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Vermont Legislature Legalizes Gay MarriageFollow

#227 Apr 13 2009 at 4:03 PM Rating: Decent
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Majivo wrote:
Exactly this. Which is what we've restated several times, but you keep pretending we don't give a reason. And just because it falls in your little list of responses you get "every time", does not mean it's invalid.


It's invalid because arguing that if one group gets something another group should is kinda silly. The reasons are not arbitrary.

If you want to argue that we should limit marriage benefits to some degree based on whether or not married couples have children, that's fine. Heck. I'd be all for saying that a spouse cannot receive social security from the other unless they had children together. Ditto for pensions, military survivor benefits, etc.

None of which in any way justifies granting those things to gay couples though. That's the point I'm trying to get across. It's like arguing that if someone wears a belt with their pants that they must also wear a belt when naked, because his pants wont always fall down if he doesn't wear a belt. It's nonsensical.
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#228 Apr 13 2009 at 4:04 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Um... But it's kinda like the insurance issue I talked about in the other thread. We don't know which of the heterosexual couples who marry might have children together, so we "insure" them all with the benefits to make sure that as many who might produce children will be married as possible.
But it is easy to know which ones do have children. And to think any number of people of a significant amount gets married because of financial benefits, is ridiculous. People get married because it's what society expects of them when they're "in love" with someone.
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#229 Apr 13 2009 at 4:11 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
We don't know which of the heterosexual couples who marry might have children together, so we "insure" them all with the benefits to make sure that as many who might produce children will be married as possible.
No we don't.

Think I'm wrong? Provide proof of what you just said.

Hint: Saying "If it's not this then why?" isn't proof. Proof is provided via some sort of documentation.

Edited, Apr 13th 2009 7:11pm by Jophiel
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#230 Apr 13 2009 at 4:12 PM Rating: Decent
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Majivo wrote:
No. No no no no absolutely no.

We "insure" them once they already have children or are pregnant. What is difficult about that?


Because we want them to marry *before* they have children. It's not just about providing benefits to people who have children, but trying to increase the likelihood that children will be produced in an existing socio-economic environment which will be most beneficial to them and least likely to result in the children being drains on society.

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There's the exact same incentive to have children as there was before - the tax break is the exact same.


Again. The incentive is not to get people to have children. We don't (or shouldn't) simply reward people for popping out babies. We do this to some extent and it's a mistake and increases the rate of children born to single mothers (a bad thing).

If you give the benefits only for marrying and not just for having children, then the children will be more likely to be born to a married couple. Hand them out to anyone who has children, without including the marriage bits, and you increase the rate at which they will be born outside a marriage.

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You're just trying hard to find a legitimate excuse to prevent gays from marrying at this point.


No. I'm really not. In fact, I'm all for gay couples marrying. I'm just not in favor of subsidizing those marriage with a whole set of financial benefits which I pay for and for which there is no benefit to society in return.


I even proposed a situation in which we'd change our laws to allow gay couples to qualify for the legal status of "married", but then change all the other laws which grant just a set of specific financial benefits to couples who marry such that only married couples consisting of one man and one woman could qualify and was told that would *still* be wrong. I'm doing everything I can to come up with a solution which meets all the social needs and wants, while preventing unnecessary financial expenses and am hitting a wall of "but it's not fair!!!" responses.


Ask yourself why that's not fair? Not every single person should receive government funded benefits. We shouldn't grant those benefits just because we feel sorry for a group or want them to get the same thing some other group gets. We should grant benefits only because the gain to society from granting those benefits outweighs the cost of the benefits themselves. We can debate this as it applies to straight couples, but it's an absolute no-brainer when it comes to gay couples. There is no societal benefit sufficient to justify the cost of the benefits for them. Thus, there no rational reason to grant those benefits to them.

