Testiculese wrote:The fact that he wants to hold a Constitutional Convention in the first place is the threat. Defining marriage is none of the Constitution's business.
Sergeant Thorne wrote:I beg to differ. Marriage is something that is basic to life and society. I could wish that we didn't have to explicitly define something so obvious. But the need has arisen, not because conservatives are trying to force values on others, but because the core value that is marriage is under attack by those who would force the acceptance of their warped values on everyone else. Conservatives aren't the ones trying to change this country, it's the other way around.
Ferno wrote:oh, bull.
you may be able to convince yourself with that argument you just posted, but you won't be able to convince anyone else with it.
Sergeant Thorne wrote:So I'm stupid, or gullible, or both. But can you tell me at what point marriage was conceived in human history? If I won't be able to convince anyone else, there must be a reason, right?
I never did get an answer, and I don't want to just let this go.Ferno wrote:yea.. civilization as a whole is completely dependant on a man being married to a woman...
and the institution of marriage is under attack by completely warped people...
That just reeks of bigotry and ignorance.
Testi, I can see your logic, but the more I think about it, the more I believe it is based on a misrepresentation of just how basic marriage is to life and society, and possibly a misjudgment of just what the constitution is for. As I see it, the two things that must be understood in order to arrive at the truth of this are, "what is marriage?", and, "what is the constitution for?".
You can't convince me than marriage is no big deal just because the homosexuals want the norm to change to include them, or because more and more people don't even bother with marriage, except as an afterthought to an intimate, established relationship. These things don't truly effect what marriage is, they only evidence a changing perception of it. As a Christian, and a conservative, I don't care what people have decided that marriage is in light of these changes. They're "moving the boundaries," as Mike Huckabee so eloquently put it. If anyone's going to claim that marriage is not basic enough to be supported by our constitution, then let them demonstrate it using historical evidence, and without first redefining marriage. If you can't do that, then our dispute remains one of human origin, and therefore liberal vs conservative thought.
It's very important to bear in mind that Christians/conservatives weren't the ones looking to change the laws of the land, it's the special interest groups who started that. Neither are they looking to change the country from what it has always been, but rather, at this time, to necessarily solidify the definition of the institution of marriage--a definition that has always been accepted as obvious, for reasons moral, spiritual, and physical (do we need schematic drawings?)--against all attacks.