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Biblepoe
Guest
It does. But there are special rights issues that primarily effect same-sex couples that don’t face others. For example, same-sex couples are prohibited from marrying the one they love, while mixed-race couples are no longer prohibited from marrying the one they love.Then why doesn’t “gay rights” fall under the acceptance of all people?
I highly doubt Belgium is seriously considering any of those things, such as pedophilia.Frankly I don’t know why European countries do the things they do. In Belgium, they’re considering giving children the consent to choose if they’d want to die.
Every country considers some stupid legislation all the time, so even if Belgium is considering legalization of pedophilia, which I have never heard about until now, it doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with homosexuality. Plus, there are many other countries besides Belgium, such as Canada, Argentina, Spain, Portugal, Iceland, and others.
However, the point with European countries is that if same-sex marriage did cause societal problems, we would be seeing it in those countries. The only attempt here to show such evidence is the link that Faithdancer provided to an article from the Family Research Council, a propaganda outlet. I’m waiting for Faithdancer to being specifically whatever he/she finds convincing from the article to this discussion in order to analyze it.
No, the Catholic Church will not be forced to marry same-sex couples for the same reason that churches aren’t forced to marry mixed-race couples: The First Amendment.Oh but we will.
Allowing committed opposite-sex couples to marry doesn’t promote the idea that marriage doesn’t require commitment. If anything, it promote commitment as the primary characteristic of marriage, not who the person chooses to marry.Heterosexual people are also for gay marriage, even if they’ll never engage in that kind of activity. It further promotes the infectious idea that marriage can be anything that gives you pleasure and marriage doesn’t require commitment or new life.
As for life as a requirement, if you want raising new life to be a requirement for marriage, then you would have to ban anyone who has had a hysterectomy or vasectomy from marrying. If you do think that life should be a criteria for marriage, then I want to hear you say, “I support banning anyone who has had a hysterectomy or vasectomy from entering a marriage.”
If you aren’t willing to say that for a couple with a hysterectomy or vasectomy, then you shouldn’t be using lack of ability to generate life as grounds to deny same-sex couples from marrying.
Are you confessing that you cannot think of a reason to ban incestuous, polygamous, and bestiality marriages without also banning gay marriage?It opens the gates to future perversions with the lowering of the criteria. 50 years ago everyone was disgusted by gay marriage, now everyone is enthusiastic about it. In the next 50 years we’ll be having this conversation about incestous polygamous pedophilia and bestiality.
It should be based on the actual effects, not based off of people’s religious persuasions. If someone’s religion defined a driver as a blind man, we wouldn’t enshrine that into law. I’m glad we can agree on that.It should based on what benefits society and what makes sense.
The government wouldn’t give a blind man a driver’s license, would it?