It's not me being mean. It's me looking at the issue honestly and unemotionally.
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#231 Apr 13 2009 at 4:16 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
We don't know which of the heterosexual couples who marry might have children together, so we "insure" them all with the benefits to make sure that as many who might produce children will be married as possible.
No we don't.

Think I'm wrong? Provide proof of what you just said.

Hint: Saying "If it's not this then why?" isn't proof. Proof is provided via some sort of documentation.


Lol... Joph. That's why *I* believe providing those benefits to straight couples who marry is justified.


I showed you mine. Now show me yours. Tell me what societal benefits are derived as a result of granting those financial benefits to gay couples who marry so as to justify the cost of those same benefits.


Let me give you a hint: "Because straight couples get them" is not a justification.
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#232 Apr 13 2009 at 4:17 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Lol... Joph. That's why *I* believe providing those benefits to straight couples who marry is justified.
So you're saying that the "We do it for the kids!" is pure opinion and not fact? Because you keep presenting it as fact so I'd like to get this settled before moving onwards.
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#233 Apr 13 2009 at 4:20 PM Rating: Excellent
How about, because a lot of gay couples were in straight relationships and had kids, then they realized they were living a lie because they were really gay, and now they are single lesbian mothers or single gay fathers?

If it's "for the kids" for straight couples, it damn well applies to gay parents too.

For the record I am getting married for tax benefits for my cat.
#234 Apr 13 2009 at 4:23 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Lol... Joph. That's why *I* believe providing those benefits to straight couples who marry is justified.
So you're saying that the "We do it for the kids!" is pure opinion and not fact? Because you keep presenting it as fact so I'd like to get this settled before moving onwards.


It's why I am Ok with paying higher taxes/whatnot so that married couples pay less or receive more benefits.


Insisting on the "facts" of this is an unfair argument. Ask 20 people just what marriage *is* and you'll get at least 10 different responses. There is no one single document held on high, and sealed in a glass case in which we can read exactly the one single reason why marriage benefits are granted.

It's not exactly hard to noodle out why most of them exist though, just by looking at what they are and how they work. If you're unhappy with that, then I suppose you'll live a very unhappy life as you insist that no public debate can exist on any subject unless we can find the single reason everyone holds for whatever it is we're talking about. We have a system in which collective positions are derived at and often codified into law. To insist that every single person voting "yes" on a piece of legislature have the exact same reason for voting "yes" is absurd beyond belief...

Edited, Apr 13th 2009 5:24pm by gbaji
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#235 Apr 13 2009 at 4:33 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Insisting on the "facts" of this is an unfair argument.
No, it's incredibly fair. You just dislike it because it doesn't help your case. The fact is, as you say, there is not codified "Why we have marriage" document. You can't even piece something together from other legal documents.
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It's not exactly hard to noodle out why most of them exist though, just by looking at what they are and how they work.
I disagree for various reasons. I certainly disagree with your conclusion.
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If you're unhappy with that, then I suppose you'll live a very unhappy life as you insist that no public debate can exist on any subject unless we can find the single reason everyone holds for whatever it is we're talking about.
Not at all. Rather, perhaps we should start with the admission that no such thing exists and therefore blanket pseudofactual statements about why marriage exists should be kept off the table.

I'm perfectly happy to hold a debate on it. I'm even happier when that debate doesn't have one guy pretending that his reasons are the reasons and then having to find new ways to spin when asked to support that.
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To insist that every single person voting "yes" on a piece of legislature have the exact same reason for voting "yes" is absurd beyond belief...
Is this an admission that our current system of marriage laws was perhaps not universally decided to convince folks to put a ring on it before squeezing out tricycle motors? That maybe some people involved had other motives and ideas? Because it sure sounds like one.

Edited, Apr 13th 2009 7:35pm by Jophiel
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#236 Apr 13 2009 at 6:00 PM Rating: Decent
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So, exactly what's the difference in taxes collected from a married couple rather then a two people who are single but live together? If I recall right in most cases don't you end up paying more in the end? I'm just wondering exactly how much money you're arguing over.

