Cathy Young | March 18, 2004
At the United Nations, the Vatican has joined forces with a bloc of more than 50 Islamic states to block a proposal to extend spousal benefits to the partners of gay U.N. employees from countries where such benefits are legal (e.g., Belgium and the Netherlands). According to The Washington Post, Vatican envoy Joseph Klee says that recognition of same-sex unions is contrary to the Roman Catholic Church's concept of marriage and the family.
Why, next thing you know, the U.N. will be wanting to recognize polygamous marriages. Oh, wait ... it already does. According to the Post, "The United Nations has recognized polygamy, a common practice in the Islamic world, as a legitimate form of marriage and permits employees to divide their benefits among more than one wife." With nary a peep, one presumes, from the Vatican or the U.S. mission (which, under the Bush administration, has frequently sided with Vatican and the Islamic governments on "family" issues, and is still pondering its response to the present dispute).
One can only wonder -- at the U.N., is it going to be a slippery slope from polygamy to gay marriage?
(Thanks to the Cato Institute's David Boaz for the tip.)
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Jennifer:
Just a word about myself, I don't idolize my country or my culture,
but I would like to caution you not to idolize yours.
I was just pointing out what you said might be practiced in Saudi
by some but it is against the law. So, I see now that you arn't
criticizing the law but the practice. So, let my reply to your
comments.
"do you deny that many girls are married before menarche in your
enlightened society?"
Yes. I could be wrong but I'll be shocked if what you say is true.
I have never heard of any one married before menarche. I know that
there many who marry before 18, but not before menarche. If you
know of any, please enlight me, I'm all ears.
"granted, these are only anecdotes, but I don't think your
government keeps actual statistics on the number of girls murdered
(by the family or the government) over sexual matters."
Executions in Saudi are performed in public with a signed decree,
so they are published. So, if you are or any one else is interested
in collecting statistics I'm sure it isn't hard. As for the
so-called 'honor killing' (there is nothing honorable about that),
I don't think it is easy to collect statistics as it is mostly done
in bedouin (nomad) families or rural areas, where they are
illiterate and keep moving from one place to the other. But I agree
that is a problem that must be address and the best way to address
this is to educate people. The rapidly decreasing illiteracy rate
is an evidence that the government is doing a good job of
that.
"I'd always thought of murder as the one "unforgivable" crime for
the obvious reason that the one in a position to forgive you is
dead! But no, if the victim's family is glad to see him go, they
can collect blood money instead. "
Yes, there always cases where the system will be abused. But this
happens in the US too. Manipulating jurors to acquit murderers
(hint O.J.) is not very different from manipulating the victim's
family. Actually, I would argue that the latter is much
harder.
"but if I have sex (or expose my face in public, or leave the house
by myself sans permission from a man) I am guaranteed to suffer
physical pain at best and death at worst"
My sisters-in-law all expose their faces in public and so far no
"guaranteed" physical pains. They get harrased sometimes but they
defend themselves well (I'll help in their defense if I'm around).
I agree covering the face is so stupid. I wish I could convince my
siters to do without their face covers.
"No, I will not apologize for the lack of respect I feel towards
your country and your culture."
I didn't ask for one. I just thought you would appreciate some
first hand knowledge about the culture you read about but never
experienced.
"By the way, what did you think of that BBC story?"
I read the same story in a Saudi newspapers a couple of days before
the BBC published their story. In fact this was not the only one
they published. They have reported several stories similar to that
one where some old fart is bragging about his marriage practice. It
is revolting. If I knew any of those old farts I assure you that
they will hear what I have to say. I'm not sure why the saudi
newspapers reported these stories, but I suspect that it is their
subtle way of criticizing such practice.
Having said that, are you trying to tell me that none of this
nonsense happens in the US. I happen to read and watch on TV many
similar absurd stories taking place in the US: a man marrying a
women and her daughter, a man marrying a whole bunch of women,
etc.
Does the US government publish any statistics of such practices in
the US?
I believe there are many things wrong in my country (and yours). I
much rather spend my energy in righting the wrongs in my country
than pointing the wrongs in yours. Your lack of respect for my
culture and country is not going to change that.
Brent -- I think you may have misunderstood my attempt at sarcasm. My comment, "One can only wonder -- at the U.N., is it going to be a slippery slope from polygamy to gay marriage?" was meant as a humorous reference to worries that legalizing gay marriage may be a "slippery slope" to legalizing polygamy. In this case, those who oppose the recognition of same-sex marriages by the UN apparently have no problem with the UN's recognition of polygamous marriages in Islamic countries.
The Catholic Church condones all sorts of ideas that are repugnant to notions of individual liberty and autonomy. That they got into bed with another like-minded group opposed to such liberty and autonomy should not be surprising.
Saudi judge-
Of course there are terrible things that happen in America, too. I
do not idolize my country; indeed, on other postings I'm often
accused of being un-American. But in America, women and girls are
mistreated IN SPITE OF the law. In Arabia, they're mistreated
BECAUSE OF the law. There are many evil things you could truthfully
say about American cops, but none of them would ever force
schoolgirls to run back into a burning school building because they
were inadequately dressed. If they did, they'd be prosecuted.
Here in America, we have a lot of regional prejudices; Southerners
will insult Northerners and vice-versa, Westerners make fun of
Easterners and vice-versa. Now, if the area where you live is being
insulted, the traditional comeback is along the lines of, "Why
don't you come here and see my home for yourself, before you pass
judgment like that?" However, in your case this would not work; due
to my religion, my gender and my marital status I am forbidden from
setting foot in your country and can only judge it based upon what
I read. That one book I mentioned by name, "Princess," was not
written by a Bedouin nomad but by a member of your own royal
family. Of course, in Saudi law, a woman's testimony is only worth
half that of a man's so I suppose I should only believe half of
what I read in the book.
Perhaps I was wrong in saying that women must hide their faces.
What of my other charges: that women are forbidden to run their own
lives without the permission of a man, or the charge that women who
have sex outside of marriage (even tose who are raped) often face
capital punishment? I read that just now, on the Human Rights Watch
website (www.humanrightswatch.org).
In your own cultural heritage you have the 1,001 Nights with the
marvelous message of Scheherazade: 'Just because you can't control
women doesn't mean you have to kill them.' Such a pity, that the
Saudi government and Wahhabi clerics seem determined to go out of
their way to make Arabic religious and secular culture look as
barbaric and ignorant as possible.
Jennifer,
Don't forget the incident where girls were shoved back into a
burning building because they weren't properly dressed.
Jean-
I did mention that obliquely; I pointed out that an American cop
would never do such a thing, or if he did he'd at least be
prosecuted.
