This is disgraceful

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by Denny Crane, Nov 5, 2008.

  1. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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    I don't know what the situations are in the other states. However, in my state I live in, I am discussing and defending my vote and rationalization for it.
     
  2. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    The fact that you keep talking about the "rights being the same" suggests you don't know what "separate but equal" means. The literal rights aren't the issue, it's the atmosphere created by the government singling a group out as apart from the others.
     
  3. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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    Do you know what the separate, but equal rights were? It meant that there were separate FACILITIES that were used by blacks and whites. There were coloured drinking fountains. There were separate schools for blacks and whites. Clearly, this is highly contrasted to the use of "Separate But Equal" in this case of gay marriage.

    In my opinion, your use of this term in this matter should be highly offensive to the civil rights movements in the 1950s and 1960s. The issues here is one of SIMPLE SEMANTICS, not the use of any rights whatsoever in any capacity or that can be derived from whatever you think or simply fabricate.

    The government is not singling a group out as being apart from the others. They are simply defining marriage as being between one man and one woman. That's it. No rights are being infringed on EXCEPT for the right for gays to call it a marriage. Again, its a semantic argument, nothing more.
     
  4. Shooter

    Shooter Unanimously Great

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    The passage of Prop. 8 was one of the bright spots of the election. It shows that Californians have not completely lost their minds yet, even though they voted for Obama.
     
  5. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    Yes, I know. And while it was obviously a much bigger deal in the case of non-whites, the issue is the same: the proponents of separate but equal facilities back then said, "But the facilities are equal. Non-whites get exactly the same rights, so there's no rights violation taking place." The point was not whether the rights were different; the point was that by creating a separate set of facilities, the government was encouraging a divide and singling out non-whites.

    Similarly, with gay marriage, the point is not whether the rights are different; the point is that by creating a separate designation for gay unions, the government is encouraging a divide and singling out gays.
     
  6. #1_War_Poet_ForLife

    #1_War_Poet_ForLife The Baker of Cakes

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    Yeah, it was just semantics when African-Americans had to sit in the back of the bus, or use a different fountain.


    Equal and separate is not equal.
     
  7. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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    Actually it wasn't just semantics, it was institutionalized racism. This is CLEARLY different as there were definite restrictions as to where one could go to school, drink water, sit on a bus, etc. This is again, and I repeat it because you don't seem to get it, about the term "marriage". This has ZERO to do with rights, access to any services or anything else you can think of. It has to do with defining the word "marriage". Nothing more. All rights are the same outside the use of this terminology.

    It is interesting and of note that those African Americans who actually went through the separate but equal doctrine, voted overwhelmingly in support of this measure.
     
  8. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    Not that interesting. Religious people voted overwhelmingly for it, and the black community is highly religious.
     
  9. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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    It is that interesting. the group that was at the center of the separate but equal injustices, voting for this, didn't think this is an injustice. they believe, that marriage should be between a man and a woman. if you want to call them bigots, go ahead!
     
  10. hasoos

    hasoos Well-Known Member

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    Can anybody explain to me why there are any laws on the books about marriage? I can maybe see laws about how old you have to be in order to get married, to ensure they are an adult, but that is it. But all other laws, are really, not necessary and could be replaced with a series of laws so this divisive issue, never comes up again. All it does it piss people off at each other. So why keep bringing it up, unless you want people to hate each other? So how do we fix it?

    We take marriage laws off the books completely.

    1. Tax laws could be re-written so that people with dependants could get tax breaks needed. People who are married without kids should pay no different taxes than anybody else, anyhow.

    2. People who are married can enter into agreements similar to business partner deals indicating who owns what and if the "business" breaks up, who is financially responsible for what items. This would probably be a lot more responsible than what goes on now anyhow, since it would force people to documents said things before trouble arises and it's too late. This covers the divorce scenario.

    3. Insurance laws can be re-written to accomodate the changes. Let's face the facts here. The people who don't want this done are actually businesses who would have to pay benefits for people they normally did not have to in the future. The insurance companies don't give a shit, they are getting another customer. If their business model didn't work by getting more customers, they wouldnt' still be in business.

    4. Child custody is still handled the same way. No changes there.


    If you go out and think about what you can do now, without getting married, what is the point of these stupid laws? Are you going to throw somebody in jail for "getting married"?

    Remember, this isn't the United State of Straight Christian States. This is the United States, where people fled other countries in order to free themselves of religious intolerence. People have such short memories of the countries history and why we are even here to begin with. If you don't pay attention to mistakes made in the past, you are guaranteed to repeat them.

    What next? Are we going to have a god damned spanish inquisition?
     
  11. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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  12. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    I don't think that's particularly interesting. Religion has brain-washed many people. Blacks aren't some super-race, immune from the effects of organized religion.

    I have no problem calling them bigots. People who want to restrict the right of others based on innate characteristics are bigots, whether white or black (or all the other lovely shades of human).
     
  13. AgentDrazenPetrovic

    AgentDrazenPetrovic Anyone But the Lakers

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    again, what right are we restricting other than simple nomenclature?
     
