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Microsoft Abandons Gay Rights Bill

andrewagill writes "Microsoft has withdrawn support from a bill that would "protect gays and lesbians from discrimination in employment, housing, banking, insurance, and other matters by adding sexual orientation to a state law which already bars discrimination" of the other usual suspects. Odd, given their previous accolades from the GLBT community, and their prior public support for the bill."

2,304 comments

  1. What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Interesting
    From the article in The Stranger:



    The Stranger has learned that last month the $37-billion Redmond-based software behemoth quietly withdrew its support for House bill 1515, the anti-gay-discrimination bill currently under consideration by the Washington State legislature, after being pressured by the Evangelical Christian pastor of a suburban megachurch.



    You mean it's that easy? I got an idea...Let's all march on Redmond and threaten to boycott Microsoft...unless they fix all of these unnecessary security holes in their products. :P

    Seriously, though, this is a MAJOR issue...Microsoft withdraws its support on a subject it's been championing for years, becuse of threats from one rabidly evangelistic, gay-hating preacher??? Just what exactly does Ken Hutcherson have on Bill anyway? For the life of me, I don't understand why Bill didn't just tell him to fuck off. He should have ordered that Ken be dragged out back and shot (fun fact: it's legal for him to do that in Redmond). But no...he just caves, despite the fact that Microsoft owns the consumer market, and Ken's followers could no longer 'boycott' the use of Microsoft's products than they could 'boycott' the use of oxygen.

    I almost feel sorry for Microsoft. Almost.

    It's going to be interesting to see how Microsoft wriggles out of this one...although I would have much rather they called Ken's bluff...the 'boycott' would have been even more interesting to watch.
    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by swilde23 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      despite the fact that Microsoft owns the consumer market

      Would that be the same consumer market that passed anti-gay marriage laws in 11 different states last November?

      --
      There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand this sig, and those that beat up people who do.
    2. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Maybe. Just Maybe. The pastor was heard and M$ decided he made a good point.

      I don't know the guy. So I can't say how bad he is. But you certainly sound very negative.

      There is no national gay agenda. I'm sure we could find gay people on both sides of the issue. Are we so desperate to split up our society into little small pieces to fight one another? Does it have to be the bible-crusaders against human rights for gays? I would imagine there are a lot of bible-thumpers who would never hurt another human being, gay or not. And until told otherwise, I'd assume this pastor is one of them. Likewise, I imagine there are a lot of gay people who don't want special rights, they just want to be treated like everyone else.

      Is there room for common sense anymore?

    3. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      He has noting on him.

      The bill was basically stalled as many other unrelated things got tacked onto it. The spirit of the bill was so diluted it was useless.

      MS will support a new bill, which adheres to the original with none of the extra fluff.

    4. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I've never understood why homosexuals require special protection beyond those already offered by existing laws. What's next, a law that protects left handed people? What about a specific law to protect those that choose to be monosexual (probably a good portion of the /. crowd)?

      Discrimination law really shouldn't cover something that is a choice (if you argue that being homosexual is a choice) and if it's a medical condition, then let it be covered under the disabilities act.

    5. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by IronChefMorimoto · · Score: 1

      You mean it's that easy? I got an idea...Let's all march on Redmond and threaten to boycott Microsoft...unless they fix all of these unnecessary security holes in their products.

      Let's all march on Redmond? Did you just suggest we have a Windows Update Pride Parade?

      IronChefMorimoto

    6. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dav3K · · Score: 4, Informative

      Heh...ironically enough, that is PRECISELY what gay and lesbian people are after - to be treated like everybody else. Too bad you missed the memo on how that currently is NOT the case...

    7. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Likewise, I imagine there are a lot of gay people who don't want special rights, they just want to be treated like everyone else.
      I don't really see an anti-discrimination law as "special rights". It's not Affirmitive Action or anything.
      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    8. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically), nor is it particularly a disability. Furthermore, as it's entirely unrelated to capacity to perform most any given job or what have you, there is no reason that discrimination on the basis of sexual preference should be permissable.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    9. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. It is the most intelligent and insightful thing said so far in this discussion.

    10. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is that like left-handed people are different from right-handed ones? Or fat people different from skinny people? Or tall people different from short ones? Do you want the infinite list of how people are different and how they are treated differently?

      Sounds to me like gay and lesbian people (as represented by the movement, not the individual people) are not wanting to be treated like everyone else, they want to be special. They want political clout, they want marches, they want to throw their personal preferences into the living room of the other 80% of the population.

      I say treat them the same - -that means NO special laws or consideration. Just like everybody else.

      If you're talking marriage, then that's a different animal. Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can? Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club. I support equal rights as far as survivor's beneifts, insurance, etc, but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      You can't leglislate away the way people think. You can only persuade them civilly. Like we are doing here. Free political speech and persuasion are pretty neat things.

    11. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      could be simply that he was honestly persuaded by someone who holds a strong convictionn in the beliefs he was sharing with him. you should be careful when you use the word hate or hating. one of these days someone might incorrectly use it to describe you, b/c of a stance you take on a moral issue.

    12. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      Discrimination laws are a result of real discrimination, not imagined possible discrimination like a biased against people who are left handed. Sexual "preference" may or may not be a choice, but assuming it is there are other things that you choose like religion for which it is illegal to discriminate against.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    13. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by override11 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Guy + Guy = Bad Girl + Guy = Normal Girl + Girl = good (its perfectly natural) Cant they just make guy on guy luvin illegal?

      --
      No I didnt spell check this post...
    14. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why Bill didn't just tell him to fuck off.

      Hey Bill may be the richest man, but he already learned that messing with the powers that be will land him a smack down - or another anti-trust suit ;)

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    15. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1, Troll

      ..."there is no reason that discrimination on the basis of sexual preference should be permissable."

      What if your sexual preferences run to minor children?

      I am not flamebaiting or trolling, I am serious. "Sexual preference" and associated "discrimination" is purely a societal thing. In some societies, sex with underage children is acceptable, but homosexuality is not, and vice-versa in other societies. Ditto for bestiality.

      Where do we draw the line? Or do we?

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    16. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by AviLazar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Girl + Guy + Girl = (as my lesbian hippy friend says) "Dreamy"

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    17. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by FuzzieNorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As I'm sure you know, generally the argument revolves around the basis of consent .. the argument in our society is that underage children aren't able to consent to sex in an informed manner, and that animals aren't able to consent to sex with humans at all.

      Obviously homosexuality doesn't figure into that at all, because all people involved are obviously just as capable of consenting as heterosexual partners.

    18. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      Why not draw the line based on what is clearly behaviour that causes harm and behaviour that doesn't cause harm? Just saying that discrimination is all right because different countries have different ideas of what is acceptable is absurd.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    19. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Keep going:

      Ken's followers could no longer 'boycott' the use of Microsoft's products than they could 'boycott' the use of oxygen.

      I believe that in a heartbeat. Unless this preacher is able to get his followers to switch to Macs or spend a few months learning to run GNU/Linux, then he has no real clout on this issue.

    20. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      wow, for a moment there i swore you were saying 2 guys equals a bad girl..

      **shiver**

    21. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ZeroZen · · Score: 1, Insightful

      so why is guy + guy unnatural?

      my dogs hump eachother all the time, isn't that natural?

      and why is it, that because you want to see 2 girls make out that it becomes natural, and something you don't want to see (at the same time as boy on boy, childbirth?) is unnatural?

      if girl + girl is good, guy + guy can be good too.

      it might not be pretty, but beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

    22. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Descrimination based on sexual orientation does not exist. That's right, nobody is getting fired, nobody strikes out at an interview because he/she is GLBT.

      Not at all true.

      Sexual orientation is not an unvariable of yourself.

      Arguably true, arguably not. Irrelevant in any case. The question is not whether someone can "not not change" as you say it (why not just say "is a variable" - people who willfully use double negatives are usually trying to play stupid semantics games).

      Further, sexual orientation is simple to hide.

      Not at all true. It's a sad and easily recognizable fact that people are often judged by their mannerisms, and (flawed) inferences are readily made therefrom.

      To prove this to yourself, try to spend a day "simply" hiding your heterosexuality. For extra credit, try going to a gay bar and see if anyone doesn't notice your discomfort.

      I'm not gay, and I'm not really a bandwagoneer. Your argument is just emotional nonsense. Really, try working out that tricky double negative and you might learn something. You're hiding a lot of confusion between free will and personal choice in there.

    23. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by eno2001 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I, for one, champion the rights of 3M1C (three men and a cat) marriages! In this day and age, the artificial limits we impose on sexuality vis-a-vis marriage should be done away with completely. However, I will say that there should be strict laws regarding Republicans and Libertarians. They should be restricted to non-sexual cohabitation rights with members of the same sex only. This will eventually eliminate them from the gene pool. Thank you very much.

      Man am I thirsty!

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    24. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Minnesota, we have a legislator who has announced publicly that he is gay, yet has consistantly opposed gay marriage and still does.

      So no, you are not in a position to say, "PRECISELY what gay and lesbian people are after," because not all such folk have the same agenda.

    25. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      Wow, my 3rd post about religion in this story. Ironically religious discrimination is much like sexual orientation discrimination.

      Neither is appropriate in the workplace but that doesn't mean that one should have to hide their religous/sexual preferrence.

      I'm not sure where you get your "Descrimination[sic] based on sexual orientation does not exist" comment from but it sounds like pretty clouded vision

      I don't understand what this means: 1. Sex isn't a non-variable Maybe you could clear that up for me.

      Finally I guess I would fall under your " tolerance bandwagonner" category, though I can think of no reason to be ashamed of it. Oh, and get a clue. Gay people are not interested in dating ignorant religious nuts and certainly don't want to make you gay.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    26. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Homosexuality probably isn't a choice. It's too wide spread throughout the animal kingdom. My guess would be that it has strong genetic and neonatal evioroment factors. Maybe it's a vestige from before the evolution of sex, in either case, it's VERY OLD.

      2. Pigment content of one's skin could be considered a "medical condition" one, incidently, that has an effective medical solution.

      3. Everyone should have equal protection under the law. And in that sense Discrimination law is pretty flawed.

      4. Homosexuals actually recive special persecution under the law. Note how everyone against the legal contract called marrige for gay people don't object to divorce (invented by angelicans) or to any kind of civil marrige, marrige at sea, or even common law marrige where people don't even know they're married! Marrige existed long before christianity, long before monotheism at all. It was a legal idea, an idea so important that it was integrated into nearly every religion everywhere.

      5. Christians who don't think gay people should be allowed to marry, don't love Christ. They don't believe everyone should have been given free will,. Deep in their hearts, their God is small, petty, ingnorant, and prone to making mistakes that his worshipers need to fix after the fact through the domination of other people's lives.

    27. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by LordNimon · · Score: 1
      What if your sexual preferences run to minor children?

      The term "sexual preference" means whether you're sexually attracted to members of your sex, or to members of the opposite sex. It doesn't mean anything more than that.

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    28. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by learn+fast · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thank god. I for one can't go anywhere without certainly gay people peering at me in the most odd way.

      I've installed locks on all my doors and windows so those goddamned gays can't sneak in and get up to no good. One look at those pillows, your curtains and you know you've been hit by the gays.

      I've tried to do my part in my community by trying to keep tabs on them. I've taken some surveillance at the local YMCA. I've swept the mall and tried on some red swimware. Yet gay people keep decidedly peering at me in the most peculiar way.

      We must stop the gay conspiracy and the gay media conspiracy, with their forced-redecoration squads running amok, frightening children and installing remarkably tasteful yet a little too frilly curtain vestments on every doorway and awning in this whole country. They want to take away our rights, to have our own curtains. The gay media conspiracy keeps a lid on it, however.

      I urge you to ban gay marriage/civil unions in your state or your curtains may be next!

    29. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 2, Informative

      Would that be the same consumer market that passed anti-gay marriage laws in 11 different states last November?


      More specifically, those were state CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS not just state laws. The whole reason for that is because they're afraid that activist judges would overturn laws already in the books. Currently 39 states have "Defense of Marriage Acts" as laws, as well as the federal DOMA.

      http://www.domawatch.org has good information.
      --
      moo
    30. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Uzik2 · · Score: 1

      >Descrimination based on sexual orientation does not exist.

      So why do the gays tell us they can't get the
      same rights as others?

      Why is it not permissible for them to do something
      a straight man and woman are permitted to do?

      Think again.

      --
      -- Programming with boost is like building a house with lego. It's a cool but I wouldn't want to live in it
    31. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for pointing out why it's so hard to discuss this subject rationally. Child molestation is a crime because it *hurts* the child. So it's irrelevant to this dicussion.

      Lets draw the line before we start dealing with things that *hurt* other people. Two men/Two Women in a relationship does not *hurt* anyone else.

      Try defining why they shouldn't be allowed to 'marry' (gov't designation, not religioius)

    32. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It'd be nice if it were that simple, but the fact is that people do get fired when their bigoted bosses find out they are gay. No, they aren't having sex at work - but people figure it out anyway.

      People do get refused housing based on their sexual preference - the landlord of some friends of mine refused to renew their lease when she learned that they were more then just "roommates" and told them to their face that it was because they were gay.

    33. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tverbeek · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The point is that Microsoft's market share is secure enough that they can do things that their customers wouldn't necessarily approve of; the Rev. and Mrs. Goodfaith are still going to buy a PC with MS Windows and MS Office, regardless.

      I can't believe MS is really afraid of a religious-right boycott, especially when they're still the darlings of the other side of the Republican party (the economic right).

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    34. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      Ahh that's what he mean by non unvariable. To many double negatives for me. In that case I will again come back to my religious example. You can change your religion yet there are anti discrimination laws for people of a specific faith.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    35. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ZeroZen · · Score: 1, Insightful

      personally i know how to use linux, and i'm still a windows user. just learning how doesn't make the monopoly go away. we're all locked in by our software we use that we can't migrate to either the mac or the gnu/linux platform.

      i play games, and windows is on my system, because there are no *real* alternatives.

      sure there's winex, but you go play EQ2 on that.

    36. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Monf · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I disagree- discrimination based on sexual orientation does exist, just as discrimination based on gender exists.

      As to #1: I don't believe that sexual orientation is "simple" to hide. It is a large part of who we are, straight or gay, and comes out in our personalities. The whole point, which you obviously missed, is that A PERSON SHOULDN'T HAVE TO HIDE their sexual orientation.

