FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > IIDB ARCHIVE: 200X-2003, PD 2007 > IIDB Philosophical Forums (PRIOR TO JUN-2003)
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 05:55 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 06-12-2003, 09:50 PM   #131
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Calgary
Posts: 1,335
Default

Quote:
To those with an empiricist mindset, that is no doubt the case. Such people need to be debating someone besides me, it appears.
At the risk of having this devolve further into the argument sketch:
Quote:
An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition. [...] Argument is an intellectual process. Contradiction is just the automatic gainsaying of any statement the other person makes.
Looking familiar to anyone?
~~~~~~~~~~

Quote:
This, of course, is the problem. You are so determined to prove me wrong that you are utterly incapable of appraising what I say dispassionately.
I have little respect for your position as you have steadfastly refused to clarify or substantiate your position at any time. I have specifically asked you a number of questions intended to further elucidate information from you so I could better understand your position.
This is the same position that has essentially been boiled down to "I'm right because I said so."
In refusing to provide evidence or elaborate on your points suggests to me that you are an agitator with no actual interest in discussing the issue in a thoughtful and rational manner. Of course, another word comes to mind...... I think it starts with a "T"......
....Never mind. I'm sure I'll figure it out soon enough.
Godot is offline  
Old 06-12-2003, 10:01 PM   #132
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Bloomington, Indiana
Posts: 188
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Godot
This is the same position that has essentially been boiled down to "I'm right because I said so."
Let's be honest, it didn't really start as anything else. It's things like this, combined with his refusal to answer any question with a substantive response, the frequent insults, and his condescending nature that makes me wonder what he hopes to accomplish here.

Oh, and one more thing-

Quote:
An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition. [...] Argument is an intellectual process. Contradiction is just the automatic gainsaying of any statement the other person makes.
No it isn't!
PandaJoe is offline  
Old 06-12-2003, 10:09 PM   #133
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 2,199
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Godot
According to this line of reasoning, single-parent families are equally devoid of value?
Single parent families are generally inferior to the traditional nuclear family, though there are obvious exceptions.

Quote:
Really though, do you honestly think that a homosexual marriage is a pre-meditated conspiracy to undermine the moral fabric of society?
Any particular such marriage? Of course not. However, it IS based on an implicit determination to deprive the child of one role model or the other.

Quote:
Watch Springer sometime. Not much of that fabric is left intact.
Swell. Since the roof is leaking, lets burn the house down.

Quote:
Upon what foundation do you base such a belief? If it is your personal opinion, that is one thing. If you are submitting it as an objective reality, that is another matter altogether.
It is self-evident to me that gender-confused people have to some degree forgotten who they are, having been pressured or seduced into the lifestyle. Having failed to respond properly to such influence themselves, they will tend generally, when their children encounter them, to be at a loss to help them - or they may unknowingly be that bad influence.

Quote:
What sorts of problems do you expect these traumatised children to exhibit?
I'd imagine problems similar to those in any disfunctional family, only more so.
yguy is offline  
Old 06-12-2003, 10:35 PM   #134
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Calgary
Posts: 1,335
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by yguy
Single parent families are generally inferior to the traditional nuclear family, though there are obvious exceptions.
How so?
Quote:
Any particular such marriage? Of course not. However, it IS based on an implicit determination to deprive the child of one role model or the other.
And the child cannot have a positive role model of the deficient gender from elsewhere?
Quote:
Swell. Since the roof is leaking, lets burn the house down.
I live in a cave on the other side of the world. You and I do not share the same concerns, though it is a bit drafty in here...
Quote:
It is self-evident to me that gender-confused people have to some degree forgotten who they are, having been pressured or seduced into the lifestyle. Having failed to respond properly to such influence themselves, they will tend generally, when their children encounter them, to be at a loss to help them - or they may unknowingly be that bad influence.
Ah.
Well in that case,
Quote:
I'd imagine problems similar to those in any disfunctional family, only more so.
So the only appreciable difference between hetero and homo relationships is the degree of dysfunction in the unit?
Godot is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 03:59 AM   #135
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Seattle
Posts: 4,261
Default

Here's some things I researched tonight:
Quote:
yguy:
Traditional marriage made America not just the most powerful country in the world, but the noblest and most compassionate. In effect, the history of the country from the founding until WWII is a monumental case study demonstrating the value of traditional morality, including marriage.
Apparently yguy is talking about a different America than the one I'm familiar with.

http://www.lambdalegal.org/cgi-bin/i...rd?record=1067
Racism and Marriage: At one point, 40 states prohibited the marriage of a white person to a person of color. These marriages were condemned as "immoral" and "unnatural."

