vt_disney_fan
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2008
- Messages
- 294
And my opinion is that you must know from personal experience and have had to intentionally choose your sexual orientation. Carry on.
And my opinion is you chose to be gay. Carry on.
And my opinion is that you must know from personal experience and have had to intentionally choose your sexual orientation. Carry on.
And my opinion is you chose to be gay. Carry on.
I only have a few questions about your opinion...
How long did you struggle before you chose your heterosexuality?
Did you wake up one day and it came to you, or did you really have a hard time deciding?
Did you weigh the benefits of being straight vs. being gay, and then just decide that it would easier to be straight, so you ran with it?
Your opinion is just that...YOUR opinion. And you are entitled to that opinion. There's a difference in believing that somehow homosexuality is wrong or that it is a choice...and believing that we should deny rights to an entire group of people based on that so-called "choice".
If Sarah Palin had said, "I believe homosexuality is wrong." I would believe that she was entitled to hold that opinion.
What I have a PROBLEM with is the fact that she is using her opinion to deny an entire group of people basic and equal rights.
That's the crux of this argument here.
Not that she is not entitled to her beliefs.
But, that she would support legislation that would deny an entire group of people equal rights.
It is one thing to hold certain personal and religious beliefs. It is quite another to spin those beliefs into a denial of civil rights.
Thanks for the honesty.
I used to think similarly, and then a girl asked me if I thought I could choose to be attracted to men.
END OF DISCUSSION.
I'm pretty sure that if I underwent transgender surgery, I'd end up as a lesbian. How does that map into this?
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So why is your opinion more important than someone else's and why is your religion more important than mine? Better yet, why do we have laws based on your opinions and your religious beliefs?
If anything, I would think your opinion would be less valid than a gay person's opinion. Are you gay? Do you know how it feels to be gay? Then why do you think your opinion that "sexual orientation is NOT based on genetics...yada, yada, yada..." is more valid than the person who actually IS gay and CAN tell you how it feels?![]()
Of course I believe it's a choice - I don't shy away from that. And again, I'm not expecting anyone to be convinced otherwise, or to change their minds - I won't, why should you, right? I'm just giving my opinions, as others on here are doing.
You all are entitled to yours, same as me. I don't hate you, I just disagree with you. It's really that simple.
Why does anyone think THEIR opinion is more valid than anyone else's? Because it's there opinion, and they (usually) have reasons to support that opinion. We disagree - that won't change. I'll fight to have my opinions heard and legislated, as will you. No different, other than we differ on what we're fighting for (or against). If you say otherwise, it means you inherently think you're right. Of course, so do I, yet you say it's just my opinion. See the circle?
Yes and in both Plessy and Brown everyone (even the attorneys for Plessy and Brown) agreed that the laws were equal in terms of treating both races the same and providing equal accommodations.
For both Harlan and Warren (in Brown) they can only get to their conclusion by stretching the meaning of "equal protection" beyond the obvious and appealing to this idea of a badge of inferiority or psychological harm. The Brown case hinges on the claim that de jure segregation causes black children psychological harm. Where in the constitution does it indicate that "equal" means anything to do with psychological harm? Since when is that the plain meaning of the words "equal protection of law"?
I do not understand how a committed textualist (which is the philosophy it seems you are espousing) could accept the Brown decision (or Harlan's dissent in Plessy). The plain meaning of the words "equal protection of law" have nothing to do with psychological consequences or the badge of inferiority which is experienced by those who fall under it.
Any sort of strict constructualism seems to fail with regard to Brown. Indeed, Justice Rehnquist wrote a brief opposing Brown when he was a law clerk for one of the justices at the time in which he essentially accused the court of liberal activism. Gee, that sure sounds familiar! (Of course, 20 years later when it came time to become a Supreme Court justice he denied that when he said "I think Plessy was right" he actually meant "I". But of course he had to say that--he couldn't have gotten confirmed if he had announced in front of the entire country that he didn't think de jure segregation was a constitutional problem.)
The way I see it, if a proper textualist interpretation of "equal protection" takes it to mean "you can't have a law that treats the races equally in all tangible ways, yet which gives an intangible stamp of inferiority to one race" then it's also textualy appropriate to nterpret "equal protection" to mean "you can't have a law that treats people of different sexual orientations equally in all tangible ways, yet which gives an intangible stamp of inferiority to a group of people with one particular sexual orientation" either. And that will clearly make laws which restrict marriage to male-female couples (or which grants only civil unions to gay couples but marriage to male-female couples) unconstitutional. (And you don't have to declare that marriage is a right granted by the constitution to do this, any more than Brown declared elementary and secondary education a right granted by the constitution.)
I didn't struggle with it - I chose to remain the way that God created me, rather than fight against it and choose to live in a way that He did not create me.
As I said above, I chose to remain the way God created me. Wasn't hard..
No, I weighed the benefits of following God's order for my life vs. not following it, and that made it easy for me. Since He created us as male and female, with natural attractions to the opposite sex, it wasn't hard for me to continue as such.
Again, I approach this from a standpoint of it being a choice to be homosexual. For anyone who doesn't believe it is, I wouldn't expect them to agree with me, as many on here don't. Based on the different beliefs we have, one group of us must be wrong (either it is a choice, or it's not; there's no in between). I think the other group is, the other group thinks I am. I don't hope to convince you, and won't be convinced by you. I'm just giving my opinion. You can disagree, make fun of it, whatever makes you happy. It's still the way I believe, and while there are many people who agree with your opinions, there are many who agree with mine, too.