      As to #2: This has nothing to do with having sex at work. In most work places, religious ceremonies are not appropriate, and are not performed at the workplace. Yet we DO prohibit discrimination based on religion. So what's your point?

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    37. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never understood why homosexuals require special protection

      I realize you're just a troll, but I'll respond anyway.

      MU.

      Homosexuals don't "require" anything "special". They just want to be treated just like everybody else.

      Why is that so hard for you to understand?

    38. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. That most certainly is not what they are after. They get that now. What they in fact do want is special treatment.

    39. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by kahei · · Score: 1

      It's going to be interesting to see how Microsoft wriggles out of this one...

      Excuse me? They supported the bill for a while, at least. What did you do? Or do you feel that companies have a responsibility to perform political lobbying on behalf of causes you support? Hint: they don't.

      I hear Standard Oil, Rocky Mountain Non-Ferrous Metals, Amtrak, and Mrs. Mitten's Olde Fashioned Tea Shoppe are also companies that are currently not supporting the bill.

      Wonder how they are going to wriggle out of it? Heh, it'll be interesting to watch them squirm!

      I mean, listen to yourself.

      --
      Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    40. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 1

      Well, it's obvious what he has on Bill. M$'s deal with the Devil is in danger if he makes the pastors mad. After all, the pastor's boss is more powerful than Bill's.

    41. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your words are those of a homophobe.

      Tell me, how do gay men negatively affect your life (other than tempting you with something you might very well feel given your attitude)?

    42. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if the Lone Ranger falls in love with Silver, what harm does he do the horse?

    43. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Descrimination based on sexual orientation does not exist.

      Bull fucking shit.

      In most of Amerikkka, homosexuals are denied the right to marry the person they love, where as heterosexuals suffer no such discrimination.

      Discrimination is more that "did someone get fired?", fuckwit.

    44. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mzwaterski · · Score: 1

      Do you have a source for such a study? Not trying to be an a-hole, I'm curious...seriously!

    45. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by swilde23 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification. What I should have said was "legislation". I know where I live it was a consitutional amendment, but I wasn't entirely sure about the other 10 states.

      At least they are making it easy for when they all get overturned for being unconsitutional. Rather then have to jump through hoops trying to undo laws and rewritting consitutions, we can hit all 11 in one fell swoop.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand this sig, and those that beat up people who do.
    46. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, it has not been "proven" scientifically. Just because someone publishes a report and says "X is true" doesn't mean it's true.

      Not all homosexuals believe that they are what they are without a choice.

      To say we do not have a choice would be to say that fate controls our lives, and when you start saying that you're going to piss a lot of people off.

    47. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by malex23 · · Score: 1
      I've never understood why homosexuals require special protection beyond those already offered by existing laws. What's next, a law that protects left handed people?

      Yeah, totally... and after that they might pass wacky laws protecting people based on gender, ethnicity, or religion...

      /What?

    48. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      " .. the argument in our society is that underage children aren't able to consent to sex in an informed manner, and that animals aren't able to consent to sex with humans at all."

      That is not necessarily true. Male dogs will voluntarily copulate with human women--active participation evidences consent.

      Society also recognizes that minors are capable of making adult choices--witness minors tried as adults for felony crimes.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    49. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1
      And if the Lone Ranger falls in love with Silver, what harm does he do the horse?
      An animal isn't capable of sexual consent with a human. Are you honestly trying to equate bestiality with consenting adults?
      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    50. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by swilde23 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I do hope your are joking, because I assume the person you are replying to was. Maybe I am just needing more sleep.

      In the eyes of those states legislation, two girls is just as offensive (and unlawful) as two guys.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand this sig, and those that beat up people who do.
    51. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cnkeller · · Score: 1
      I hear Standard Oil, Rocky Mountain Non-Ferrous Metals, Amtrak, and Mrs. Mitten's Olde Fashioned Tea Shoppe are also companies that are currently not supporting the bill.

      Wonder how they are going to wriggle out of it? Heh, it'll be interesting to watch them squirm!

      The issue isn't that they aren't supporting it, the issue is that they changed their position for some reason. No one (generally) worries that a for-profit company doesn't support some law (copyright, patents aside, blah blah), but when they change their stance....it's time to ask why?

      --

      there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

    52. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Monkelectric · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Me either ... MS isnt afraid of the friggin EU, let alone a single preacher.

      Someone very big must have threatened them, or, more likely, we simply don't know the story here. I think a boycott would have been GREAT for MS. Firt of all: we all know that conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers -- second of all: MS would get to look like a good guy for once by doing the right thing -- and thats great publicity.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    53. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole reason for that is because they're afraid that activist judges would overturn laws already in the books.

      Enough with the damn doublespeak. The judges have merely pointed out that EXISTING LAWS don't allow discrimination against gays. The judges clarify the law, usually by throwing out the one with less authority, which is exactly what they are supposed to do.

      Specifically, I live in California (where the issue hasn't been decided yet). We have a law that says marriage=man+woman. We also have a constitution that says we can't discriminate against someone based on sexual orientation. It is perfectly reasonable to say that allowing one orientation to wed and not the other is discrimination. Unless the constitution is amended, the issue will be up to the courts to determine if the lesser law violates the constitutional protections.

      Personally, I think that putting discrimination into the highest law of the land is un-American. But with our society of hyperbole, fear and divisiveness, what else can you expect?

    54. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1

      OK...let's get a few things straight.

      First of all, I am a heterosexual, and a Christian...just like you. I have a fiancee (the big day is in October), and she and I go to church every Sunday. So you can stop calling me 'gay' and 'christian bashing', OK?

      Now that that's out of the way, allow me to address your points:

      Descrimination (sic) based on sexual orientation does not exist.

      Again, here's a quote from the good Pastor Hutcherson:



      "Homosexuals have never been considered one-fifth of a human being."



      Discrimination 'doesn't exist', huh?

      ...nobody is getting fired, nobody strikes out at an interview because he/she is GLBT.

      Wrong. I personlly know not one, but two gay friends who have lost their positions solely on the basis of their sexual orientation. If you choose to disbelieve me, fine...I'm sure you can dig up many more similar cases with a simple Google search. Just because you haven't seen it (or don't want to see it), doesn't mean it's not happening.

      Sexual orientation is not an unvariable of yourself.

      What does this even mean??? (Hint: 'unvariable' is not a noun, genius.)

      Further, sexual orientation is simple to hide.

      Congratulations. With this phrase, you've just proven me right. If "nobody is getting fired, nobody strikes out at an interview because he/she is GLBT", then exactly why would they need to hide said sexual-orientation???

      Log off before you hurt yourself.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    55. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      At least they are making it easy for when they all get overturned for being unconsitutional. Rather then have to jump through hoops trying to undo laws and rewritting consitutions, we can hit all 11 in one fell swoop.

      Are you just dying to get the federal constitution amended or something? Because I promise you that if the SCOTUS had the arrogance to do this, all hell would break loose and the US Constitution would have the 28th Amendment in record time.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    56. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      If you like my post above, add me to your friends list and I will do likewise. I'm very interested in making sure that social commentary injected with humor is in plentiful abundance on Slashdot. The good lord knows that it is desperately needed in these dark times.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    57. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      The notion of what harms children has become terribly politicized. Corporal punishment; exposure to nudity; exposure to sexuality; exposure to violence; in utero exposure to alcohol or cocaine... There are experts on both sides of the issues, who argue vehemently, passionately their point of view as the TRVTH.

    58. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      At least they are making it easy for when they all get overturned for being unconsitutional. Rather then have to jump through hoops trying to undo laws and rewritting consitutions, we can hit all 11 in one fell swoop.


      I think that's unlikely, considering the large GOP majority in both houses of the US Congress, a GOP president, and a whole lot of conservative judicial nominations in the works. But only time will tell.
      --
      moo
    59. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Golias · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As one who does not agree with your point, I wish more people would address your argument, instead of simply modding you down as Flamebait or whatever.

      Getting to the argument:

      It would be entirely inapropriate for a non-Christian boss to expect you to "hide" all signs of your Christian faith while at work. It's a part of who you are, and even applying social pressure within the office on you to not express that part of yourself is descriminatory against your religion. If you have to live in dread every day that somebody might discover you are a Christian (perhaps even hear a rumor about it) and your chances of promotion or advancement within the company would be damaged by it, then you are being descriminated against, even though you shouldn't be expressing your religion at work anyway!

      Secondly, your statement, "nobody is getting fired, nobody strikes out at an interview because he/she is GLBT" is completely untrue. Even in states which have laws against such descrimination, it still happens. Companies lose lawsuits every year over this issue, so unless you are prepared to believe that the courts awarded damages for trumped-up charges in every single one of those cases, it obviously is something which goes on.

      Finally, when you say "Sex isn't a non-variable," what on Earth does that mean and what does it have to do with human rights?

      For the record: I'm a Christian myself, but I recognize that the rules of my church and the rules of my country ought not be the same thing, as my country governs millions of people who are not part of my church.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    60. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't leglislate away the way people think. You can only persuade them civilly.

      Which is my biggest argument against the DOMA laws. They don't make gay marriage go away, they just make it illegal (rather, unrecognized by the state).

    61. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In most of Amerikkka, homosexuals are denied the right to marry the person they love, where as heterosexuals suffer no such discrimination.

      Sorry. Marriage is not for them. Get over it, it's not changing.

    62. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you advocate murder, then? Interesting. Pretty much tanks the rest of your self-righteous ranting, but hey, whatever gives you an erection. Just don't get caught.

    63. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gay men troll for dates? I was under the impression that homophobes weren't their type.

    64. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by pianophile · · Score: 1

      What if your sexual preferences run to minor children?

      Sex with kids, gay or straight, is illegal under age-of-consent laws. This is not the same issue as sexual orientation.

      Where do we draw the line? Or do we?

      IMHO, between consenting adults, just about anything should be permissable.

      --

      'Your brain is God.' -- Dr. Timothy Leary
    65. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "At least they are making it easy for when they all get overturned for being unconsitutional."

      Guess what Judges cannot change the constitution.
      They cannot touch it.
      Not one little bit.

      Thankfully State and federal Constitutions are beyond the reach of ANY court.
      And before I forget do you see the irony of your post?
      It was placed in the constitution their for it is constitutional by definition.
      Let some judge try to cross the constitution.... Watch happens...

    66. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 0

      Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically), nor is it particularly a disability.

      That's not really true. Human beings are patterned to pursue things that cause them pleasure the same as Pavlov's dogs. And nothing causes more pleasure than sex. Indulge your new girlfriends fetish for spanking for a while, and you'll start involuntarially associating spanking with pleasure. Get into a routine of burning the same incense in your bedroom every time you have sex and you'll start seeing a physiological response when you burn it even if you're by yourself.

      You could turn a heterosexual into a homosexual and back into a heterosexual against their will by laying down situations and forcing a sexual response from them if you were immoral and ruthless enough to choose to do so. Read some of the horror stories out there about how women abducted by those in the sex trade are programmed some time.

      You can thus deduce that it's something that you can choose to enter into and leave, not to say that leaving something you've been taught to associate with pleasure will always be easy. You'll have these patterns laid into your brain forever, similar to a former smoker who will feel cravings out of the blue years later, but the new ones will supplant them with enough time if you change your routines.

      None of which justifies discrimination against homosexuals of course.

      Oh, and ask someone who suffers from infertility if they think it's a disability, see what they say.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    67. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I say treat them the same - -that means NO special laws or consideration. Just like everybody else.

      If you're talking marriage, then that's a different animal.

      Please be consistent from one senetence of your post to the next.

      Federal law assignes some 1,080 benefits to married couples. Gays and Lesbians are excluded from those benefits. That is clearly not treating the same! They don't want special laws or consideration; they want to be treated just like everybody else.

    68. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by jarich · · Score: 1
      or, more likely, we simply don't know the story here

      Ya think???

    69. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 2, Funny
      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    70. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by HyoImowano · · Score: 1, Funny

      It'll be curtains for you, see? Nyaaa see!? NYYAAAAAAH!

      --
      By now you should have guessed...I'm your magic negro.
    71. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Durandal64 · · Score: 1
      Maybe. Just Maybe. The pastor was heard and M$ decided he made a good point.
      I'd love to hear an argument against gay marriage which doesn't appeal to arcane religious beliefs or "traditional family values," which is just another euphemism for religious bigotry.
      I don't know the guy. So I can't say how bad he is. But you certainly sound very negative.
      He's obviously a bigoted homophobe. You didn't know Hitler either, yet I imagine you'd say he was a bad guy.
      There is no national gay agenda. I'm sure we could find gay people on both sides of the issue.
      Oh please. The only gay people against gay marriage are the ones who have been brainwashed by fundamentalist Christians into thinking they have some sort of disease.
      Are we so desperate to split up our society into little small pieces to fight one another? Does it have to be the bible-crusaders against human rights for gays? I would imagine there are a lot of bible-thumpers who would never hurt another human being, gay or not. And until told otherwise, I'd assume this pastor is one of them. Likewise, I imagine there are a lot of gay people who don't want special rights, they just want to be treated like everyone else. Is there room for common sense anymore?
      I'm sick of this idiotic nanny crap in politics. There are some issues which are just cut and dry, and gay marriage is one of them. The government is engaging in gender-based discrimination by refusing to recognize gay marriage, and gender-based discrimination is unconstitutional. Period. Religious nut-cases can whine and scream all they want, but they don't have a legal leg to stand on. Homosexuals are citizens of this nation, and they deserve to be treated like citizens of this nation.

      In 50 years, our grandchildren are going to look back on this anti-gay marriage idiocy the same way we now look back on Jim Crow laws.
    72. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      If I'm not mistaken, all of these state constitutions can be reworked with a 50%+1 share of the vote. That kind of mob mentality scares me. I don't have a problem with local issues being decided by majority vote, but when it comes to the state constituion, there should be more protection from mob rule.

      Its like the fact that we could have the 1st amendment repealed with 66% of the vote and 75% of the states in agreement. Things like that should be set in stone.

    73. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Necropheliacs are also not allowed to marry the person they love. Life is hard, get a helmet.

    74. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by xalres · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is just hearsay so take it as such. My uncle works in a brain spectrometry lab at UCSD. In one of the experiments (or whatever) they did, there was a noticeable physical difference when comparring the brain structure of homosexuals to heterosexuals.

      This lead me to believe that it's not a choice for most. I've tried to explain this to christians I know but I get the same "fingers in the ears" response they all give when something calls one of their beliefs into question.

