cb1000rider wrote:Our country was founded by people fleeing religious persecution. Religious persecution, at some level is people of a particular religious affiliation not granting the same rights as those who are not associated. I agree with you that there is nothing constitutional guaranteeing a separation of church and state, but I believe it is a fundamental principle.
No, they were fleeing King George and they wanted free land and to get rich.
cb1000rider wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote: Homosexuality is not a constitutionally protected class, so your attempt to harken back to racial issues fails.
There were no protected classes when the constitution was drafted. I think that fact validates my argument even more. The fact is that as we evolve as a country, the things that need protection change.
There still aren't. Protected classes are unconstitutionally created by federal statutes. Every single protected class in existence today was created by bill that passed Congress (age, race, religion, etc.). No such statute exists for homosexuals, thus there's no basis for the Supreme Court's decision.
cb1000rider wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:I'm an attorney and I know precisely what all citizens rights are in terms of currently available partnerships. Taxation is different in terms of the different marriage deduction for federal income tax purposes, but apparently you forgot about the so-called "marriage penalty" that actually penalized married couples.
No, I didn't forget. If you're an attorney, you're probably well educated and I can't imagine that you believe that same-sex couples have the exact same rights as married couples.
I never said that "they" had the same rights as married couples, nor should they. Heterosexuals who are unmarried do not have the same rights as married couples, at least in the context in which you reference "rights." I pointed out that they can accomplish almost the same goals by the use of contracts, as can heterosexuals.
cb1000rider wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:I don't make "my morality," and this is precisely the problem. When liberals and those supporting them argue that there is no "truth," no "right," and that each person should establish their own morality, then society is doomed. There is one morality, like it or not, accept it or not.
We all make our own morality to some degree. If personal morality was black and white, things would be a lot easier.
To me, this isn't an issue about a moral right.. I don't argue morality here. I argue equality. If I felt that there was civil equality and legal equality, then things would be different on my end.
No we don't, we don't have that right, authority or ability. Some CLAIM to create their own morality as an excuse for doing that which is unacceptable to society. Unfortunately, an ever increasing segment of American society buys your argument that everyone should be able to "do what is right in their own eyes." That's why this country isn't a shadow of what it once was only a few decades ago and why it will likely not survive many more.
cb1000rider wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:
I also could not disagree with you more on the issue of what our servicemen fought and died for in so many wars.
Chas.
I think they fought and died so we can have civil disagreements. So we can live in a country that is diversive in terms of belief system. So we can live in a country where the majority class doesn't try and exterminate a minority class, just because they judge themselves to be morally (or genetically) superior... And yea, I'm being dramatic, but in the past this country has a history of discriminating with great prejudice against unprotected minority citizens.
Too bad there isn't a way to ask veterans and active servicemen if their service was/is so each person back home can do whatever is right in their own eyes and thumb their noses at morals that society has accepted until recently. I think you would be disappointed.
Chas.