  14. e_blazer

    e_blazer Rip City Fan

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    As I understand it, those who oppose gay marriage generally fall into three categories:

    1. Those who oppose on religious grounds, believing that matrimony was instituted by God as being between man and woman. Catholics and some orthodox Christians consider marriage to be a sacrament.

    2. Those who oppose because of social concerns about impacts to the family, believing that for the purposes of raising children, it is best for the children to be exposed to both male and female influences in their upbringing.

    3. Those who are bigoted against homosexuals.

    From my perspective, religious considerations are personal and shouldn't be mandated in a country that values freedom of choice of religion and separation of church and state. The second category iof folks would probably be hard pressed to make a case that a child raised in a loving relationship between a gay couple is somehow worse off than those in the multiple dysfuntional types of heterosexual relationships we see in today's world. The third category of bigots don't deserve to be considered.

    While it may be a matter of semantics, I think that the best solution is for government to get out of the marriage game. Civil unions should be the norm for both heterosexual and homosexual couples who wish to formalize their relationship for legal purposes of shared property, inheritance, tax benefits, health care issues, etc. Existing marriages would be grandfathered in and recognized by governments as civil unions. Those who wish to have their unions considered a marriage consistent with their faith, would do so through their church, but it would carry no additional significance from a legal standpoint.

    I suppose that makes too much sense to ever get implemented.
     
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  15. Ed O

    Ed O Administrator Staff Member Administrator

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    Is there anything in the California constitution about homosexuality being a protected class?

    If not, it seems fair to me that Californians can allow or disallow, through the democratic process, homosexuals (or polygamists, or whomever) the right to marry one another.

    I would hope that Californians would not do that, but it's their state and, in spite of four activist judges who overturned the previously stated will of the people, it looks like they are going to.

    Hopefully they see the error of their ways and reverse this decision.

    Ed O.
     
  16. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    There was no activism. The "previously stated will of the people" was unconstitutional at the time. The purpose of the state Supreme Court is to strike down laws that are unconstitutional.
     
  17. crandc

    crandc Well-Known Member

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    Ed, the State Constitution forbids discrimination based on sexual orientation. That was the basis of the State Supreme Court's decision on marriage equality. If the State Constitution forbids discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, then you cannot have a right for people of one sexual orientation that is denied to individuals of another. That is why it took a constitutional amendment to overturn the decision.

    Incidentally, it has nothing to do with any church. Religious bodies can and do decide whom they will marry. Catholic priests will not marry divorced people and most rabbis won't marry a mixed couple, although both types of marriage are perfectly legal in civil law. What this hate law does do is remove from those clergy who do marry same sex couples the right to follow their conscience and their interpretation of their faith.

    It is sickening that people can vote for Obama and vote for hate. I saw the celebrations last night. The joy and unity. An hour later, it was as if those celebrants were telling me "oh, but you're not part of it". Obama in his speech referred to his wife as the love of his life and his best friend. That was how Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon referred to each other for 55 years. They finally had legal recognition for two months before Del died. It is sickening that people can vote for Obama and dance on her grave. In his speech, Obama referred to his love for his children. It is sickening that people can vote for Obama and deny the children of gay and lesbian couples the protection of having married parents (and for all the "protect children from horrible gays" crap, gays and lesbians will continue to be parents, they just won't have legal rights to protect their children). In his speech, the new president was inclusive, referring to Black, white, Asian, Latino, Native American, gay and straight, men and women, old and young, disabled and non-disabled. It is sickening that people can listen to that speech and say that gays should be removed from the description of American. California passed a law, which I support, to protect farm animals. It is sickening that people in my state can vote to protect the rights of animals, but take away my cousin's marriage.

    There is only one real reason for saying some people should be denied a right that you take for granted for yourself. Bigotry.
     
  18. STOMP

    STOMP mere fan

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    there is a whole lotta California and a good proportion of the population lives outside of the major cities. Most of these rural communities are pretty blue so I wasn't that surprised to see this pass.

    The thing of note about this measure is that a majority of the 30M in funding for the the YES vote was supplied by the Mormon church... seems a strange way for a tax exempt entity from outside the state to behave. Their ads were typically fear mongering/distortions of facts POS. :sad:

    STOMP
     
    Last edited: Nov 5, 2008
  19. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    And even stranger for a religious group who has been angry about being persecuted for their own non-standard marriage arrangements.
     
  20. hasoos

    hasoos Well-Known Member

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    Yea and you know whats absolutely stupid about that. It is illegal for them to marry multiple partners. But I can have 18 girlfriends with kids, all at the same place, and there is nothing they can do about that.

    The thing I guess I am saying is, you can pass all the laws you want about crap. You are not going to stop them from living their lives as they will. All you are going to do is make it harder for them to do the same things you take for granted every day. Want insurance? It is harder to get now. Want visitation rights? Can't get them. Does anybody of this stop folks from practicing what they are going to do? Hell no.

    So exactly what are you accomplishing?

    IMO, somebody should just make up a religion, and challenge the laws in US Supreme court as a violation of religious freedom, and the promotion of one religion over another. That would end it right there.
     

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