Yes But… as i have been trying to get people to answer
God and religion are a concern when developing any moral framework or laws.
Morality has to do with oughts and ought nots so when we say that homosexuality ought not to be practiced then we are speaking within a moral framework. We are not reproaching the civil rights of a homosexual person by saying that homosexuality ought not to be practiced. Civil rights has less to do with behavior and more to do with individuals, races or other groups. Granted that homosexuals have become a group but here is the rub, they are defining themselves based on their actions. SO to speak against their actions now becomes an assault on how they have decided to identify themselves. But discussion of whether or not these acts ought to be practiced or not MUST continue or we are not free to speak or judge what is morally right, which is also a breach of our civil rights. The problem is that homosexuals have decided that to speak against this act is breach of civil rights because then we are seen to be discriminating against people when in fact we are speaking of oughts and ought nots. Our language becomes “hate speech” and Pastors and Priests are arrested for preaching their holy book which states that this is morally wrong! So the “so called” persecuted ones i.e homosexuals become the ones who are persecuting Christians because the Christians believe it is wrong. So in your cause to vindicate yourself you condemn most of the world who believes this is wrong, and if a society accepts your plight as being legitimate then legal action must be taken against those who say this is wrong. Very ironic if you ask me for this leads to a very fundamental breach of human rights, freedom of speech. How can this be? Do we have the right to speak against any action within a moral framework? Surely we must be free to decide whether this is moral. If society decides that it is not moral, or rather recognizes that it is immoral, will it ever be seen as a condemnation of an act and not a person (though a person can be condemned for his acts)?** I understand that acts can define people for example when someone lies we see him as a liar (with some exceptions), or when someone rapes we call him a rapist, or when someone murders that person is called a murder and so on and a person can be prosecuted according to his acts in regards to the law, but this doesn’t mean that we don’t that the right and the duty to decide whether these acts are moral or not**. And it doesn’t mean that just because Homosexuals have placed their identity in this behavior that we cannot judge it as a moral ought not.
I wrote this post in response to Ashley42 and have been waiting for a comment or something