Too bad the girls had to die, but let's look on the bright side--at
least some Saudi male didn't have to look at the girl's exposed
bodies and risk having a sexual thought!
Forgot to add: in America you can only be put under house arrest if you are convicted of a crime; in Arabia you're under house arrest if you're born without a penis. Kind of funny, the way they accuse WESTERNERS of being obsessed with sexuality.
Cathy, you've made a few keen observations. First, platonic
relationships.
Today, the State does not ask about the sexual orientation of the
prospective bride and groom. A bisexual man can marry a lesbian
woman, and so forth. Eligibility regulations do not make civil
marriage an exclusively heterosexual club. But marriage is about
couples, of course, and the combination that the State recognizes
is man and woman. The State may have created "civil marriage", but
it merely acknowledged the procreative model upon which marriage
itself was created before the State existed. (Later I'll comment on
your point about the relevance of procreation in the face of recent
technologies.)
Likewise, the State does not inquire about the quality, character
or even the existence of love between the two individuals who come
for a marriage license. Platonic relationships are not prohibited
in civil marriage today.
As Sowell suggested, approval of the State is not necessary for
couples (homosexual, platonic, whatever) to live and love together.
The question of governance relevant to this issue is about the
utility of "civil marriage", and the utility of the symbolism of
the procreative model, in maximizing freedom. Even a truly
libertarian society has a vital interest in that.
The advocates of SSM talk a good deal about the the theoretical
equality of sexual orientations and about the normalcy of love in
the SSM model. But there's not much talk about the social
consequences of irreversibly disconnecting marriage from
procreation. Where is the risk analysis? The cost/benefit analysis?
A look forward?
With the SSM concept of civil marriage, it would be
anti-heterosexual bigotry to bar two straight men, or two straight
women, from marrying each other. There's only a few hundred
thousand same-sex couples living together in the USA today; it
wouldn't take long for double-straight heterosexual partnerships to
catch-up and eventually outnumber mutually-loving homosexual
unions. The next big thing: marriage for closely related
individuals and for groups.
In any case, double straight couples in buddy unions would overturn
the central theme that supposedly equates SSM with traditional
marriage: mutually loving fidelity between consenting adults.
Monogamy will be redefined along the lines of current homosexual
relationships: the standard monogamy will be emotional not sexual.
Written into boilerplate contracts, I suppose. Objectively
interpreted in divorce courts as distinct from extramarital
relationships...
The utility of this new model of marriage would be unlike what
wehave today in the making of public policy. But maybe that's not
an unintended consequence? Advocating SSM is like advocating the
destruction of civil marriage. It is not about semantics. It is not
about the label but about the thing itself, marriage.
Gay Marriage violates the religous convictions of millions of
tax paying Americans. I'm against any policy that forces American
taxpayers to support something that violates their religous
convictions.
Just to show I'm not biased, I would argue that gay taxpayers in
Belgium and the Netherlands shouldn't be forced to financialy
support the policies of the American Baptist church either.
Ken Shultz-
But when you say gay marriage violates the convictions of religious
Americans, you're forgetting that gay marriage is not something
that will be done TO them. Hell, being non-Christian violates the
religious beliefs of millions of tax-paying Americans. By your
logic, would you suggest that our police and military (paid for via
taxes) should not be required to protect non-Christians from crime?
If not, then how is that different from gay marriage?
I assume polygamy will come up in the UN sooner or later--
mainly as a women's rights question. How the "hypocrisy" plays out
will be interesting to see. How many advocates of same-sex unions
will be willing to defend polygamy?
(The Communist Chinese have always been proud to say they
suppressed the practice, both among the Han and national
minorities.)
"... you're forgetting that gay marriage is not something that
will be done TO them."
You're forgetting that our tax money pays the salary and benefits
of gay employees of the UN directly. Forcing people to use the
fruit of their labor to finance something they find, not just
morally repugnant, but specificly against their religous beliefs is
just plain wrong.
Our definition of religous freedom has really drifted. Religous
freedom once meant that the U.S. Government couldn't establish a
state religion a la the Anglican Church. It once meant that anyone
should be able to practice their religion without interference from
the government, and to that end, we upheld even the rights of Amish
people not to send their children to school and the practice of
SNAKE HANDELING!
Besides, this principle is in evey First Grader's American History
class. Why did the Pilgrims come to the New World?
If you don't think that having one's earnings coerced from them in
order to pay Gay Marriage benefits, is a government intrusion on
the religous liberty of fundamentalist christians, then I question
your objectivity.
P.S. Don't you realize that this is the kind of victimization
Christian fundamentalists thrive on?
Sorry, but fuck a whole bunch of that, not to put too fine a
point on it. All my fellow Fairfax, VA residents ultimately have to
pay higher property taxes because of the
more than 100 churches that don't have to pay any. Paying
property tax to, essentially, subsidize a house of worship violates
my religious beliefs, so I think they can take it on the
chin for this one.
Yes, I realize that other nonprofits are subject to the same rules,
but I don't consider churches qua churches to be inherently
charitable enterprises, so I think it's bullshit.
Ken-
Are you seriously trying to make the argument that your TAXES will
go up if gays are allowed to marry? Either way, you haven't
answered my question: by your logic, why should Christian taxpayers
be expected to fund the protection of non-Christian lives? What
about Muslim taxpayers, who pay the salaries of female police
officers (which goes against their religion)?
Don't confuse freedom OF religion with freedom FROM things you
don't like.
I wish the Saudi Judge would come back. I really wanted to hear his take on Saudi women's rights.
"Either way, you haven't answered my question: by your logic,
why should Christian taxpayers be expected to fund the protection
of non-Christian lives? What about Muslim taxpayers, who pay the
salaries of female police officers (which goes against their
religion)?"
Taking money from people's paychecks to finance Gay Marriage
benefits and protecting the rights of non-Christians isn't
comparable. Let's try plugging in another variable. Maybe then
you'll see my equation.
Imagine that Saudi Arabia is the largest single donor to the UN.
But rather than financing its UN contribution with royal oil
income, it got its contribution by way of an income tax. Imagine
then how the average Saudi would feel when they find out that a
portion of the UN budget goes to build distilleries and pig farms
somewhere in Europe.
Would that not be a violation of their right to practice Islam as
they see fit?
Back to the issue, that's the way Christian Fundamentalists see Gay
Marriage benefits. As a Libertarian, I believe that the purpose of
government is to protect the rights of its citizens. Non-Christians
have a right to life, liberty, pursuit of happiness, and whole lot
more. They deserve to have their rights protected by a police
force, amongst other things. Paying taxes to finance that force is,
thus, not even a question.
