Ok, I’m saying ‘you’ exclude the community in your arguments. Isn’t your position focused on the rights of individuals?
No, it’s not. It includes both the individual and the community.
Isn’t ours a defense of human society?
No, it’s a defense of your ideology.
I’m saying your argument has little concern for the good of the larger community. How you are doing that?
By protecting the people in it and by protecting families. I’m not sure why this wouldn’t be enough for you.
I don’t know except that your view too intensely focuses on the experience of being an individual and the social environment that forms the individual is blurred.
I disagree. I think the social environment is very important; I think we just value different aspects of it.
It has a significant painfull efffect on real people not necessarily negative . You don’t address the concepts you attach to ‘real’ people. ‘Human coupling’ the human family’ the young. Not much SSM offers those. This is what i mean about excluding society from your defense of these things.
What painful effect does same-sex marriage have, and on which real people? Be specific.
That’s what you say when we say you are doing that. We say it causes harm.
Again: what harm?
You don’t include justifications that serve the common good.
You can’t be serious. I base my position on same-sex marriage on the fundamental principles of morality and the rule of law; if these things don’t serve the common good, I don’t know what does.
You resort to ad hominem statements that the common good we speak of is just a good for catholics. Nothing to substantiate that we are doing that.
Nothing except a tendency to force the Church’s position on people who don’t agree with it.
You talk about how banning SSM causes harm but nothing really to back that up except pain relative to certain individuals or situations. Harm to the community is excluded in your argument.
First off, why don’t you consider pain to inviduals to be pain to the community? A community is a collection of individuals.
Second, what do you think would constitute “harm to the community”?
Sure. Register in your parish. Get active.
Actually, if I were to follow the anti-same-sex marriage campaign’s example, I’d do it by going through secular law. After all, you’re not content to keep your objections to same-sex marriage in your parish, are you?
You know, you are refering to the Catholic Church. Most people feel perfectly within their bounds to peer at, comment, and decide the proper end of the Catholic Church. That door hasn’t swung our way in ages. They aren’t even members! At least we are member of the societieties we live in. Aren’t we? You really do seem to expect catholics to not allow their ‘catholicism’ , our identity, to shape ‘our’ ‘this’ culture.
I meant something a bit different: not just negative comments, but actually using the law to compel your actions. For example, why exempt the Church from employment standards legislation? Why not use secular law to open up the priesthood to women and homosexual men?
That’s the sort of thing I mean about opening up that door.