You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-3   3-27   28-52   53-77   78-102   103-127   128-152   153-177   178-202 
 203-227   228-252   253-277   278-293       
 
Author Message
25 new of 293 responses total.
gelinas
response 3 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 12:55 UTC 2003

Safire isn't waffling: "As moral-political issues go, this big one
deserves examination in communities with minds that can deal with internal
contradictions   which is the libcon way."

This is both a legal issue and a cultural issue, as you note.  The culture is
not going to change because the law changes.
remmers
response 4 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 13:43 UTC 2003

"The culture is not going to change because the law changes."

Well, I don't know about that.  Around 1953 one might have said the same
thing about racial segregation in the American South.  Then the law changed,
and the law was enforced.  There was much resistance to change within the
culture, but cultural change eventually did follow.  Without the impetus
provided by the changes in laws, I very much doubt that this would have
happened.
bhoward
response 5 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 14:04 UTC 2003

The two chase each other and at other times they push each other.
Sometimes things get really nasty and they pull against each other but I
really can't recall a time when law and culture ever ignored each other
for any significant amount of time.
jep
response 6 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 14:40 UTC 2003

Safire doesn't take a stand.  He dances around some of the various 
issues but he doesn't give his view.  He says he wants to see local 
communities discuss the issue and decide what they think.  He can 
neither encourage that nor stop it.  They do it all the time.  Nice 
that it gives him some warm fuzzies to see it occurring.  I guess.
other
response 7 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 14:48 UTC 2003

Nice item, Richard.
gull
response 8 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 15:35 UTC 2003

Re resp:0: I think Safire is right about most things in that piece, but
wrong about the Texas sodomy ruling "opening the door" for agitation for
gay marriage.  People were agitating for gay marriage long before that
ruling.  In fact, the ruling seems to have provoked a backlash.

Re resp:2: I keep hearing that this is going to be a big issue in the
upcoming election, but I don't see why.  The Democrats are not going to
make a big deal about gay marriage, because they know the majority of
the public isn't going to support it.  The people who *are* strongly for
gay marriage will still vote Democratic because, let's face it, they
have no other options.  Likewise, Bush already has a lock on the
Religious Right's vote, so he doesn't really need to play to them on
this issue.  At most it'll be a sidenote the Republicans will attempt to
use in an exaggerated way as a scare tactic.  (<serious announcer
voice>The Democrats want to force your church to marry queers!  Vote
Bush 2004.</voice>)

Re resp:6: Still, Safire is a conservative commentator.  It's pretty
striking, to me, that he doesn't come right out against the whole
concept of gay marriage.  Cal Thomas, for example, would have approached
the subject very differently.
jep
response 9 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 16:27 UTC 2003

I think Safire made a good point in comparing homosexual marriage to 
interracial marriage.  Both have been outlawed in the past.  Legalizing 
interracial marriage went a long way toward humanizing minorities.

I think he's exactly right when he said:

   [T]he ancient word conveys a powerful message. Civil union connotes 
   toleration of homosexuality, with its attendant recognition of an 
   individual's civil rights; but marriage connotes society's full 
   approval of homosexuality, with previous moral judgment reversed.

Legalizing homosexual marriage removes the force of society's angry 
frown of disapproval from homosexual relationships.  People will still 
be uncomfortable and unhappy about homosexuality.  Many, maybe most, 
people still feel awkward about interracial marriage.  So what?  Some 
feel uncomfortable about interfaith marriages.  Those have been legal 
for a century at least, and I don't know anyone who thinks they should 
not be.  People said interracial marriages were proscribed by the 
Bible, too.  I for one still think legalizing them was a good idea.

I'm for legalizing homosexual marriages.  If they have to be 
called "civil unions", then so should heterosexual marriages.  There 
shouldn't be any legal distinctions between the two, such as tax 
advantages.

Like Safire, I'd describe myself as somewhere between a libertarian and 
a conservative.  I wouldn't draw the lines quite where he does, so I 
guess I'm not a "libcon".  I can live with that.
jep
response 10 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 16:53 UTC 2003

I am sure the GOP leadership would like to make homosexual marriage 
into a campaign issue, much like they tried to do with flag burning a 
few elections ago.  It'll be more likely to be a big issue if Howard 
Dean is nominated.

Homosexual marriage is a big, important, critical issue to a lot of 
people.  If the Democratic Party allows it to become a central campaign 
issue, then they'll lose the next election, because it's the sort of 
issue that will get a lot of people out and voting.  I hope that 
doesn't happen.
klg
response 11 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 17:22 UTC 2003

re:  "#10 (jep):  . . . Homosexual marriage is a big, important, 
critical issue to a lot of people."

How many?
rcurl
response 12 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 17:25 UTC 2003

I also am unclear on what Safire is "proposing". Perhaps  he just had a
column deadline to meet but hadn't any new (or old) ideas. 

I'm inclined to think that if "civil unions" of homosexuals were widely
permitted, essentially equal to marriage in law, those so united would
themselves still say they are "married" (that could not be outlawed), and
slowly the distinction would melt.

vidar
response 13 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 17:59 UTC 2003

I'm getting tired of politicians making big deals out of what I see as 
non-issues.  Of course, I also know that they play to whomever is 
giving them the most money.  The Religious WRONG in Bush's case.  I 
also don't understand why people get so worked up about things that are 
going to have absolutely NO impact on them.