But paying taxes that go directly to finance something like Gay
Marriage or Abortion is a violation of the rights of Fundamentalist
Christians just as paying taxes that go directly to finance
something like pig farms and alchohol would be a violation of the
rights of Muslims.
That's why the U.N. should avoid engaging in such behavior.
Is there any question that in a struggle between U.N. Personell
Policies and the Bill of Rights that the U.N. should be more
flexible?
Ken-
OK, let's take the issue out of the UN and put it in the local
police force. Let's say that in Libertyville, USA the police only
enforce Constitutional laws and they never violate the Bill of
Rights and all these other great things. A perfect police
force.
As compensation for their services and the risks they assume, cops
are given the contractual guarantee that if they die in the line of
duty their freely designated survivors will be given a pension.
Well, a cop killed while trying to arrest a murderer, and the cop
just happens to be a gay man, and he designated his gay
lover/spouse/civilly united partner/whatever as his beneficiary.
And some fundamentalist taxpayers in Libertyville are angry that
their money is going to "finance" a gay relationship.
What to do?
Ken said:
"Taking money from people's paychecks to finance Gay Marriage
benefits and protecting the rights of non-Christians isn't
comparable."
Yes, it is, because your original argument is that religious people
should not see their tax dollars go to fund something that goes
against their religion. As I pointed out already, the same
religious book that prohibits homosexuality also prohibits other
religions. The Book of Exodus clearly states "Thou shalt not suffer
a witch to live," and yet every day tax money is being spent to
protect Wiccan lives, firefighters put out blazes in Wiccan homes.
. . .you name it.
Now, seriously, I doubt that you would suggest that only Christians
should enjoy the benefits of law. But I think again that you are
confusing freedom OF religion with special benefits TO religion.
You have religious freedom, yes, but that does NOT mean you will
never have to be exposed to things that offend your religion.
Again, let me ask you: should females be kicked out of the police
force and military, on the grounds that Muslims are taxpayers too,
and female authority figures go against the tenets of Islam? By
your logic, the answer is yes. Indeed, by your logic, any one
single taxpayer should be allowed to play the "religious offense"
card to stop ANYTHING he personally dislikes.
Ken,
Your tax dollars go to polygamist benefits. My tax dollars go to
all sorts of stuff that people don't approve of. Should a Muslim or
Jew be able to say that subsidies on pig farmers are a violation of
the 1st Amendment because they don't approve of swine? What about
forcing Quakers to pay for the military? Don't you realize that all
sorts of atheists [gasp] and adulterers get beenfits from Christian
taxpayers even though they are major sins. They
make God's top 10 list of big no nos. Goodness, tax dollars pay for
work on the Sabbath too, yet another 1st Amendment violation.
Last I checked, Christians (and everyone else) can practice their
religion as they please. As long as they don't ask for the
government or government entities to step in. I have a problem with
Catholic Charities being forced to pay for contraceptive benefits.
But most of the complaints from the religious right is that
Christianity is being brought to an equal level with other
religions.
Remember, traditionally, the Catholic Church was one of the biggest
proponents of the seperation of church and state, not some group of
atheists.
"Gay Marriage violates the religous convictions of millions of
tax paying Americans. I'm against any policy that forces American
taxpayers to support something that violates their religous
convictions."
Man, if I had a nickel for every program the Federales fund that I
have moral, ethical, intellectual, philosophical and even, (gasp,
can it be true, from an AGNOSTIC?) religous objections to, I'd have
enough money to buy a house in the Bay Area.
First off, from what I understand, just about ALL taxes are bad
things to libertarians. So maybe we should just find another way to
fund these things. Your money won't go to benefits for spouses in
gay marriages. And my money won't go to abstinence only sex
"education", propping up brutal and repressive gov'ts(hey,
Jennifer, is there room on the Anti-Islamic-Treatment-of-Women
Bandwagon, cuz I got some things to say about female genital
mutilation), subsidizing farmers.... etc. etc.
Thoreau-
I liked your cop example, and want to take it further. Imagine a
hetero cop who wants a vasectomy, which will be paid for by
taxpayer money as all cop medical procedures are. But some of those
taxpayers are Catholics, who think vasectomies are sinful. Should
the cop be denied his operation?
Wait a minute, why am I asking you? I want Ken to give me the
answer.
Thoureau,
Tricky. I'm not sure I have an adequate answer for that, but here's
my gut. Municipal and State workers should have such questions
determined by the relevent municipality or State.
Let's not forget that there is a private "benefits" market out
there in the form of life and health insurance too. I'm sure that
there are myriad entreprenuers eager to contract for such benefits,
and such arrangements certainly don't need government
approval.
There's private charity to help pay poor government employees
premiums too.
But, ultimately, the problem stems from the fact that taxes are
coerced from us in the form of an income tax rather than paid
voluntarily in the form of a sales tax.
"Wait a minute, why am I asking you? I want Ken to give me the
answer."
Same answer I gave to Thoreau, Jennifer. Municipalities should
decide for Municipalities, etc. I shouldn't have much to say about
the personnel policies of the San Francisco Fire Department, for
instance.
Also, once again, the problem is the income tax, rather than some
kind of fee based, voluntary system.
P.S. After re-reading myself, I wanted to point out that I am not a
Fundamentalist.
"How many advocates of same-sex unions will be willing to defend
polygamy?"
Here's one.
However, for me to advocate any relationship of any kind between
anybody, I have a precondition: the participants--ALL the
participants--must be allowed to freely choose to enter or not to
enter the relationship (and leave it if necessary). Inherent in the
choice is the responsibility to bear the consequences of that
choice.
That's a no-brainer. Really.
"But, ultimately, the problem stems from the fact that taxes are
coerced from us in the form of an income tax rather than paid
voluntarily in the form of a sales tax."
Depends on what's being taxed. If there's a sales tax on food, is
the tax voluntary? A city girl has to eat too, and growing my own--
heh, sorry I'm 12. Growing my own FOOD isn't an option. I suppose
it'd work if the sales tax was on luxury goods only. But one man's
luxury is another man's necessity which leads to a whole new set of
arguments.
Come to think of it, any plural marriage that includes at least one man and one woman is a same-sex union, at least in part. I mean, it is, isn't it?
Heather,
Sales taxes are entirely voluntary in that the buyer takes them
into consideration when they make a purchase.
If you're looking to defeat the entire idea of Libertarianism by
pointing out that we all "need" things, ...well...let's just say
that the idea has already been considered and rejected by most
Libertarians.
