But without calling out those specific examples, there have been cases where such laws have been deemed not to apply - I’ll see if I can find the quotes from a headmaster of a school in Florida who stated that the general anti-bullying statutes couldn’t apply when the victim was morally perverted, gay or lesbian.
The fact that someone misrepresents an existing law does not mean that we need to make a new law, it just means that the existing law needs to be explained to the principal.
Here is what some people who are interesting in stopping bullying
have said: There should not be any major emphasis on defining victims. This addition into an anti bullying law will cause several problems for lawmakers:
Any child can be victimized by a bully. Remember that bullies bully because they can, and because they can get away with it.
The way a bully’s target or victim acts or physically looks is not the victim’s problem but the bully’s own psychological problem. The bully is the root of the problem.
Defining victims will slow the process of lawmaking, dividing political parties who will argue over which victims get special rights over other victims.
All children deserve the “special right” not to be bullied. ALL children who are bullied need to be protected.
You’re obviously not familiar with the Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda, who use Old Testament scriptures to say that God positively commands them to genocide, rape and torture the UnGodly.
*” And Moses said unto them, Have ye saved all the women alive? Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him.
But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves.”
That’s what they do. They take these and other words in the Bible literally, and put them into practice.
And obviously the perpetrators of the beheadings also disagreed that these were heinous acts, and probably had some verses from the Koran to back them up.
Which is why they’re so much against employing Idolators like Hindus, and support the KKK when they don’t want to employ Blacks. And why they’re so much against the existing laws that say you can’t fire someone merely because they’re Catholic… except that’s different, right?
Would I say that Jack Chick Publications had the right to fire an employee who converted to Catholicism? Well, in a civil sense, yes, but of course not in a spiritual sense.
Religion is used as an excuse to justify irrational and emotionally-based Homophobia, just as in the past it has been used to justify racism.
Religion, yes, but *which religion? *It was not the Catholic Church which used made-up interpretations of the Bible to justify racism, it was Protestants. In fact, way before the Protestants did that, or saw the sinfulness of chattel slavery, way back in the 1400’s the Pope condemned it. (
Here and
here are a couple of articles)
WRT homosexuals, the Catechism of the Catholic Church
says: This inclination, which is objectively disordered, constitutes for most of them a trial. **They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. **These persons are called to fulfill God’s will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to unite to the sacrifice of the Lord’s Cross the difficulties they may encounter from their condition.
I’m homophobic myself - but as a rational being, I don’t mistake an instinctive revulsion for a moral justification.
Proximity does not *always *equal causation, but sometimes it does.
If this were not the case, the same degree of energy would be spent in say, making divorce illegal, or preventing Buddhists from gaining employment “where they’re not wanted”.
Note that the proposed Employment Non Discrimination Act only applies to large firms employing dozens or hundreds of people, government departments, and does not apply to any religious organisation or one with a religious basis. Even ones with no religious connection whatsoever aren’t affected unless they employ at least 15 people.
So, which is it, 15 or more, or dozens or hundreds? I mean, if I run a firm with 16 people, and some of those people are my children or my children come over, I would avoid hiring *anyone *who seems overly interested in sexual activity, but with these laws in place, I could get sued for not hiring the person who comes into the interview wearing a Gay Pride Day t-shirt. Is *that *fair?