I disagreed with the way you framed his argument, that's all. Saying he doesn't want to be ostracized the way we were isn't really relevant. That's all. The important thing is not that people are ostracized, its the why and whether or not its just.
Average Guy said:You seemed to be belittling Christian concerns.kurt vonnegut said:Average Guy said:Christians shouldn't be concerned when their businesses get targeted specifically to make them compromise out they sit them down? And when they work for an employer they are more and more being told they have to affirm things which are counter to their beliefs? When deep pocketed progressives and presidential candidates say things on the subject that can only be interpreted as meaning that Christian's are going top be pushed until they either compromise or are drive out of society?kurt vonnegut said:Seamaster said:
"Has the religious right ever crossed the line?"
You tell us. Prohibition maybe?
Blue laws which kind of annoy me (if I need wine for Sunday lunch and forgot to get some Saturday.)
You could reach back into history and there was some kind of crazy stuff going on in the name of Christianity in the Middle Ages obviously.
As to my not giving any ground on the definition of the word "marriage." I stand by that 100%. I was asked at work recently what I thought about gay marriage by a superior. He wasn't fishing, I think he just was curious because i am from the south and a professed Christian.
I said exactly what I've said here: marriage is one man and one women. Period. Regardless of what a government says.
Let's go with an easy one. Same sex marriage has been illegal in the US for the majority of its existence almost solely in religious grounds with Christian organizations explicitly opposing equal rights for homosexuals. I'm not talking about "marriage" as the church sees it. I'm talking about basic equal rights. How do you justify that?
I saw a political cartoon years ago with two windows - I'm sure many will recall it or something similar. The first window has a Christian smashing an atheist over the head with a Crucifix and verbally assaulting him. The second window has the atheist grabbing the cross and about to break it over his knee with the Christian yelling he's being oppressed. I'm pretty sure you would see that comic and say "Poor Christian. That atheist stole from him and is about to destroy his property."
I'll spell out the obvious analogy so it's not misunderstood. Christians have treated gays poorly throughout most of history. Not just poorly, despicably. Now we have a couple lawsuits about Christian bakers and a political candidate threatening tax exemption removal and you act like the Gay-Apocalypse is here. You think Christians are oppressed here? *****, you don't know what real oppression is
(it doesn't matter that Beto has no chance to win the election, it only matters that he senses, probably correctly, that it will score him points with the opinion makers)
I've said multiple times that it is concerning. Who are you arguing to?
Beer Baron said:
I agree to some extent, and people have made that argument to me many times here, by the way. That's why I think the Christian in America vs. Gay in America hypothetical is more of an apples to apples situation.
In general I think we all understand that true persecution is a much higher bar to clear than discrimination is. The former also gets used in a more figurative way sometimes though.
AGC said:
I've stayed out of this thread but the, 'you're not Christian in Afghanistan' argument falls a bit flat to me.
I mean, imagine saying to BB, 'not being able to marry isn't really persecution. It's not like being gay in Saudi Arabia.' This is a really bad situation to use comparative arguments because it's self defeating.
. I would be surprised if he would allow himself to be used in this way. His statements are a huge political liability and will follow him everywhere and even make him toxic as a VP pick.swimmerbabe11 said:
I have heard the theory that everyone knows Beto is out, so therefore he is being used as a litmus test. How do people react to the crazy stuff he says. Is the base mortified about him saying the stuff about taking away guns... is the base mortified about the tax exemption.. etc.. that way they can see how far they can go or how much they need to reel back.
kurt vonnegut said:AGC said:
I've stayed out of this thread but the, 'you're not Christian in Afghanistan' argument falls a bit flat to me.
I mean, imagine saying to BB, 'not being able to marry isn't really persecution. It's not like being gay in Saudi Arabia.' This is a really bad situation to use comparative arguments because it's self defeating.
When you think about all of the injustice and oppression in the world and through history, how high do you place modern Christians in the US? That's not to say It's not worth speaking out against I'll treatment of modern American Christians. I am only suggesting that the response to it should be proportional and informed by at least a hint of perspective.
And if BB starts comparing treatment of LBGT in America with Jews in the Holocaust or something ridiculous . . . I'll tell him he's nuts.
kurt vonnegut said:. I would be surprised if he would allow himself to be used in this way. His statements are a huge political liability and will follow him everywhere and even make him toxic as a VP pick.swimmerbabe11 said:
I have heard the theory that everyone knows Beto is out, so therefore he is being used as a litmus test. How do people react to the crazy stuff he says. Is the base mortified about him saying the stuff about taking away guns... is the base mortified about the tax exemption.. etc.. that way they can see how far they can go or how much they need to reel back.
In the 1930s and 40s, Nazi's tortured and executed millions of Jews. A couple years ago a Christian was sued for not making a cake for a gay wedding. Both are examples of persecution. I would not attempt to defend either. But, I would argue that one of the examples is more troubling than the other. One brings me more sadness than the other. How about you? Murder and petty theft are both wrong. Should the punishment for these wrongs be relative / proportional to the impact of the wrongness? The impact of petty theft is relatively small compared to murder. No?AGC said:kurt vonnegut said:AGC said:
I've stayed out of this thread but the, 'you're not Christian in Afghanistan' argument falls a bit flat to me.