Women In Marriage: For hundreds of years, women had few or no legal rights once married. Married women had no independent legal existence: they could not form contracts, have full ownership and control of property, or maintain their own names. Some of these inequalities continued well into the 20th century.

http://www.rutlandherald.com/legisla...000/panel.html
Nancy F. Cott, a professor of history and American studies at Yale University, told the House Judiciary Committee on Monday that at the time of the American Revolution polygamy was the more normal practice around the world. Marriage, she said, was "often polygamous, often informal and often not life-long."

"Christian monogamists were a minority," Cott said. "But they were a crusading minority because they thought they were right."

http://www.indiebride.com/interviews/cott/
Marriage has been important in race politics and citizenship. In the book, you discuss how the government used marriage to "Americanize" and control ex-slaves, Native Americans, and immigrants. Can you talk more about that?

In terms of the racial aspect of the story, it is interesting how consistently I found that the national government held coercive policies on marriage towards groups designated as nonwhite. This was certainly true for African Americans, Native Americans and immigrants, primarily Asians, but also true for Mormons. Because the Mormons practiced polygamy (which was seen as characteristic of Asia and Africa), they were figuratively "nonwhite.”

http://www.geocities.com/mollyjoyful/marriage.html
Heterosexual marriage began as a method of firming tribal alliances, procreation and tracing inheritance rights. Historical marriages documented in the Bible were barbarous, in which women were seized during warfare to become wives. Parents viewed their daughters as child-bearing commodities, and just as frequently sold their children into slavery. Polygamy was frequent, especially in early Biblical marriages, such as the stories of Solomon and his "700 wives, princesses and 300 concubines,” as related in 1 Kings 11:3 (Revised Standard Version).

In England and early United States, wives were not legally allowed to inherit money or property after the death of their husband, and all money and property were given to the closest male relative. Young American women raised in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries constantly added clothing and furniture to their dowries, in order to enhance their marriageability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some interesting parallels for everyone to think about:

Quote:
yguy:
Can't speak for everybody, but at least some of us on this side of the issue are looking at the long term possiblities for erosion of moral infrastraucture. No way in the world will a nation survive if gender confusion becomes the norm; and that surely is where things like homosexual marriage are leading us.
http://www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/CCCi...cked=3&item=12
But the views of some CCC members go beyond wistfulness for lost white privilege and disfavor toward encroaching minorities and multicultural change. In an article posted on the Arkansas Web site, for instance, Dr. James Owens, a former Dean of the American University School of Business, hypothesizes that a second civil war is imminent and suggests that Southern states secede from "the Union" in hope of creating segregated living spaces for the country's different races. In his scenario, the "silent, white majority" will become shocked into taking action by the catastrophic genetic effects of interracial marriage and by the inevitable rise of an accompanying police state.

It was this story which Henry Pratt Fairchild, past president of the American Sociological Association, expressed in 1926 when he said: "If America is to remain a stable nation, it must continue a white man's country for an indefinite period to come."
Quote:
yguy:
It is quite possible that, were it possible to dissect every marriage, one might conclude that most marriages are similarly based. Obviously we cannot formulate public policy based on individual cases, so we must take care not to grant societal approval to unions which, if they became prolific, would have a corrosive effect on our moral foundation.
The differential punishment for interracial cohabitation was directed not "against the person of any particular color or race, but against the offense, the nature of which is determined by the opposite color of the cohabiting parties," an offense whose "evil tendency" was greater than if both parties were of the same race, as it might lead to "a mongrel population and a degraded civilization."

Justice Buchanan assured Virginia authorities…. "No such claim for the intermarriage of the races could be supported; by no sort of valid reasoning could it be found to be a foundation of good citizenship or a right which must be made available to all on equal terms." He could find nothing in the U.S. Constitution, he wrote, that would "prohibit the State from enacting legislation to preserve the racial integrity of its citizens, or which denies the power of the State to regulate the marriage relation so that it shall not have a mongrel breed of citizens."
Quote:
yguy:
From a public policy perspective, that is not the issue, but whether as a general rule such "marriages" would degrade the institution as a whole.
Less than 30 years ago many in this Nation believed that
allowing interracial couples to marry would seriously denigrate
American society, and many State laws reflected that.