Ken-
You're dodging the question. Say that the city council of
Libertyville and/or the legislature of whatever state it's located
in has already said "A police officer may designate one or more
surviving beneficiaries, and a pension shall be divided amongst
them as the officer provides, if that officer is killed in the line
of duty" or whatever the legalese is. And this isn't done as any
sort of social engineering or redistribution, but simply as
compensation for those who render the services of a cop and assume
the risks.
And a private benefits market won't cut it. Sure, it could lower
the gov't's risk to pay survivor benefits on an insurance basis,
where in exchange for a flat annual fee the insurance company
handles survivor pensions for any and all cops who die on the job.
But that premium on the insurance policy still has to be paid out
of tax dollars.
A sales tax won't cut it either. Sure, it isn't an income tax, but
as a practical matter it is still coercing people to pay a tax if
they want to buy a product from a vendor within a certain
jurisdiction. Neither the vendor nor the buyer has any say in the
matter. In the end, there's no getting around the fact that all
taxation involves some amount of coercion.
So, we're left with our dilemma: If the police department in
Libertyville lets cops designate a recipient for survivor pensions,
and if one of those cops designates a gay
lover/spouse/civilly-united-partner/whatever as a beneficiary,
Christian fundamentalists can whine that they were coerced into
spending money on a gay relationship.
For that matter, they can whine that the city is "sending the wrong
message to the children" by even hiring a gay cop. And Muslim
fundamentalists can complain if that gay cop is a woman
(gasp!).
Ken-
After posting I see that you already argued that sales taxes aren't
coercive because people can take them into account when making
spending decisions.
Hey, I can take the income tax into account when making my
budgetary decisions. Sure, in some regards the sales tax may be
much less problematic than an income tax (I don't want to get into
the details of that debate right now, let's just accept that in at
least some ways the sales tax might be a "lesser evil") but it is
still coercive.
Now, I realize that as long as we have government to handle things
like cops and military and courts and whatnot there will be at
least some level of taxation, and taxation will by its nature be
coercive. My point is that people will always be able to complain
"They didn't just coerce me into paying for the defense of people
and property and whatnot, they coerced me into paying for those
immoral gays! (or whatever their bogeyman is) At some point we have
to be able to tell them to shut up and get used to it.
I'll now pause as the purity police escort me out of libertopia. I
just hope none of those purity police are gay, because that would
really screw things up! :)
Jennifer:
"In Arabia, they're mistreated BECAUSE OF the law."
Are you talking about the law in theory or what actually happens on
the ground? Please stick to one, it makes the discussion much
easier.
"There are many evil things you could truthfully say about American
cops, but none of them would ever force schoolgirls to run back
into a burning school building because they were inadequately
dressed. If they did, they'd be prosecuted."
I'm not sure that shooting people for having the wrong color of the
skin is not as bad.
Any way, I'm aware of the incident you illude to. There were
consequences (not as serious as one would hope) for that incident.
The head of the women's education lost his job.
BTW, The account of what happened might not be as clear cut as you
think. If you have an open mind here is something about that
incident you probably didn't know.
The Saudi government accused the religeous police of preventing the
girls from leaving the building causing the deaths of ~14 students.
This accusation, in my opinion, was for ulterior motives by the
government. They used the backlash to merge the women's branch
(which was controled mostly by religious people) and the men's
branch of the ministry of education which they were planning to do
but waiting for the right time. The ultimate responsiblity for
puting out the fire lies on the civil defense police (the fire
department). It doesn't make sense to me that a bunch of reigious
fanatics could stop the police from doing their job. After all the
fanatics of the religious are not armed and the police is armed.
The buidling itself was not a propriate and the saftey of the
building was questionable. So it wasn't entirely the fault of the
religious fanatics.
As an evidence of the ulterior motives of the government, there
were far more serious fire incidents and other tragedies after the
school's incident with many more deaths that have resulted in zero
outrage (from the saudi newspapers) and zero action from the
government.
"due to my religion, my gender and my marital status I am forbidden
from setting foot in your country and can only judge it based upon
what I read"
That is simply not true. There are more than 6 million foreigners,
at least 2 million are non- muslims. I would also estimate that at
least 1 million are females. I'm not sure what is your
religion/marital status but I'm quite confident that someone with
similar status has been granted visa to Saudi. The only exception I
know of are Israelies, and possibly granting visa for same-sex
spouses. I know that the US has similar restrictions.
"In your own cultural heritage you have the 1,001 Nights with the
marvelous message of Scheherazade: 'Just because you can't control
women doesn't mean you have to kill them.'"
The message I get from the 1001 nights is that a smart women can
manipulate a man no matter how powerful he thinks he is. But that's
just me.
"Such a pity, that the Saudi government and Wahhabi clerics seem
determined to go out of their way to make Arabic religious and
secular culture look as barbaric and ignorant as possible."
Perception is in the eye of the beholder. BTW, I get the feeling
that you use muslim and Arab interchangeably. They are different
things. One is a religion and one is an ethnic group.
I wasn't dodging Thoreau, like I said, I'm not sure that I have
a complete answer to your question.
But I think you're mistaken about the private benefits market, and
I disagree about the effect of income taxes on issues like
this.
A fundamentalist can find ways to work around a sales tax, at
worst, if he so wishes, he can move to a municipality that doesn't
offend. But income taxes are unavoidable that way.
I would also point out that Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid
are highly charged this way. Every soccer mom has a right to make
decisions about coverage precisely because we all pay into the
general fund.
Oh, and every Fundamentalist that pays income taxes has a right to
make decisions about coverage too.
Thoreau,
I didn't see your post until after I'd posted also.
Good luck with the purity cops.
Isn't it good that Catholicism & Islam can find common
ground?
Neither condone homosexuality, and hence oppose same sex
marriage.
Every cloud has a silver lining.
About Speedwell's observation that polygamy is same sex:
Does Islam dictate how multiple partners are to be managed?
The Mormons of old, preferred separate households.
Brigham Young said of the promotion of polygamy
that it was the worse burden to be put on one man,
sapping his wealth, time and energy, plus taxing his patience.
I don't think that polygamy is considered same sex marriage because it's see as the man having two wives married to him, rather than three people married to eachother.
Mo, et. al.
Yes, one of the reasons that I think the government should do so
little, and the private sector do so much is because of the very
kinds of things you're listing.
Why should Muslims be forced to finance the acquisition of a liquor
store by way of the SBA? Why should Jews be forced to underwrite
pig farms by way of subsidies?
If only the government would refrain from such activites, how much
better off would we all be?