      --
      If whales learn how to use weapons we're all screwed!
    75. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shalda · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you please explain to me why Microsoft ought to care one way or another? They're a public company; their only obligation is to make money for their shareholders. They have absolutely no business getting involved in social issues. They should stick to making software.

    76. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by UCRowerG · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Sounds to me like gay and lesbian people (as represented by the movement, not the individual people) are not wanting to be treated like everyone else, they want to be special. They want political clout, they want marches, they want to throw their personal preferences into the living room of the other 80% of the population.

      Yep, that's right. Gays want to join that special club of people who don't have to worry about being attacked on the street or in their own homes. They want to have those special rights like hospital visits and the ability to make medical decisions should their long-term partner become incapacitated. Let's not forget about the special right to keep a job without fear of harassment or being laid off for "poor performance," or any of the other hundreds of "special" rights the rest of the country takes for granted.

      If you're talking marriage, then that's a different animal. Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can? Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club. I support equal rights as far as survivor's beneifts, insurance, etc, but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      When a cat can understand the concept of marriage, its rights and responsabilities, and becomes a valid citizen of the country it lives in, then it should be granted marriage rights. Until then, a cat is a cat, and people are people.

      Double check your history. Gay relationships are out of fashion only in the current time. Historically in many cultures they have been accepted and even praised.

    77. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by swilde23 · · Score: 1

      If by an amendment to the federal constitution you mean something that says "The government can't and shouldn't define marriage to be the union of one man and one woman" then yes. However, I don't see why any reason for that to be necessary. Why does the government need to be involved with this on any level?

      --
      There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand this sig, and those that beat up people who do.
    78. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 2, Informative

      Simon LeVay's experiments, in the early 1990s, are quite famous; he determined that homosexuality is the result of physiological changes in the mother's womb, under certain conditions.* In experiments with rats it was found to be related to certain parts of the brain; INAH3 was the one that one experiment focused on, if I recall correctly. It was found to have developed differently in homosexual male rats than in heterosexual rats, and was similar in size to a female's. *It seems related to stress the mother undergoes during pregnancy; among other things, a strong correlation has been noticed between rates of homosexuality and catastrophic events or war conditions in specific areas.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    79. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Baldrson · · Score: 1
      Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically)

      Oh, you mean the proof that gayness is caused by a virus?

    80. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Tell me, how do pedophiles negatively affect your life (other than making annoying news items once in a a while)?

      Please retire the "it doesn't bother ME so it must be good" argument, mkay?

    81. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is the part that needs to be fixed, not redefining marriage: making sure lifetime partners are treated the same as married folks.

      The question is still open to why it has to be two people, and only people. Animals don't have rights? Can't they marry people too?

      I saw on 60 minutes last week that a Florida man was arrested for sleeping with two alligators. And I mean sleep in the sense you think I mean it. So why doesn't the guy just marry them? He obviously loved them, and they had an attachment for him as well. He was a nice warm-blooded mammal.

      Be careful how you change the rules. It may feel good today, but what is the long-term trend?

    82. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Golias · · Score: 1

      "Homosexuals have never been considered one-fifth of a human being."

      Discrimination 'doesn't exist', huh?


      Call me an idiot if you like, but I fail to see how that quote is evidence of descrimination.

      I'm not saying descrimination doesn't exist, I'm just wondering how his insistance that gays have never been thought of as mere fractions of humans is an example of intollerance.

      Ignorance, perhaps... but then it's an ignorance which I share, because I've never heard of such a thing either.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    83. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

      Um, no. Marches and political clout are to *precisely* get us what you already have. I must have missed the memo about how we're trying to take over the world or something. We're not trying to legislate how we're thought of; we just want the same *rights*.

      What rights? Lets just look at marriage rights, shall we? Here's just a handful.

      * Access to social security after a spouse's death
      * Access to health ensurance through the spouse's workplace
      * The right to custody of children after divorce
      * Visitation rights for non-biological children
      * Joint parenting rights, such as access to children's school records
      * Bereveament leave after death of a spouse
      * Burial determination after the death of a spouse
      * Domestic violence intervention
      * Sick leave to care for a spouse or non-biological child
      * Legal validation of a long term relationship
      * Ability to live in neighborhoods deemed "families only"
      * Access to life insurance in spouse's workplace
      * Access to survivor benefits in case of emergency
      * Access to spouse's crime victims' recovery benefits
      * Ability to file wrongful death claims
      * Right to shared property, child support, and alimony after divorce
      * Ability to file joint home and auto insurance policies
      * Joint rental leases with automatic renewal if spouse dies or leaves
      * Access to adopting children
      * Automatic inheritance of shared assets after spouse's death
      * Automatic inheritance of retirement savings tax-free after spouse's death
      * Automatic exemption of property tax increases on shared assets gained after spouse's death
      * Ability to file joint tax returns
      * Access to tax breaks for married couples
      * Assumption of spouse's pension after death
      * Ability to file joint bankruptcy
      * Ability to collect unemployment benefit after leaving a job to relocate because of spouse's job move
      * Ability to transfer property from one spouse to aother without transfer tax consequences
      * Access to fostering children
      * Automatic next-of-kin status for emergency medical decisions and hospital visitation status
      * Immigration and residency priority for spouses from other countries
      * Ability to invoke spousal privilege in a court of law
      * Access to reduced rate memberships at health clubs, social clubs, organizations.
      * Prison visitation rights

      Many, many more.

      We're tired of being second class citizens. Sick of it, really. I can just picture you, back in the 1960s, claiming that blacks "just want political clout and to march". It's the same sort of tripe that they got then, and we're taking it now.

      Marriage is not "a different animal". First off, just from a technical perspective, civil unions are generally pretty worthless. the most important benefits are at the federal level. Many private benefits are simply based on the word "marriage" as well (private organizations have the right to exclude same sex couples if they want, and few would argue them that, despite what Fox News and the like tell you; the issue is that many organizations simply want a legal status, and use whatever the government decides is "married"). Civil unions are "consolation prize"; separate-but-equal (but not really equal) really sucks.

      But most importantly of all: It is not *your* institution. Because *your* church, or whatnot, says that it's wrong, means nothing to me. My partner and I were married in a Unitarian church; they recognize and honor same sex marriages. Who are *you* to say that my religion's viewpoint is of lesser value than your own?

      The American Anthropological Society completely disagrees with the notion that marriage has always been as it is now, and that same sex marriages are either ahistorical or harmful. Hundreds of societies throughout history have had them. Up until recently, interracial marriages were illegal in the US. Before that, marriages between African Americans were banned, period. For the

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    84. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      I don't really see an anti-discrimination law as "special rights".

      It's "special rights" in the sense that it's one of a limited number of reasons why you can't be fired. You could still be fired because, say, you're a Democrat and your boss loves Bush. Or because you root for the wrong sports team. But not because your boss saw you wearing that pride day button.

      I generally don't trust this type of law (a family member nearly got dragged through the coals by spurious complaints about age discrimination). I'd rather just boycott companies that discriminate.

    85. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anubis350 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      my dogs hump eachother all the time, isn't that natural?

      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins. They live together, have hatched an egg given to them together. It's really cool.

      if girl + girl is good, guy + guy can be good too.

      I have a helluva lot of female friends who think so anyway. Girl-on-girl is hot to many guys, but a lot of girls (that I know at least) are just as turned on by guy-on-guy as guys are by girl-on-girl.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    86. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ah yes the modern liberal. Find one judge somewhere to overturn precedent, legislation, etc. Which is why all of the right wing lackeys are now crapping themselves trying to do stupid things like amend the constitution.

      If the constitution actually mattered anymore, then people might have some understanding of the rather large and expansive role individual states are supposed to have in governing themselves, rather than some hippie judge in California making a decision that affects state law in Indiana. But now that both republicans and democrats have abandoned any consistency in their defense of the constitution, that is all out the window.

      How about this, let states decide how they will regulate things that are clearly within their constitutional bounds to regulate. Then see what happens. I happen to be conservative, but I bet that states that allow equal protections for gays will not implode into centers of beastiality as predicted by the hard right.

    87. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would not trust one to perform ANY job.

    88. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Minors tried as adults is a contradiction, and usually the same right-wing retards that oppose same sex marriage support executing children.

    89. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 0
      Why does the government need to be involved with this on any level?

      No, obviously I am talking about an amendment that removes the issue from the juridiction of the federal courts, and allows the little people to make the laws that govern themselves through the democratic processes. I have no problem whatsoever with gay-friendly legislation passing through democratic processes. Even if I disagree with it, at least I have a voice in the process. I DO have a problem with federal courts arbitrarily reading their own values into the Constitution and overriding the decisions of even state supermajorities.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    90. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      Politics aside, it's a fact that child molestation causes emotional problems later in life for the molested child, hence why there is a real, not just political, basis there.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    91. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      The phrase should be extended with the words "or anyone else". Pedophiles (assuming that they act on their fantasies) are harming the child. Nobody is being harmed by the existance of a gay couple.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    92. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by RichardX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I say treat them the same - -that means NO special laws or consideration. Just like everybody else.

      Absolutely!
      Which is why they should be able to get married, and to live and work without fear of discrimination.

      As for the marriage issue, I think a lot of people don't understand that marriage is far more than just an indication to society of two people being long term partners. There's a whole shedload of legal implications, such as ability to follow your partner to different places with a career change, or implications for what can be left in the event of your partner's death (especially from a taxation point of view), even implications for access to your partner under certain medical care situations. IANAL, so I can't fill you in on the details.. I'm also referring more to the situation in the UK, but I'm sure it's much the same in the US.
      Anybody with more legal knowledge care to comment?

      Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can?
      Hint: Cats aren't human. Humans are.
      Furthermore a cat is incapable of consenting to such a union.

      If marriage has got anything to do with ability to reproduce then anybody incapable of reproduction shouldn't be able to marry.

      On the other hand, if it doesn't have anything to do with reproduction, then why are you so worried about letting same sex couples marry?
      If you feel it would devalue "normal" marriages, then you need to take a close look at mariage statistics. They really can't get much more devalued than they already are.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    93. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was good, however, keep in mind that Libertarians would be the last ones trying to infringe on your 3M1C idealogy. We're all for anything goes (as long as the cat consents).

    94. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by hobbesx · · Score: 1

      Or, what if someone found the killing of another human erotic? If someone were to consent to being killed with a knife during sex, would that be acceptable?

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
    95. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mzwaterski · · Score: 1

      I have to say that I lean towards the chosen path rather than born trait. I have yet to see one good study that shows otherwise, but I am very open to changing my opinion if I see one. However, I'd hardly call this the answer. Just because the brain structure is different doesn't mean that it was that way when they were born. I don't know, I guess I would have to see more information.

    96. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the plus side, reading his post gave me a little bit more understanding about Orwell's _1984_ newspeak.

      His phrases like "plusungood" are kind of hackneyed; they aren't mindfucks anymore, but rather just a pop culture reference. Seeing someone actually use "non-unvariable" in a discussion about personal rights is pretty damned chilling.

    97. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I support fixing the problems you bring up.

      I don't support redefining marriage.

      People get a license to marriage. The state defines the concept. I see no other example of a state which legalized gay marriage and lasted for a long time, therefore, I believe it is a bad idea. That's my opinion, that's my right. Has nothing to do with you or anybody else being gay.

      Can we agree that gays need the same treatment in their lifetime unions as married folks? Or is this about something else, like demanding that the gay lifestyle be unconditionally accepted by mainstream society? I'll march with you on the first cause, but count me out on the second.

    98. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can? A cat can't get married because cats can't enter into a contract.

      3 people can't all be married to each other because most (all?) states require that the marriage contract be exclusive, which means that anyone can only be party one such at any given time, and that each contract may only inlvolve two people. Think of it as an exclusivity clause.

      Your reasoning is poor. How does allowing two men to marry suddenly let people marry cats, any more than heterosexual marriage does? Two gay men can enter into damn near any other contract, but it doesn't mean that a cat can do the same.

      The big problem that the states and feds are having now is that they went on an equality spree over the last 100+ years. The 14th amendment was added to the federal constitution, and since then most states that didn't already have similar legislation have added it to their own constitutions. Some even added laws that were far more expansive than the 14th amendment to the federal constitution.

      Now, many states have decided that they want to be able to limit who can enter into certain contracts based on the individuals' gender. Oops, our constitutions won't let us do that! Better hurry up and amend them to make exceptions!

      Worse yet, (for the anti-gay-marriage bunch, that is) they'll probably not even be able to get away with "civil unions" for long. Brown v. Board of Education will prevent them from creating two differently-named but otherwise equal contracts, as even that violates the 14th amendment. In other words, constitional (state and federal) amendments will be necessary to prevent full-fledged gay marriage.

      They should just change all of them to Civil Unions, abolish "marriage" at the federal level, and call it a day. Let holy men marry people, the government can just have "unions". There, idiotic semantic argument solved.

    99. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is the part that needs to be fixed, not redefining marriage: making sure lifetime partners are treated the same as married folks.

      Oh, you mean "separate but equal". That worked so well the last time, let's try it again.

      I think the phrase you are looking for is "consenting adults". Animals are not considered adult, and are not able to give informed consent. Same with children.

    100. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      A cat can't consent. Nor can doorknobs or any other ridiculous thing you want to make a flawed analogy about. Explain to me how a cat says "I do," and I'll be 100% behind man/cat marriages.

      So we have "Why can't 3 guys get married?" left. And the answer is that it serves no legal purpose. If 3 guys want to get their friends together and put on tuxes and dresses, let them, but legally, there's no point.

      And I doubt it would happen, but if it turns out that 3 guys want to get hitched, we'll hear them out. If the only reason we can think of to not let them is that it's always been that way, then we should probably go for it.

      What the hell is the problem with that? None of them are trying to marry you, are they? And even if they were, I don't think forced marriages are ever going to be part of the gay agenda.

    101. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boy, the first post in days that deserves some mod points and my leftovers expired.

      Nice job. *golf clap*

    102. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't have a problem with homosexuality, but this proves nothing. You're confusing correlation and causation.

      London taxi drivers (who have to learn the name and location of every street in London before they get a license) have very significant differences in brain structure to the rest of the population. It is the learning process that causes the brain changes, rather than people with particular brain structures choosing to become taxi drivers.

      Similarly, until the reasons for the brain differences of homesexuals are understood, you cannot conclude that they are the cause of homesexual feelings. Or vice versa.