And gay couples can achieve most of the other rights of being married already without the marriage, it just might take a lot more time and work. Also quite a few health insurance companies do have options to include significant others, even when you're not married.
#237 Apr 13 2009 at 6:13 PM Rating: Good
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mattguard wrote:
And gay couples can achieve most of the other rights of being married already without the marriage, it just might take a lot more time and work. Also quite a few health insurance companies do have options to include significant others, even when you're not married.


But I think that's irrelevant. The whole "separate but equal" thing doesn't fly.

And my health insurance I get through work won't cover anyone who isn't my Spouse or Children.
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#238 Apr 13 2009 at 6:25 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Insisting on the "facts" of this is an unfair argument.
No, it's incredibly fair. You just dislike it because it doesn't help your case. The fact is, as you say, there is not codified "Why we have marriage" document. You can't even piece something together from other legal documents.


Yes. Congratulations. We have a legal status, and a whole mess of different benefits attached to that status, and no one single document explaining *why* the status exists, or why any one benefit (much less all of them) exist. Great!

So. We're debating whether or not gay couples should be allowed to qualify for that legal status, and qualify in turn for all those benefits. I have looked a the benefits, and given my opinion as to why those benefits are ok from my perspective to provide to the existing set of couples. I have then asked the question as to whether that same set of reasons apply to same sex couples, and arrived at the conclusion that they do not.

That's me. I'm asking you to do the same. Why do you believe those benefits exist? What purpose to they serve? And do you believe that the purpose they serve makes sense if those benefits are extended to same sex couples?


I'm asking you to go through the same logic I have. I'm not insisting that you arrive at the same conclusion, but I really would like to hear why you think the cost for providing those benefits to gay couples is justified? And again. I don't want to hear about who gets them now. Assess whether they should get them on their own merits. If you want to argue that the existing qualifications are too broad, then that's a whole different issue. But that would mean that gay couples would be less qualified to receive them, not more...


Give me the Joph reason. That's all I'm asking for here.


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I'm perfectly happy to hold a debate on it. I'm even happier when that debate doesn't have one guy pretending that his reasons are the reasons and then having to find new ways to spin when asked to support that.


I'm not insisting that my reasons are "the reason". But in the absence of anyone else coming up with any other, then that's kinda all we have, right?

Again. Give me your reason for them existing? Why do we provide those benefits. Tell me what you think. Then assess whether those reasons make sense if we apply those benefits to gay couples.

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Is this an admission that our current system of marriage laws was perhaps not universally decided to convince folks to put a ring on it before squeezing out tricycle motors? That maybe some people involved had other motives and ideas? Because it sure sounds like one.


Nothing is universally decided Joph. You're holding this one set of legislature up to a higher standard than any other.

Find me where there is a single document defining the reason why we fund public education Joph. You can't. Everyone knows of course. But if you were to challenge me to find where "Because an educated population is worth the cost" is written anywhere, I'd also be unable to find that. Amazingly, we still manage to make decisions regarding education funding.


If you don't think my reasons are legitimate, then by all means come up with some counter rationale. I can't think of one, but maybe you can...
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#239 Apr 13 2009 at 6:30 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
"Because an educated population is worth the cost"


And yet we spend time and public money "educating" the severely mentally disabled, who cannot gain anything from it and will not retain any education.

Hmmm...

So how would that relate to spending "tax money" on couples that can never "reproduce" when the supposed reason is promoting "reproduction"...
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#240 Apr 13 2009 at 6:34 PM Rating: Default
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TirithRR wrote:
mattguard wrote:
And gay couples can achieve most of the other rights of being married already without the marriage, it just might take a lot more time and work. Also quite a few health insurance companies do have options to include significant others, even when you're not married.


But I think that's irrelevant. The whole "separate but equal" thing doesn't fly.