I want three things from the federal government. Briefly, I want a
military force sufficeint to deter a foreign invasion, a domestic
police force to protect me from crime and a fair judicial system so
that I'll have somewhere to go for redress when I'm wronged and so
I'll be treated fairly if I'm accused of wronging someone
else.
Which of these things violates the religous convictions of
anyone?
P.S. Maybe Quakers regarding national self defense, but I really
don't know that much about Quakers.
Ken-
So basically what you're saying is MY rights can be taken away if
they offend YOUR religion, am I right?
Saudi judge-
Glad to see you back.
COncerning the school fire, first of all, I do NOT blame the
mutawae'en for the fact that the school burned down; I blame them
for the fact that they refused to let the girls leave. Big
difference.
As an atheist and an unmarried female, I could not enter your
country. Even if you guys didn't mind atheists, I still couldn't
enter your country, because my last name sounds Jewish and you guys
won't let Jews into your country.
My main question, which you have not addressed, concerns women. WHY
do you keep all of your women under a permanent state of house
arrest? You alluded to America's mistreatment of blacks; granted,
we have a lot of stains on our collective conscience, but a black
man in the South during the days of segregation still had it far
better than your women do now.
Get this: ever since I lost my teaching job I've made money by
going to estate auctions, buying stuff and then selling it for a
profit on the Internet. This is a business, but I also think it's
fun; I happen to enjoy going to auctions. This does not just bring
me money; it brings me happiness, too.
This is what I did last weekend:
1. Drove my car fifty miles to an auction house
2. Talked to the auctioneer (a male to whom I am not related)
3. Talked with various other junk dealers (both male and female,
none related to each other)
4. Bid on and bought items (by myself, with no male relative
placing bids or making purchases for me)
5. Loaded my purchases into my car (with the help of still more
non-related males)
6. Drove myself back home.
That's it. I had a good time and made money to pay my bills. I hurt
nobody. Nor did I solicit any acts of prostitution, which you guys
seem to think a woman does every time she leaves her man's sight.
And yet, EVERY SINGLE THING I did would have been forbidden in
Arabia: women can't drive. Women can't leave the house by
themselves. Women can't buy things from males. Women can't talk to
men unless they're related.
WHY? What are you so afraid of? Why are you so obsessed with what
does or does not dangle down between a person's legs? Just today I
read in "Arab News" where Prince Turki (Haifa's brother, I assume)
insisted that women are not oppressed in Arabia. Riiiiiight.
Incidentally, the only manipulation performed by Scheherazade was
manipulating the King into breaking his habit of fucking a virgin
every night and killing her the next day. We women are so sneaky,
trying to stop men from murdering us like that.
Meanwhile, here's a fun story on today's BBC News:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3520362.stm
To summarize: a Saudi man is about to marry wife #60. SInce no
Muslim can have more than four wives at a time, he will do his
usual practice of drawing lots to decide wich previous wife he'll
divorce to make room for the lucky new one. The new wife probably
hasn't hit puberty yet, and hasn't consented to her geriatric
husband, but at least there's no homosexuality here! Praise
Allah.
If the Pope had a grain of intelligence he would think "The fact
that Bin Laden and I agree on something should really make me
second-guess it."
How much tax payer money do your local Fairfax churches
absorb Phil?
Beats me. Doesn't matter. Any amount greater than zero is too much,
and violates MY right not to support religious activity with my
money.
See, this sword cuts both ways, huh?
Correction-
Did I say that the King in the Arabian Nights was "fucking" a
virgin every night? I meant to say "raping" a virgin. I'm sorry. My
bad.
Actually, Jennifer, the Vatican, Muslim nations, and the US (when governed by Republicans) have consistently formed an anti-sex, anti-woman, anti-gay bloc at the UN. The Cairo conference, which replaced support for coercive Population Control with support for empowering women, was denounced by Islamic governments, the Vatican, and the GOP.
Joe-
That's exactly my point. What kind of revolting anti-life attitudes
do these people have? In Saudi Arabia, if I were to murder you, I
could avoid prosecution by giving money to your family. But if I
had SEX with you. . .chop-chop! Off with my head!
Here's an interesting side thought: in America, a lot of the
anti-homosexual sentiment seems based upon the notion that sex and
marriage are ONLY for having babies. Presumably the Muslims have a
similar doctrine, and yet there is an Arab proverb to the effect
that a woman's first period should be in the home of her husband,
not her father. If procreation is the be-all and end-all of human
relationships, why make girls get married when they're still years
away from being physically capable of motherhood?
DJ-
You asked how Muslims maintain separate marriages. In theory, each
wife is to be treated with strict equality. A few years ago I read
a book titled either "Princess" or "Saudi Princess," a biography of
a woman in the Saudi royal family. She said that in practice, the
only Saudi men who have multiple marriages are either the very rich
(royals) or the very poor(Bedouins): the very rich can afford to
buy each wife her own palace, whilst the Bedouins had only to erect
a new tent for each new bride. Middle-class men, however, can
generally afford to maintain only one middle-class existence, and
so they tend to be more monogamous.
That's the point Phil. If any church received any tax payer money it would violate the establishment clause. Churches don't pay taxes, they don't receive tax money.
Jennifer:
"I do NOT blame the mutawae'en for the fact that the school burned
down; I blame them for the fact that they refused to let the girls
leave. Big difference."
I don't see you blaming the Saudi fire department for not saving
the girls or puting down the fire. Anyone who singls out the
mutwae'en for the blame isn't being honest and might have ulterior
motives. Any way, I'm not sure the mutawae'en did in fact stop the
girls from leaving. Read my previous post.
"a black man in the South during the days of segregation still had
it far better than your women do now"
Easy for you to say. I will gladly believe the black slaves if they
made that claim. But not you, no offense intended.
"Even if you guys didn't mind atheists, I still couldn't enter your
country, because my last name sounds Jewish and you guys won't let
Jews into your country"
Like I said before, I'm sure that at least one of the ~6 million
foreigners is an atheist. As for the second part of your remark,
that is simply not true. It is Israelies (not jews) that are not
allowed in the country. Thomas Friedman (from the NYT) visited
Saudi and I believe he is a jew. One of my professor when I went to
college was a jewish american. That is 2 examples that contradicts
your theory.
"Nor did I solicit any acts of prostitution"
What's wrong with soliciting prostitution? After all, they say that
it is the oldest profession.
"women can't drive"
Yes, they can't drive in Saudi (they are allowed to in other
Arabic/muslim countries). This is a prohibition that I totally
disagree with. In fact, a group of women publicly defied the
government in 1991 and I hope other women will do the same again
and again until this prohibition is repelled. I'm proud to say that
one of my sisters-in-law took part in that demonstration.
