Mongoose, I thought you'd left to go masturbate?
Oh, and KT, as a hypothetical, I'm curious...does denying someone with Down's syndrome the ability to obtain a driver's license and operate a motor vehicle also count as not treating them as an equal citizen? Or denying a convicted felon the right to vote? Or making any of the other numerous distinctions between citizens that the government does on a daily basis, for a variety of reasons? I'm dying to know.
Your examples are as ridiculous as your theory of marriage and "gay biology." Rian pointed out why. Contrary to what you'd like to think, Gays are not retarded and/or a danger to others because of their sexual orientation, and they're also not criminals by virtue of being gay. We live in a nation where
every citizen gets all the freedoms and rights they're entitled to until they impede the freedoms or rights of others. Sexual orientation and marriage in no way affects anyone else. Stop failing.
Also, if you can point to the clause in the Constitution where it states verbatim that states' recognition of marriage must include any and all combinations of persons, or indeed where the term "marriage" comes up at all, I'd love to be informed of that as well.
I pointed out some great ones earlier on page one. Go back and check them out. Better yet, go buy a copy of the Constitution. It sounds like you need to re-read it.
Once again, it's hilarious how, when one side says the other is wrong, they're right, but when the other says the first is wrong, they're dead wrong. And it's all determined by those within the debate.
You're wrong when you're wrong. Stop trying to be a martyr.
lolz
You know, it's amusing to me that your whole argument can be summed up right there, because the rest of it is based on inferences not present in your opponent's, extaggeration, and general ****wittery.
Inferences not present in my opponent's [arguments] ? Which ones were those? The part where Mongoose is afraid to give Gays equal rights? The part where he thinks they shouldn't be allowed to marry because they can't have children together? The part where he's being a bigot? I'm confused by your accusation.
I don't know what extaggeration is.
And if you're going to act like a clown, I'm going to call you one.
And now you start arguing about the "spirit of the Constitution" like it has some kind of relevance, when oh**** the "spirit of the Constitution" is the spirit of a group of dead white people who would have voted against Prop 8. When was the last time we passed an amendment, or even tried to? 70's? Yeah, you see what I mean.
No, I don't see what you mean.
Don't presume to think you know what the forefathers would have done. That never works, and only makes you look like a fool. And you're right. Spirit was a poor choice of words. I should have used "word of the Constitution" because it clearly states that all citizens have equal rights. Nobody has to prove or earn their Rights. They're given to you by virtue of being an American. Nowhere does it say "equal rights unless you're a queer." Gays pay the same taxes, work the same jobs, speak the same language, live in the same communities, have the same ambitions, and love the same, as all the other citizens of the United States. Except for some reason, bigots (yes) and homophobes (yes) have deemed them unfit to marry. Or to serve in the Military. Don't even get me started on that one.
Also, this whole tossing around of "homophobe" is, as Mongoose states, bull****. (KT has now moved on to "bigot" preemptively, which is better.) This word implies fear, and Mongoose has already suitably demonstrated (inasmuch as this is possible in this form of communication) that such is not the case dealing with him. Now I know somebody will hop in here with some "oppression equals fear" sociological argument or something, but that's not the case. Oppression is mostly a crime of opportunity.
You already answered your own question. But just to humor you, let's check out fear, courtesy of dictionary.com
Fear –noun
1. a distressing emotion aroused by impending danger, evil, pain, etc., whether the threat is real or imagined; the feeling or condition of being afraid.
2. a specific instance of or propensity for such a feeling: an abnormal fear of heights.
3. concern or anxiety; solicitude: a fear for someone's safety.
4. reverential awe, esp. toward God.
5. that which causes a feeling of being afraid; that of which a person is afraid: Cancer is a common fear.
1 - Mongoose seems to be pretty distressed about gays potentially being married (apparently because they have biological conditions) - so much so, he's willing to legislate against them doing so, violating his own Constitution. Talk about trading liberty for security. I guess its chill if its not
your liberty. Check.
