trick is that it's difficult or impossible to tell when conception can occur... which just speaks to my point.
Again you miss the point. I'm not making any sort of probabilistic claim here. The point, once again, is that the sexual union between a man and a woman is procreative in nature. This is true even if conception doesn't occur, just as it would still be true that a football team is ordered towards winning even if it only wins 1/100 games.
Again you miss the point. I'm not making any sort of probabilistic claim here. The point, once again, is that the sexual union between a man and a woman is procreative in nature. This is true even if conception doesn't occur, just as it would still be true that a football team is ordered towards winning even if it only wins 1/100 games.
That amounts to saying that sex is procreative, except when it is not.
Even if that were particularly informative, it still does not follow that marriage should be defined mainly by considerations about reproduction.
Yeah, you have to buy into all this bollox about things being "ordered" this way or that way as if there's some grand plan, which is why this whole argument has the stink of religious dogma all over it despite his protestations to the contrary.
It's just Catholic doctrine about sexuality.
OK, but he's insisting it's nothing to do with Catholic hocus pocus, and that his argument would still stand on reason alone.
What does "metaphysically comprehensive union" mean?
Do you even know?
You're once again confusing marriage's public purpose and the private reasons why individuals marry. The public purpose of marriage, encore, is to attach mothers and fathers to their children and to one another, upon whose stability the children depend on for their well-being. All the other net-positive public consequences you mention are just subsidiary to this. Companionship and affection can certainly motivate one wanting to get married, but the public purpose of marriage is not companionship and affection.Ok, this is getting silly. Clearly coordinating procreation, and the education and socialization of children, is one of the primary social functions of marriage. But it clearly is not the only one- this is not really up for dispute, open any work in sociology on the matter; marriage also has the personal aspect you wish to minimize (companionship and affection), as well as regulating economic consumption and stability, acting as a means of division of labor, reinforcing basic social bonds, and so on. So clearly there isn't just one function or purpose of marriage. But then, there's also the problem that you have no basis for the normative claim you're trying to make here- that the function of being "ordered towards procreation" is somehow more correct or legitimate, even to the exclusion of any others.
No, this is a mere matter of fact claim. Let the intentional point-missing continue though, by all means.No. You're making a normative claim, truth or falsity have nothing to do with it.
"Wrong once again." If the public purpose of marriage is to attach mothers and fathers to their children and to one another, then, just like a women's debate club disallowing a man to become one of its members, it is not unjust to disallow two men or two women from "marrying." But, again, I've mentioned this about 16 times or so. And I wrote an entire blog post which, per the criticisms received, was too long and thorough. Almost as if I was trying to dumb down a simple concept to explain it to people. Care to guess why I thought that necessary? (Hint: it has to do with responses like these.)Wrong once again. Men have men's bathroom. Marriage is the only game in town. There is a perfectly reasonable basis for separating men and women into different bathrooms. There is no reasonable basis for not only separating, but excluding, gays from the institute of marriage.
Are you asking whether I find it surprising that the state has an interest in marriage because of something to do with children? Why on Earth would that surprise me? I mean it's not like I've been saying that the public purpose of marriage is to attach mothers and fathers to their children and to one another, right? Or something about a comprehensive union and children and procreation, right? Here's a kangaroo: :kangaroo:Curious, then, that the state regulates other aspects of marriage as well? Oops, eh?
What a great analogy. Of course, I have conceded no such thing.
Yes, much covered. Much already.And there is more than one public purpose of marriage, as covered already.
GotMeSoGood.jpgWe aren't talking about promoting SSM, but allowing it- just as we allow divorce. Oops, eh?
Public policy must generalize and promote the optimal precisely because of the nature of public policy! Again, you dont determine public policy based on the exception or extreme case. For example, there might be some instances when its justified to run a red light -- like rushing a dying person to the emergency room -- but that doesnt mean we should make running red lights legal. Thats bad public policy. Similarly, there might be some very rare circumstances in which a child might "better off" with a same-sex couple or with a single parent, but that doesn't thereby mean that it ought to be public policy to place children in the care of same-sex couples or single parents.No, it doesn't- just because a case isn't optimal doesn't mean that it is nevertheless bad (this is a false dilemma), so much so that it needs to be legally prohibited, or that it outweighs other benefits of a policy. And this is supposing we grant your premise, which we really needn't do in the first place since it requires misconstruing (or jumping the gun on, at the very least) certain studies concerning children of same sex households.
