Traditional Marriage (was Books discussion)
Did a Christian just say holy shit and for the love of god on the same post?
awesome.
On the subject of your point's clarification, that
it's just as silly that people should change their opinion of a person based on one opinion that person holds-- if
he wasn't sitting on the board of a lobbying organization try to legislate that opinion into law I wouldn't have given a flying fuck about the man.
However, the moment a person's \"opinion\" becomes \"action\" to remove or otherwise block equal access to
legal rights enjoyed by married couples, then
people who think it's silly to dislike those who hold such opinions can go
give a razor bladed pinecone a blowjob, and deserve no civility from me.
Alright, are you interpreting this back-and-forth as a fight? Because I'm not really sure what my diction has to do with anything, unless you're trying to attack me on personal grounds, asserting that I'm not a "good Christian" or whatever. And what I do with my pinecones is quite frankly none of your business. Perhaps I reacted with a bit more indignation than was due, but just remember who asserted that I held the exact opposite opinion that I actually do.
Now, to the thrust of your reply: I saw the links the first time through, and my opinion still holds. This man sitting on a board for a anti-gay-marriage organization is not qualitatively any different than another man sitting on a board for an organization trying to push gay-marriage into law. I mean, the other man has an opinion too. Is it somehow more valid because it's the opposite of Orson Scott Card's opinion?
You'll probably argue yes, because you seem to be of the opinion that - because the gay rights movement is taking some sort of
positive action, trying to spread new rights to those who didn't have them before, it's somehow more justified. But what if I started an organization trying to win voting rights for six year olds? People would remind me that voting is something that a six year old should not be able to do. This guy is saying the same thing: just instead of six year olds, his target is homosexuals, and instead of voting, the issue at hand is marriage.
I realize that six year olds voting and grown adults marrying persons of the same gender have a few qualitative differences that set them apart. But I don't care enough to find a better example, because as I alluded to in the first paragraph of this reply, I'm actually
for gay marriage.
But you would effectively charge Orson Scott Card of a thoughtcrime, which isn't cool. And in the end, perhaps Orson Scott Card
isn't justified in his opinion. I know if we were both sitting at a bar, and it came up, I would probably take issue with his view. But if you are of the opinion that he shouldn't want to, or shouldn't be allowed to express that opinion, then I
definitely take issue with that.