the government giving you a piece of paper certifying that you are now legally recognized as a couple has nothing to do with religion.
10/11/2014 6:27:56 PM
10/14/2014 5:23:14 AM
10/14/2014 10:42:02 PM
so all of the non-religious wedding ceremonies I've attended over the past 4 years didn't count?
10/14/2014 11:59:29 PM
I've officiated 2 weDdings in a non religious capacity the past few months, and attended others. Marriage is definitely and conclusively not a religious institution in modern day America.
10/15/2014 12:10:53 AM
10/15/2014 8:53:18 AM
^You're wrong. Marriage is a religious institution in America. And, marriage isn't a religious institution in America. It's a very personal decision made by two people, and those two people determine if it is a religious institution or not.
10/15/2014 8:54:49 AM
10/15/2014 9:10:53 AM
^^ this issue is not about the Christian religious sacrament of marriage (or any other religion), the constitutional issue and reason why same sex marriage must be allowed is only about legal marriages as recognized by the state. The state does not care what kind of vows or sacraments you share in front of god as part of your religion, or how your religion handles marriage, the state only cares about the secular, legal marriages. It's true that marriage is two different things, a religious sacrament (to some) and a legal agreement, and those two things happen separately (a religious ceremony, and a secular marriage certificate with the register of deeds), but this debate is only about the secular marriage that happens with the register of deeds. no one cares about religion, if you want your minister or pastor to only perform the religious sacrament for people of opposite sex that's between the church congregation and leadership and no one else.as soon as you realize this there is no defense for banning same-sex marriages, the debate is only about this secular arrangement and there is no secular reason to deny a right to some people that is given to others[Edited on October 15, 2014 at 9:31 AM. Reason : it's really very simple]
10/15/2014 9:30:01 AM
I've never argued against gay marriage. I don't really care - I think they should get the same legal benefits. Especially when it comes to EOL issues.This is for a different thread, but I have always only argued against the persecution of those who let their opinions be known on the issue.
10/15/2014 10:27:54 AM
persecuting people who persecute people?
10/15/2014 10:33:07 AM
those poor souls who happen to dislike others simply for wanting equal rights
10/15/2014 10:35:09 AM
pointing out that someone's views are hateful, dated, and not based on any logical or secular reasoning is not persecution
10/15/2014 10:35:22 AM
Boycotting a business of someone who holds those views, even though they don't let those views influence hiring and business practices, is.And just because someone holds the opinion that marriage should be between a man and a woman doesn't mean they are actively persecuting anyone.
10/15/2014 12:34:33 PM
So if you refused to shop at a local grocery store that was managed by an outspoken satanist who regularly and openly contributed money to try to pass satanic legislation, you would be persecuting the satanist?And just because someone holds the opinion that a bigot is a bigot doesn't mean they are actively persecuting anyone.[Edited on October 15, 2014 at 12:46 PM. Reason : ]
10/15/2014 12:43:34 PM
TIL that boycotting a company is persecution, and you shouldn't boycott a company because of religious beliefs (no matter how hateful) even though we live in a time when companies are allowed exemptions to healthcare requirements because of the company's closely held religious beliefsIf a personal opinion is kept personal, no one is going to boycott a company. If someone at a company makes their hateful beliefs public, then some people are well within their rights to not support that person by not patronizing their business. That's not persecution. And you are right that someone simply holding some religious belief (if that's all they are doing) that marriage should only be between a man and woman is not persecuting someone. This doesn't mean though that their personally held opinion is right, or that it is somehow exempt from criticism. But those hypothetical people aren't the issue, those people wouldn't cause demonstrations, boycotts, or civil rights court cases. It becomes an issue when those people try to force their personal beliefs, personal religious beliefs, on others for no secular reason. If you don't participate in doing that, if you don't support Amendment 1 in any ways, then that's great for you but it still doesn't mean that someone can't criticize your hateful and dated personal opinion. And if someone does that, they are not persecuting you.
10/15/2014 1:08:32 PM
Declining to spend money is the only true American sin.
10/15/2014 1:10:03 PM
the dick is a binding contract no matter where you stick it
10/15/2014 1:25:50 PM
So which of you agree with recent denials of issuing marriage certificates by government employees due to their person religious beliefs?
10/15/2014 10:27:08 PM
Not I. You don't get to express your religious beliefs as an actor of the gov't in an official gov't capacity, unless it's an actual part of your job (chaplain in the military, for instance). It's that fucking simple. if you don't like it, go find another job.[Edited on October 15, 2014 at 11:24 PM. Reason : ]
10/15/2014 11:21:51 PM
aaaaaaaaaand a town in Idaho has essentially said that it will fine and/or throw the owners of a wedding chapel in jail if they refuse to perform same sex unions, regardless of their religious beliefs as ordained ministers. Because seriously, who really gives a fuck about the 1st Amendment, right?[Edited on October 20, 2014 at 11:48 PM. Reason : ]
10/20/2014 11:48:33 PM
Yup, that might happen. It certainly shouldn't, but it might and then it will get overturned on appeal. Sometimes that's the awful way that our system works.
10/21/2014 12:02:35 AM
^^ it's not really a wedding chapel. No churches, under that city's ordinance, are going to be forced to do a gay marriage.This is little bit of a gray area though:
10/21/2014 12:27:29 AM
When are all these social problems gonna start that the republicans said we would get if the gays could marry?When are the social problems from legal marijuana going to ruin Colorado and Washington State?When will the alcohol in beer cap being raised ruin North Carolina?
