Moderator: Community Team
nietzsche wrote:For once I agree with Phatscotty.
Why do we need governments to tell us what we can or cannot do?
f*ck off. Governments self-impose on us and we can't do anything about it.
We have become dependent our governments to tell us what can or cannot do,
Phatscotty wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Gay couple: Can we get married?
phatscottys of the world: take you tyrany elsewhere scum!
lmao! the question is not "can we get married"
Phatscotty wrote:the question is "can we do something that has never been done before (until the extremely recent past in the most flammy areas) and therefore change the definition of marriage?"
Phatscotty wrote:Oh, btw, I just called out Chris Kluwe, punter for the Minnesota Vikings. He is running his mouth, talkin about politicians are afraid to take him on in a debate, and they kinda actually are, so I called him out on his fan page and on facebook and am writing a letter to the local newspaper that I will handle this myself.
aad0906 wrote:I still wonder why people that claim to be in favor of civil liberties and against government intervention are so worried about what other people do with their lives.
Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:aad0906 wrote:I still wonder why people that claim to be in favor of civil liberties and against government intervention are so worried about what other people do with their lives.
Hypocrisy.
Maybe it isn't about caring what other people do with their lives at all, and is about not wanting to see the words "mother" and "father" banned from all official documents. Maybe its a lot of other reasons too.....ban the words “mother” and “father” from legal documents under the country's plan to legalize homosexual “marriage” and give equal adoption rights to both traditional couples and same-sex partners. Under the proposal, which is being aggressively pushed forward, the term “parents” would replace “mother” and “father” in an identical marriage ceremony that will be used for both traditional and homosexual weddings.
You need the government to legitimize marriage (as between man and woman) and parenting (as between mother and father)? That's pretty sad dude.
I don't need anything.
Phatscotty wrote: The only thing that is sad is you ignoring the consequences.
Phatscotty wrote:If the government were not so large and controlling and entrenched, this would not even be an issue. You should realize that demanding "government control" to enforce same sex marriages is obviously moving in the wrong direction. Go a little further in this direction, and people will need gov't licenses to have children.
Baron Von PWN wrote:nietzsche wrote:For once I agree with Phatscotty.
Why do we need governments to tell us what we can or cannot do?
f*ck off. Governments self-impose on us and we can't do anything about it.
We have become dependent our governments to tell us what can or cannot do,
So we should do away with government involvement in marriage? Government already dictates who can or can't marry. opening marriage to same sex marriage introduces more freedom not less.
jimboston wrote:My position on Gay Marriage is rapidly evolving.
I used to be against it... and in retrospect I think my sole argument was "Ew, that's gross".
However... the more I think about it, the more I feel I have to be for it, given the fact that I claim to be moderately Libertarian.
The only final "concern" is that we need to come to terms with the potential financial impact on Social Security... and also on impact related to Health Care.
Re: Social Security... perhaps the numbers are so small (i.e. percentage of likely gay married couples) that the impact to the system is negligible? If not we need to address this... perhaps by changing SS payouts or age requirements. (Of course we really need to do that anyway.)
Re: Healthcare... The Gov't already (essentiallY) forces private employers to fund healthcare. If (when?) same-sex marriage gets recognized by the Federal Gov't as legal... the Gov't will then be in the business of forcing private employers to recognize a (new?) private relationship... one which they (said private employer) may be morally opposed to. I don't like this.
That all said... I think I have moved essentially to the "pro" same-sex marriage side of the debate.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
nietzsche wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:nietzsche wrote:For once I agree with Phatscotty.
Why do we need governments to tell us what we can or cannot do?
f*ck off. Governments self-impose on us and we can't do anything about it.
We have become dependent our governments to tell us what can or cannot do,
So we should do away with government involvement in marriage? Government already dictates who can or can't marry. opening marriage to same sex marriage introduces more freedom not less.
I'm against in principle with government telling us what to do.
In this specific case I'm undecided, it really is something that cannot be settled one side or the other.
You are right, but Scotty also has a point, although I'm not sure if that's his point or a point he's using because of an ulterior motive he won't disclose.
If I'm not mistaken Scotty's point is two-folded, he disagrees with the government messing with the sanctity of marriage, which is the weak side of the point and the strong side is why does the government has to tell you how and what to do, which is the ideological side to with which I agree.
