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patrickaa317 wrote:Woodruff wrote:patrickaa317 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Woodruff wrote:
But it can't be true, because I heard that allowing gay marriage would lead to beastiality, not the other way around.
It will lead to gay adoption
Is it a problem for children to be raised in loving homes instead of on the street?
I thought poverty and lack of medical care forced kids to sleep on the street. Now not allowing gay marriage causes it?
Learn how to read. Seriously. It's pretty basic.
Your comment implied that if there if gay marriage is allowed, there are less kids on the street. Therefore you are also implying that not allowing gay marriage keeps more kids on the street.
patrickaa317 wrote:If that's not want you meant, don't criticize my reading skills, you should check your skills at communicating your points.










Lootifer wrote:I wanna know what part sector/kind of organisation is funding PS's new expert guest speaking role...?










Woodruff wrote:Lootifer wrote:I wanna know what part sector/kind of organisation is funding PS's new expert guest speaking role...?
You're so cute, expecting an answer and all.

































Phatscotty wrote:Patricka. It was a dodge move. Don't over analyze it though. He just changed the subject.
Phatscotty wrote:He turned a simple statement of "this will lead to gay adoption" into "he fears gays adopting".
Phatscotty wrote:He wants to direct the light away from the reality that 90% of people are against gay adoption, which makes it one of the most agreeable and mainstream views in the country.
Phatscotty wrote:Then he changed the definition of the subject from his newly created "fear" statement into whether or not children should "live in the streets as compared to in a home".
Phatscotty wrote:It's the same thing Obama and the media is doing to Romney concerning his tyranny refusing to enforce the law concerning illegal immigration. They are bashing him in an attempt to force Romney to play in the new construct that Obama created, in whether he will rescind the executive order or not if elected.
Phatscotty wrote:It's a trap, and probably most visible one I have ever seen anyways...
Phatscotty wrote:So what he want's to do is make his own unrelated question, which is also 90%+ likely to get the answer "Children living in a home, of course, is better than living in the streets".
Phatscotty wrote:That way he can pre-emptively claim the moral high ground in a way that has 0% to do with the original topic matter, but it doesn't matter, because he would have claimed it, and he would ride that high ground into page 27 while still not having said anything of value.










Lootifer wrote:I wanna know what part sector/kind of organisation is funding PS's new expert guest speaking role...?










patrickaa317 wrote:If you feel his question wasn't loaded, perhaps you will have no issue answering this one. What percent of same-sex couples would provide a loving home?













Phatscotty wrote:Patricka. It was a dodge move. Don't over analyze it though. He just changed the subject. He turned a simple statement of "this will lead to gay adoption" into "he fears gays adopting". He wants to direct the light away from the reality that 90% of people are against gay adoption, which makes it one of the most agreeable and mainstream views in the country.































Phatscotty wrote:the reality that 90% of people are against gay adoption
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880

























Bones2484 wrote:Where did the 90% number come from? Is that in a specific state/county or the US as a whole? I am assuming it is referring to the entire country since the sentence goes on to say "most agreeable and mainstream views in the country".
http://voices.yahoo.com/gay-adoption-america-97133.html
Way back in 2002 (I was too lazy to find more recent numbers, but trends have it increasing in favorability) it was at 47% approval...

























2dimes wrote:Dog gone it. Why is it when I'm somewhat serious it looks super sarcastic. Yet if I'm pouring on the sarcasm it reads like I'm just a bully.










Bones2484 wrote:Where did the 90% number come from? Is that in a specific state/county or the US as a whole? I am assuming it is referring to the entire country since the sentence goes on to say "most agreeable and mainstream views in the country".
http://voices.yahoo.com/gay-adoption-america-97133.html
Way back in 2002 (I was too lazy to find more recent numbers, but trends have it increasing in favorability) it was at 47% approval...










Woodruff wrote:2dimes wrote:Dog gone it. Why is it when I'm somewhat serious it looks super sarcastic. Yet if I'm pouring on the sarcasm it reads like I'm just a bully.
For what it's worth the "barely heterosexual wife" and "knock out her tooth" had me laughing.


























2dimes wrote:Woodruff wrote:2dimes wrote:Dog gone it. Why is it when I'm somewhat serious it looks super sarcastic. Yet if I'm pouring on the sarcasm it reads like I'm just a bully.
For what it's worth the "barely heterosexual wife" and "knock out her tooth" had me laughing.
Well I don't know if venting here is better or worse.










2dimes wrote:Now the kids yell at each other like that's normal.










Woodruff wrote:2dimes wrote:Now the kids yell at each other like that's normal.
That's probably normal for brothers/sisters, especially if they're close to the same age. But I certainly get your point regarding adults/children.
















PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:2dimes wrote:Now the kids yell at each other like that's normal.
That's probably normal for brothers/sisters, especially if they're close to the same age. But I certainly get your point regarding adults/children.
A lot of the "current thinking" about kids is a few folks taking some honest science, twisted by half-hearted articles and reports by people just interested in entertainment, not really information.
For example "Don't say 'no'". The truth is partly in the old joke on a toddler's shirt "my name is 'no-no' "... some parents spend so much time saying "no", that it just plain loses its effect and meaning. However, the real issue is that for very young kids, telling kids "no" really means asking them to not just stop what they are doing, but to also think of something else positive to do. So, for very young kids, you get better results if you tell them what you actually want them to do, rather than just "no". There are exceptions, of course. I mean, if a kid is hitting another, its "NO".. followed by correction measures. However, if you catch 2 kids about to reach for the same toy, you can suggest, "take turns", (taking turns is easier for young kids to "get" than "sharing".. though we adults often blurr the two concepts).
Similarly, a lot of parents take the "kids need choices" way too far. A rule I learned is that one choice per year of age, for younger kids. A two year old can handle green or red, a three year old might do green, red or orange? (not exact, of course). BUT.. and this is where so many goof, all the choices offered have to be "OK choices". And.. that is another goof. Sometimes we ask young kids what they feel is a question without realizing it. "Pick up your toys, OK" -- the answer is "no, mommy" (evidenced by actions). Kdis do learn "adult speak" pretty quickly, particularly in a family (day cares, may have changing clientel, so it may not apply as well), but the more we avoid it, the better.
When you get to older kids, a different set of issues evolves. The old "learn through experience, rather than words". And as all the parents here know, the trick is to let your kids learn through experience, but SAFELY. And that is a real trick!
Anyway, this is quickly turning into a lecture on parenting, which I did not intend, not a chatty --- yep, kids fight, adults add to it, sometimes because we "over-think" things commentary.










Phatscotty wrote:Anyways, I got the job.
Juan_Bottom wrote:
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"





















john9blue wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Anyways, I got the job.
same here, i just accepted my first full-time permanent job a few days agoJuan_Bottom wrote:
umad?














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