I mean, imagine saying to BB, 'not being able to marry isn't really persecution. It's not like being gay in Saudi Arabia.' This is a really bad situation to use comparative arguments because it's self defeating.
When you think about all of the injustice and oppression in the world and through history, how high do you place modern Christians in the US? That's not to say It's not worth speaking out against I'll treatment of modern American Christians. I am only suggesting that the response to it should be proportional and informed by at least a hint of perspective.
And if BB starts comparing treatment of LBGT in America with Jews in the Holocaust or something ridiculous . . . I'll tell him he's nuts.
I disagree with the premise that persecution should rightly be viewed relative to others (via 'perspective'). It exists or it doesn't. We've clearly seen that it exists in Colorado (and Washington, Philadelphia, Michigan). Any attempt to compare it is an attempt to diminish or demean the truth of it. Else why is it so hard would to simply say it exists here and now and needs to be fought? Your response says people should 'speak out.' To what end? Are we just tweeting? Are we writing letters hoping for legislative action? Or are we codifying protection for those with religious beliefs?
If we go across the pond English judges have begun finding Christians guilty not on the basis of belief but by sidestepping it entirely and accusing the adherents of bigotry and doubting that they sincerely have those beliefs.
What is your 'proportional' and 'informed' response to such religious persecution? Propose a solution.
kurt vonnegut said:In the 1930s and 40s, Nazi's tortured and executed millions of Jews. A couple years ago a Christian was sued for not making a cake for a gay wedding. Both are examples of persecution. I would not attempt to defend either. But, I would argue that one of the examples is more troubling than the other. One brings me more sadness than the other. How about you? Murder and petty theft are both wrong. Should the punishment for these wrongs be relative / proportional to the impact of the wrongness? The impact of petty theft is relatively small compared to murder. No?AGC said:kurt vonnegut said:AGC said:
I've stayed out of this thread but the, 'you're not Christian in Afghanistan' argument falls a bit flat to me.
I mean, imagine saying to BB, 'not being able to marry isn't really persecution. It's not like being gay in Saudi Arabia.' This is a really bad situation to use comparative arguments because it's self defeating.
When you think about all of the injustice and oppression in the world and through history, how high do you place modern Christians in the US? That's not to say It's not worth speaking out against I'll treatment of modern American Christians. I am only suggesting that the response to it should be proportional and informed by at least a hint of perspective.
And if BB starts comparing treatment of LBGT in America with Jews in the Holocaust or something ridiculous . . . I'll tell him he's nuts.
I disagree with the premise that persecution should rightly be viewed relative to others (via 'perspective'). It exists or it doesn't. We've clearly seen that it exists in Colorado (and Washington, Philadelphia, Michigan). Any attempt to compare it is an attempt to diminish or demean the truth of it. Else why is it so hard would to simply say it exists here and now and needs to be fought? Your response says people should 'speak out.' To what end? Are we just tweeting? Are we writing letters hoping for legislative action? Or are we codifying protection for those with religious beliefs?
If we go across the pond English judges have begun finding Christians guilty not on the basis of belief but by sidestepping it entirely and accusing the adherents of bigotry and doubting that they sincerely have those beliefs.
What is your 'proportional' and 'informed' response to such religious persecution? Propose a solution.
Persecution clearly happens everywhere. What is so special about Colorado, Washington, Philly, and Michigan? Are these places where Christians were persecuted? Why call them out specifically? Seamaster has all the sympathy in the world for oppressed Christians and zero for anyone else - at least none that I can see. Where do you stand? Is one of those locations the site of a great injustice against Atheists that saddens you and that you feel you must speak out against?
Is the persecution of a Christian worse than the persecution of a Muslim, Jew, Atheist, Homosexual, anyone else? If a kid was beat up at school for being gay in Alabama and another kid was beat up for being Christian in Seattle - would you feel the same sadness for both? If someone is killed for being Christian in Sudan and someone is killed for being a Muslim in North Carolina, do you feel the same sadness? If one person believes that homosexuals should have fewer civil rights and another person believes that Christians should have fewer civil rights, is one better than the other?
Perspective does not serve to justify persecution, in my opinion. But I do think its necessary for understanding it. Earlier in this thread, Seamaster showed himself incapable of understanding that homosexuals feel like they've been persecuted and poorly treated by Christians in America, historically. Regardless of whether or not Christians have persecuted gays, the fact that he does not understand this, I think, shows that he is unwilling to understand their perspective. Again, this justifies nothing. Its only an explanation. And this lack of perspective goes both ways. But, saying it goes both ways still doesn't justify being unwilling to understand someone else's perspective.
XUSCR said:
Username checks out.
Good grief.
SCHTICK00 said:XUSCR said:
Username checks out.
Good grief.
Not really. Passive aggressive is more like it. An antagonist
Beer Baron said:
Also telling that he's never seen posting anything else. Just comes out of the woodwork to jab somebody. It's like when the GB has a gay topic and suddenly there's an influx of Forum 16 posters who never post there otherwise. In many cases when and where you chose to post says as much about you as the words you type do.