Politicians need to focus on politics.  My grandmother, a lifetime 
Repiblican, stopped voting Republician because of making abortion the 
major issue.  One of the founding principles of this country is 
religious freedom, and the Christian theocracy that the Religious WRONG 
is pushing for makes me sick.  After all, one of the reasons the 
colonists left England was to escape religious oppression.

Again, why worry about things that don't affect you?
jep
response 14 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 18:52 UTC 2003

re resp:11: I'm not sure what you want.  Are you disputing what I said?
richard
response 15 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 19:26 UTC 2003

re: #8....the reason the GOP and Bush's folks will run hard on the gay
marriage issue is that polls consistently show that there is a distinct gender
gap on this.  Younger voters, who grew up in a more accepting culture, are
far more likely to have less of an issue with legalizing gay marriage.  But
older voters, over age fifty, grew up in a different time and a lot of them
see legalizing gay marriage as another instance of the world changing from
what they know and the world they grew up in.  

The Bush people are making a big run at getting larger chunks of the senior
citizens vote next year.  With a proposed consitutional amendment to outlaw
gay marriage, they figure they will not only rally their base, but also
attract a lot of older voters who might place extra importance on such
cultural issues.  Also they figure such an amendment will play well in the
south, which is the region traditionally most resistant to cultural change
(see civil rights era)  So if they think they have a hot button issue sure
to help them among older voters and in south, what does that add up to? ONe
word-- Florida.  The state that decided the election last time.  Also the Bush
folks presumably think they can use this issue to bring out rural white
voters-- who polls show strongly oppose gay marriage-- in key states like
Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.  
richard
response 16 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 19:38 UTC 2003

Think about what happened when Clinton became president and he tried to
fulfill a campaign promise to change the rules so openly gay people can serve
in the military.  There was a huge hue and cry, people-- military veterans,
older voters-- saying that you can't force cultural change on the military.
The reality is that you COULD have gays in the military now because younger
people aren't as homophobic as their parents or grandparents.  But the old
guard that still runs the military couldn't see that, and they rallied a lot
of support among older voters, white male rural voters, conservative southern
voters.  The result was "Don't Ask, Don't Tell", a sham of a policy which
encourages gay people to stay in the closet and doesn't promote acceptance
and understanding.  

The same sort of factors are in play with legalizing gay marriage.  The same
people who don't want to know that gay people might be in their troops, are
the ones who don't want to know that gay people are getting marriage licenses.
scott
response 17 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 19:40 UTC 2003

Oh, I agree the Republicans will make an issue of gay marriage.  Regardless
of what the Democratic position is, they'll be accused of supporting it.
slynne
response 18 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 21:04 UTC 2003

If we ever find ourselves in a position where we have a draft, I have a 
feeling that homosexuals will be allowed to serve openly in the 
military. Either that or you'll have a whole lot of young men 
pretending to be homosexual in order to avoid going to war. If they 
drafted women and didnt allow lesbians in, I would be french kissing 
some chick while waiting in line. 

happyboy
response 19 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 22:18 UTC 2003

can i have polaroids?
gelinas
response 20 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 2 23:49 UTC 2003

(Apparently, homosexuality was NOT used to avoid the draft during the Vietnam
War.  Of course, homosexuality was not as acceptable then as it is now.)
slynne
response 21 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 03:01 UTC 2003

exactly my point
richard
response 22 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 03:36 UTC 2003

If you read historical accounts, you wouldn't believe how Harry Truman was
attacked when he ordered the military de-segregated.  The old guard military
leaders screamed that it was against the military culture, that blacks had
to be in black troops and whites in white troops.  Truman, to his credit, told
them basically, "get over it"  Truman signed Executive Order #9981 in 1948
and unilaterally de-segregated the army.  And you know what? the military DID
learn to live with it, and became more tolerant as a result.  Sometimes people
WON'T accept cultural change unless it is forced upon them.  That's just life.

There is no question that people would get used to gays in the military and
gays getting married, and after a while not even think about it anymore.  
russ
response 23 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 05:00 UTC 2003

Re #20:

        If one guy comes in, sings a bar of Alice's Restaurant and walks
        out, they'll think he's really sick and they won't take him.

        And if two people do it... if two people walk in, sing a bar of
        Alice's Restaurant and walk out, they'll think they're both
        faggots and they won't take either of 'em.

                        -- Arlo Guthrie (errors mine)
gull
response 24 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 14:47 UTC 2003

Leonard Pitts, Jr. did a column about gay marriage recently, too:
http://www.freep.com/voices/columnists/pitts28_20031128.htm

He thinks that the focus on gay marriage is a misdirection ploy by the
Republicans, meant to distract people from the war and the budget
deficit.  He also thinks that Republicans will focus on "gay marriage",
not "civil unions", because including the word "marriage" gets more of a
visceral reaction from people.
bru
response 25 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 16:31 UTC 2003

Being gay is illegal under the UCMJ, or has that regulation been changed?
vidar
response 26 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 17:36 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

vidar
response 27 of 293: Mark Unseen   Dec 3 17:39 UTC 2003

I'm not sure if this is a politics or religion question: what does UCMJ 
stand for?
 0-3   3-27   28-52   53-77   78-102   103-127   128-152   153-177   178-202 
 203-227   228-252   253-277   278-293       
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss