IglooDude said:On the contrary, just as MobBoss & Co. say that homosexuals can marry the opposite sex just-like-anybody-else, likewise heterosexuals would be able to marry the same sex just-like-anybody-else.![]()

IglooDude said:On the contrary, just as MobBoss & Co. say that homosexuals can marry the opposite sex just-like-anybody-else, likewise heterosexuals would be able to marry the same sex just-like-anybody-else.![]()
Truronian said:The redefinition of this nationwaide institution doesn't affect you in the slightest, so far as I can see. Pray enlighten me as to how it can.
Anyone has the potntial to become a drug user. I'd say only homosexuals have the potential to enter into a homosexual marriage.
IglooDude said:On the contrary, just as MobBoss & Co. say that homosexuals can marry the opposite sex just-like-anybody-else, likewise heterosexuals would be able to marry the same sex just-like-anybody-else.![]()
Truronian said:We are opening the gates to civil unions of convenience!
MobBoss said:Been over this plenty of times before. Lets just cut to the end where I say it does and you disagree ok?![]()
But if I believe that it does affect me, just like someone thinks a guy doing drugs in his own house affects the neighborhood, then why is it so bad for me to be against it?
I would say you are wrong. Thats like saying under the current situation, only heterosexuals have the potential to enter into heterosexual marriage and we know that isnt always true. Homosexuals have indeed gotten married to women to father kids for example.
If I, as a heteosexual, wanted to marry a homosexual, for some crazy reason...maybe in CA homosexuals get better benefits or something.....who says I have to engage in homosexual sex to be married? Especially if marriage is just a contract between two adults?
Truronian said:Ok, sure. But you are wrong![]()
Of course, this would most likely stop if homosexual marriage was legalised. Marriages of convenience between gay and straight people are merely an exploitation of the institution that has rejected them. If they aren't allowed to marry for love, why not marry for another reason?
Homosexual marriage would eliminate any such partnerships. There would be no benefit to homosexual marriage if you were straight (a side-effect of equality), and therefore no crazy reason to enter into a homosexual marriage unless you were homosexual and in love. (In fact there would be an obvious disadvantage, you would be unable to marry any true love that may arise)
Turner said:Homosexuals enter hetero relations for one of two reasons: 1) to blend in, or 2) because they didn't realize they were homosexual before entering the relationship.
If SSM was legalized, and there was no stigma attached with being homosexual (like there shouldn't be), then Reason #1 would simply disappear. There would be no need for it.
MobBoss said:I would say that your imagination is rather limited if you think this. That is like saying that heterosexual marriages would end people shacking up, but that certainly wasnt the case now was it?
Turner said:You mean from when we were all running around in the bushes buck naked? Before we were even an oral society, let alone a written one?
Turner said:Oh my, I just realized what a bad pun that was....
We're not talking children. We're talking marriage.MobBoss said:Thats the only two reasons? How do you know? Might they not do this to have kids where they otherwise wouldnt?
I suggest you go back and re-read what I said. I never said that legalizing SSM would remove the stigma.MobBoss said:So you think having SSM is going to remove the stigma from homosexuals? I think you greatly incorrect on that point. So, the USA legalizing SSM is going to change, for example, the Catholic Church's opinion on it? Other churches? Mom and Pop on the farm in Kentucky?
You mean the stigma of imposing your morals on another? I'm not going to sidetrack this discussion into a Roe vs Wade thread. Suffice it to say that I'm against abortion, and I would never advocate someone to get one. Far be it from me, however, to make someone do something with their body that they don't wish to do. That's their karma, not mine. I certainly wouldn't look down on anyone for having one.MobBoss said:Abortion is legal is it not? And has the stigma been removed from that practice?
Not the last time I checked. But you're starting to look pretty good, big boy.IglooDude said:Are you sure you're not gay?
Proof?MobBoss said:Well, you see you might think so, but a lot of people like me think differently...and guess what? We are the majority.
MobBoss said:Well, you see you might think so, but a lot of people like me think differently...and guess what? We are the majority.
For benefits, which was the argument for gay marriage for years. However, since the benefit gap has HUGELY shrunk in recent years due to laws changing, now the argument is about love. Imagine that.![]()
I would say that your imagination is rather limited if you think this. That is like saying that heterosexual marriages would end people shacking up, but that certainly wasnt the case now was it?
Cuivienen said:Get rid of marriage as a legal institution. No one is married legally. Offer civil unions to every couple. Marriage then becomes strictly a religious institution and carries no legal weight outside of religion.
Turner said:We're not talking children. We're talking marriage.
I suggest you go back and re-read what I said. I never said that legalizing SSM would remove the stigma.
You mean the stigma of imposing your morals on another? I'm not going to sidetrack this discussion into a Roe vs Wade thread. Suffice it to say that I'm against abortion, and I would never advocate someone to get one. Far be it from me, however, to make someone do something with their body that they don't wish to do. That's their karma, not mine. I certainly wouldn't look down on anyone for having one.
comradedavo said:Proof?
MobBoss said:You can extend this argument as far as you like with whatever action you like. You would never take illegal drugs would you? However, you would discourage someone via the law from doing something to their own bodies with illegal drugs. We impose our morals on one another by our laws. We dictate those laws as a society. To say that its a stigma to impose ones morals on another flys in the face of the fact that we do exactly that on a wide variety of issues.
Truronian said:Shrunk, but not disappeared. Eliminating the benefits gap is the most important thing when it comes to gay marriage, which is why it has been prominant in the argument for equality. Of course, denying two people the option to sanctify their love due to their respective genders is also pretty heinous.
What I was saying was that introducing equality between hetrosexuals and homosexuals with regards to marriage would eliminate marriages of convinience.
Incidentally MobBoss, would you have a problem with Cuivienen's suggestion?
IglooDude said:Let's see where I fall into the inconsistency... drugs? Nope. Assisted suicide? Nope. Anything I'm missing, as far as "protecting us from ourselves via the criminal code"?
Edit: it can be extended in the opposite direction too; at what point do you oppose imposing morals on others via the law?
Which states were those?MobBoss said:The proof is in election results from states that put such state constitution measures as defining marriage as between a man and a woman on the ballot. To date such measures pass with roughly 60-80% of the vote....i.e. landslide majorities. Polls in the USA on the matter are slightly lower, but still indicate that a majority of Americans favor marriage be defined as that between a man and a woman.
You would never take illegal drugs would you?