I just don't like mitt Romney

If you don't support civil liberties, can you please stop calling yourself a libertarian?

Nope. I don't agree with "orthodox" libertarian beliefs on every issue, but I tend to agree with them.

For the record, on the gay issue I support civil unions that do more or less the same thing, so I don't see what the huge issue with my position is.
 
Nope. I don't agree with "orthodox" libertarian beliefs on every issue, but I tend to agree with them.

For the record, on the gay issue I support civil unions that do more or less the same thing, so I don't see what the huge issue with my position is.
You wouldn't. You're not gay and have no empathy for anything but fetuses.
 
May I kindly redirect you to one of the several Supreme Court decisions that established that "Seperate but Equal" is inherently unequal? Saying LGBT gets civil unions while straight people get marriages is kind of like that. And, because of countless legal reasons, civil unions and marriages could not possibly be considered "Equal" anyway. And I don't care how much you try to pass laws to make them more equal; it won't change that's it's basically the same as making non-white people sit at the back of the bus.
 
I find it a fine alternative to spam. I'm also not the one who denegrates the creditials of others.
 
May I kindly redirect you to one of the several Supreme Court decisions that established that "Seperate but Equal" is inherently unequal? Saying LGBT gets civil unions while straight people get marriages is kind of like that. And, because of countless legal reasons, civil unions and marriages could not possibly be considered "Equal" anyway. And I don't care how much you try to pass laws to make them more equal; it won't change that's it's basically the same as making non-white people sit at the back of the bus.

Definitional word games are not the same as making black people sit at the back of the bus. If we made gay people sit at the back of busses (If we could even do such a thing) I'd agree with you. I think you could easily argue that DADT is equivalent, but not gay marriage.

Honestly, the more I think about it, the more "Get the government the heck out of marriage" appeals to me. That way the government won't pick a winner in a culture war, and yet "Separate but unequal" cannot continue to be claimed.
 
As I said before and before you blow a gasket - it's a symbol of the damage done to British interests by Obama.

Hmm....British Petroleum?
 
I don't understand why it's a ponzi scheme because it utilizes money from another generation.

You use infrastructure and buildings that were made using the tax dollars of previous generations. Government is not an "I pay for myself only" system. Collectivism requires older generations paying for things younger generations use, and vice-versa.

In other words, this ponzi scheme argument doesn't hold water. It's how government works to begin with, and government has existed for a very long time.

Precisely
 
Don't be silly. This is OT, and threads morph in ways that defy predictability and logic. :)

But have none of the wrongly convicted in the U.S. ever sued for wrongful imprisonment and reached a settlement? There have been several cases in Canada where the wrongly-convicted man was awarded millions (considering one of them spent 23 years in prison, I don't blame him for suing).


Yes. That happens all the time. Or, at least it happens in those small number of cases where a conviction gets overturned because of something the government did wrong.
 
Definitional word games are not the same as making black people sit at the back of the bus. If we made gay people sit at the back of busses (If we could even do such a thing) I'd agree with you. I think you could easily argue that DADT is equivalent, but not gay marriage.

It's not a definitional word game, it's just a fact that there are real differences between civil unions and marriage. There are legal differences, there are social differences, and there is absolutely no way to make civil unions and marriage the same thing.

And if you want government out of marriage, why do you want gay marriage to be illegal?
 
It's not a definitional word game, it's just a fact that there are real differences between civil unions and marriage. There are legal differences, there are social differences, and there is absolutely no way to make civil unions and marriage the same thing.

The social difference is kind of the point. Gay marriage is not marriage and nothing you can say is going to get me to think it is. Honestly, fighting over the word "Marriage" sounds a lot like "Recognize my relationship" and I don't want to do that.

And if you want government out of marriage, why do you want gay marriage to be illegal?

I'm not 100% sure what my opinion is. I said the idea "Appeals to me." Honestly I don't really care much about gay issues and the shouts of "Bigotry" are not going to get me to give any more of a crap than I do.

If the government is going to define "Marriage" it should be defined as "Union between one man and one woman." If you want to solely make it a legal document with benefits, without trying to define precise terms, than "Civil union" should be term used, for any and all such "legal unions."

I honestly just don't want the government meddling with definitions. That, to me, speaks of a big government moreso than a small one. Marriage is between a man and a woman, period. I don't really care if the government recognizes the fact.
 
The social difference is kind of the point. Gay marriage is not marriage and nothing you can say is going to get me to think it is. Honestly, fighting over the word "Marriage" sounds a lot like "Recognize my relationship" and I don't want to do that.

But... that's the point, LGBT people just want their relationships to be recognized and treated the same as straight people's relationships are.

If you think that it's acceptable for there to be social differences based on sexual orientation, you are, by definiton, a bigot. Period. I don't care if crying bigotry doesn't make you want to change you mind, but at least, what was it you said earlier... "Call a spade a spade."

The least you could do is admit that it's hypocritical to both call abortion murder and also get mad at us when we call homophobia homophobia. :p
 
If two gay men have a committed relationship, that just shrinks the dating pool by two for some. Recognition of that fact is hard for some.
 
That's something Obama inherited when he took over office...

And he made promises about it fully knowing what he inherited didnt he?

At some point he has to own up for not making it better, or in fact making it actually worse. He cant blame Bush forever.

Here's something I realized over the last year, foreign policy. War is expensive. You cannot possibly talk about balancing the budget while at the same time talk about starting another war. Honestly, if Obama will keep us from going to war with Iran, and Romney won't, that's enough reason not to vote for Romney. Another war will kill our budget as much, if not more than, anything else Obama is capable of doing.

DId Obama keep us from being involved in Libya? No? And he probably wouldnt either if things with Iran dictated the need for a war.

The thing is, we have two choices BECAUSE PEOPLE THINK WE HAVE TWO CHOICES. Period.

And you voting for a their party isnt ever, EVER going to change that. EVER. All you are going to do is suceed in helping get a man elected that is directly opposed to your every political belief. Period.

If every single person wrote in Ron Paul, he'd be the President.

Yeah, if cows had wings they might just fly too.

But it aint going to happen.

Now, that's implausible, obviously, and I agree with you that either Mitt Romney or Barack Obama will be our President in 2013, but that doesn't mean we have to just lie down and accept the fact.

Actually, yeah, it does. To accept anything else at this point is sheer lunacy.

In fact, honestly, if you want to say we have two choices, we really only have one. If you compare ANY two candidates this election, heck, even if you compare Gary Johnson with Ron Paul, they are still farther from each other than Obama is from Romney. I honestly see no difference between the two.

Then you dont really have any point voting in this election imho, 'cause pretty much everyone else (except maybe Ron Paul koolaid drinkers) see a ton o' differences.

Now I'll admit I'm still young and idealistic. I may be wrong about this. But I REALLY don't see the difference between the two. Both will continue the status quo on nearly everything. And so I cannot in good conscience endorse either of them.

Then all you will do is succeed in getting the candidate more unfavorable to your beliefs elected. Yeah...thats really smart.

In addition, I cannot in good conscience support ANY Republicans for ANY national offices this year simply because of the way they are treating grassroots movements within the party.

I'd vote for a rock over Obama. But not Mitt Romney.

Then you deserve the government you get, and at days end your're not any different than any other losertarian that just throws their vote away.
 
Mitten's only economic policy is cut taxes on rich people and watch it trickle down. It hasn't worked in the last 40 years and I don't expect to magically start working today.
 
Honestly, the more I think about it, the more "Get the government the heck out of marriage" appeals to me. That way the government won't pick a winner in a culture war, and yet "Separate but unequal" cannot continue to be claimed.

That is essentially what SSM is all about. It is a repeal of DOMA and various state laws which would allow any church to make that decision instead of the government.
 
