B
Baelor
Guest
I assumed you knew what you were talking about – the BSA banned all avowed homosexuals.You just changed your claim. You did not say “avowed” before.
All avowed homosexuals were institutionally banned.Yes, the BSA did ban avowed homosexuals but not all of them.
From everyone, yes. The BSA had a policy that dictated conduct of Scouts in other spheres of their lives. To my knowledge, homosexuality was the only such policy in Scouting.I did not say you had to confess it or act on it at a BSA function. If a homosexual boy wanted to join the BSA, prior to the policy change, he could have done so. He would have just had to keep it secret.
Not at all. Are you so incredibly arrogant as to believe that you know exactly why every single homosexual in the world discloses or does not disclose his disordered attraction?But here we now get back to are those with SSA homosexuals. A person with just SSA would have no problem keeping it a secret. But a person that is a “homosexual” has a problem with this because their actions expose them, making their secret harder to keep.
Context is everything. Someone randomly introducing himself as “John, a homosexual” is very different from someone disclosing his homosexuality in a discussion about sexual morality or living as a member of a stigmatized group.Again, I think how one identifies himself is very telling.
Yes. My proof is that no one outside of these forums and in my life has every used “homosexual” to connote anything other than mere attraction.By “often”, are you implying this is the majority situation because I think you would be hard pressed to prove it.
A schizophrenic suffers from schizophrenia. Why can a homosexual not suffer from homosexuality?Yes, since “homosexual” can have many different understandings, as you point out in other posts. Do you not see the problem with saying, “I am a homosexual” when describing a disorder? No one asked to describe the person but the disorder.
Because never in my life have I heard the term SSA other than on these forums, and never in my life have I heard the term homosexual meant as anything other than sexual attraction. So there is no reason to say “I have SSA” because “I am gay” and “I am homosexual” have invariably meant the exact same thing but are less awkward and more clear to everyone I have ever met ever.How about saying, “I have SSA”, if one only has same sex attraction? Why use “homosexual” when it can and mean more than one just having SSA.
What makes the situations categorically different? You stated the following:Are you saying that voting and sexual behavior are of the same moral weight?
You did not define equality. The only connection I could glean was that equal rights were being extended to both groups. That is the case in many other areas. If you meant something different, perhaps you should explain.This is a form of equality and if the one being equaled to is normal