"Women can't leave the house by themselves."
not true.
"Women can't buy things from males."
If you knew anything about Saudi, you would know that is simply not
true. In fact, the norm is for a woman to buy from men not
women.
Now, let me ask you a few questions of my own:
How many women held the highest post of government in the US and
how many in the muslim countries?
Why do women in the US tend to make less money than men when hired
to do the same job?
Why women in the US are not allowed to show their boobies in
public?
Do you take offense at women wearing hijab or that the fact that
they are forced to do it?
Jennifer:
"In Saudi Arabia, if I were to murder you, I could avoid
prosecution by giving money to your family. But if I had SEX with
you. . .chop-chop! Off with my head!"
I don't think that you know what you are talking about. In Islam
(and in Saudi law) If you murder someone, money will spare your
life ONLY if the family of the victim agree to it. If they refuse,
then ... "chop chop".
As for the having sex part, in theory, adulterers are to be
condemned to death ONLY if they are married. That goes for women
AND MEN. If you have sex and you have never been married, then the
penalty is much more lenient than the death penalty (I think it is
like
80 lashes on the butt, and again that goes for women AND
MEN).
Oh, and can you please tell me what is the Arabic proverb you
mentioned in your post. I never heard of it (not to say that there
is no such a thing)
Saudi judge-
In the past two months I've checked out from my local library and
read fifteen books about Islam and Arabic culture. Some sounded
pretty nuanced, some were obviously anti-Arab, and a couple sounded
suspiciously pro-Islamic fundamentalism. I will confess I don't
remember exactly where I read the proverb. However, do you deny
that many girls are married before menarche in your enlightened
society?
As for sex leniency: What matters is not theory but practice. After
all, in theory, the Soviet Union's constitution promised everyone
human rights and a Utopian society, but that does not change the
fact that the Soviet Union was a repressive place.
Likewise, who cares about the 'theory' that unmarried people who
have sex are "only" given 80 lashes rather than death? In practice,
the Muslim world is far too fond of honor killings. There were also
anecdotes in "Princess" of a pregnant rape victim facing execution
after she gave birth, or a girl drowned in her family's pool after
'making out' with a boy. . .granted, these are only anecdotes, but
I don't think your government keeps actual statistics on the number
of girls murdered (by the family or the government) over sexual
matters.
As for the murder payoff: I'd always thought of murder as the one
"unforgivable" crime for the obvious reason that the one in a
position to forgive you is dead! But no, if the victim's family is
glad to see him go, they can collect blood money instead.
So to reiterate: if I murder someone there's a chance I can avoid
prosecution by paying money, but if I have sex (or expose my face
in public, or leave the house by myself sans permission from a man)
I am guaranteed to suffer physical pain at best and death at worst,
with no possibility of a payoff.
No, I will not apologize for the lack of respect I feel towards
your country and your culture.
By the way, what did you think of that BBC story?
Here's the facet of this grand argument I've having the most
trouble with: how will gay marriage negatively affect straight
marriage? I mean, really....how does 2 guys or chicks living
together in peace adversely affect mom and dad with their 2 kids
down the street?
And now the UN is getting on the bandwagon..with help from the
(somewhat unchanging) Vatican? Sheesh. To call it a "slippery slope
from polygamy to gay marriage"...that, too. I'm not sure what makes
it a "slippery slope". That term is usually used to connote a
regression into something bad or something from the past. I'm not
quite sure gay marriage falls into such a category. Arguably, the
issues of multi-racial coupling or woman's suffrage, at their
height of debate, would have been categorized the same way.
Nowadays we don't even give either a second thought.
Jennifer:
"I do not oppose the inherent idea of a woman wearing hijab, but
the fact that she is forced to do so. "
So, I guess you would show the same outrage if some government
forced her to take it of, right?
"And the color! Bad enough to force women to wear tents, but they
also have to be black? Heat-absorbing colors in the desert?"
So, you don't have a problem with the color in the winter? I'm
sorry that the color offends your taste. Black isn't my favorite
color either. But that hardly warants the "barbaric" term you used
earlier.
"It was the Saudi news who first reported this, not a Western news
agency with an anti-Saudi bias."
Like I said before, the Saudi government (which controls the saudi
press) had ulterior motives for the accusation. I said nothing
about western news agencies. Read my previous post.
As for the shopping issue, here is a link with some pictures that
some one took in a shopping mall in Riyadh, see for yourself (I'm
sure you can find more using google):
http://www.btinternet.com/~dafyddk/riyadh/Riyadh.htm
BTW, there are fantastic malls in Riaydh and in Dubai (in the UAE),
if you are interested in shopping.
"During the Jeddah economic conference your Grand Mufti recently
declared that the mingling of the sexes is the cause of all evil in
the world"
Well, if he said that then he does not know what he is talking
about. Pat Robertson thinks that homosexuality (and islam) is/are
the source of all evil in the world. Religious nuts are out of
touch with reality. Tell me something I don't know.
"from a woman's perspective, America is a far better place than
Saudi Arabia"
I'm sure that they are alot of Saudi women who would disagree. But,
that is a personal choice.
Doesn't this argument actually demonstrate the link between
polygamy and same-sex marriage? I mean, we're told again and again
that there is a principled difference between the treatment of the
two by SSM proponents, yet when the UN treats them differently, the
UN is accused of hypocrisy?
Is there a principle that will allow us to legalize SSM and not
legalize polygamy? I don't think so, and neither, apparently, does
Cathy.
BTW: the Vatican can't oppose or support anything at the UN, as it
isn't a member of the UN; that perhaps goes a long way to
explaining why there hasn't been much talk about the benefits for
polygamous relations from the Vatican--there's no state willing to
oppose them.
Saudi: As for the shopping issue, here is a link with some
pictures that some one took in a shopping mall in Riyadh
I�d have to agree with the �Saudi Judge� here �Jennifer�.
I have visited the majority of the countries centered on the Gulf.
(The UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, � etc. for the last 15 years of my
military career). I have been in and out of large and small cities
around the back hill country areas. I have read several books and
compared them to reality. I also have no political agenda on the
matter. Now that the background is out of the way�
UAE, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia have a lot more western culture then
most people who have never visited them realize. Particularly the
UAE. I have seen women(especially tourists) wear �revealing�
clothing that would get them into trouble in a lot of places in the
US.(I have traveled a lot in the US also). The malls are better and
offer more products them most of their US equivalents.
Jennifer: "And the color! Bad enough to force women to wear tents,
but they also have to be black? Heat-absorbing colors in the
desert?"
The garb worn by women is fairly comfortable from talking to them.