Quote:
yguy:
I have no doubt, however, that children raised by homosexual parents will be inferior to those from stable, traditional marriages by and large. When these children grow up and get married, they will have all kinds of problems.
http://academic.udayton.edu/race/04n...louis.htm#Only
There were many justifications to uphold the laws which stated that marriage between races were forbidden and criminal. Three major justifications are explained by the author which are: White supremacy, protection of White womanhood, and the prevention of mixed race offspring. The third justification was based on popular belief that children of interracial marriages were mentally and physically inferior to pure White race children.

scigirl
scigirl is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 08:41 AM   #136
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Kansas
Posts: 51
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by yguy
How you could get that idea I don't know. I'm talking about the media proclivity for portraying homosexuals as, in many cases, more "together" than heteros - of glorifying the lifestyle.
Well, maybe I just don't watch enough TV, but I am unaware of a single example of this in the media. Can you cite any examples?

Quote:
When did I say they were, necessarily?
OK, I don't think you explicitly said this in so many words, but let's recap the discussion on this point heretofore. (It diverges into a couple of subthreads, but I've tried to include all the relevant discussion in as clear a manner as possible.)

Quote:
yguy: ...gender confusion and the selfishness which spawned it produce an environment which is increasingly hostile to children, which produces a decline in population, inducing the government to loosen immigration laws to maintain the population base.

NHGH: OK, this is where things get really confusing.

1) You assert that "gender confusion", which you previously defined as "men acting like women and vice versa", is the result of "selfishness". (You never answered Hedwig's request for clarification, but I'll just assume here that you meant this only in a sexual/relationship context. You can correct me if I'm wrong.) Why do you think that engaging in homosexual relationships is any more "selfish" than engaging in heterosexual relationships?

2) How does it "produce an environment which is increasingly hostile to children" to have people involved in gay relationships? And how does this lead to a population decline? (Obviously, gay sex doesn't produce offspring, but there are gays with children, either adopted or conceived via surrogates, so I don't see a firm connection between gay relationships and population decline.)

yguy: I submit that any relationship outside of traditional marriage is selfish at root, because it amounts to using another person strictly for self-gratification...

For about the hundredth time, it's not "gay" relationships per se, but any sexual relationship based on mutual use that is the problem. Any offspring of such a union can hardly hold the parents in high esteem. Acceptance of homosexuality is only a symptom of a more fundamental flaw in the culture.

NHGH: I think we may be getting at the crux of the problem here. (And in the following, I assume that by "traditional marriage" you mean a marriage between a man and a woman, for the purpose of producing offspring. Feel free to correct me if this isn't accurate.)

Why do you believe this? Is it not possible that gays--or for that matter, straight couples not united in a "traditional marriage"--care about the welfare of their partners, rather than seeing them as nothing more than sex objects? Is it not possible that they feel happy for their partners' good fortune in life, and sad for their partners' misfortunes? I can't see why a "traditional marriage", or for that matter any sexual relationship at all, is necessary to feel genuine concern for the welfare of others...

If this is to have any force as an argument against gay marriage, I think you still need to demonstrate, rather than merely assert or suggest, that all gay relationships are necessarily relationships "based on mutual use".

yguy: Just as there are no completely unselfish people, there are no completely selfish people, obviously...

It is quite possible that, were it possible to dissect every marriage, one might conclude that most marriages are similarly based. Obviously we cannot formulate public policy based on individual cases, so we must take care not to grant societal approval to unions which, if they became prolific, would have a corrosive effect on our moral foundation.

NHGH: Plainly correct, to which the logical follow-up question is: What is your basis for asserting that heterosexual couples are more unselfish than homosexual couples?

...Again, this cannot conceivably serve as an argument against gay marriage unless you provide some good reason at least to believe that gay relationships are more likely than straight relationships to be "based on mutual use". Even then, it would be highly debatable.

yguy: When did I say they were, necessarily?

...From a public policy perspective, that is not the issue, but whether as a general rule such "marriages" would degrade the institution as a whole.
As I read this exchange, your point was originally that the "selfishness" embodied in gay relationships is harmful to children and thus we should oppose gay marriage (even going so far as to assert at one point that "it's not 'gay' relationships per se, but any sexual relationship based on mutual use that is the problem"). That line of argument just won't fly unless you assume that gay relationships are more likely to be "selfish" than straight relationships, so I assumed that you were at least implicitly making that claim.

But now, you've had to back off from that point because it was completely untenable, so you're arguing instead that gay marriage "would have a corrosive effect on our moral foundation" and "would degrade the institution as a whole." To this I can only say: How? Even if we grant the dubious premise that gay relationships are somehow morally “inferior” to straight relationships, how does it “have a corrosive effect on our moral foundation” if we legally recognize their domestic relationships, grant them the same civil benefits as “traditional” marriages, establish some degree of legally enforced commitment in order to lend a measure of stability, etc? How does it affect anyone else’s marriage if a handful of men (women) decide to marry other men (women)? Would that make your marriage, if any, less significant? What do the private domestic arrangements of one couple have to do with those of another?


Quote:
If one insisted on trivializing the idea to the point that children=good, you'd have a point. Obviously what we're looking for is a generation of children who are stronger and freer than the previous one. Acceptance of gender confusion as normal will lead us in the other direction.
Another contentious assertion, and in my view, lacking proper foundation as well: I don't see how permitting gay marriages constitutes "[a]cceptance of gender confusion as normal". I think most Americans are intellectually sophisticated enough that they can distinguish between the government conferring its stamp of approval on gay marriage, and simply recognizing that the private domestic arrangements of its citizens are not an appropriate subject matter for public policy.

Quote:
The problem with "gay marriage" specifically, of course, is that it necessarily and in calculated fashion deprives the child of either a father or a mother.
That much is obvious. What's less obvious is why this would be objectionable. I mean, I can see why a two-parent family might be preferable to a single-parent family when practicable, just for logistical reasons, i.e. the necessity of supporting a family economically while also providing adequate supervision for children. I don't see where gender enters into this, though.

But assuming for the sake of argument that gay marriage is indeed a "problem" for this reason, let me throw out this suggestion: suppose a (male) gay couple and a lesbian couple were to move into a single large house together and raise their children jointly. Would this alleviate your concerns about those children being deprived of either a father or a mother?

Quote:
From a public policy perspective, that is not the issue, but whether as a general rule such "marriages" would degrade the institution as a whole.
I've already addressed this point above.

Quote:
No significant effect will be seen in the short term, or possibly even in our lifetimes. I have no doubt, however, that children raised by homosexual parents will be inferior to those from stable, traditional marriages by and large. When these children grow up and get married, they will have all kinds of problems
Of course, others, including myself, have doubts. But then, since you grant that "[n]o significant effect will be seen in the short term, or possibly even in our lifetimes," the assertion is conveniently untestable.

Quote:
That is true enough from the POV of rank and file homosexuals, but they are being used by political operatives who are hostile to traditional values to try to intimidate those of us who are not into doubting what we know.
"Contentious" would be an understatement. Here we're veering perilously close to out-and-out conspiracy theory.

If true, however, this would be (if you'll pardon the expression) a pretty limp-wristed effort at intimidation. The only way I can see that this would intimidate anyone is if that person had arrogated to himself the right to dictate to others what domestic arrangements they might or might not enter into, and thus took the legal recognition of the rights of others to determine their own domestic arrangements as a sort of personal encroachment.

Quote:
Thirty years ago, it was unsubstantiated hyperbole that acceptance of homosexuality would open the door to acceptance of pedophilia.
As far as I know, it still is.

Quote:
Just a few years ago, the American Psycological Association was headed by Martin Seligman, a man who has spoken positively of his pedophilic experience as a nine year old;
I don't suppose you can provide a link to some evidence for this claim...

Quote:
and apparently there is a move afoot in the American Psychiatric Association to do for pedohilia what it did for homosexuality, if a report (which I've been unable to confirm from a mainstream source) from the NARTH site is accurate.
Again, care to provide a cite?

But frankly, if what you meant by "do[ing] for pedophilia what it did for homosexuality" was simply to remove it from the DSM as a mental disorder, then I fail to see how that constitutes "acceptance of pedophilia", any more than, say, removing kleptomania from the DSM would constitute acceptance of theft.
NHGH is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 08:53 AM   #137
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 2,199
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by scigirl
Here's some things I researched tonight:

Apparently yguy is talking about a different America than the one I'm familiar with.

http://www.lambdalegal.org/cgi-bin/i...rd?record=1067
Racism and Marriage: At one point, 40 states prohibited the marriage of a white person to a person of color. These marriages were condemned as "immoral" and "unnatural."

Women In Marriage: For hundreds of years, women had few or no legal rights once married. Married women had no independent legal existence: they could not form contracts, have full ownership and control of property, or maintain their own names. Some of these inequalities continued well into the 20th century.
And why did some of those inequalities NOT continue? Because this is a nation which can admit when it's wrong - an integral component of nobility.