2- Mongoose appears to have a specific propensity of said fear toward Gays - Gay marriage is harmless to him, yet he still wants to legislate against it. Note, even if Gays can't have kids, I still fail to see how them being married hurts Mongoose. Check.
3 - Mongoose very much appears to fear for the safety of... well.. I'm not sure. The "Marriage Institution?" Biology? Underpopulation? Check.
4 - lol
5 - Gay marriage is almost as bad as cancer, amirite? Check.
So that's 4.5/5 out of five definitions of fear, which then fits into a fear of homos - homophobia. Where was I wrong again?
We live in a country of religious plurality, mainly run by Abrahamic religions.
And it is a valid reason to vote against it. Oh****, yes, I just went there.
Welcome to the flaw inherent in a democratic system, folks. People vote their beliefs, religious or otherwise. You can't seperate church and state at the ballot box (one of many reasons why California's system is terribly flawed), only once in office.
Marriage is also, manifestly, not a legal contract exclusively or even at all. Before there was government regulation, there was religious regulation. Marriage was/is regulated religiously in a social sense far more than it is regulated by the state. The gay marriage movement is, in fact, the first major movement in the history of marriage in this country to see things in these terms of being primarily a legal contract.
Therein lies the problem. The government should not be involved in marriage as such. Civil unions for all is the only logical means for them to do so, rather than get wrapped up in many many thousands of years of religious marriage (more or less the only kind there was until the 1700s and common law marriage).
What. We live in a country... run by abrahmic religions? Are you sure? Where do you live dude, because I live in America, where we separate the Churches (<--- that way) and the State. (----> that way) This ain't Israel. This ain't Saudi Arabia. This ain't Afghanistan. There ain't no Sharia law governing me, or any of the other 299,999,999 people who've come from all over the world to live here.
You can vote based on whatever you like. That's what makes voting awesome. It doesn't make whatever you like legal though, if what you like is illegal. Nor does getting 51% of your boys to vote for whatever you like. That just makes you a majority of people who are wrong and unlawful. It does not make you right. That's the whole reason we have a Constitution to govern our actions. That's the whole reason we have the third branch, the Supreme Court, who is supposed to protect the minority from the majority in cases where the minority is wrong. That's Poli Sci 1, to borrow your phrase. Try it.
And again, the fourth branch of Californian Gov. ( the People) are essentially a watered down, direct version of the first one. (the Legislature) If the Legislature votes for something that's unconstitutional (they don't usually, because they're not complete idiots, and like to waste money elsewhere) then the Supreme Court has the authority and responsibility to strike it down, just as they should have hear. If the 4th branch legally allowed for mob rule, then we wouldn't really have need for any of the other ones. Which is precisely why it wasn't included in the national Constitution.
Marriage is also, manifestly, not a legal contract exclusively or even at all. Before there was government regulation, there was religious regulation. Marriage was/is regulated religiously in a social sense far more than it is regulated by the state. The gay marriage movement is, in fact, the first major movement in the history of marriage in this country to see things in these terms of being primarily a legal contract.
Therein lies the problem. The government should not be involved in marriage as such. Civil unions for all is the only logical means for them to do so, rather than get wrapped up in many many thousands of years of religious marriage (more or less the only kind there was until the 1700s and common law marriage).
- Precedent is not justice. Blacks had been oppressed for centuries as slaves and subhumans. Are you going to say that things should never change, that the Emancipation Proclamation, that the 14th Amendment, that the Civil Rights movement were all wrong because they betrayed "the way things had been?" Seriously?
- I'm beating my own dead horse. Marriage is not owned by any church. Marriage predates any of your Abrahamic religions you touted earlier. Where do you come up with this ****? When your Mormons, or Christians, or Catholics go and get a trademark on Marriage, come back and talk to me.