    103. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1
      I would imagine there are a lot of bible-thumpers who would never hurt another human being, gay or not

      That's probably true but, then again, you can sure find a shitload of Jesus lovin' Christians in most major U.S. prisons . . .

      Hate is hate, no matter how much one dresses it up in theology. Whenever I hear a bible-thumper rail about how all the folks he defines as "sinners" will soon be roasting in hell, I'm reminded of that Rowan Atkinson skit where he plays the devil welcoming folks to hell. There's a bit where he's dividing up the new arrivals into smaller, easier to manage groups (e.g. sodomites, adulterers, etc.), and he says,

      "Christians . . . yes, I believe some of you are fairly surprised to be here, but, you see, the Jews were right."
      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    104. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 2, Interesting

      State constitutions are not beyond reach of SCOTUS. State constitutions must be compliant with the US constitution, and the ultimate interpreter of the US constitution is the supreme court. You can argue about their interpretations, of course, but the fact remains that it is their call.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    105. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Acceptable, but problematic.

    106. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we should boycott Microsoft! I already kind of do in a way by never paying for their software. :)

    107. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are incorrect, homosexuality is a choice and has not been proven genetically.

      It has been speculated that it is genetic, but there is no genetic tie in humans to homosexuality, and in the genetic experiments the homosexuality was not due to the animals inherent feelings toward the individual animals (the fruit fly study) but because of its inability to determine the sex of the of the other fruit fly. The fruit fly was only having sex with the other fruit fly because it did not have the ability to make its prefered choice.

      Since fruit flys are completely hardwired, trying to say that because a fruit fly was unable to determine the partner is completely non linkable unless someone is attempting to make an excuse.

    108. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That kind of mob mentality scares me.
      Democracy is the mob mentality....Everyone votes and the majority wins.

    109. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the City of Cincinnati... up until last year it was the only place in America where it was legal to discriminate against someone based on their sexual proclivities. Oddly no one ever tried to keep heterosexuals out of the workplace - something I pitched to many employers who were against the law.

      The whole thing passed based on the idea that we shouldn't give "special" rights to gays. In other words, gays don't deserve the same rights. Many a smart man was fooled by their propaganda campaign. Oddly enough the law was passed under a gay (female) mayor!

      More?

      http://www.citizenstorestorefairness.org/

    110. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Possibly because Mircosoft feels that its finanically unfair that they give their gay employees benefits while other companies don't. So they want to raise the bar for everyone.

    111. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rock on Microsoft! America was better off when the gay freaks stayed in the closet.

    112. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Funny
      "Girl + Girl = good (its perfectly natural)"

      As long as there is a straight guy in the room with them running the video camera......and they're both good looking...

      :-D

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    113. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ManoMarks · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They're only "activist" if they don't decide in your favor, at least as far as Rightists in the U.S. are concerned.

      --

      That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere

    114. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      What effect does this bill have on the profits of the shareholders of Microsoft?

      It costs money to support, and it doesn't provide any benefit. Gates probally recieved an edict from on high that this was not something the company wanted.

    115. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Hence democracy scares me. Yes ... I know.

    116. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't support redefinining marriage

      Oh, really? Ok, then, lets make it so that interracial marriages are banned again. Sound good?

      Heck, lets go further: blacks can't marry, period. Sound better?

      Heck, lets go even further: women are chattel. Sound even better?

      If these don't sound better, than you *do* support redefining marriage - you just don't support redefining it from its current state. And you do this because of *your* viewpoint, which conflicts with *my* viewpoint. Seing as my stance doesn't harm *you*, and makes me a "separate but equal" category, what grounds do you have to hold your view? Is it your church? *My* church disagrees. Is it your personal tastes? *My* personal tastes disagree. Etc.

      I don't ask that you like me. I don't ask that you like my partner. I don't *want* you in my private life. All I ask is that you accept that we have a right to be treated like everyone else, that *our* view on marriage is different than yours (but that this is a country of individual freedoms and not a doctrinal state), and that "separate but equal" is inherently unequal.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    117. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it is, then it is a harm they've chosen for themselves. I say "let 'em be."

    118. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by MAdMaxOr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > that's long ago been proven scientifically

      I wish that whenever people say that they'd reference the relevant journal articles.

    119. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is interesting that you used the word 'fluff'. Very fitting...

    120. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you need a study? There are people that physically can't perform without specific requirements being met that have nothing to do with sex. It's called a fetish. It's very well documented. No one has ever gone and decided that they would only be aroused by certain shoes.

      It probably wasn't genetic, and they probably developed it at some point. That doesn't mean they can flip that particular switch off.

      (For the idiots, no, shoe marriage is not analogous.)

    121. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Golias · · Score: 1

      It's worse then that. Now they're floridating the water to taint our precious bodily fluids!

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    122. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rs_Conqueror · · Score: 2, Funny
      Lets take a look at that statement shall we?

      Here you say::

      Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically), nor is it particularly a disability.

      Therefore homosexuality is genetic.

      And yet here you say::

      There is no reason that discrimination on the basis of sexual preference should be permissable.

      Therefore homosexuality is a preference. But wait! Didn't you just say it was scientifically proven to be genetic? Get your story straight and come back to me later.

    123. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Funny
      I've swept the mall and tried on some red swimware. Yet gay people keep decidedly peering at me in the most peculiar way.
      Dude, it's not just the gays looking at you funny in those red swim trunks. When you tried to "enhance your manhood", you put the tennis balls in the back of the trunks instead of the front. You looked freaking scary!
    124. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Altus · · Score: 2, Insightful



      I dont have a problem with that...

      as far as I am concerned wrong is wrong... even if the supermajority disagrees.

      What if Utah passed a state constitutional amendment that let the authorities run roughshod over your rights... tap your phones, put cameras in your house, break in at any time to search and seize your property.

      that would be unconstitutional and I would expect the federal courts to overturn the beliefs of the supermajority in Utah.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    125. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      " The point is that Microsoft's market share is secure enough that they can do things that their customers wouldn't necessarily approve of; the Rev. and Mrs. Goodfaith are still going to buy a PC with MS Windows and MS Office, regardless."

      I'm actually wondering why a corporation is involved in a social issue to begin with....maybe they realized this and withdrew because of that.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    126. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      So, to summarize...
      Beauracracy brought Bill's bill to be bull, but Bill's didn't bow to the bigoted bible bashing bishop*, but began a new bill with all the benefits but no bull.

      It's all so clear now.
      (*I know he's not a bishop. Artistic licence, and all that)

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    127. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by skahshah · · Score: 1

      I have no problem marrying a cat with a man. I just want the cat to say clearly "I do" when I aske the question, then take the pen and sign. I don't mind whether she is left-pawed or right-pawed. Now I'm on my way to marry Koko the gorilla with his teacher...

    128. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually, no. The state historically has NOT defined marriage--the church has. And churches have been marrying gay people for a very long time.

      The state merely decides what benefits people get. If it uses marriage as a determinant, it doesn't have to define it--the people already got married in their church and they AND their church are happy about it.

      This whole "gay marriage" label is a misnomer. Gays can already get married. They frequently do. I've attended several gay weddings. No police came in and broke the thing up. There was a minister, and exchange of vows, a kiss, and cheering. Then they were married.

      This is about BENEFITS for gay couples WHO ARE ALREADY MARRIED.

      Frankly I'd be happy if the state didn't recognize ANYONE'S marriage. It's a religious issue, they shouldn't touch it.

    129. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Mumpsman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      they want to throw their personal preferences into the living room of the other 80% of the population.

      So...say a hmosexual man has a "personal preference" for hairy, well endowed biker dudes. Now say that I, a heterosexual man, have a personal preference for girls in bikinis. If by "into the living room" you are talking about TV (and not say books or radio or any of the other things that americans do in living rooms), then I would say that TV sexualizes girls in bikinis WAY MORE than hairy, well endowed biker dudes. At least, that's how it works on the beer comercials I watch.

      Seriously, you make it sound like the gays are just banging down you door so they can have sex in front of your grandmother. "We're here, we're queer, we're high on poppers and X and looking for you to fist us!"

      Please let me know if I'm way off base here and living in one of the fortunate 20% of households whom the gays have decided, like a limp-wristed G-d on passover, to spare this indignity.

      --
      No battles to the death are recalled. Mumpsman can hit to attack and cause brainsmashing.
    130. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Altus · · Score: 1



      while you are right about the federal constitution I do not believe that state constitutions have as much strength.

      For instance, if a state constitution had a clause that was in complete conflict with the federal constitution (IE nobody has any free speech at all... or no freedom from search and seizure) I think the Federal constitution would trump the state constitution and that would ultimately be decided in federal courts.

      I dont believe this has happened in the past however... any example of it would have to be rather unusual.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    131. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rpresser · · Score: 5, Insightful

      American democracy has a long tradition of protecting the minority from the majority. I guess that no longer sits well with you? When can I expect the death camps to begin?

    132. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      I can't believe MS is really afraid of a religious-right boycott, especially when they're still the darlings of the other side of the Republican party (the economic right).

      You're really generalizing there. I'm literally a card-carrying Republican, largely for economic reasons, but I certainly have no love for the convicted illegal monopolists. Liberals are not a homogenous block, and neither are conservatives. Just thought you'd like to know.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    133. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Activist Judges? Please explain to me what an activist judge is. As far as my study of law is concerned, judges evaluate laws and determine their legitimacy as a balance against over-reaching legislatures. Are you claiming that these judges are ignoring precedent or US legal theory like the SCOTUS did in Bush vs. Gore?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    134. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They're only "activist" if they don't decide in your favor, at least as far as Rightists in the U.S. are concerned.


      I would contend that what you say is an unfair generalization. I consider it "activist" when a judge looks at FOREIGN LAWS to decide their rulings, or when they rule against the will of the people and decide to legislate from the bench. Judges should only judge the law in question with respect to the US Constitution (or state constitution, for state laws) and NOTHING ELSE - and without completely changing the meaning of language as well.
      --
      moo
    135. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1
      The whole point, which you obviously missed, is that A PERSON SHOULDN'T HAVE TO HIDE their sexual orientation.

      I disagree slightly: in the workplace, everybody should hide their sexual orientation. Among other things, it would dramatically decrease sexual harassment.

      I prefer to know as little about the sex lives of my coworkers as possible. A "don't ask, don't tell" policy covering everything sexual would be just great.

    136. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cod3po37 · · Score: 1

      What else could those anti-gay marriage voters possibly buy? Are they all going to turn to Linux? Apple? I don't think so. The Southern Baptist Convention--the largest protestant congregation in the US--has tried unsuccessfully for years to boycott Disney because of progressive non-discriminatory policies and "gay days". There's something decidedly odd about all of this.

    137. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by xalres · · Score: 1

      That's a very good point, you're right. In my mind, the evidence justifies the "born" route, in your mind, the evidence is a result of the "choice" route. Honestly, I have no idea who's right. Until somebody finds a "gay gene" I don't think anybody will have it right.

      I just have a hard time imagining anybody would choose a life of ridicule and violence. I can't imagine waking up one day and thinking "You know, my life is entirely too absent of verbal ridicule and ass-beatings at the hands of ignorant rednecks. Hey I know, I'll be gay!"

      --
      If whales learn how to use weapons we're all screwed!
    138. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1
      If I'm not mistaken, all of these state constitutions can be reworked with a 50%+1 share of the vote....Its like the fact that we could have the 1st amendment repealed with 66% of the vote and 75% of the states in agreement. Things like that should be set in stone.

      Interestingly enough, these state amendments would have met your suggested threshold in most cases. The closest margin in any state was Oregon (where the amendment won by 14%, and Bush lost by 4%). Here are the vote by state on Gay Marriage amendments - all of which passed:

      Arkansas 75% 25%

      Georgia 77% 23%

      Kentucky 75% 25%

      Michigan 59% 41%

      Mississippi 86% 14%

      Montana 66% 34%

      North Dakota 73% 27%

      Ohio 62% 38%

      Oklahoma 76% 24%

      Oregon 57% 43%

      Utah 66% 34%

      Missouri 71% 29% (Vote was in August)

      Louisiana 78% 22%(Vote was in September)

    139. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stankulp · · Score: 1
      Seriously, though, this is a MAJOR issue...Microsoft withdraws its support on a subject it's been championing for years, becuse of threats from one rabidly evangelistic, gay-hating preacher???

      What's the difference between that and a company supporting "gay rights" because of threats from rabidly self-absorbed, hetero-hating gay activists?

      The entire purpose of the "gay rights" movement is to force companies to provide medical benefits to the "domestic partners" of gay employees.

      In case you hadn't noticed, the entire healthcare system is on the verge of collapse because somehow, somewhere, somebody convinced the world that healthcare should be freeeeee!!!! Wheeeeee!!!!

      Companies do not provide health care benefits to the "domestic partners" of hetero couples. What makes gay couples entitled to it?

      --
      We must be alert to the danger that public policy could become captive to a scientific-technological elite. - Eisenhower
    140. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by kz45 · · Score: 1

      As for the marriage issue, I think a lot of people don't understand that marriage is far more than just an indication to society of two people being long term partners. There's a whole shedload of legal implications, such as ability to follow your partner to different places with a career change, or implications for what can be left in the event of your partner's death (especially from a taxation point of view), even implications for access to your partner under certain medical care situations. IANAL, so I can't fill you in on the details.. I'm also referring more to the situation in the UK, but I'm sure it's much the same in the US.
      Anybody with more legal knowledge care to comment?


      if gays are allowed to get married legally, do citizenship rules apply? Could a foreigner marry someone from the U.S and obtain citizenship?

    141. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      If you are heterosexual, and fall in love with a member of the opposite sex and want to marry him/her, then those rules are perfectly fine for you. But if you're homosexual, and fall in love with a member of your own gender and want to marry him/her, you're just out of luck. Why should only heterosexuals be able to marry the ones they love?

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    142. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful


      The point is that Microsoft's market share is

      Surely not - shouldn't the real point be why does a human rights bill need the financial backing of a big company to get passed?

      That's the issue as far as I'm concerned. Has the US ideals of democracy sunk so low that this is just a given now and not worthy of comment?

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    143. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      If you're talking marriage, then that's a different animal. Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can? Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club. I support equal rights as far as survivor's beneifts, insurance, etc, but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      The problem I see with the whole thing, and this perspective generally pisses off ppl from both camps, is this:

      A healthy society needs to care for the next generation. If it doesn't, it ceases to be, barring the existance of another society that young can be leeched from (which is why north america has such a push for immigration, it's a desparation brought on by previous generations choosing money and over family and the only thing that can prevent a collapse).