As to the color, black is not my preference but having worn
brighter and darker clothing I didn�t feel a real difference in the
sun. If I could have gotten away with it I would have worn a tent
too�..
Jennifer: �Nor did I solicit any acts of prostitution"
Saudi : What's wrong with soliciting prostitution? After all, they
say that it is the oldest profession.
Briefings from the military claimed prostitution was against the
law in most of the countries around there. You would not have been
noticed due to the extremely large number of women (men too)
soliciting at all times of the day and night. It was worse then
Thailand and the Philippines in many ways.
Jennifer : "Women can't buy things from males."
I�ve seen local women freely shopping everywhere I went. I did not
notice any problems with the sex of the seller/customer. Some women
(men too for the same reason) in my unit had problems with
shopkeepers. Being generally young and insensitive to all but their
own desires they would not conform to the general rules of
negotiation held by that country.
Jennifer: �This is what I did last weekend:
1. Drove my car fifty miles to an auction house�
Other then the driving you could do everything in most of the
countries. I don�t agree with limited women from driving.
After talking to several locals I found out men have a hard time
getting to drive also. The age limits vary but the average I heard
was over 27. You pay a lot of money from the privilege also.
Jennifer: �do you deny that many girls are married before menarche
in your enlightened society?"�
Saudi Judge: �Yes. I could be wrong but I'll be shocked if what you
say is true. I have never heard of any one married before
menarche.�
I have talked to several families and friends from the region. The
practice was a lot more frequent depending on the region and $$$
the family had. I have not researched the laws but from my
conversations it is not legal anymore. I am sure it still happens
but it is much more isolated and falling out of common practice as
the education level rises.
Looking at other areas around the world. �Thailand/Philippines�,
countries north of Singapore, Mexico, Countries South of Florida,
Texas, Hong Kong, Korea, etc.. children are abused a lot more then
I have ever seen in the Gulf region. At some point in time from
1983 to the present I have visited areas from above and have always
seen rampant child prostitution, which is accepted by the community
even if it is against the law.
Jennifer: �No, I will not apologize for the lack of respect I feel
towards your country and your culture.�
The Persian Gulf area has it problems as does the US and areas
discussed above. If you are basing your opinion on �Books� and
�news� I recommend you try talking to real people from the area
with an open mind. Then go live there if possible. It is the only
way to really understand it. The �news� is biased towards the
negative aspects of the world, as people only have limited
attention spans in general. Politicians are even worse since they
tend to try to satisfy the public�s shifting whims. It doesn�t help
when you are broadcasting statements as above with no �real�
knowledge of the matter. I have seen a lot of the negative side of
life in the world. Even with my knowledge of the negative aspects I
would not make that kind of broad statement����
Jennifer:
"but over here Robertson is viewed as a joke,"
I'm sure millions of Americans disagree with you on that. In fact,
I'm not sure he has less influence than our Grand Mufti, especially
with the current US administration.
"I can't go to Arabia and see for myself, though, because I am a
single female who has no desire to get a job as a maid"
In earlier posts, you claimed that you can't get to Saudi because
of your gender, marital status, and your jewish-sounding last name.
I refuted your claim. Now, you claim that you can't get their
because you don't want to work as a maid.
If you qualify to work as a teacher, doctor, nurse, or college
professor (just to name a few professions), then I'm sure that you
can get a job there if you are interested.
"Any comment by the judge on my main complaints: the sex
segregation"
What segregation? I gave you a link to some pictures. Did you look
at them? In one picture you see women forming a line at a Mcdonald
only a few yards from the men's line. In another, you see a woman
buying cosmetics standing less than a yard from a male salesman. Do
you call that segregation? Do you want pictures of women humping
men to be satisfied?
"the original complaint that consensual sex is legally often a
worse crime than murder?"
The law doesn't distinguish between men and women neither in
adultery nor murder cases. So, no discrimination there.
Jennifer, I have a feeling that you are either not reading my
responses or you like to argue for the sake of arguing. You made
some general claims that I refuted. Then, you made specific claims
that I refuted. When some other posters also refuted your claims,
you went back and recycled your original claims. How
pathetic!
I don't feel like repeating myself. So, have a nice weekend.
"If you're looking to defeat the entire idea of Libertarianism
by pointing out that we all "need" things, ...well...let's just say
that the idea has already been considered and rejected by most
Libertarians."
No, not really looking to the defeat the entire idea of
Libertarianism. First off, that'd be a bit rude on a libertarian
site. Plus, even if I tried, especially with such a simplistic
argument... well, the phrase "dogpile" comes to mind. I was just
pointing out that any collection of money by a gov't is pretty much
coercive. Whether it's sales tax, income tax, flat tax, property
tax, or a "are you breathing American air-- then pay for it!" tax,
it's coercive if you either don't want to pay it or disagree with
some of the purposes for which the money is used.
Personally, I think that's what democracy is for--if I don't like
how the gov't uses my money, I try to change the gov't. I know, I
know, damn liberals and their optimistic ideas about regime
change.
Jennifer,
"Heat-absorbing colors in the desert?"
Two small points:
(1) Heat absorbing colors are also heat-radiating colors.
(2) Typically, people who live in hot places (such as the desert)
do not stand around outside during the middle of the day. That's
the origin of the phrase "Mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the
midday sun".
Don't get me wrong: I have no great love of Saudi culture. However,
if you want to criticize Saudi culture, you should do it sensibly.
Having some sense of how cultures develop might also be helpful.
For example, do you really think that, say, 70 years ago it would
have been a wonderful idea for a woman to go travelling long
distances completely alone (bear in mind the types of
transportation then available, and recall that none of them had
windows, locks, or could go over about 15 mph)? Bear in mind that
one of the big implications of women not being able to drive is
that their male relatives have to play chauffeur to them all the
time -- i.e. culturally this has a tendency to force male relatives
to protect their female relatives. Is this outdated with modern
cars? Yes. Is it absurd for a people not to drop cultural norms
which have kept it safe for centuries in a few years without any
resistance at all? Not if you know anything about human
beings.
When considering other cultures, especially other
traditional cultures, you really should bear in mind that
while as a modern American you grew up in one of the safest places
in the world to live, not all of the world was always so safe. In
some places, people actually had to vary their habits or endure
inconveniences in order to avoid dying.
By the way, if you see some sort of contradiction in the idea of a
woman marrying a little before she can bear children (and hence get
impregnated by someone who is not her husband and who might just
abandon her) and marriage being about producing children, you
really should take the "genius" part out of your email (either
because of its modern connotation of intelligence or its more
ancient connotation of male fertility).