BS. It only doesn't fly when there's a group of people who are perceived to be a victim class involved. It flies just fine all the rest of the time though.

There are thousands of legally defined statuses. Each of them have sets of requirements and have various benefits or penalties associated with them. And none of them are "equal". They're all "different". They are different because they address different situations.

You need to stop looking at things are purely a benefit that one group gets so it's somehow unfair if another doesn't. IMO that's a moronic way to approach any spending issue. I'll ask a question I asked earlier: Why limit those benefits to married couples? If it's really just about making sure all people get the same benefits, why only married couples?

Why don't I get to assign X number of people to be covered by my medical insurance? That's the same thing married people with children get, so why not me? Why can't I just designate one person who gets to receive my social security or pension benefits when I die? Why do only spouses get those? Gee. That's unfair! As a single person I'm being treated differently... Whaaaaah!


Before you can argue that gay couples should receive these benefits, you really should first at least *try* to explain why straight couples should receive them and then show how gay couples meet the same criteria. I'm approaching this in that manner. No one else is. You may disagree with my conclusions, but my argument is inherently consistent. The rest of you are just parroting a position, without a single reason for it other than "That's the way it should be".

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And my health insurance I get through work won't cover anyone who isn't my Spouse or Children.


See. Unfair. It's not like I pay proportionately less for my medical coverage than the married guy in the next office. Yet his insurance covers himself and any arbitrary number of dependents. I'm paying for his wife and children to get medical care. How is that fair? It's not.

If it's just about fairness, then there'd be no benefits at all.
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#241 Apr 13 2009 at 6:51 PM Rating: Decent
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TirithRR wrote:
gbaji wrote:
"Because an educated population is worth the cost"


And yet we spend time and public money "educating" the severely mentally disabled, who cannot gain anything from it and will not retain any education.


But you would never argue that since we spend money educating severely mentally retarded kids that it should be perfectly ok to spend our education dollars on household pets, right?


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So how would that relate to spending "tax money" on couples that can never "reproduce" when the supposed reason is promoting "reproduction"...


It's pretty much identical. We don't perfectly target the benefits so some couples who wont produce offspring will gain the benefits. Aw shucks! But that lack of perfection is not a good reason to expand the benefits to include couples who cannot under any circumstances produce offspring.

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#242 Apr 13 2009 at 7:42 PM Rating: Good
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I'm still wondering exactly what these benefits that you're so worried about actually cost. Hell, maybe even the money spent on the wedding ceremony to caterers, photographers and the like would be enough to outweigh any theoretical cost to society.
#243 Apr 13 2009 at 7:52 PM Rating: Good
Actually, family insurance plans tend to have premiums twice as high as "single" plans -- if not even more.

So yes, you are paying proportionally less for your insurance than the married guy, unless your insurance is very strange.
#244 Apr 13 2009 at 8:01 PM Rating: Default
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mattguard wrote:
I'm still wondering exactly what these benefits that you're so worried about actually cost. Hell, maybe even the money spent on the wedding ceremony to caterers, photographers and the like would be enough to outweigh any theoretical cost to society.


Lol. You're asking good questions, but it's still interesting to me how often the very way we view an issue is skewed sometimes. It's not about them re-couping the cost of their wedding. It's not about the benefits someone gets. It's about the cost someone else has to pay for them to receive those.

It just seems that somewhere long the line most people have been taught/indoctrinated into viewing issues of liberty, equality, fairness, etc in terms of what people get instead of what is taken from people. And IMO that is exactly 180 degrees backwards. If you get 100 dollars of stuff and I get 100 dollars of stuff, this does not make either of us more equal, or free, nor does it make the world in any way more "fair". You and I each got some stuff. That's it. But the guy who had to pay the 200 bucks for us to get it is the one who has been infringed upon.