      Historically speaking, anything that supported the married couple supported the family. So the societal need to support procreation is partially filled by supporting married couples in a multitude of different ways across a multitude of different legal jurisdictions, ranging from taxation to insurance and far beyond.

      Fast forward through time, and you see the rise of the DINKs (Double Income No Kids). This is a situation where resources are being misallocated, people who are not having families are accumulating wealth far beyond their neighbours because they're recieving benefits that they really shouldn't, but they're in the minority, so they don't drive corrective action.

      Fast forward some more. The DINKs are the majority and don't want to give up their gravy train, reform where marriage is concerned is desparately needed, and you have a minority group that is GUARANTEED not to naturally procreate that wants in. It's just making a bad thing worse.

      The answer as I see it is to implement the reforms that are needed where marriage is concerned and find some way to reallocate resources to parents rather than wedded couples. Stop systematically making DINKs with no ties to society beyond their own death richer than their peers. Call me a cynic, but marriage nowadays seems to be more concerned with how to fairly dissolve one than anything else.

      Once this is done, there's no longer any logical reason not to allow marriage between anyone who's decided to couple, and the society will actually be healthier and have more of the political and economic clout allocated to those with a biologically driven motivation to look at the bigger picture. And gays and lesbians won't have to take the law into their own hands when it comes to determining who gets the car, who gets the jeep, and who keeps the house.

      That's how I see it anyways. I'll leave the discussion on how to handle adoption of children by gay and lesbian couples to those with a better understanding of child psychology.

      Something creepy to think about: If gay and lesbian marriages ARE morally acceptable, is there any logical or moral reason why two sisters or two brothers shouldn't get married? What a can of worms....

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    144. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      " .. the argument in our society is that underage children aren't able to consent to sex in an informed manner, and that animals aren't able to consent to sex with humans at all."

      That is not necessarily true. Male dogs will voluntarily copulate with human women--active participation evidences consent.


      Quite right. But the missing keyword here is "informed"
      Of course, you've no way of knowing that a person giving consent is giving informed consent, but they are actually able to (they can learn about the issues, should they choose to do so)
      A dog is NOT capable of giving informed consent, because while it may be happy to dive right in (err. bad choice of words) it probably doesn't have a deeper understanding of issues surrounding the acts it's choosing to participate in, some of which may affect it in ways it's unaware of at the time.

      Much like somebody who's extremely drunk or high may well consent to something, their consent is not informed as they are not in a good state to make decisions.
      Having said that though, what exactly constitutes a good state to make decisions is, of course, a tricky subject, with all sorts of factors such as age, education, mental and physical wellbeing, ability to communicate, and so on, entering in to it

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    145. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Be careful.

      200 years ago black people were not considered humans either. We can logically assume that 200 years from now there will be -- say monkeys and dolphins -- who will be given some sort of consideration. Especially if we apply some sort of cognitive enhancement to help them with their obvious "disability"

      All I'm saying is pass a law that means something, not just pandering to gay people who are obviously hurt by the current state of affairs.

      I'm still not comfortable with why there has to be "2". This whole thing of redefining marriage (and not gay union rights, which I support) sounds like too much bullshit for me to support.

      I understand what the American Anthropological Society has to say, and with all due respects, who cares? As a voter, I'm looking for long-term stable systems of civil society, not "the thing that was tried by all these societies that aren't around anymore" -- thanks, but no thanks. If anything, sounds like an argument against gay marriage more than anything else.

    146. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Altus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yea... the never of these activist judges... thinking they have the right to CHECK or BALANCE the power of congressional legislation.

      The NERVE of them... its like they think they have some kind of right to do it!

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    147. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The religious right just wants to enshrine hatred above the law. But state amendments and state laws both fall just as easily to a federal decision.

      Keep it up. Until we see a symbolic excommunication of Jim Phelps (I don't CARE that he's not catholic), I'll paint all christians like him.

      Let's Godwin this: there were probably members of the nazi party who were horrified at what was happening to the jews too. This didn't obligate anyone to give a damn and listen to both sides of the party line.

      This is a religion that teaches you that by default you are DAMNED to eternal suffering and torment because you are inherently WRONG unless you accept some external source of salvation. I would like to make it my life's work to dismantle this life-destroying belief.

    148. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Federal law assignes some 1,080 benefits to married couples. "

      Just guessing here....but, wouldn't most all of those benefits be there to contribute to the man+woman marriage to help them with them having children? Not that every couple has kids...but, the majority do.

      Personally? I don't think there should be tax breaks for having kids. Just because you didn't wear a condom and have a kid, you get a tax break and I don't? In essence, I have to pay more because YOU had a kid?

      I think people need to think out the total costs of having children...the time needed to spend with them, the difficulty of training and disciplining them...and the COST of raising them. Why should I be subsidizing your kids? I'm talking about Fed Taxes. I've really no problem with local taxes going to schools. You need roads because people have cars...humane societies because people have pets...and schools because there are kids running around...common good things. But, why an actual tax break for having them?

      I don't see it....and the argument given "Well, it is in the governments interest to encourage people to have kids which will be future tax payers". I call BS on that...people will fuck and have kids no matter if they get a tax break or not. I cannot imagine the conversation has ever come up, "Hey Marge, lets have another kids...need that extra deduction..."

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    149. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by haluness · · Score: 1

      It seems related to stress the mother undergoes during pregnancy; among other things, a strong correlation has been noticed between rates of homosexuality and catastrophic events or war conditions in specific areas

      This sounds like a very nice feedback mechanism on a species basis. If stress is high, halt reproduction by making the next generation unwilling to mate.

      Of course, a mechanism making the next generation sterile could also work, but that might be too drastic.

      And finally, I'm not a biologist, so I'm just guessing. But it does sound neat :)

    150. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dogun · · Score: 2

      Here's a better question:
      What legitimate interest is it for the state to say that a woman and another woman or a man and a man cannot marry?

      It's discrimination against gays in an odd way. Pairwise, as opposed to individual discrimination. In my book, that's still a problem.

      I support the grandparent's view that the government should recognize unions and get out of the marriage industry.

    151. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by prizog · · Score: 1

      "The Law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich, as well as the poor, to sleep under the bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread." -- Anatole France

    152. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by seriesrover · · Score: 1
      because of threats from one rabidly evangelistic, gay-hating preacher???

      Is this an example of tolerance that Christians are told to adhere to?

    153. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      if gays are allowed to get married legally, do citizenship rules apply? Could a foreigner marry someone from the U.S and obtain citizenship?

      Yes. Which would be better than the situation now, because since gays can't marry the ones they love they have no reason not to marry someone else for citizenship or for tax purposes or whatever.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    154. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 1

      The libertarians support your views, retard. Go read the libertarians viewpoint on gay marriage.

    155. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like you. I like your partner.

      I don't support redefining marriage _any more_ from the where it is now. Understand?

      I also don't support stoplight cameras. Or swimming at the beach after dark.

    156. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      When can I expect the death camps to begin?

      Blah, blah, blah. Way to flame, even though I tried to be as civil as possible. If you are correct, why even have elections? Why not just have philospher kings? What minority protections are at stake here, anyways? The protection from hurt feelings? Uncomfortable situtations? Disapproval of others?

      Honestly. Have we really gone so far, that the mere suggestion that citizens ought to have some say in the laws that govern them implies death camps in your mind?

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    157. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rules you are responding to are completely silent on who you may or may not fall in love with.

      Why should only heterosexuals be able to marry the ones they love?

      Because heterosexuals are, by definition, those who fall in love with ones they can marry.

    158. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      I see what you're getting at, but I just have one quesion:
      If you grant all rights and priviledges of "married" couples to what we shall temporarily call M2 couples, then in what way are "married" and M2 different?

      apparently I lied, here's another question, sorry.

      let's assume that in all ways Married and M2 are the same, except Married explicitly means "one man, one woman". Now, if some single man and single woman decided to M2 each other, would that not be permitted? why not? M2 is just a union defined for "2 consenting adults" isn't it? or does M2 specifically require a union of "2 men or 2 women" ?

      I know you assume I'm just being difficult now, but I have one more question before I cease my troublemaking.

      You said, "I don't support redefining marriage." However, you also said " I see no other example of a state which legalized gay marriage and lasted for a long time..." so, if other historical states have legalized it, then does that mean the definition has already been changed from "a union of 2 consenting adults" to "a union of 1 man and 1 woman"?

    159. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      Now, I'm not gay or anything, but I do agree with you 100%. The situation will not improve in the US anytime soon. You should consider moving to a country like Canada that already has gay marrige in many jurisdictions (BC, Ontario, etc.) and it will be Federal law soon enough.

      Now we need a new slogan for Canada, "Canada, more free and tolerant then the US!"

    160. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note "argument in our society", rather than "absolute truth". :)

    161. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Does it have to be the bible-crusaders against human rights for gays

      In the words of Little Timmy: "he started it". The religious right declared this war, and show no sign of wanting a truce.

      I think we need another Stonewall.

      I think we need one every fucking week.

    162. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand what this means: 1. Sex isn't a non-variable Maybe you could clear that up for me.

      Well, a non-variable would be a constant
      and if sex isn't a constant, then it must be a variable.
      It's unlikely to be a boolean, as I was once informed by an A&E staffer at a hospital that on the "in patient" form they have has five options for sex on it (male, female, post-op, too mangled to tell.. never figured out what the last would be)

      So.. possibly an integer or a string.
      Does that help?

    163. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Monf · · Score: 1
      I'm talking about "general" sexual orientation.

      That doesn't mean we keep a dildo as a paperweight, or have a cat'o'nine tails and some handcuffs, or a picture from the last "Dykes on Bikes" parade on the wall next to the generic "Perserverance" workplace art.

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    164. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by frikazoyd · · Score: 1

      Wait wait wait... Homosexuality is not a gender. The absence or presence of certain sexual organs defines gender, my friend. It's cut and dry, Male or Female. And while Hermaphrodites may be a special case, almost always they choose a sex and get surgery (or surgery is performed at birth). And as far as I know, the state recognizes them as one sex or the other to keep things simple.

      Now, the fact of the matter is, marriage is deeply entrenched in our laws (think taxes), and the reason Christians are so offended is because they feel that defining marriage to also include "same sex relationships" is stepping on their beliefs. And it is, only the most Liberal of Christian organizations believe that God will sanction a homosexual joining.

      So, what's the solution? Rewrite the laws so that the legal rights of same sex life-joinings are the same as current married benefits and rights. Don't call it marriage. Now, the benefits of this:
      1. Religious groups will be appeased with the technicality, since gay couples won't be "married" unless they find a religious organization that will sanction it. They will be "legally joined".
      2. Homosexual unions will be allowed by the US, and given equal rights. No discrimination.
      3. If a gay couple claims to be "married", then the Christians can take offense with the religious organization that sanctioned it, not the couple itself.

      Granted, some "Christians" are so shallow that they would rather hate the individual as well, but they're just using the name to rally behind a cause that is essentially hatred.

    165. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Why should only heterosexuals be able to marry the ones they love?"

      Because, by definition, that's what marriage IS.

    166. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Colonel+Angus · · Score: 4, Informative

      The earliest records we have of marriage ceremonies is 2350 BCE in Mesopotamia and had little to do with love or religion in any way, shape or form.

      It was intended to bind women (yes, more than one) to a man so that any children born to that woman were guaranteed to be of the man's seed. They were simply baby makers. Property of the men to continue their lineage. If the woman was failing to produce offspring the man was allowed to give her back.

      In Greece and Rome the married men were free to satisfy their sexual urges however they saw fit. Concubines, prostitutes and, if they so desired, male lovers.

      As Catholicism gained influence in Europe it became necessary for a wedding to be performed by a priest for it to be a legally recognized marriage. It wasn't until the 1500's that marriage was written into canon law as a sacrament.

      So your vision of marriage is essentially a 500 year old institution. While for the previous 3500 men were free to marry many women and cavort on the side with ladies of the night. Which is it? The real traditional marriage or the one that you've been told to think is traditional when it's anything but?

      From http://www.christiangays.com/marriage/rite.shtml

      Unions in Pre-Modern Europe lists in detail some same sex union ceremonies found in ancient church liturgical documents. One Greek 13th century "Order for Solemnisation of Same Sex Union", having invoked St. Serge and St. Bacchus, called on God to "vouchsafe unto these Thy servants [N and N] grace to love another and to abide unhated and not cause of scandal all the days of their lives, with the help of the Holy Mother of God and all Thy saints". The ceremony concludes: "And they shall kiss the Holy Gospel and each other, and it shall be concluded".

      Another 14th century Serbian Slavonic "Office of the Same Sex Union", uniting two men or two women, had the couple having their right hands laid on the Gospel while having a cross placed in their left hands. Having kissed the Gospel, the couple were then required to kiss each other, after which the priest, having raised up the Eucharist, would give them both communion.

      Boswell found records of same sex unions in such diverse archives as those in the Vatican, in St. Petersburg, in Paris, Istanbul, and in Sinai, covering a period from the 8th to 18th centuries. Nor is he the first to make such a discovery. The Dominican Jacques Goar (1601-1653) includes such ceremonies in a printed collection of Greek prayer books.

    167. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      Well, I cannot imagine how the male dog could be harmed by the act, but that's another discussion.

      I think you would have to agree, however, that in our sex-conscious society most 12-year-olds of either sex are quite capable of informed consent. No?

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    168. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "You mean it's that easy? I got an idea...Let's all march on Redmond and threaten to boycott Microsoft...unless they fix all of these unnecessary security holes in their products. :P"

      Too bad you cant do something similiar to Firefox...

      Here is the issue- they are pushing a bill, but if that bill is defeated it can be claimed as a 'victory'. They are better off putting the time and resources into backing the already-existing law, since it already accomplishes what their bill was looking to achieve. Having overwhelming precident supporting an anti-discrimination law is far more effective than yet another bill.

    169. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cryptess · · Score: 1

      As someone going through immigration procedures for a heterosexual marriage, I'd say that our current citizenship rules would probably work just fine, whichever sex applies.

    170. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Um, no it isn't. Lesbians have a lower rate of STD transmission (which I think you were alluding to) than straight women do. So, apparently by your logic, women should only be allowed to marry other women.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    171. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      as far as I am concerned wrong is wrong... even if the supermajority disagrees.