Jennifer: Yes, Pat Robertson is easily as idiotic as your Grand
Mufti,
Depending on your viewpoint I have heard people call Howard Dean as
idiotic as the above people. Lots of people where taking him just
as seriously until recently. Not to mention any of your other
radical left/right wing politicians....
Jennifer: I can't go to Arabia and see for myself, though
Actually you don't have to qualify as a teacher, doctor, etc....
Volunteer for aid work in the area via any of the organizations
servicing the gulf region. I have seen men/women in various
countries that had little education or skills, just a desire to
help.
Jennifer: Any comment by the judge on my main complaints: the sex
segregation, the fact that women can't control their own destinies,
and the original complaint that consensual sex is legally often a
worse crime than murder?
Saudi Judge: The law doesn't distinguish between men and women
neither in adultery nor murder cases. So, no discrimination
there.
I would have to say the woman is more stigmatized whatever the law
states. However other then severely tradition areas which are
few(again getting a lot less over the years) I have not seen sex
being treated worse the murder�. Adultery(sometimes)�As for men get
into the same trouble. It is harder to prove against the man.
Of course with the availability of prostitutes(as mention in the
prior post) most of this attitude is decaying away��
Lets talk about the U.S. Women are more generally more stigmatized
here also. (Anywhere from their �Reputation� to taking care of
unintentional offspring). That too has improved over the years.
Look at general treatment of unwed mothers even 50 years ago. Of
course men here have there own problems with getting child custody,
etc.(but that is off subject).
Sex segregation was explained in above post.
Talking to my friends and from observation the older women have a
lot to say in their �families� destinies. Many of the younger men
and women have less control over major aspects of their own life as
compared to the US. I have had to baby-sit enough of the 18-24 year
old people coming into the military. They always think they are
right until they get into trouble and then want someone else to
�Fix� their problem. Maybe they have too much control of their
�destinies���..
If the Pope had a grain of intelligence he would think "The
fact that Bin Laden and I agree on something should really make me
second-guess it."
Ah, like the belief in a Creator God who spoke to Adam, Abraham,
and Moses? Like the belief in the Virgin Birth? Like . . .
Well, I could go on, but to what point? If Bin Laden happens to
believe that no woman should be forced to have sex without her
consent, does that mean you should second-guess your beliefs on
rape?
Saudi judge-
Yes, Pat Robertson is easily as idiotic as your GRand Mufti, but
over here Robertson is viewed as a joke, not one of the guys who
sets policy. You still didn't answer my question about why the
sexes are so strictly segregated over there, though. As I
understand it, this is not even required by Islam; it's just a
Wahhabi thing.
If I'm wrong about Saudi women being mistreated then I'm glad to be
wrong. I can't go to Arabia and see for myself, though, because I
am a single female who has no desire to get a job as a maid, and I
understand Saudi tourist visas are basically non-existent.
Any comment by the judge on my main complaints: the sex
segregation, the fact that women can't control their own destinies,
and the original complaint that consensual sex is legally often a
worse crime than murder?
Saudi-
A couple of points in no particular order:
1. I said the *segregated* blacks were better off than modern Saudi
women, not the black slaves. Again, huge difference.
2. I do not oppose the inherent idea of a woman wearing hijab, but
the fact that she is forced to do so. And the color! Bad enough to
force women to wear tents, but they also have to be black?
Heat-absorbing colors in the desert?
As for the school fire: it is not the fire itself I am criticizing.
Fires happen in all countries. People sometimes die because they
can't get out in time. But in that school in Mecca, the girls
actually did make it out; problem was, they were forced back in.
I'm not blaming the firemen unless their water hoses are what
shoved the girls inside. It was the Saudi news who first reported
this, not a Western news agency with an anti-Saudi bias.
Some of your other answers interest me, however. I've always read
that women in Saudi Arabia face such restrictions as: not being
allowed to leave the house, let alone the country, without either a
male relative or a 'pass' signed by a male relative, or not being
allowed to talk to any men outside their families. I have also been
told, at least during the Gulf War, that American servicewomen
stationed in Arabia could not buy things from male storekeepers,
but had to have a male escort do the marketing for them. Are you
saying this is not true?
And why the strict sexual segregation? During the Jeddah economic
conference your Grand Mufti recently declared that the mingling of
the sexes is the cause of all evil in the world.
You;'re right in saying that American women suffer some
inequalities compared to American men, but still, from a woman's
perspective, America is a far better place than Saudi Arabia, or
any place run by people who say and seriously believe things like
"Men and women socializing is the root of all evil." Men and women
socializing is merely the root of all BABIES. Whether or not those
are evil is another matter entirely.
I am a late-comer to this conversation. I arrived at it a short
while ago after typing "statistics on gay marriage" into a Google
search. This has been very interesting reading. I am impressed, for
the most part, with the overall quality of thought expressed in the
various posts.
A few thoughts of my own:
1. Joe and Jennifer: To what Cairo conference are you referring?
The only Cairo conference of which I am aware was basically a
racist rant by the Arab states calling, once again, for the
destruction of Israel. Was there another conference that I
missed?
I'd be very interested in seeing some evidence backing up the
suggestion that the Vatican and GOP support coercive population
control. Isn't that more of a Communist China and Planned
Parenthood sort of thing?
2. To: chairm, ctl and Thomas. Great posts.
3. To: Anonymous. Ah, yes. The fallacy of origin, i.e., that a
proposition is wrong simply because of its source. As though 2+2=4
would cease to be correct, if your math teacher was Adolf Hitler.
Comical.
How did the government get involved in sanctioning marriage in
the first place? It seems to me that had the government stayed out
of this issue...getting involved ONLY when contractual disputes
arose, then this whole" gay marriage" and Polygamy thing would sort
itself out.
Example. In my humble opinion, anyone who is not married in a
formal, widely recognized, church, is not married. Now you can call
me any names you want, but that is my opinion. And that is what I
live by. I will denounce you (if I feel like it) for entering into
a gay marriage or a polygamy arrangement. But I will not get my
shotgun and come after you because I am tolerant (tolerance doesn't
mean agreement). But I am not married because the state says so. I
could not care less what the state says. I am married because my
church says that I am. And I don't recognize your weird church that
approves of gay marriage. That's the way a free country works. Of
course, the USA is far from being a free country.
Scott
Indianapolis
One other comment. Polygamy, which I am against, should only be
tolerated when practiced among adults. Many of these polygamist are
violating the rights of children.
Scott
Indianapolis
I have a question i am a little confused and i need a muslims help is it haram to marry a guy that converts to Islam? Or is it just wrong to the parents and family? Please somebody help me out with this question. Thank You!
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