I don't think so.
Well, surely if something can be legitimately sold, then it can be owned. And if it can be owned, then to seize it without consent is theft. If it's not possible to describe the illegitimate seizure of a persons body and time as "theft", then it would seem that they do not own either that body or that time, and that they have no right to trade either of them on the market.
 
Honestly, the more I think about it, the more "Get the government the heck out of marriage" appeals to me. That way the government won't pick a winner in a culture war, and yet "Separate but unequal" cannot continue to be claimed.

You're absolutely correct.

I think the shortest path to equality continues to be expanding marriage to include gay marriage and then dissolving the legal idea of marriage. Getting the gov't out of marriage is going to be much, much harder to do, and (as a result) the inequality will continue for longer than it needs to.
 
DId Obama keep us from being involved in Libya? No? And he probably wouldnt either if things with Iran dictated the need for a war.

He might not, you are correct. I am almost certain Mitt would not, however. Neither choice is good in this case, or any other.

And you voting for a their party isnt ever, EVER going to change that. EVER. All you are going to do is suceed in helping get a man elected that is directly opposed to your every political belief. Period.

That would happen regardless of who we elected this election. I support a free market, isolationism, and a government that leaves us alone rather than regulating our lives further. Mitt Romney didn't do any of those things in Massachusettes when he had the power. He didn't even try moving in that direction. Neither did Obama of course. But that's why I say four is less than eight.

Then you dont really have any point voting in this election imho, 'cause pretty much everyone else (except maybe Ron Paul koolaid drinkers) see a ton o' differences.

I'm not, because I can't. Two and a half months or so too young (I'll turn 18 the day after President Romney would be inaugurated if he won). If I could, I absolutely would make my voice heard, and it would not be by voting for Mitt Romney OR Obama.

In the few differences I see, this is the rare case when I'd say the Democrat candidate is actually close to even with the GOP candidate, rather than the Republican clearly being better, as I would normally say is the case.

Obama supports Obamacare, obviously. But so does Mitt, in fact, he came up with it first. That Romney's rhetoric is now dedicated to saying "He's going to repeal Obamacare" doesn't matter. He's not going to, because that's the LAW HE FREAKING SUPPORTED in Massachusettes.

Mitt Romney is at least as anti-gun rights as Obama is. Both supported the Federal Assault Weapons ban. Romney says he now disagrees with this, but in Massachusettes he claimed "These weapons are designed solely for killing (Forgetting Jefferson a bit much, Mitt?) and have no place in our society." Obama to my knowledge has more or less stayed the same, but has not restricted the right to bear arms more than the status quo (Which in itself is pretty pathetic, we SHOULD be able to own automatic weapons according to the 2nd, but Mitt is not interested in this, nor is Obama interested in banning semi automatic weapons. Its a wash.)

Both want the Patriot Act, as well as the unconstitutional searches the TSA is currently participating in. Obama is slightly better on the former, while I don't know if either candidate is any better on the latter. Both of these men are supporting unacceptable positions though. The amount of surveilance powers the government has should be considered not only radical, but utterly unthinkable. Instead, they are policy. I'm not voting for it. But Romney is even worse than Obama here (Obama at least got rid of PART of the USA Patriot Act.)
Both support an unaffordable and frankly immoral foreign policy in the Middle East. Iran would be even more difficult to defeat in combat than Iraq. However, Obama is a bit softer in his rhetoric against them. I don't trust either of these men to not start another war, but on this particular issue, I would trust Obama more if I had to make a call. At least he didn't claim that nuking Iran was on the table.

Both support the drug war.

Both support high taxes, while continuing to support loopholes that will force even more IRS involvement to make the rich pay a thing, while Paul Ryan's fiscal policy is about as anti-poor as it gets. Neither one is interested in cutting the red tape. Romney is just a sellout to the rich while Obama is a social democrat.

