Nov 05, 2008 18:07
And California has just passed a law that has whittled away at the civil liberties of one in ten (approx) of its citizens. That is so disappointing.
ETA: Florida too, although they're calling it Proposition 2, and Arizona, I don't know what they're calling it.
politics
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Homosexuality only became decriminalised in 1993 in Ireland and this year they're drafting the first legislation on same-sex unions.
And it was only in the nineties that women began to gain any real rights too (the right to divorce and have access to contraceptives, for one thing, although we still don't have the right to an abortion)
That's why this sort of thing makes me so angry. People claw at a system to make progressive changes and then have it snatched away again - Just Like That.
Scary is what it is.
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Don't forget that in addition to the US constitution there are also 50 state constitutions to deal with. That's why Florida and Mass. were talked about. States are sovereign within their own borders as long as nothing they do conflicts with the national constitution. From what little I can gather it seems to be somewhat analogous to the way England/Ireland/Scotland function together within the UK.
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I hope the reactive surge will die down sooner rather than later. I haven't forgotten how good I felt hearing a man from the Deep South at the Republican National Convention say while he didn't believe in "gay marriage" he did believe in gay "civil unions". While a "civil union" isn't a marriage, it's "separate but equal" segregation at its finest, it is a step in the right direction. It is an acknowledgment that gays should be allowed to form legal unions and have the rights of legal unions under the law.
It would be a shame if these bans aren't repealed.
I believe one day they will be repealed. I only wonder how long it will take for there to be enough people who agree that gays have the right to marry like everyone else for the bans to be repealed.
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It reminds me of the arguments that went on here, during the constitutional repeal of the anti-divorce laws. At one point, one of the politicians just exploded and went: For christ's sake, it's not going to be bloody compulsory, you know!
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As you were careful of your wording I'll attempt to be careful with mine.
That isn't fear of Other, that's sincere moral belief.
I respectfully disagree with your conclusion. An ability to say one is motivated by a moral belief doesn't negate one's true motivation being fear of Other. Indeed someone holding a belief that something is morally wrong can be a strong source of fear of Other as they have defined that Other as being morally wrong.
You may consider them to be sincerely wrongheaded...
I believe them to be "sincerely wronghead," and I believe them to be scared of Other. I believe to describe it as "utterly appalling that such an abomination is encouraged in any way," and to be willing to "say and do anything and use any argument" shows clearly their motivation and guiding principal is fear not moral rectitude. I believe when someone is prepared to "say and do anything" and "use any argument" they aren't being guided by high morals. They're being ruled by irrational fears.
...but ( ... )
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