It can be said however, that this second part of the point is not necessarily pertinent in this case, that he's just being paranoid or only using it to gain support for his side, but, it does feel that way, that government is gaining more and more control over us each single day, that our experience in this world is forever permeated by this.. self proclaimed group in control. Whether or not it's good that something tells you what can you do and how to do it, it goes against our natural spirit of being.
MegaProphet wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:aad0906 wrote:I still wonder why people that claim to be in favor of civil liberties and against government intervention are so worried about what other people do with their lives.
Hypocrisy.
Maybe it isn't about caring what other people do with their lives at all, and is about not wanting to see the words "mother" and "father" banned from all official documents. Maybe its a lot of other reasons too.....ban the words “mother” and “father” from legal documents under the country's plan to legalize homosexual “marriage” and give equal adoption rights to both traditional couples and same-sex partners. Under the proposal, which is being aggressively pushed forward, the term “parents” would replace “mother” and “father” in an identical marriage ceremony that will be used for both traditional and homosexual weddings.
You need the government to legitimize marriage (as between man and woman) and parenting (as between mother and father)? That's pretty sad dude.
I don't need anything. The only thing that is sad is you ignoring the consequences.
If the government were not so large and controlling and entrenched, this would not even be an issue. You should realize that demanding "government control" to enforce same sex marriages is obviously moving in the wrong direction. Go a little further in this direction, and people will need gov't licenses to have children.
I don't understand how you see this as the government being more involved. The government is already involved since it handles marriage licences. LGBT people already can get married in the sense of holding a ceremony and making vows to each other. They just want to be recognized and have the same rights as far as taxes and visitations as straight couples.
Phatscotty wrote:but just because you know the government "already handles marriages" does not mean government involvement in marriage is right, or should be expanded, or redefined...
Frigidus wrote:Phatscotty wrote:but just because you know the government "already handles marriages" does not mean government involvement in marriage is right, or should be expanded, or redefined...
So would you be fine with government no longer being in the business of what sort of marriage is/is not allowed and leaving those decisions up to whatever religious institution someone is seeking to be married by?
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty, did you forget about the equal protection clause in the U.S. Constitution? I think you did.
thegreekdog wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:aad0906 wrote:I still wonder why people that claim to be in favor of civil liberties and against government intervention are so worried about what other people do with their lives.
Hypocrisy.
Maybe it isn't about caring what other people do with their lives at all, and is about not wanting to see the words "mother" and "father" banned from all official documents. Maybe its a lot of other reasons too.....ban the words “mother” and “father” from legal documents under the country's plan to legalize homosexual “marriage” and give equal adoption rights to both traditional couples and same-sex partners. Under the proposal, which is being aggressively pushed forward, the term “parents” would replace “mother” and “father” in an identical marriage ceremony that will be used for both traditional and homosexual weddings.
You need the government to legitimize marriage (as between man and woman) and parenting (as between mother and father)? That's pretty sad dude.
I don't need anything. The only thing that is sad is you ignoring the consequences.
If the government were not so large and controlling and entrenched, this would not even be an issue. You should realize that demanding "government control" to enforce same sex marriages is obviously moving in the wrong direction. Go a little further in this direction, and people will need gov't licenses to have children.
So your path forward is to create further regulation of marriage by defining the term and excluding groups of people from engaging in marriage. That seems like a statist's path forward to me.
And you do need this. You need bigger, badder government with more regulation. You need the government to tell people what your definition of marriage is. This is not difficult to understand. It's why Republicans are seen as statists when it comes to social issues (such as marriage, sexuality, and religion) and why I jumped out of that political party. Now, I expected you to come in with a "yeah, but this is a state issue, not a federal one." But a state is as much an remover of freedoms from individuals as the federal government. And you're supporting increased Minnesota control over social issues. Thus, I dub you a statist. And that is a far more accurate description of you than the word "marxist" is of our current president.
jimboston wrote:My position on Gay Marriage is rapidly evolving.
I used to be against it... and in retrospect I think my sole argument was "Ew, that's gross".
However... the more I think about it, the more I feel I have to be for it, given the fact that I claim to be moderately Libertarian.
The only final "concern" is that we need to come to terms with the potential financial impact on Social Security... and also on impact related to Health Care.
Re: Social Security... perhaps the numbers are so small (i.e. percentage of likely gay married couples) that the impact to the system is negligible? If not we need to address this... perhaps by changing SS payouts or age requirements. (Of course we really need to do that anyway.)
