shaktazuki wrote:The whole point of the gay marriage movement is to create a legal platform from which to criminalize religious expression - in particular, the public expression of Christianity - using <hate crime> laws.
Currently, you can say anything you want about blacks, mexicans, or gays under free speech. There was someone near where I live that had "Vote White" and other highly racist things, but the signs couldn't of been taken down because they were protected under free speech. Besides that whole thing I just said,
the purpose of the gay marriage movement is to allow same-sex couples to have the same legal rights and social status as opposite-sex couples. Simple.
shaktazuki wrote:Now that marriage has been legally defined to be the union of opposite sexes
Actually, it would be more of "A union between two consenting adults". Straight marriage would not be banned, simple as that.
shaktazuki wrote:it also is not now a crime to teach that sexual conduct outside of marriage is a sin, since such a message is not aimed at gays specifically.
Explain this to me: how would gays getting married change the ability to teach that sex outside of marriage is a sin? If anything, it would strengthen the teachings, because gays could finally follow that idea because they would be married.
shaktazuki wrote:Whether you agree with the religious perspective, you should agree that one's right to hold and teach religious beliefs must be preserved at all costs.
Yes I do agree, but this does nothing to restrict that.
At all.
shaktazuki wrote:And, if you agree that this fundamental right to believe what you want and speak your beliefs freely must be preserved at all costs, you should support prop. 8 type laws until all laws are eliminated which criminalize speech to any degree (barring direct and immediate threats which pose a clear and present danger to life, limb, or property).
If you want to eliminate crimes against hate speech, then eliminate crimes against hate speech!
There is no legislation about hate crimes in any gay marriage amendment; therefore what you can or cannot say about gays and their lives would not change.
If I "misunderstood" your argument, please say it in a way that is understandable.
If you understand spanish:
Dice el argumento en una lengua comprensible.
To address the gay convert controversy, it is very simple.
Sexuality is a very complex subject not fully understood. No one knows how your sexuality is determined, or how you'd go about changing it, but the only clear thing is that it is not a choice.
For those who say it isn't a choice: I can't wake up one day and go "Okay, I'm going to get turned on by other dudes". I'm heterosexual, and I couldn't change that even if I wanted to. I also have many sexual fetishes, and I did not choose them. Something happened to me to have them, and although I don't know if they can change, I know I can't change them by will power (trust me, tried for months, but I didn't change a bit). Preachers, prisons, or gay rehab camps can't change orientation, something has to happen inside the person's mind. None of these conversions, however, have any scientific proof.