      But what if your definition of wrong is itself wrong? If there a better way of resolving these disputes than by conservative (in the sense of "change-resistant") but democratic institutions, I'm all ears.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    172. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by eyeball · · Score: 1

      Wow, well put. I never thought of it that way.

      --

      _______
      2B1ASK1
    173. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by vvaduva · · Score: 0

      That's just assinine! Everyone is treated the same...everyone can marry someone of the opposite sex. Where is the discrimination?

    174. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy.

      M2 is the "legal" definition of marriage.

      Marriage, or M1, is the social/religious definition of marriage.

      Both are the same. One has special social/historical/religious significance to a majority of the population. Adults can do whatever they want. Society gets to pick the names. That's my proposed compromise.

      As for your final question, it could mean either 1) it was redefined later to its current form, or 2) the structure of the social contract caused the society to fail, therefore a redesign was in order (Marriage 2.0)

      Although I'm not religious, religion can be a pretty good guide here. Obviously there have been multiple religioius practices regarding marriage over the years. I don't think that it is unreasonable to assume that the current general belief system in the USA is the best evolved of the bunch, vis-a-vis maintaining a stable society.

    175. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Col.+Blackwolf · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have a helluva lot of female friends who think so anyway. Girl-on-girl is hot to many guys, but a lot of girls (that I know at least) are just as turned on by guy-on-guy as guys are by girl-on-girl.

      Most of the girls I know think that that's a waste of 2 perfectly good guys attention that could be focussed on them instead. Preferably at the same time ;)

    176. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by javaxman · · Score: 1
      I, for one, champion the rights of 3M1C (three men and a cat) marriages! In this day and age, the artificial limits we impose on sexuality vis-a-vis marriage should be done away with completely

      That was an excellent Simpson's episode.

    177. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      Your rules apply unfair sexual discrimination. Men are not allowed to marry men, while women are. This is unfair to men. Your rules do not allow women to marry women, while men are allowed to marry women. This is unfair to women.

      If you prohibited me from marrying women, I'd be pissed off. Wouldn't you be pissed off if you were prohibited from marrying women?

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    178. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      Ahhh.. but you forget. I am a leftist fascist. ;P

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    179. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cod3po37 · · Score: 1

      You've got to be bloody joking.

      What do you think they were trying to do all those years with shock therapy? What about long-time prisoners who return to heterosexual behavior upon leaving? Get a blow job from another guy a sufficient number of times and the next thing you know you're picking out china and shopping for antiques?

      Behaviorists never cease to amaze me. Step away from the Skinner; put Walden II on the floor in front of you and no one will get hurt.

      Reminds me of these whacked out sociobiology-based conservatives who think that evolution somehow proves that homosexuality is unnatural when the father of sociobiology argued exactly the opposite.

    180. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Your example is perhaps technically correct, but often, we don't obey the word of the law, but the spirit of the law.

      In any case, it's still discriminatory, because you're essentially being told that you can't marry the person of your choosing. It's like being told that as a hetero male, you can marry any woman you like, as long as it's not one specific woman.

      If I choose to enter into a contract with another man, that's my choice, right? Why would you want to prevent people from entering the marriage contract with people of the same sex? What possible purpose does that serve?

    181. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I don't really see an anti-discrimination law as "special rights".

      Sure it is. Anti-discrimination laws elevate specific classes of persons or their attributes to a protected status. That is, by definition, a "special right." That can happen either directly in the law itself, or in the customary manner of enforcement. Once that protection is in place, it can be used as a bludgeon to beat down or punish anyone whose views do not agree with those of a protected person. "You don't cheer and advocate my relationship? That is bigotry! Discrimination! Hostile environment! Sue sue sue!" There are plenty of other cans of worms that can be opened as well. And please don't say that won't happen.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    182. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      Here is an interesting contention for you then.

      What basis do you have that Marriage revolves solely around love? That you marry someone BECAUSE you love them?

      As a social tool, what is the benefit of marriage? And no, "happy people" is not the correct answer. If this were so, marriage has completely failed that goal and should be abolished entirely.

      Two men or two women would not fit the social need of marriage. Married couples often violate the social need of marriage, but thats just how it works.

      The social need of marriage is completely focused on giving incentives for pro-creation. Note the word incentive. Even non married people are given special benefits and bonuses when a child is born and or under their care. Married couples are also given this incentive, and it also solidifies inheretence rights, a familial consolidation. In every culture though it is most tied to procreation and the support of a child until it can fend for itself, and a line of sucession when it comes to the assets and holdings of the parents. It would make you wonder why nearly every society (with very very few and minor detractions in small communities) ties marriage to a classification of one man and one ore more women.

      The law does not bar two non married lovers from living together and sharing assets, and individuals in those groups to give special powers to their life partner to get the equal and shared responsibilities aspect of marriage. The main thing that cannot be achieved through a will, or other current legal means, is the incentive provided to make living together cheaper to promote child rearing.

      I think all would be satisified if there was some process in place to make the current legal steps smoother. IE you can make a person your "family" in a sense, etc... Some kind of civil partnership where the individual is framed as sharing resources and being fundementally dependant on one another.

      France for example sidestepped the issue of marriage, which has a very definite definition and social role, and allowed civil partnerships between ANY two people, regardless of orientation or relation.

      A mother and a daughter could be civil partners for example.

      Would that arrangement satisfy homosexuals? I do not know, but perhaps you can ask homosexuals in france for their opinions, perhaps one will read this board and enlighten us.

      The idea is to abandon the idea of marriage as being between two people who love each other, since that does not seem to be a standard in ANY culture, and seems extremely romantic to me.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    183. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      It's intolerance in the sense that he's marginalizing the issues gays experience by comparing them against the issues blacks had to go through long ago. In essence, he's saying 'you've got nothing to whine about....now us blacks...we had it hard...'

      Mabye some Jew ought to marginalize his pain by comparing it to Auschwitz.
      Mabye some American Indian ought to marginalize his pain by comparing it to the Trail of Tears.
      Mabye then he would shut the hell up.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    184. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ABaumann · · Score: 1

      Being a homocidal maniac also is neither a choice, nor is it particularly a disability, but I, for one, champion not being homocidal as a moral standard that I'd hold all of my company's employees to. ...betcha I'll get modded down for this one.

    185. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Arker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't really see an anti-discrimination law as "special rights".

      Then you need to look closer, or take off your blinders, or something.

      Assault someone because they're wearing yellow or very nearly any other stupid reason in the world, and it's assault. Assault that SAME person with a slightly different, similarly stupid motivation (skin tone, religous jewelry, presumed or acknowledged sexual orientation) and suddenly it's a "hate crime" with far more severe consequences.

      If the law isn't taking assault seriously enough, then we should change that - not cook up extra "thought crime" statutes to tack on. And the use of the phrase "thought crime" here is completely apt - we're talking about a law that criminalises the thought behind the crime, rather than the act itself. This is a very very very bad precedent, regardless of any other aspects of it - thought crimes are a category of laws that should never be made, for any purpose whatsoever, period.

      I agree wholeheartedly with all genuine efforts toward legal equality. The State shouldn't have anything whatsoever to do with defining, recognising, rewarding or penalising marriage. Propose eliminating those privileges and I'll back you. Propose expanding those privileges to cover new classes instead, and I'll fight you every step of the way.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    186. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I consider a federal judge who bases his or her rulings on FOREIGN LAWS or STATE LAWS rather than the US CONSTITUTION, or distorts the language away from it's original meaning when it was written, to be an activist judge.

      --
      moo
    187. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      No, this has happened. In Romer v. Evans , the SCOTUS invalidated a Colorado constitutional amendment that prohibited state and local municipalities from extending special legal protections to homosexuals.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    188. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Altus · · Score: 1



      actually... if you were fired for any of those reasons and you could prove it you would certainly have ground for a wrongful termination suit against your former employees.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    189. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some "church" you were "married" in if they don't even read the Bible. You don't get equal rights, because you're not "equal."

      18For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth. 19For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. 20For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. 21For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 22Claiming to be wise, they became fools, 23and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and reptiles.

      24Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, 25because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.

      26For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; 27and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error.

      28And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. 29They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, 30slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless. 32Though they know God's decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them.

    190. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The judges who ruled affirmative action to be constitutional were activist. Nowhere in the constitution does it allow for discrimination based on "race" but that didn't matter.

      They allow discrimination. Now, I don't care what your political leanings are, intentionally hamstringing someone based on something they cannot control is wrong. Period.

      And worse, it should be unconstitutional but it's not.

    191. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mad.frog · · Score: 5, Funny
      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins.

      Obligatory Daily Show quote: "Just because it happens in nature, does not make it natural, buster!"

    192. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 123abc987 · · Score: 0

      You're right that gov't has its hands all up and over marriage. I don't see any difference in the definitions between union and marriage. Right now, any church can declare a union for any couple and that couple will have no legal rights or privileges. All you're proposing is switching the definition of union and marriage. All that would do would make a bunch of constitutional amendments limiting unions to hetrosexual couples. So basically, you're leaving the definition of marriage/union in the hands of a church, and now us godless heathens and non-xtian religious people will have no right to marry.

    193. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      Judges should only judge the law in question with respect to the US Constitution (or state constitution, for state laws) and NOTHING ELSE -

      For my education, can you provide specific cases where judges made decisions based on foreign laws?

      What about judges who refer to the non-constitutional sources, such as the Christian Bible, for the definition of marriage, when the word itself has many different historical meanings? I doubt you would call them 'activist judges'.

      What if the answer cannot be found in the constitution?

      When this country was young, many judges looked at the laws and conventions in other countries. Why? Because many of these other countries have similar legal systems & a similar moral context, and a similar decision made in another country may also work here.

    194. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1


      Specifically, I live in California (where the issue hasn't been decided yet). We have a law that says marriage=man+woman


      Actually, if you already have a law, it seems like it has been decided.

      The judges and courts exist to interpret existing law and to ensure that state law does not trump the state's constitutional guarantees. If a judge rules against a law despite not violating the state's constitutional guarantees, or bends the constitutional guarantees in order to rule against the law, he/she may be seen as an 'activist', one who is exceeding the bounds of his charge.

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    195. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      Why should only heterosexuals be able to marry the ones they love?


      Wait a minute, if someone loves their dad, should he or she be able to marry him? Or their mom? Or their brother or sister? There's MUCH more to marriage than just love.
      --
      moo
    196. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Catskul · · Score: 3, Informative

      All issues aside here.

      No they arnt. If you think that "lot[s] of girls are just as turned on by ..." then you must have been exposed to an extremely untypical group of women.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    197. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Yep, isn't tolerance fun?

    198. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      Well, at least you agree with Bush! "I told all four that there are going to be some times where we don't agree with each other, but that's OK. If this were a dictatorship, it would be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator," Bush joked. -- CNN.com, December 18, 2000

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    199. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Dealing with employment rights is part of making (and losing) money for their shareholders. This isn't about marriage or religion. This legislation is extremely important to their HR and legal departments as well as employees. If they backed down on legislation supporting equal employement rights for non-whites would you say the same thing?

    200. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you. Now I have a good list of dumbfuck hick states to avoid like the goddamn plague.

    201. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please explain the unfairness of these rules:

      - A man may NOT marry a woman
      - One man may marry one man
      - One woman may marry one woman

      In each of the previous two lines, it DOES NOT MATTER whether said man or said woman is gay or straight. The rules apply to everyone equally! So how is this discrimination? It sounds to me like some people want to have one set of rules based on their religious beliefs be applied to everyone equally via the government.

      If I had faith in the trueness of my religion, I would not want an organization whose power is founded on forcing people under threat of death to do things deciding whether my religious beliefs were appropriate for all. Faith is meaningless when it is found at the end of the barrel of the gun.

    202. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 123abc987 · · Score: 1

      you are so last century, it's sexual orientation, cuz there's not a choice in it as preference implies.

      you also forgot to mentions that in some societies, it is unlawful for people of differing ethnic/racial backgrounds to be married. your post would have had a lot more flamebait quality then.

    203. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0

      What legitimate interest is it for the state to say that a woman and another woman or a man and a man cannot marry?


      Perhaps "preservation of society" would be an answer to your question - I'm sure there are other better answers. But, you wont get those answers from people who call members of the GOP "gay haters".
      --
      moo
    204. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 1

      . Read some of the horror stories out there about how women abducted by those in the sex trade are programmed some time.

      Any chance of a link? Seems an intresting read, you so rarely hear whats really behind all "this evil sex traffic"

      --
      I like muppets.
    205. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 0, Troll

      intentionally hamstringing someone based on something they cannot control is wrong

      You're absolutely right. And the sooner we get the airlines to hire those blind folks at pilots, the sooner we will all rest easier as our civil rights have once again been secured.

      Equal rights for the blind!

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    206. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cryptess · · Score: 1

      "I think you would have to agree, however, that in our sex-conscious society most 12-year-olds of either sex are quite capable of informed consent. No?"

      No. Simply knowing that Tab A going into Slot B makes a baby doesn't mean the kid groks what they're getting into, socially, physically, and emotionally. Depending on whether they were brought up in a red or blue state, they may or may not have it down intellectually, but one factor does not grokkage make.

    207. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      What's next, a law that protects left handed people?

      If people were fired from their jobs for being left-handed, then that would be useful.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    208. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Golias · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not sure that's intollerance. Indignance, perhaps.

      There are those who promote gay rights who do try to equate their struggle for social acceptance and marriage rights with the frequent lynchings that went on in Harlem back in the day. If I were a black man who lived through such hard times, I would probably be deeply offended by that, regardless of my position on their cause.

      I'm all for civil liberties for all people, regardless of what their particular race, religion or kink happens to be, but I also recognize that gay men have a higher average income than the general population, which is one (imprefect) indication that what descrimination does still exist in our society is rather isolated trivial compared to the struggle of blacks in America.

      I'm not saying this guy isn't an ass... I'm just saying that this one quote is not really sufficient evidence that he is. (Especially when it is quoted and emphasized by a web site from his opposition. It's one thing if he said it answering somebody's question about his feelings on the matter, and is now being quoted without any context. It's quite another if he's printing and selling T-shirts with that same quote on it.)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    209. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zoombat · · Score: 1

      You can thus deduce that it's something that you can choose to enter into and leave...

      I think your logic is flawed. You used a few specific examples to "prove" your assertion, but that is far from showing that it is applicable for everyone in all situations.