10/21/2014 1:01:32 AM
I saw where several magistrates in the state have resigned due to religious conflicts, as they were told there would be penalties, some even criminal, if they refused to marry a gay couple.
10/21/2014 9:20:34 AM
And the problem is?If a magistrate refuses to serve [insert name of group here] when it is their legal duty to do so, then that magistrate should be removed from office.this religious rights bullshit is going too far. IT IS YOUR PERSONAL RIGHT TO PRACTICE AND BELIEVE, NOT YOUR RIGHT TO ENFORCE ON OTHERS.christian reasoning sounds a lot like islamic extremist reasoning[Edited on October 21, 2014 at 9:25 AM. Reason : .]
10/21/2014 9:22:26 AM
I'm not sure what criminal offense that would be, but they could certainly be fired and might invite a lawsuit. If they don't want to uphold the requirements of their office, they of course should be fired. That doesn't really have much to do with the case in Idaho. In that case, a town in Idaho passed an ordinance that prevents discrimination based on sexual preference and a for-profit company was told that they will face a penalty if they break that ordinance and discriminate based on sexual preference. That's fine with me, the simplest way to handle things is to just add sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classes to the civil rights act, the civil rights act already describes what places are exempt and has been refined and clarified through numerous court cases.
10/21/2014 9:32:06 AM
I wasn't saying there was or wasn't a problem with what was going on with the magistrates. You sign up for a job, you have a job to do. It is pretty simple.I heard today where some house Republicans are crafting a bill that will allow magistrates to decline marrying gay folk.
10/21/2014 7:08:11 PM
You guys realize that Hitching Post story is complicated fabricated by the ADF right? There have been zero complaints against the chapel."We have never threatened to jail them, or take legal action of any kind," said city spokesman Keith Erickson.http://www.thenewcivilrightsmovement.com/davidbadash/how_many_lies_is_the_religious_right_willing_to_tell_in_the_idaho_for_profit_wedding_chapel_story
10/21/2014 7:09:28 PM
10/21/2014 10:23:16 PM
You mean forcing an agent of the state to execute a legal document, of which it is their job to do? I would call it that.[Edited on October 21, 2014 at 10:41 PM. Reason : that]
10/21/2014 10:40:26 PM
10/22/2014 12:14:57 AM
Yes it's true about abortion, just look at all of the BS personhood legislation and abortion restrictions that keeps getting passed
10/22/2014 6:32:37 AM
10/22/2014 10:15:36 AM
http://www.wral.com/berger-backs-religious-exemptions-on-marriage/14101415/
10/22/2014 10:21:21 AM
10/22/2014 11:07:34 AM
STOP PERSECUTING THEM!
10/22/2014 11:30:47 AM
^^ That's all fine and dandy, but up and until you see churches presiding over murders, rapes, thefts, gluttony, etc, and giving their blessings to them, then you don't really have a point. The issue a church would have with joining a homosexual couple would be that they are giving a blessing to the sin itself, while marrying an axe-murderer would not be giving a blessing to the murder itself. So, there really is no hypocrisy in saying "we'll marry a sinner" but refusing to perform a same-sex ceremony.And, by the way, I was not aware that anyone had a legal right to the services provided by any other person. That's news to me, and it's probably why this country is so fucked as it is. Oh, and by the way, marriage is a religious institution, so you lose on that one, too. Good day, sir
10/27/2014 1:03:16 AM
all things aside, i find it extremely confusing that any couple would want to be married by someone who doesn't want to do it, especially from a moral/belief standpoint... and the idea of forcing them to do it just seems bonkers to me.aren't there enough online-ordained schmucks out there to go around anyway?
10/27/2014 2:40:22 AM
10/27/2014 10:55:36 AM
10/27/2014 10:59:46 AM
What part of going to a government building, interacting with a government employee, and receiving a "governmental" piece of paper stating the government's recognition of your union is religious?
10/27/2014 11:53:37 AM
You can't reason with that guy, he's insufferable
10/27/2014 12:06:08 PM
http://nypost.com/2014/11/10/couple-fined-for-refusing-to-host-same-sex-wedding-on-their-farm/More proof that this isn't about tolerance: it's about pushing your beliefs onto other people.
11/11/2014 10:28:03 AM
A church, or any extension there of, is not necessary to obtain a marriage license. You do realize that, right?[Edited on November 11, 2014 at 10:44 AM. Reason : .]
11/11/2014 10:43:57 AM
And a gov't license is not necessary in order to get married. Methinks you don't know what a marriage is at this point, brah.
11/11/2014 10:59:08 AM
"open to the public, unless you're gay" is against the law and they should be fined.
11/11/2014 11:08:18 AM
11/11/2014 11:13:11 AM
Actually, from a legal standpoint, no. I don't think anyone should be forced to provide service to someone if they don't want to. Would I think they were dickbags? Absolutely.But the dickbags in this case are the ones who call up a place, looking for a fight, while secretly recording the conversation, just so they can claim their poor, precious feelings were hurt.]
11/11/2014 11:21:34 AM
So when you open up shop, where are you hanging your no blacks sign?I mean, I agree with the idea, but in reality it doesn't work. That's why we have laws against it. We've already tried that little experiment... it didn't go so well. [Edited on November 11, 2014 at 12:15 PM. Reason : .]
11/11/2014 12:13:54 PM