Forum Settings
       
« Previous 1 2
Reply To Thread

A question for the okra farmerFollow

#1 May 08 2009 at 4:29 AM Rating: Excellent
*****
12,049 posts
Varrus,

You mentioned in a past thread that you have a "*****" friend. You then later went off on a rant when we said that ***** is an offensive term and that there was a homosexual conspiracy to hijack the word gay, but that's another matter.

Assuming that money and travel is no issue, and your friend is going to get married in a legal marriage in a state with gay marriage, would you attend the wedding? Why or why not?

If you say yes, I would wonder why you would attend a ceremony that you are clearly against.
If you say no, I wonder why you wouldn't attend when you've stated that it is a state's decision and if the state supports gay marriage then you're fine with that.

Just curious. Explanations are nice, sources not needed.
#2 May 08 2009 at 5:41 AM Rating: Good
Smiley: popcorn
#3 May 08 2009 at 5:44 AM Rating: Default
Locked,

Quote:
Assuming that money and travel is no issue, and your friend is going to get married in a legal marriage in a state with gay marriage, would you attend the wedding? Why or why not?


We're not that close. But I wouldn't. I wouldn't because I don't believe in supporting something I disagree with.
#4 May 08 2009 at 5:46 AM Rating: Good
Avatar
*****
13,007 posts
#5 May 08 2009 at 5:48 AM Rating: Default
***
3,229 posts
hangtennow wrote:
Locked,

Quote:
Assuming that money and travel is no issue, and your friend is going to get married in a legal marriage in a state with gay marriage, would you attend the wedding? Why or why not?


We're not that close. But I wouldn't. I wouldn't because I don't believe in supporting something I disagree with.


Would it change if you were good friends?
#6 May 08 2009 at 6:02 AM Rating: Good
*****
12,049 posts
hangtennow wrote:
Locked,

Quote:
Assuming that money and travel is no issue, and your friend is going to get married in a legal marriage in a state with gay marriage, would you attend the wedding? Why or why not?


We're not that close. But I wouldn't. I wouldn't because I don't believe in supporting something I disagree with.


Ok, was just curious. But you're still fine with gay marriage if a state decided it is legal? I took your previous responses to mean that... at least, that was one of the arguments you used (let the states decide the issue, go with the will of the people).
#7 May 08 2009 at 6:05 AM Rating: Default
Locked,

Quote:
But you're still fine with gay marriage if a state decided it is legal?


I'm for marriage being up to the states to decide.
#8 May 08 2009 at 6:16 AM Rating: Decent
***
3,229 posts
hangtennow wrote:
Locked,

Quote:
But you're still fine with gay marriage if a state decided it is legal?


I'm for marriage being up to the states to decide.


In that respect, you're saying it is ok to restrict freedoms as long as the state makes it illegal.

I guess Dr King was just a fusspot.
#9 May 08 2009 at 6:23 AM Rating: Good
Goggy wrote:
In that respect, you're saying it is ok to restrict freedoms as long as the state makes it illegal.


That's just reading into what he said. He didn't say either way, he just said he's for states deciding the legality of same-sex marriages. That doesn't declare an individual preference to one side or the other.

Not defending Varrus, just seems irrelevant.
#10 May 08 2009 at 6:24 AM Rating: Default
Groggy,

Marriage is not a right, it's a privilege. Just like voting is not a right it's a privilege.
#11 May 08 2009 at 6:37 AM Rating: Decent
***
3,229 posts
Ryneguy wrote:
Goggy wrote:
In that respect, you're saying it is ok to restrict freedoms as long as the state makes it illegal.


That's just reading into what he said. He didn't say either way, he just said he's for states deciding the legality of same-sex marriages. That doesn't declare an individual preference to one side or the other.

Not defending Varrus, just seems irrelevant.


I didn't say he did exactly, what I'm saying is that history has shown us that bad decisions can be made by law makers. We argue and questions these laws so we can live in a fair society. In my opinion, if two people of the same sex want to be together, what right has the state to deny them that right?

Where does it say marriage is a privilege, not a right?
#12 May 08 2009 at 6:40 AM Rating: Good
Quote:
Where does it say marriage is a privilege, not a right?


Apprently the same place is says that voting is a privilege and not a right. Smiley: laugh I guess Suffrage isn't a civil right...
#13 May 08 2009 at 6:43 AM Rating: Good
***
3,229 posts
Ryneguy wrote:
Quote:
Where does it say marriage is a privilege, not a right?


Apprently the same place is says that voting is a privilege and not a right. Smiley: laugh I guess Suffrage isn't a civil right...