      You can use just a few examples to disprove something, or use a very large number of examples to reasonably demonstrate a correlation, but really all you've shown is that given some specific extreme conditioning, people can be forced to behave in certain ways.

    210. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 123abc987 · · Score: 1

      What about between Wilbur and Mr. Ed?

    211. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      I know I didnt present empirical evidence and in fact mentioned that this was the women I know. Yes you're right, they are a group of not so typical women for the most part.

      however, do you have any empirical evidence to back up what you said, or are you just talking out of your ass?

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    212. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow- i've rarely seen an AC with the balls to come out and be a total douche like you just did. congrats!

    213. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by wolftone · · Score: 1

      I don't support redefining marriage _any more_ from the where it is now. Understand?

      I, for one, don't. In order for me to understand, I need for you to justify your lack of support. Why don't you support further changes to the definition of marriage?

    214. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ocelotbob · · Score: 0

      Why would I want to move to some frozen wasteland for gay marriage? I'd rather fight here right now for one right, than to subsume many more rights, such as the right to keep and bear arms, a press that isn't dominated by some government-owned entity, and a more vibrant, diverse culture. I live in California; gay marriage here has a pretty good chance of being real very soon now, and if not, I could always go to Massachusetts.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    215. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      I mentioned Simon LeVay's experiments elsewhere in the general thread, but thought I might mention that they seem particularly pertinent to your post. He found that brain structure leading to homosexuality was a product of conditions in the mother's womb, which tends more to the side of causation in this instance than your proposed looser correlation.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    216. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intra-family marriage is not allowed in the United States and no one here is arguing for the change of that.

      Why are you so against gay people being able to marry?

    217. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would be amazed at what people will do if their preacher/religious leader tells them to do it.

    218. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      This is about BENEFITS for gay couples WHO ARE ALREADY MARRIED

      Well said. The real reason for giving benefits for a married couple is that *The society owes a debt to the married couple* in the sense that the married couple will be giving birth to good children, bring them up, and contribute to the more smoother functioning of society. That is why the society helps the married couple by giving tax breaks etc. (heard lot of stories like in europe, australia where the govt encourages couple to have children, whereas countries like china discourage couple to have children) What does the gay couple do? can they be normal parents to a child? if they adopted for their peace of mind, think about the state of the child. they adopt. Is it a natural for a child to have same sex parents. That is why gays should not even think about marriage rights. It is a fetish, let them have it, I dont care, but dont talk about rights.

    219. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by UrgleHoth · · Score: 1

      From what I see, an activist judge is one who disagrees with your opinion.

      --

      Dogma - "let's just say we'd like to avoid any empirical entanglements."
    220. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rhone · · Score: 1

      I think this is where you have to make a distinction between what a person naturally feels and what a person does.

      You can believe that the former is innate (controlled primarily biologically, or perhaps even by early childhood experiences that are out of the person's control), while accepting that people still have control over the latter. So no, believing homosexuality has a biological cause does not automatically mean believing that fate controls everything people do.

      Personally, I've had several homosexual friends, and all of them feel as innately attracted to the same sex as I feel innately attracted to the opposite sex. I'm not saying there aren't exceptions. I'm guessing the exceptions are rather rare among men, while women (due to fewer inhibitions and societal taboos about having close physical contact with other women) are perhaps more likely to "experiment".

      Yeah, innate homosexuals they still have a choice over how they react to their feelings. In my opinion, however, expecting that someone who feels homosexual should ignore their feelings and marry someone of the opposite sex, is every bit as ridiculous and disgusting as expecting that a heterosexual person should marry someone of the same sex.

    221. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Xtifr · · Score: 3, Funny
      According to America (the book) by John Stewart, et al.:
      1. A judicial activist sees the Constitution as a living document that can be adapted and re-interpreted to protect the needs of a changing society, such as "marriage between sodomites" and "impulse abortions."

      2. A strict constructionist interpets the Constitution according to the language and original intent of the text at the time of its writing, in much the same way as a fundamentalist views the Bible. Fortunately for strict constructionists, they have been endowed by God with the super-human gift of being able to read the minds of people who died 200 years ago. Naturally, they use this power only for good.

      HTH, HAND :)
    222. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snowboardguy711 · · Score: 0

      If I might quote old school. We have no rebuddle. That was perfect. I had to copy that. I will be using that for reference from now on. EXCELLENT POST!

    223. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      A good argument, but it rests on the assumption that women and men are the same. But men and women are different. Before I get flamed, realize that I'm NOT SAYING that one sex is better or worse than the other. I'm just saying men are different than women. It's a fact.

      --
      moo
    224. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      So, what's a foreign law? Do international treaties, like the Geneva Convention count? As I remember, the US Constitution explicitly states that international treaties approved by the Senate are Federal law.

      Secondly, in Mass., it was the state Supreme Court that ruled that the bans against gay-marriage violated the state constitution. Are you claiming that the Mass. state Supreme Court is packed with activist judges?

      Also, isn't it the Federal Courts job to determine the original meaning the written law? Isn't that the job description of a judge, or are they merly administrative assistants who oversee trials in your "alternate-reality legal system"?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    225. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't matter what the fucking bible says, asshole...THAT'S THE WHOLE FUCKING POINT HE WAS MAKING!

    226. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, if you already have a law, it seems like it has been decided.

      Uh, I believe I said that we have a law which may or may not conflict with our consitution. That means it is still open to interpretation, because the law might not be valid. That interpretation is in the hands of the courts.

      The judges and courts exist to interpret existing law and to ensure that state law does not trump the state's constitutional guarantees. If a judge rules against a law despite not violating the state's constitutional guarantees, or bends the constitutional guarantees in order to rule against the law, he/she may be seen as an 'activist', one who is exceeding the bounds of his charge.

      Yes, very true. When there is a possible contradition of the laws, it is the job of the judiciary to pick an interpretation, at least until the legislature fixes the law. The thing is, whichever direction they choose will be considered wrong by the opposing side, so they can't help but be seen as 'activist'. The judges are just doing their jobs, it is the ones who pass the conflicting or unclear laws who are failing the public trust.

      I think the California law was passed by voters, not the legislature, which means the judge needs to send it back and demand that it be re-passed with some clarification about whether it conflicts with the constitution or not. The judge who does that will be denounced as an 'activist judge', though.

    227. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better add Kansas (state # 18) to your list.

    228. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You talk like it is a proven fact that people are born gay, like African American's are born black. You completely fly right over that and make these comparisons between the civil rights movement and whatever this is.

      You'll have to convince the majority with scientific proof that you were born gay and that you're not just another sexual deviant.

      That's not to say that you can't accomplish your goals with lawyers and judges collaborating to undermind majority rule, as is the case with affirmative action, which I'll remind you was never written into law.

      This bill will die. Perhaps that's why MS isn't supporting it any longer. Hey, where's Apple in all of this? Isn't Steve Jobs a big time liberal?

    229. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by JonathanX · · Score: 0, Redundant

      How is this insightful? Please point out the law that requires Microsoft's support for this bill to get passed. Microsoft decided to abstain from helping fund the lobbyists who are arguing in favor of the bill. That's all there is to it.

    230. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A gay person has every right I have, right now. It is just as illegal to punch me in the face as it is to punch him in the face. I can marry pretty much any woman I want, he can marry pretty much any woman I want. We are equal under the law in every way. Our desires may be different, but it's doubelespeek to say that the law treats us differently.

      It is a shame if some place chooses to fire a worker just because they are gay. On the same hand, what is keeping an employer from fireing me just because he dosen't like my face? Should I have special protection from being fired for being unattractive?

    231. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rworne · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins. They live together, have hatched an egg given to them together. It's really cool.

      You know, at the local state prison we have lots of "gay" couples. Trick is, you release them into their natural habitat they ungay themselves rather quickly (at least those who weren't gay to begin with).

      Are the penguins gay because that is their choice, or is it because of natural urges for procreation and the lack of potential mates?

      Toss 22 penguins in an exhibit and make 10 of them female. What the hell are the 2 leftover males going to do assuming penguins are monogamous?

      Sure, I can accept that homosexuality occurs in nature - but I don't see a whole lot of it. At least not on the scale it occurs in human society.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    232. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right- society will fall apart when homosexuals have the same rights as heterosexuals. do us all a favor and head down to the bunker now. i promise i'll be down in a little bit to let you know when Bush has passed his amendment to the constitution.

    233. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1

      "An activist judge is a judge that makes a ruling that you don't like"
      - John Stewart

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    234. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Even Brits realized that there was a need for a part of the house that doesn't represent the will of the people, for sometimes the will of the people can be morally unjust.

      Agree or disagree with the House of Lords if you like, but they were onto something.

      If majority always ruled, blacks would never be considered equal in America. Too bad you guys have an administration that has little regard for the constitution, and that administration will be appointing much of the supreme court this term.

      Good luck to y'all.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    235. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0

      In any case, it's still discriminatory, because you're essentially being told that you can't marry the person of your choosing.


      Well, we don't let people marry their parents or siblings even if they "choose to". So your point is moot. There ARE societal rules for these things, and for a good reason.

      And telling someone you can't marry a person of the same sex is not discrimination if you tell EVERYONE that.
      --
      moo
    236. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he wasnt talking about shock therapy. what he described is more carrot than stick. rather than associating pain with the sexual preferences you want to stifle, you associate pleasure with the sexual preferences you want to encourage.

    237. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 123abc987 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have had horrible luck linking into PubMed, but here goes:
      Homosexuality[MESH] (brain OR genetic)

    238. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      This is a religion that teaches you that by default you are DAMNED to eternal suffering and torment because you are inherently WRONG unless you accept some external source of salvation. I would like to make it my life's work to dismantle this life-destroying belief.

      No, it's a religion that says Love Me, your God and ohh by the way.. do not act like runting beasts... I made you for something different. Nobody, by default is damned to eternal suffering. It is the "actions" of a person which loses the grace of God.

      You will find that the result of your radical secularism is the death of Mankind. Because, in reality, we all are morally culpable for the suffering of our fellow humans.

      Your shoes, your food, your computer, and your house were all bought at a price. And that price today is slavery, inequity, child labor, and racism among others.

      Mercy and suffering are tied together, without which we all really do deserve death.

    239. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Double check your history. Gay relationships are out of fashion only in the current time. Historically in many cultures they have been accepted and even praised.

      And where are those cultures now? Failed?

      I'm just say'in...

    240. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Stot the doublespeek, a gay can marry. They may not want to but there is absoultly no law (I am aware of) that states that a man cannot marry a woman, baised on his preference for men.

    241. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Brown v. Board of Education will prevent them from creating two differently-named but otherwise equal contracts, as even that violates the 14th amendment.

      I suggest you re-read Brown. Specifically, the "separate-but-equal" argument was rejected because not because this was insufficient under the 14th Amendment, but because in reality they weren't equal.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    242. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 1

      Whether you're a gay nazi or not, us libertarians don't give a rats nipple what you do, so long as you're not given special privilege. Our position is to eliminate income tax breaks (as well as income tax all together) and any reference to marriage. Pretty much 90% of the laws out there can go, so don't go knocking libertarians because you learned in your high school history class that we are conservative and all conservatives are bad. We are conservative, no doubt. Learn to love it, nazi boy.

    243. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      actaully, interestingly we have an over-abundance of females, not males.

      You know, at the local state prison we have lots of "gay" couples. Trick is, you release them into their natural habitat they ungay themselves rather quickly

      that has more to with with domination and sexual frustration than gay tendancy for the most part. It very little to do with normal homosexuality.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    244. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Wateshay · · Score: 1
      Depending on whether they were brought up in a red or blue state, they may or may not have it down intellectually

      Do blue staters not learn about it as early? That must be what you're saying, because I was brought up in a very red family, in a very red state, surrounded by a lot of other red families, and everyone I know had a pretty good idea how sex worked by 12 years old.

      --

      "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

    245. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      you make it sound like the gays are just banging down you door so they can have sex in front of your grandmother. "We're here, we're queer, we're high on poppers and X and looking for you to fist us!"

      You apparently haven't been to a college campus lately.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    246. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shirov · · Score: 0, Troll

      My world view stems from the bible. My grounds for thinking that what you do is wrong comes from a 2000+ year old book that contains the word of GOD.

      WHAT IS YOUR BASIS?

      shirov

    247. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      For my education, can you provide specific cases where judges made decisions based on foreign laws?


      In the recent SCOTUS ruling on capital punishment for minors, one (or more) of the justices DIRECTLY REFERRED TO THE LAWS OF THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES as the sole basis of their judgement. The ruling was that minors can NOT be put to death, no matter what. This was a few months ago. I'm too lazy too dig up a direct link, but you should be able to find it with that info.


      What about judges who refer to the non-constitutional sources, such as the Christian Bible, for the definition of marriage, when the word itself has many different historical meanings? I doubt you would call them 'activist judges'.


      Since the US Constitution does not define marriage, then if a law is passed that defines it, then it can not possibly be unconstitutional, since the constitution does not address it. However, since some judges disagree with the legislature, they blindly apply their own personal meaning, rather than the meaning that fits the will of the people who elected those representatives.
      --
      moo
    248. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1
      I didn't say it was genetic, I said it was in-born. There's a difference.

      Furthermore, "sexual preference" is a term. It's not necessarily a very accurate one, as you point out, but it's the term we have and I stand a much better chance of being understood if I use existing terms rather than making up my own.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    249. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by superyooser · · Score: 1
      anti-gay marriage laws

      You misspelled "pro-marriage laws."

      They're about promoting marriage, not opposing a group of people.

    250. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit! The original Bible was written in English?! I never knew.

      Seriously, are you that cowardly in your position that you fail to reference the edition of the Bible you purport to reproduce here, omit the name and background of the translator(s), and offer no argument as to how Jesus of Nazareth would feel about what you have written?

      Oh, well. I forgive you. I hope, for your sakes, the ultimate Judge does, too.

    251. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      I'm not "proving" my assertion, I'm giving some examples to illustrate the fundamental assumptions that underpin my assertion. What the hell do you want, this is slashdot. I'm not writing a thesis paper here.

      People like you are really annoying. If you think my logic is flawed, why don't you at least put up some sort of rebuttal. I'm not an expert on the subject matter, but at least I can put together the rational behind my opinion and provoke some discussion. Which is a hell of a lot more than your post manages to do.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    252. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rhone · · Score: 1

      There's no contradiction in saying that someone prefers something for genetic reasons.