Yes, do tell me more of this red herring you had for breakfast.It would appear you're not very familiar with the realities of foster care, if you think that remaining in foster care would, in general, be better than being raised by a single parent.
Not sure what you're responding to exactly but what you said sounds right. Then again, I'm not entirely sure what you're saying, so don't hold my tongue to that.I'm not sure cases like that make up a majority; many times a child is placed elsewhere is because the family situation is unstable, and so while they may be unable to appreciate it, being raised in foster care or with a relative, or by one parent, is actually in their best interest.
That's actually precisely what is happening. Male homosexual couples, for example, pay surrogates to take to term some of their sperm and some of the eggs they bought from a genetically-endowed woman. After nine months, the surrogate hands over a child, receives a wad of cash and is then escorted off the premises, allowing the homosexual couple to pretend to be the happy heterosexual couple who just "gave birth" to their child, and then they take the child home and avoid any talk of the big elephant in the room, namely, "where's mommy?" To which the answer is: "well, we bought some woman's eggs. Not just any woman, mind you -- she had a high IQ and had desirable genetic traits. Then, we found your second mommy, Narida, in Hyderabad, India and then we paid her to take you to term. Then she gave birth to you, we bought you like a commodity, as one might buy an exotic pet, and we are deliberately raising you without a mother because my homosexual partner and I just 'like, really wanted to, like, have a kid in the house, lol' and then we contractually obligated Narida and your other mommy to give you up." Just wonderful, right? In the case of a lesbian couple, they either buy some sperm from a sperm bank or sleep with some guy friend and then *poof*, they escort him off the premises and take "their child" away with them to their house where they must live out their own fatherless fantasy and avoid their own elephant in the room, namely, "where's daddy?" The answer, in most cases, is "Well, we bought his sperm, delibrately deprived you of a father because my lesbian partner and I 'like, really wanted a kid to parade around on a stroller, lol so cute' and then we contractually obligated him to leave my lesbian partner and I alone." Another wonderful story, right?Yeah, that's not what we're talking about. Legalizing gay marriage would not institutionally deprive children of a mother and a father. It's not like its going to make anyone's parents *poof*, go away.
You're thinking about this the wrong way. I could construct two scenarios in a different way. What if the lesbians didn’t have a stable relationship, couldn’t keep steady jobs, experienced domestic violence in their home, and often used drugs. The other adoptive option was a married heterosexual couple (one a doctor and the other a teacher), who lived in the same home for 18 years, and who had already adopted a child. Given those two options, wouldn’t it be better for the child to be adopted by the heterosexual couple? Sure, but what’s that prove? That you can construct any combination of scenarios designed to prove that a certain set of people would be better parents.The only extent to which it would do anything of the sort is by, for instance, allowing gay couples to adopt- in which case, even if same sex households are not optimal (for whatever reason), they are nevertheless going to often be better for the child than the care they would have been receiving otherwise (I mean honestly, are you aware of the conditions of some orphanages around the world?).
No, it doesn't. It assumes that it is a question of rights, and that it pertains to gays. That's a check on both counts, obviously.
Is a half legible book still a book?
I rest my case.
The concept of marriage only for procreation is not only outdated, but is straightforward stupid in today's overflowing population.
Homosexual marriage and adoption is one of the best things to happen actually.
Furthermore, having a highh increase in hmosexual marriage and adoption would be incredibly good for humanity and thousands of children.
In summary, a real big blessing.
We need God to send us more hmosexuals or we ll reproduce ourselves to our extintion!
That amounts to saying that sex is procreative, except when it is not.
Even if that were particularly informative, it still does not follow that marriage should be defined mainly by considerations about reproduction.
Sex, when done correctly, always releases endorphins, which help elevate headaches and increase your general mood.
Sex, when done correctly, only sometimes causes pregnancy...
Therefore, how can you say that sex is ordered towards procreation[?]
It seems to me sex is ordered towards helping aches and pains, and pregnancy is only a potential byproduct.
Yeah, you have to buy into all this bollox about things being "ordered" this way or that way as if there's some grand plan, which is why this whole argument has the stink of religious dogma all over it despite his protestations to the contrary.