Re: Healthcare... The Gov't already (essentiallY) forces private employers to fund healthcare. If (when?) same-sex marriage gets recognized by the Federal Gov't as legal... the Gov't will then be in the business of forcing private employers to recognize a (new?) private relationship... one which they (said private employer) may be morally opposed to. I don't like this.
That all said... I think I have moved essentially to the "pro" same-sex marriage side of the debate.
Phatscotty wrote:the amendment is by the people and for the people. It is a response to radical government and their actions in places like California, where an unelected judge overturned the votes of 10's of millions of people and "created" new rights which account for hundreds of billions of dollars of state spending. This is about the people taking control, and rejecting the government in their power grab into yet another institution.
Phatscotty wrote:the amendment is by the people and for the people. It is a response to radical government and their actions in places like California, where an unelected judge overturned the votes of 10's of millions of people and "created" new rights which account for hundreds of billions of dollars of state spending. This is about the people taking control, and rejecting the government in their power grab into yet another institution.
Phatscotty wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Gay couple: Can we get married?
phatscottys of the world: take you tyrany elsewhere scum!
lmao! the question is not "can we get married", the question is "can we do something that has never been done before (until the extremely recent past in the most flammy areas) and therefore change the definition of marriage?"
Phatscotty wrote:MegaProphet wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Phatscotty wrote:thegreekdog wrote:
Hypocrisy.
Maybe it isn't about caring what other people do with their lives at all, and is about not wanting to see the words "mother" and "father" banned from all official documents. Maybe its a lot of other reasons too.....ban the words “mother” and “father” from legal documents under the country's plan to legalize homosexual “marriage” and give equal adoption rights to both traditional couples and same-sex partners. Under the proposal, which is being aggressively pushed forward, the term “parents” would replace “mother” and “father” in an identical marriage ceremony that will be used for both traditional and homosexual weddings.
You need the government to legitimize marriage (as between man and woman) and parenting (as between mother and father)? That's pretty sad dude.
I don't need anything. The only thing that is sad is you ignoring the consequences.
If the government were not so large and controlling and entrenched, this would not even be an issue. You should realize that demanding "government control" to enforce same sex marriages is obviously moving in the wrong direction. Go a little further in this direction, and people will need gov't licenses to have children.
I don't understand how you see this as the government being more involved. The government is already involved since it handles marriage licences. LGBT people already can get married in the sense of holding a ceremony and making vows to each other. They just want to be recognized and have the same rights as far as taxes and visitations as straight couples.
but just because you know the government "already handles marriages" does not mean government involvement in marriage is right, or should be expanded, or redefined.
Phatscotty wrote:Frigidus wrote:Phatscotty wrote:but just because you know the government "already handles marriages" does not mean government involvement in marriage is right, or should be expanded, or redefined...
So would you be fine with government no longer being in the business of what sort of marriage is/is not allowed and leaving those decisions up to whatever religious institution someone is seeking to be married by?
i am fine with it and have argued for it from the start. I know it's easy to miss with everything else, but totally fine with it. Which is why it really isn't about "what other people do with their lives"
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:the amendment is by the people and for the people. It is a response to radical government and their actions in places like California, where an unelected judge overturned the votes of 10's of millions of people and "created" new rights which account for hundreds of billions of dollars of state spending. This is about the people taking control, and rejecting the government in their power grab into yet another institution.
The people cannot vote into law something that is unconstitutional. It is not judicial activism to overthrow an unconstitutional law. That principle has been on the books since 1803.
Evil Semp wrote:Phatscotty wrote:the amendment is by the people and for the people. It is a response to radical government and their actions in places like California, where an unelected judge overturned the votes of 10's of millions of people and "created" new rights which account for hundreds of billions of dollars of state spending. This is about the people taking control, and rejecting the government in their power grab into yet another institution.
How is the amendment for the people? I thought gay people were people. Maybe I am wrong. Your comment should read is by some of the people and not for all of the people.Phatscotty wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Gay couple: Can we get married?
phatscottys of the world: take you tyrany elsewhere scum!
lmao! the question is not "can we get married", the question is "can we do something that has never been done before (until the extremely recent past in the most flammy areas) and therefore change the definition of marriage?"
The answer to your question is YES. It is the right thing to do.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Phatscotty, why do you support the tyranny of majority rule?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users