On abortion Romney has flip flopped so many times that the word "Pro life" has lost all meaning if he is allowed to use it.

What differences DO they have? Gay marriage? Good, I'm not particularly passionate about that issue anyways. Foreign policy? Romney/Ryan have no experience there, and are even more imperialist than Obama/Biden. Taxes? Barely. Anything?

I can't find one thing that I support in either platform. So screw it. I can't support either one.

Then you deserve the government you get, and at days end your're not any different than any other losertarian that just throws their vote away.

I'm conservative in some ways, but I am not a Republican, nor will I ever be a Republican except perhaps in order to manipulate their primaries toward libertarian ideas.

Mitt Romney isn't really more favorable to what I believe than Obama is. Obama talks like a liberal, but he acts like a conservative when it suits his cause of expanding the government. Mitt Romney will too.

The thing is, you believe what Romney is saying now rather than what he did when he had power. I don't. It was obvious, pure political manipulation.

As for your attitude in that last sentence, no wonder Ron Paul supporters are falling away from the GOP. They have proven they don't really want us anyway. So let them win without us, if they can.

Obama is unquestionably going to win in 2012. Let's see if they do something decent in 2016.

You're absolutely correct.

I think the shortest path to equality continues to be expanding marriage to include gay marriage and then dissolving the legal idea of marriage. Getting the gov't out of marriage is going to be much, much harder to do, and (as a result) the inequality will continue for longer than it needs to.

You are probably right, if you are assuming that we have the same goals. We ultimately don't, even if our thinking is similar.

I can admit, based on purely secular, rational reasoning, that the gay marriage ban doesn't necessarily make emprical sense.

Even still, really, the legal word is "Civil Union." Marriage is broader than a legal institution. Its a social one.

That someone mentioned "Social equality" is kind of my point. My expectation is that government will limit its involvement in moral concerns to the NAP. Not so much that social mores will similarly be limited. Nor do I really want them to be. I still hold to my personal morality, and I wish everyone else would too. I think its immoral to force them to do so, hence why I usually lean libertarian (This, interestingly enough, does affect my fiscal policy as well. I believe it is moral and right to give heavily to charity. I don't think the government should force charity, however, as liberals more or less do support through redistributive taxation techniques.)

Gay marriage is different though. I don't even think the word "Ban" is accurate to describe it. It hasn't been "Banned" anywhere in the country since Lawrence VS Texas. What it really is is that the government is not RECOGNIZING a relationship, not that they are banning it.

I'll be honest, I don't really want them to recognize it. In doing so they are taking sides in the culture war, which I'd rather they didn't. I know its going to happen, and when it does, I'll probably be able to live with it, unlike a lot of people who will probably start vocally complaining about it.

Still, if the government is going to choose which relationships to recognize as "Marriage" and which aren't, I want them to do so according to my convictions. My libertarian side says they probably shouldn't be doing it, but my conservative side says that if they are going to do it, they'd darn right better do it correctly, or it would be even worse.

Civil unions are really my personal compromise between these two lines of thinking. I wouldn't have voted for NC's amendment 1 (Whatever it was called, I thnik that was what it was called) since it would have banned civil unions, but I would have voted for California's prop 8, which does not outlaw civil unions.

Its just according to my convictions. I wouldn't reject a candidate based on that issue, heck, Gary Johnson supports a Federal Marriage Amendment ALLOWING gay marriage and yet I still support him over Romney (Because of everything else other than that and abortion). But if it came down to a referrendum, I would vote according to my convictions, and that is that gay marriage should not be recognized. I don't want government regulating immoral behavior (At least usually) but I don't want them subsidizing it either.

My own thinking is admittedly a bit clouded on the issue. I think every other issue on the planet is more important, and I wish politicians would just shut up about it , but at the same time, my being rasied in the religious right is not something that I've totally shaken off on the issue. I'm not going to sit here and tell you that my opinion will never change. It might. But not at the moment.
 
Back
Top Bottom