Why does anyone think THEIR opinion is more valid than anyone else's? Because it's there opinion, and they (usually) have reasons to support that opinion. We disagree - that won't change. I'll fight to have my opinions heard and legislated, as will you. No different, other than we differ on what we're fighting for (or against). If you say otherwise, it means you inherently think you're right. Of course, so do I, yet you say it's just my opinion. See the circle?
So you're admitting that your sexuality was not a choice...Just the way God made you. OK, so far there's no difference between you and me...
Well, then I envy you!! It was a REALLY, super hard struggle for me to try and live according to how people like you thought I was supposed to live. I never found peace until I finally realized that I should live the way God created me.
I'm not making fun of you, or your opinion. Just trying to better understand it.
So you've had feelings for women before, and you suppressed them? In the name of following God's word? Because that would really be the only way that your lifestyle would have ever been a "choice". It must be really difficult for you to live with all of the temptation to be with women. I don't envy you in your daily struggle to stay faithful to God's word.
But nevermind, because you've admitted that you just followed the way God created you...with a "natural attraction to the opposite sex". So it doesn't really take any work for you. I can completely understand that, and I'm fine with it. Because it was the way you were made. So there was really no choice for you. You went with what was natural for you.
Then you couldn't possibly understand what it's like for someone who was created differently than you were. Someone who, just like you, is just trying to live the way that God made them.
I'm sure that you can understand that sometimes God creates people who are differently abled than you are, people who have darker skin than you do, people who have lighter skin than you do, people who have curlier hair than you do, people who have straighter hair than you do...I could go on and on about all of the differences you can find in people...But I'm sure that you're well aware of most of them, and you accept the fact that none of them made a choice to have those differences. They were born that way.
But then why is it so difficult for you to understand that I could have been born the way that I am, and that this is exactly the way God wanted me to be???
Because you see, contrary to what you've been taught in your church, I never had a choice in the matter (Just like you never had a choice to make...if we're being honest. I think you're giving yourself way too much credit for "being faithful" to the way that God created you). I tried my best to live in accordance with what others thought I should be. It didn't work. So I stopped fighting what God meant for me to be, and I've been happy ever since.
But you go on judging me...I'll leave the judgement up to God.![]()
So you're admitting that your sexuality was not a choice...Just the way God made you. OK, so far there's no difference between you and me...
Well, then I envy you!! It was a REALLY, super hard struggle for me to try and live according to how people like you thought I was supposed to live. I never found peace until I finally realized that I should live the way God created me.
So you've had feelings for women before, and you suppressed them? In the name of following God's word? Because that would really be the only way that your lifestyle would have ever been a "choice". It must be really difficult for you to live with all of the temptation to be with women. I don't envy you in your daily struggle to stay faithful to God's word.
But nevermind, because you've admitted that you just followed the way God created you...with a "natural attraction to the opposite sex". So it doesn't really take any work for you. I can completely understand that, and I'm fine with it. Because it was the way you were made. So there was really no choice for you. You went with what was natural for you.
Then you couldn't possibly understand what it's like for someone who was created differently than you were. Someone who, just like you, is just trying to live the way that God made them.
I'm sure that you can understand that sometimes God creates people who are differently abled than you are, people who have darker skin than you do, people who have lighter skin than you do, people who have curlier hair than you do, people who have straighter hair than you do...I could go on and on about all of the differences you can find in people...But I'm sure that you're well aware of most of them, and you accept the fact that none of them made a choice to have those differences. They were born that way.
But then why is it so difficult for you to understand that I could have been born the way that I am, and that this is exactly the way God wanted me to be???
Because you see, contrary to what you've been taught in your church, I never had a choice in the matter (Just like you never had a choice to make...if we're being honest. I think you're giving yourself way too much credit for "being faithful" to the way that God created you).
I tried my best to live in accordance with what others thought I should be. It didn't work. So I stopped fighting what God meant for me to be, and I've been happy ever since.
But you go on judging me...I'll leave the judgement up to God.![]()
The difference is my opinion is not based on something I do not understand nor does it seek to single out an entire group of people and ban them, by constitutional amendment, from entering into a legal contract that another group is allowed to enter.
See the difference? Probably not and to be very honest, I would be shocked if you did.![]()
Do you understand that historically, governments built on limiting people's freedoms and/or enforcing religion generally do not last?
It's been my experience that people who feel the way you do are either miserably closeted (think Ted Haggard) or end up having a close family member come out to them. On one hand that is poetic justice on the other hand....it's terribly sad in both situations.
I do, however, know all my close family members well, and know that a "coming out" isn't in the works. Sorry to disappoint.
Why does anyone think THEIR opinion is more valid than anyone else's? Because it's there opinion, and they (usually) have reasons to support that opinion. We disagree - that won't change. I'll fight to have my opinions heard and legislated, as will you. No different, other than we differ on what we're fighting for (or against). If you say otherwise, it means you inherently think you're right. Of course, so do I, yet you say it's just my opinion. See the circle?
You know, I had a cousin that felt that way, right up until her husband told her he was leaving her for a guy.