I think I should bow-out of this conversation, I'm getting caught up between stupid American law and UK law.

I'm not conversant enough with US law.
#14REDACTED, Posted: May 08 2009 at 6:43 AM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Ryne,
#15 May 08 2009 at 6:55 AM Rating: Excellent
You're confusing Civil Rights with Constitutional Rights. Civil Rights (ie. Suffrage) can be afforded or denied for any/all. It protects individuals from state or government power to ensure they can participate in society. Political and Civil rights make up the first portion of Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

People have the civil right to vote.
People have the civil right to a fair trial.
People have protection from unfair discrimination as a civil right.

Just because it can be taken away, or government can intervene on civil rights based on eligibility and/or infringement doesn't make them any less valid as rights. Any indiviual(s) that follows the law of country and/or state and is eligible has the right to vote. You cannot take that right from that person. You're arguement is with intervention on a state or government level. Not with the right, itself.
#16 May 08 2009 at 8:36 AM Rating: Decent
***
2,453 posts
hangtennow wrote:
Ryne,

Rights can't be taken away. Privileges can. That's why convicted felons can't vote. I should get paid for the educating you twits.



So the right to bear arms is not a right either?
#17 May 08 2009 at 10:02 AM Rating: Good
Ryne,

Quote:
You're confusing Civil Rights with Constitutional Rights. Civil Rights (ie. Suffrage) can be afforded or denied for any/all. It protects individuals from state or government power to ensure they can participate in society. Political and Civil rights make up the first portion of Universal Declaration of Human Rights.


You're right, at least it sounds right. I stand corrected.
#18 May 08 2009 at 1:01 PM Rating: Decent
hangtennow wrote:
Locked,

Quote:
Assuming that money and travel is no issue, and your friend is going to get married in a legal marriage in a state with gay marriage, would you attend the wedding? Why or why not?


We're not that close. But I wouldn't. I wouldn't because I don't believe in supporting something I disagree with.


The only bad thing about a person who feels this strongly about their convictions is that their convictions are usually stupid.
#19 May 08 2009 at 1:29 PM Rating: Good
****
6,858 posts
Quote:
A question for the okra farmer


I am assuming that hangten either does, indeed farm okra, or that is some sort of insult based on his/her/its points of view being very conservative?
#20 May 08 2009 at 2:57 PM Rating: Good
**
383 posts
BoondockSaint wrote:
Quote:
A question for the okra farmer


I am assuming that hangten either does, indeed farm okra, or that is some sort of insult based on his/her/its points of view being very conservative?


He really does farm okra. It's also his superhero villain ??? name.
#21 May 10 2009 at 4:55 AM Rating: Decent
****
9,395 posts
Quote:
We're not that close. But I wouldn't. I wouldn't because I don't believe in supporting something I disagree with.


I can kind of respect this. One shouldn't let friends or family get in the way of what they believe in.
____________________________
10k before the site's inevitable death or bust

The World Is Not A Cold Dead Place.
Alan Watts wrote:
I am omnipotent insofar as I am the Universe, but I am not an omnipotent in the role of Alan Watts, only cunning


Eske wrote:
I've always read Driftwood as the straight man in varus' double act. It helps if you read all of his posts in the voice of Droopy Dog.
#22 May 12 2009 at 7:23 AM Rating: Good
He farms okra and many other things, and it's one of the few things I respect him for. We do both live in the agrarian south, even if I live in one of the blue islands in the ocean of red down here. And one thing most folks around here respect, regardless of political leanings, is delicious fresh garden veggies.
#23 May 12 2009 at 7:46 AM Rating: Good
*****
12,049 posts
Sad news, looks like Varrus got banned again.

Wonder what his new name will be?
#24 May 12 2009 at 7:56 AM Rating: Excellent
Will swallow your soul
******
29,360 posts
Huh. Who is Speedly, and why does he/she care?

____________________________
In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

#25 May 12 2009 at 7:56 AM Rating: Good
Locke wrote:
Sad news, looks like Varrus got banned again.


I was starting to wonder, it's odd for no Varrus posts on a Monday by noon. Especially with gbaji's deficit discussion.
#26 May 12 2009 at 8:10 AM Rating: Decent
Samira wrote:
Huh. Who is Speedly, and why does he/she care?



What I want to know is why Wordean seems to now, after all these months, jump on this. Utterly retarded.

Varrus doesn't leave the Asylum and I haven't heard anyone here complain about him being 'back'.
« Previous 1 2
Reply To Thread

Colors Smileys Quote OriginalQuote Checked Help

 

Recent Visitors: 309 All times are in CST
Anonymous Guests (309)