Quote:
http://www.rutlandherald.com/legisla...000/panel.html
Nancy F. Cott, a professor of history and American studies at Yale University, told the House Judiciary Committee on Monday that at the time of the American Revolution polygamy was the more normal practice around the world. Marriage, she said, was "often polygamous, often informal and often not life-long."
You've utterly lost me on this one. What on earth do worldwide marriage practices have to do with whether traditional marriage is a good thing? Is this the "Eat s***, 10 billion flies can't be wrong" defense?

Quote:
"Christian monogamists were a minority," Cott said. "But they were a crusading minority because they thought they were right."
It appears to this observer that indeed they were substantially correct. Those who think the world would have been better off having been carved up by the Axis powers in WWII would have a different view, I suppose.

Quote:
http://www.indiebride.com/interviews/cott/
Marriage has been important in race politics and citizenship. In the book, you discuss how the government used marriage to "Americanize" and control ex-slaves, Native Americans, and immigrants. Can you talk more about that?

In terms of the racial aspect of the story, it is interesting how consistently I found that the national government held coercive policies on marriage towards groups designated as nonwhite. This was certainly true for African Americans, Native Americans and immigrants, primarily Asians, but also true for Mormons. Because the Mormons practiced polygamy (which was seen as characteristic of Asia and Africa), they were figuratively "nonwhite.”
That a decent institution can be used by government to nefarious ends I don't deny. You'll never find anything that's immune to that.

Quote:
http://www.geocities.com/mollyjoyful/marriage.html
Heterosexual marriage began as a method of firming tribal alliances, procreation and tracing inheritance rights.
This is merely an attempt to trivialize marriage by focusing on the more material aspects of it

Quote:
Historical marriages documented in the Bible were barbarous, in which women were seized during warfare to become wives. Parents viewed their daughters as child-bearing commodities, and just as frequently sold their children into slavery.
I don't advocate any of that, and I don't know of any mainstream Christians who do either.

Quote:
Polygamy was frequent, especially in early Biblical marriages, such as the stories of Solomon and his "700 wives, princesses and 300 concubines,” as related in 1 Kings 11:3 (Revised Standard Version).
Although polygamy was not prohibited by Mosaic law that I'm aware, neither did it have the divine seal of approval. The precedent started with Abraham, who found it convenient to obey his wife's idiotic suggestion, which produced the progenitor of the Arab race which troubles Israel to this day. Hardly a glowing testimonial for polygamy. Likewise, both David and Solomon had earthly hell to pay for their promiscuity.

Quote:
Some interesting parallels for everyone to think about: <snip>
The parallel doesn't work unless you can show that homosexuality is as much a product of genetics as skin color.

So scigirl, while you have indeed pointed out some flaws in early American society, it seems you have not done much damage to my assertion regarding America's virtue, since I never claimed we were ever perfect.
yguy is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 08:59 AM   #138
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Seattle
Posts: 4,261
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by yguy
The parallel doesn't work unless you can show that homosexuality is as much a product of genetics as skin color.
Here's a question for the audience - why do homophobes and anti-gay/lesbian-rights people insist on this fact?

Why does yguy think it's totally ok to discriminate against someone for something a person chooses. Such as, perhaps, religion? Can any rational person explain this to me?

I'm so tired of gay and lesbian bigotry - will we ever see the day when people like yguy realize the error of their ways, like as yguy pointed out, we did with slavery (finally)? It's funny that he points that out, yet he can't see his own unfounded bigotry staring him in the face.

Sigh,

well maybe I'll move to the netherlands after all.
scigirl is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 09:19 AM   #139
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Portsmouth, England
Posts: 4,652
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by yguy
Those who think the world would have been better off having been carved up by the Axis powers in WWII would have a different view, I suppose.
These were the same Axis powers that argued for complete monogomy, the execution of homosexuals and severe punishments for premarital sex? Seems to me you would welcome them with open arms!

Actually come to think of it these Axis poweres you speak of were almost exclusively monogomist, nuclear family centric and highly religiously ethically minded, how come they didn't win?

Amen-Moses
Amen-Moses is offline  
Old 06-13-2003, 10:05 AM   #140
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 2,199
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Amen-Moses
These were the same Axis powers that argued for complete monogomy, the execution of homosexuals and severe punishments for premarital sex? Seems to me you would welcome them with open arms!
Of course it does, because you're the kind of person who would try to make me out to be Hitler if I had the same haircut as he did.

Quote:
Actually come to think of it these Axis poweres you speak of were almost exclusively monogomist, nuclear family centric and highly religiously ethically minded, how come they didn't win?
The pharisees were all that stuff too.
yguy is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:13 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.