Even if that's equalized, there's still a problem. Imagine if both you and I are taxed $100, and provided $100 in some form of benefits. We're even, right? Are we? Or did the government just take $100 from us, which we could have spent on anything we wanted, and spent that money on a specific thing they wanted us to have, and then gave us that thing? Yup. That's exactly what they just did...


It's *always* about what's taken away, not what is gained. You don't achieve equality, freedom, or a society of equals by working really hard to make sure everyone receives the same benefits from the government. You best achieve those things by minimizing the total amount taken from anyone in your society as a whole. Period.

Thus, the criteria for deciding to spend money on some benefits should never be about whether that group is getting their fair share, but rather whether the benefit to society as a whole if that group gains that specific benefit is sufficient to justify the costs to the citizens in the form of taxes and whatnot. That's the *only* reason to spend government money and this question should be asked each and every time.


This is why the "gay couples should receive these benefits because it's unfair for straight couples to get them and not gay couples" is a completely fallacious argument. It does not tell me why gay couples should receive them. It tells me only that the person making the argument somehow thinks our spending objectives should be to make sure everyone gets the same relative amount of goodies from the government and furthermore believes that to not do so is some kind of violation of one group's "rights". It's not. But far too many people approach this sort of issue from that viewpoint and it's incredibly hard to get them to see that this is backwards.


It's not about what people get. It's about whether any given thing we might spend money on is worth the cost to those who have to foot the bill for it. It doesn't matter if the results seem "unfair" to one group or another. It's not about fair. If it was just about "fair", we'd never take money from one person and give it to another, right? It's not fair to single people to foot the bill for so many programs which benefit married couples. The only reason to do it is if the result is a net positive for everyone...
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#245 Apr 13 2009 at 8:05 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
That's me. I'm asking you to do the same. Why do you believe those benefits exist? What purpose to they serve? And do you believe that the purpose they serve makes sense if those benefits are extended to same sex couples?
[...]
Give me the Joph reason. That's all I'm asking for here.
I've answered this question several times in several threads with lengthy explanations about my thoughts and reasons.

Did you think they significantly changed since then?
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Find me where there is a single document defining the reason why we fund public education Joph. You can't. Everyone knows of course. But if you were to challenge me to find where "Because an educated population is worth the cost" is written anywhere, I'd also be unable to find that.
Which is pretty funny because that wouldn't have even been my first reason Smiley: laugh
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#246 Apr 13 2009 at 8:09 PM Rating: Decent
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catwho the Pest wrote:
Actually, family insurance plans tend to have premiums twice as high as "single" plans -- if not even more.


I think we discussed this either in a previous gay marriage thread, or maybe the one about healthcare (the one were McCain was taxing benefits IIRC). The cost for a married person is typically about half again that charged to a single employee.

So they get them for a little more, but not that much more. And less than the assumed double average cost for the coverage. And that's before considering children.

The point is that a married co-worker with a spouse and three kids does *not* pay 5 times as much for health insurance as I do. Not even remotely close. Yet, on average, we can assume his payouts from the program are going to be roughly five times mine. Guess who's paying more for less? That would be the single guy...

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So yes, you are paying proportionally less for your insurance than the married guy, unless your insurance is very strange.


Er? Even if it were double, that would just make us even (without taking into account children). Double for two people is the same per-person. I'm talking about the share of money I put into our insurance program in comparison to the share I pull out. A single person gets shafted on this. It's arguable that if we were to suddenly bend the labor laws such that I could work at a company which employed nothing but single people with no dependents, the cost for my insurance would probably be half or even a third as much as I pay working for a corporation in which say 50% of the employees are married.
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#247 Apr 13 2009 at 8:21 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
Give me the Joph reason. That's all I'm asking for here.
I've answered this question several times in several threads with lengthy explanations about my thoughts and reasons.[/quote]

I don't recall you ever doing this.