Therein lies the problem. The government should not be involved in marriage as such. Civil unions for all is the only logical means for them to do so, rather than get wrapped up in many many thousands of years of religious marriage (more or less the only kind there was until the 1700s and common law marriage).
As incredulous as some might be at me saying this, I honestly think I'd be all for an initiative to get government out of the "marriage" business completely. Call them "civil unions," call them "legal partnerships," call them what have you, but create some arrangement where any two people, no matter what relationship they share, could enjoy the legal benefits that married couples enjoy today, such as inheriting property and carrying power of attorney. Leave the designation of "marriage" to whatever any individual religious institution decides to limit it to. That way, everyone gets a fair playing field in the legal sense, individual faiths are able to practice their beliefs without angering a certain segment of the population, and society as a whole doesn't get alternative conventions thrust into its face by force of law.
This is wrong, see above.
Like NGTM-1R said, and it's a point I sorely should have made instead of responding to insults with sarcasm, the institution known as "marriage" isn't some legal construct that sprang into being with the authorship of the constitution of any particular country. It's a societal construct founded primarily on religious ceremony that's been practiced for thousands of years across almost every human society, and even when it extended to polygamy, its driving purpose was generally the establishment of family units and rearing of children. What particularly incenses myself, and I'm sure many others, about the recent gay marriage movement is that it completely turns a blind eye to those millennia of history, willing to brush it aside as inconsequential, even as they attempt to fundamentally alter the avenue which gives it meaning. If members of the movement are honestly surprised at the hostility generated against it, perhaps they'd do well to take a look at that history and understand why the institution in its current form is so important to so many.
Precedent is not justice. Your short sightedness is amazing. Do you live on a plantation somewhere in the South, untouched by the last 150 years of history?
I know that my examples didn't apply to gay marriage in terms of why those specific restrictions are applied, but my point to KT was that double standards between how two different people are treated do exist in the legal sense, which he seemed to be denying with his "equal citizens" speech. In fact, the judicial review principle of "strict scrutiny" usually applies in such cases, determining what compelling interests are served by applying said restrictions and ensuring that they are as narrow as possible.
What double standards? Sufficiently Mentally handicapped people can't drive because they can't pass a driving test and /or because their being behind wheels of cars would be dangerous for other people. Just like how "drunk people" are "denied their privileged to drive." There is no double standard here. Your example is incredibly stupid and you know it.
And while the principle of same-sex marriage does not harm me personally or affect my ability to marry someone of the opposite gender, I do view it as harming those thousands of years of societal precedence, if for no other reason than its complete disregard for said precedence. When someone gets in my face and screams, "We're doing it this way now, just because," while ignoring why it has been done a certain way for so long, my reaction tends to be to yell, "No," just as loudly back at them.
Jim Crowe thinks negros looking white women in the eye violates hundreds of years of precedence and bad manners. Want to go start a lynch mob?
Okay, well, first of all, here in America, majority does not get to do whatever the **** it wants to the minorities. What if a racist majority decided interracial marriage should "be called something else" because it's "just not natural" and "majority rules."
Here in California, because of the way we've constructed our governmental system, the majority does get to do whatever the **** it wants to minorities. Now I'm pretty sure you don't live here, or just slept through your government classes, so you should probably do some research on how the proposition system works before continuing this argument.
No, you're wrong. See above. Pay attention in high school gov. class. I know its hard. Drink Red Bull.
The state budget crisis is a broader example of this in action; we've voted in via the same system used for Prop 8 too many things whose funds are earmarked regardless of surplus or which present extra drain on the treasury that cannot be controlled that we're now going to end up screwing many, many minorities because we have to cut their services.
This is the system. These are the rules. They were not well-concieved.
Entirely different problem, and the budget laws make sense - despite what kind of economic debt California is in, it's still our tax dollars that get debated on how to be spent, and in California, we have the opportunity to decide how to spend them, for better or worse of the budget. This in no way violates anyone's rights.