F
Felasco
Guest
Howdy Josh, thanks for engaging my comments.
Would it be mistreatment if our neighbors passed laws denying Catholics the right to marry?
Catholics and Christians generally have been a targeted victim group in the past, and still are today in some parts of the world, so the question is not purely hypothetical.
If we establish the principle that it’s ok for us to deny our peaceful law abiding neighbors legal rights that we claim for ourselves, what’s to stop others from using this principle to do the very same thing to us?
In such a event, how would we object to such a process, if we ourselves have used the same procedure?
My wife and I have been married for 30 years, and have never had children. Many millions of couples share this situation, some by choice, some for medical reasons.
If a gay marriage is inferior because it hasn’t produced children, why is my marriage also not inferior? If gay marriages should be prohibited for this reason, why not mine too?
I propose that this debate really has little to do with the needs of children.
If the debate was about the needs of children, then we should at least be able to enthusiastically agree that gay couples should be encouraged to adopt the millions of children around the world that nobody else wants.
I’ve yet to meet a gay marriage opponent who can support this proposal, thus I’ve concluded their objections are not about the needs of children, but something else.
We might also note that there is no shortage of children in the world, with human populations predicted to grow by 50% in coming decades, to what may prove to be unsupportable levels.
Ok, your turn Josh, go for it.
And thanks again for engaging my remarks.
Thank you for this as well. So we perhaps come to the following question?I find the mistreatment of any person to be completely unacceptable, so I absolutely agree, I’d be quick to refute anyone who didn’t agree.
Would it be mistreatment if our neighbors passed laws denying Catholics the right to marry?
Catholics and Christians generally have been a targeted victim group in the past, and still are today in some parts of the world, so the question is not purely hypothetical.
If we establish the principle that it’s ok for us to deny our peaceful law abiding neighbors legal rights that we claim for ourselves, what’s to stop others from using this principle to do the very same thing to us?
In such a event, how would we object to such a process, if we ourselves have used the same procedure?
We make both unions equal in the eyes of the law.That’s odd … fully equal? how do we make a homosexual union and a heterosexual union fully equal? How do we make homosexuality and heterosexuality fully equal?
By the word anatomy I assume you’re referring to the ability to create children.How do we make the difference in the human anatomy of men and women, their sexual compatibility and complementarity with one another irrelevant to marriage?
My wife and I have been married for 30 years, and have never had children. Many millions of couples share this situation, some by choice, some for medical reasons.
If a gay marriage is inferior because it hasn’t produced children, why is my marriage also not inferior? If gay marriages should be prohibited for this reason, why not mine too?
I propose that this debate really has little to do with the needs of children.
If the debate was about the needs of children, then we should at least be able to enthusiastically agree that gay couples should be encouraged to adopt the millions of children around the world that nobody else wants.
I’ve yet to meet a gay marriage opponent who can support this proposal, thus I’ve concluded their objections are not about the needs of children, but something else.
We might also note that there is no shortage of children in the world, with human populations predicted to grow by 50% in coming decades, to what may prove to be unsupportable levels.
Ok, your turn Josh, go for it.
And thanks again for engaging my remarks.