IIRC, you've done the same thing in those threads that you are doing here. You have argued that it's unfair to deny gay couples what straight couples get. You have challenged me to "prove" that my belief about why we fund these programs for married people is correct (on several occasions in fact). You've argued on many occasions that there's no reason to deny gay couples due to their lack of child production capabilities since not every straight couple will produce a child.

You've made all of those arguments Joph. I don't recall you ever once clearly stating the societal benefits to granting these benefits to gay couples and arguing that they were sufficient to justify the cost of the benefits themselves.

Maybe you have and I just missed it? It's unlikely, but whatever. How about you humor me and write them down again then? If you've done this so many times, how hard should it be to write it down again? I re-wrote the position I've written dozens of times already again, so why is this such a hardship for you?

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Did you think they significantly changed since then?


Since I have no clue what these societal benefits might be, I honestly have no idea...


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Find me where there is a single document defining the reason why we fund public education Joph. You can't. Everyone knows of course. But if you were to challenge me to find where "Because an educated population is worth the cost" is written anywhere, I'd also be unable to find that.
Which is pretty funny because that wouldn't have even been my first reason



Do you think my reason is wrong though? Would you ignore an argument based on that "reason" for publicly funded education because it's not the one agreed upon reason? I suspect not. Largely because I know for a fact that I have stated more or less that exact reason when arguing that public education is a legitimate thing to spend money on. And while you've often disagreed with the larger point I was making about public spending (usually in some kind of welfare thread), you have never said anything about my reason for agreeing with the need to fund public education.
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#248 Apr 13 2009 at 8:36 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
IIRC, you've done the same thing in those threads that you are doing here. You have argued that it's unfair to deny gay couples what straight couples get.
Nope. Go back and read.
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Maybe you have and I just missed it? It's unlikely, but whatever.
Nope. We talked about it. You didn't miss it.
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How about you humor me and write them down again then?
Nope. You humor me and go back and read. It's no "hardship" but I just don't care to and your clumsy attempts to railroad me into it ain't gonna work.
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Do you think my reason is wrong though? Would you ignore an argument based on that "reason" for publicly funded education because it's not the one agreed upon reason?
If someone asked for support for your reason, I'd certainly argue that "It just is and everyone knows it" would be ****-poor support. I know I could build a much better argument for it.

I haven't argued it before in the past because I already know, and could back up, where those notions come from. You, on the other hand, are incapable of doing the same when it comes to marriage.

Oh, and the whole "one document" thing is pretty much a strawman (albeit one I entertained for a post or two). I never said it had to be in one singular document; I asked for supporting evidence for your claims. You're allowed to find two documents which each support different facets of your argument or three documents or even four!
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#249 Apr 13 2009 at 9:28 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
How about you humor me and write them down again then?
Nope. You humor me and go back and read. It's no "hardship" but I just don't care to and your clumsy attempts to railroad me into it ain't gonna work.
I just went back and reread the last thread about this. It wouldn't make a difference even if you did re write it. Gbaji ignored it when it was right in front of him. I'm going to go back to the Thank goodness it's inevitable anyway position.

Edited, Apr 14th 2009 12:28am by Xsarus
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#250 Apr 14 2009 at 4:57 AM Rating: Decent
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Gbaji wrote:
You've made all of those arguments Joph. I don't recall you ever once clearly stating the societal benefits to granting these benefits to gay couples and arguing that they were sufficient to justify the cost of the benefits themselves.


Joph and I both provided some reasons in a previous thread. Just because you discount or disagree with them doesn't mean they are not reasons.

As for your position ... if the reason we provide some benefits to married couples without children is to encourage reproduction, we're insane. I don't believe that's even a reason, let alone the reason. It's nothing more than your rationalization to prevent mental distress at paying for your share of the costs.
#251 Apr 14 2009 at 5:24 AM Rating: Good
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Gbaji, how can you be for funding for heterosexual couples that can't or don't produce children, but against homosexual couples that do produce children, when you believe the entire point of marriage is funding the production of children?
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