      I might (hypothetically) be biologically inclined to despise the nasty taste of raw onions. That doesn't mean I can't tell the teenage slave at Wendy's "I'd prefer not to have onions on my burger, please."

    253. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "Also, isn't it the Federal Courts job to determine the original meaning the written law?"

      Used to be. Now it seems to also be in the business of righting social wrongs, regardless of the law involved.

      Sometimes they get it right and sometimes they botch it. Mostly when they let their personal politics get involved.

    254. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Philosopher kings are a great idea. Indeed, they're pretty much the optimal form of government.

      Until, y'know, your great king dies and you need to find another one in a peaceful fashion, one that lives up to the standards of the old one (and that's assuming you get a good one to start out with in the first place, which is non-guaranteed).

    255. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 123abc987 · · Score: 1

      That nasty xtian reorientation camp has a 0% success rate. They've tried all your tricks and not a damn one of them worked. Do you think if you broke the dog's leg before you gave him food that he'd start enjoying broken limbs?

    256. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by saforrest · · Score: 1

      Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club.

      Why is a contract between sexes? Why not a contract between partners?

      I support equal rights as far as survivor's beneifts, insurance, etc, but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      So, you're one of the 'civil union' crowd: you're willing to give gay people all the trappings of marriage: benefits, coverage, etc. but you just don't want to call it "marriage".

      For the life of me I don't understand this crowd: even the gay-bashing religious folk make more sense to me.

      But clinging to a word -- it just makes no sense! What is so precious about the word 'marriage' that you can't bear the thought of having it applied to gay people?

      This institution, whatever it is called, will be functionally identical to heterosexual marriage in every way (if it's not then we have another argument). Gay people will own property, have children, get messy divorces, and general acts like all other married couples.

      For me, the whole "civil union" thing is comparable to a hypothetical situation at the beginning of the 20th century in which a guy would argue that, while women should be granted suffrage, that it really shouldn't be called 'voting'.

    257. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could I suggest switching to decaf?

      We could argue extremes all day long. You could say make marriage like it was in 1600 and I could say when are you going to let 3 men and 2 women marry?

      The questions are: 1) why is there this difference in the way we treat people? and 2) What is the definition of marriage?

      1 -- People should be treated the same. Let's write one law that replaces the other laws with new words. Not a new, _extra_ law.

      2 -- Marriage has a social and religious definition, and should be treated as such. That means let the majority religious belief system define it, as long as it doesn't hurt the minority. I'm all for having a Saint Patrick's Day, doesn't mean I have to become Catholic. Why are you forcing things to be one way or the other? Can't civil unions give you what you want? Perhaps we could redefine religion as groups of stupid people. But there I go again to the extremes. Certainly you want to meet in the middle, not grandstand, right?

    258. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      Yes, and deservedly so. Being a homicidal maniac is harmful, whereas homosexuality is only harmful in a completely illogical recursive manner - if you assume that it's harmful because it can cause other people to be homosexual, which is bad because see previous, and so on ad infinitum.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    259. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      I believe AA was allowed under tort theory as restitution for past offenses.

      You are correct that it is technically discrimination, but given the context, I'd say it's the least we could have done. We still owe a lot of black folks a decent education in this country. As a white Southerner, I'm not complaining about the technical discrimination of AA until black folks are statistically equal (Census numbers) in terms of wealth and opportunity as white folks. And for the non-Southerners, you've profited as much as anyone in the South born after AA kicked in. How that is so might not be obvious, but an empirical study of infrastructure and census numbers will tell you just how much.

      I consider AA a sacrifice my country asks me to make. Given the fact that South East Asian immigrants outnumber black software engineers in all the places I've worked in the South, I'd say it's not much of a sacrifice on my part.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    260. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When Gays understand the concept of marriage, get back to me. All the major religions that sanction marriage (not to mention the fact that one of them invented it) also consider homosexuality a sin. Clearly there is a bit of a conflict here. If you aren't concerned with following the rules of the religion, then why...follow the rules of the religion? To put it in religious "fundie" terms, if you are living in sin by being homosexual, getting married isn't going to suddenly make it ok. So if you are willing to blow off the teachings of the religion, then by all means...go for it. If this is truly about benefits, then I say eliminate all marriage benefits granted by the government. Somehow, I suspect that we'll find that this isn't just about the benefits. It is really about social acceptance, forced at that. To that, I say tough shit.

    261. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1
      For my education, can you provide specific cases where judges made decisions based on foreign laws?

      Lawrence v. Texas - homosexual sodomy, Justices cited two decisions by the European Court of Human Rights.

      Grutter v. Bollinger, affirmative action programs- Justices cited an international treaty.

      Atkins v. Virginia, execution of the mentally retarded, Justices cited an Amicus Curiae brief from the European Union.

    262. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by skiflyer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A gay person has every right I have, right now. It is just as illegal to punch me in the face as it is to punch him in the face. I can marry pretty much any woman I want, he can marry pretty much any woman I want. We are equal under the law in every way. Our desires may be different, but it's doubelespeek to say that the law treats us differently.

      That's just intellectual dishonesty... you're phrasing things in dishonest ways to prove a false point.

      You can marry pretty much any person you want.
      A homesexual person cannot.

      Trying to use semantics to prove a point is just petty and useless.

    263. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 1

      I say let gays get married only if we can ban the gay pride parade. Isn't compromise what this country is all about?

    264. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      if gays are allowed to get married legally, do citizenship rules apply? Could a foreigner marry someone from the U.S and obtain citizenship?

      Sure, why not? If that's how it works for different sex marriages, why would it be any different for same sex?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    265. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by wolftone · · Score: 1

      Although I'm not religious, religion can be a pretty good guide here. Obviously there have been multiple religioius practices regarding marriage over the years. I don't think that it is unreasonable to assume that the current general belief system in the USA is the best evolved of the bunch, vis-a-vis maintaining a stable society. Religious or not, it is not logically reasonable to assume the evolutionary benefits of American religious systems. There are a lot of factors other than religious ones that have influenced American prosperity. The first European settlers to stay in this part of the Americas were lucky as could be that the soil was fertile and natural resources were plentiful, and their technology would soon make it possible to expand westward. This has more to do with our current success than the religions that were practiced by them. The fact that we are still a country two hundred years later is not really all that special, considering the longevities of other governments. Your argument could be used to describe the ancient Romans: I would not be unreasonable to assume that animal sacrifice was the best evolved of the bunch, vis-a-vis maintaining a stable society.

    266. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by vthokie69 · · Score: 1

      Yes, mob rule is so much better. Everybody grab your torches and pitchforks.

      Let's find some witches to burn while we're at it.

    267. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by halivar · · Score: 1

      Gays want to join that special club of people who don't have to worry about being attacked on the street or in their own homes.

      It's called "assault and battery" and "breaking and entering", and we already have laws against them.

      They want to have those special rights like hospital visits

      That's not a right any more than drawing a paycheck is. I have the privilege of going to certain hospitals in particular because I pay for medical insurance. I also have the privilege of opting out of my employer-provided insurance and getting insurance that covers domestic partners.

      and the ability to make medical decisions should their long-term partner become incapacitated

      Power of attorney?

      Let's not forget about the special right to keep a job without fear of harassment or being laid off for "poor performance," or any of the other hundreds of "special" rights the rest of the country takes for granted.

      I don't live in a state with "right to work" laws. Where I live, I don't get any extra perk here that gay workers don't.

      Historically in many cultures they have been accepted and even praised.

      So was crucifiction; that doesn't mean it was a great idea. Not that being gay is equivalent, I'm just saying "argument from tradition" doesn't prove anything.

    268. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mzwaterski · · Score: 1

      awesome, thanks, I'm saving this to look at when I have a second.

    269. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shirov · · Score: 1

      You do realize that there are rules/laws in place for a reason, yes?

      Have you ever stopped to realize that you are asking for may be wrong? And that the current definitions are an attempt to protect?

      Or have you always just focused on just "getting what YOU want?"

      shirov

    270. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by sirReal.83. · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Your world view stems from a stale novel written by Anonymous Coward. My view stems from compassion and understanding. Thank you, come again.

    271. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the exception of "They want to have those special rights like hospital visits and the ability to make medical decisions should their long-term partner become incapacitated." (which is a good point and should be addressed), all of the other things you mentioned ARE how everybody else is treated.

      There are already laws against attacking people on the street or in their homes, no matter what the reason. Every day people get harrassed and laid off from their jobs for BS reasons, whether it'd be because they're gay, their religion, their race, they're ugly, their politics, etc.

      It seems that the 'gay rights agenda' is to be protected from how everybody else is treated. They want to be able to say "he beat me up because I'm gay, punish him worse than the average thug" or "I got fired because I'm gay, I want the government to protect my employment"

      This almost passes into the area of thought crime. Do I have the right to disagree with your sexual preference, race, religion, etc? Does it really matter what I think as long as I don't do anything criminal? Granted, many places already have laws in place saying that it does in terms in race and religion, the questions are 1)are those laws appropriate in the 1st place, 2)do we need to expand them to sexual preference, and 3)what ELSE do we need to protect if we're going to go as far as to protect the first groups.

    272. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by selsine · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wait arn't you protected again unlawful dismissal? Like being dismissed for the way you look?

    273. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radish · · Score: 2, Informative

      On the same hand, what is keeping an employer from fireing me just because he dosen't like my face?

      The law.

      Should I have special protection from being fired for being unattractive?

      You already do.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    274. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      You'll have to explain that one. Where has the Federal court gotten into the business of "righting social wrongs"? Are you saying the Federal government is not liable for tort? That would seem to contradict precedent, we've always (since the 1790's) allowed anyone in the world standing in the Federal courts to sue the Federal government. The Founding Fathers believed that this would keep us from acting like jerks in foriegn policy and thus jepordizing their "more perfect Union".

      And if judges were allowing their personal politics to get involved, wouldn't they be overturned on appeal?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    275. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Cplus · · Score: 1

      I agree with you entirely. It strikes me as ridiculous that they should be able to have any say, or throw any support behind a bill such as this. It's not the place of corporations to start exercising any kind of opinion on any social issue. Whether a company is on the right or wrong side of something like this I don't think they should have any say...this is the kind of thing that scares me when thinking about how corporations exercise control over government.

      --
      "Share your knowledge. It's a way to achieve immortality." -- Dalai Lama
    276. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is possibly the most ignorant post thus far in the thread.

      So a heterosexual couple who do not have children should get no rights? They aren't giving back according to you. How about a gay couple who put in 20 hours of voluntary community service every week to help society. Should they get rights? I know plenty of children who have poor parents. There are also gay couples who make wonderful parents.

      It is ignorant baseless comments like yours that has led us down this path in the first place. I feel sad for you if you truly feel this way. It must be hard to live with so much hate.

      Personally, I am straight. It is none of my fucking business who my neighbor chooses to be involved in a relationship with. With the high divorce rate and domestic abuse in this country, you moral values type folks should be welcoming any who vow to spend their lives together no matter the color of their skin or sexual preference.

      Views and opinions like yours are doing nothing to move this country forward. You are part of the problem, not the solution.

    277. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 1
      I say do away with corporate money in politics completely. Will we ever see the day?

      Wonder who's opinion this is. This is where your money spent in support of a monopolistic superpower goes.... what a shame.

    278. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by NeoOokami · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's insightful because he's pointing out that it's sad that it TAKES corporate backing to get a human rights bill passed. Microsoft is free to decide to act as they like, it's just sad that the bill like this could suffer just because there's less money being thrown in it's direction.

    279. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by yali · · Score: 3, Funny
      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins... It's really cool.

      Be careful turning to nature for guidance as to what is morally acceptable, lest you be cornered into defending nonstop drake-on-drake necrophilia. Better to just say "I'm cool with that" than to turn to avian examples.

    280. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      Since the US Constitution does not define marriage, then if a law is passed that defines it, then it can not possibly be unconstitutional,

      Yes it can, if it infringes on one of the other laws in the Constitution (or other founding documents).

      Most laws don't always have such a clear scope, unfortunately.

    281. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ichthus · · Score: 1

      For my education, can you provide specific cases where judges "looked at the laws and conventions in other countries?"

      --
      sig: sauer
    282. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I REALLY want to ban same race marriages.

      Genetically it's barely a step away from incest, and an abomination!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    283. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by NeoOokami · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, I hate it when corporations get involved with social issues. I mean think about all those charity donations. A corporation should only care about cut throat business and profit and stop trying to help people. :\ Seriously though, there's a perfectly valid branch of business ethics that argues that businesses and corporations have an obligation to help the community. There's also a completely opposite view of course. Both have their arguments. I for one don't mind a business helping out the world.

    284. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1
      Sorry. I'd like to, but I don't know of any free online sources. Those tend to be lacking, generally.

      (Of course, I'm an arts student - for all I know, science articles might be more readily available, but if so I wouldn't know where to link you.)

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    285. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by pilgrim23 · · Score: 1

      Could it be that protecting Gays is a specific protection and Microsoft is far more familiar with General Protection? Fault their decision? Never!

      --
      - Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    286. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by uncqual · · Score: 1


      What if the answer cannot be found in the constitution?

      Assuming the question is a constitutional one (as opposed to interpreting otherwise constitutional Federal laws), the Federal government has no business involving themselves in it.

      If the Constitution doesn't address the issue, then it's generally not within the scope of Federal power. That pesky list of Congressional powers in Article 1, Section 8 and the pesky ninth and tenth Amendments are fairly clear on this point (obviously there are other sections of the Constitution, including the (pre Incorporation Doctrine) 14th Amendment that also infer some rights on the Federal government).

      Sadly, all branches of the Federal government became a bit confused on this point during the last century.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    287. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by j-turkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
      They're only "activist" if they don't decide in your favor, at least as far as Rightists in the U.S. are concerned.

      Thank you! I'm glad that someone else is dismissing the term "activist judge" as a conservative rallying cry. As much as I support queer rights (as well as human rights in general), the first time I heard the term "activist judge", I understood the concern that federal judges may not have been deciding on an issue of law, rather, may have tried to decide on the right thing to do. I'm not saying that I agreed with the conservative sentiment, but I understand the concern and the potential appearance of the decision.

      However, when the term was used again in the Terri Schaivo case by Bill Frist and Tom DeLay, it was so obviously bullshit that (IMO) it totally devalued their original use of the term...especially because (historically, at least) the legislative and executive branches of the government don't get to make a law for one person that only affects one person. (Sorry, the Terri Schaivo case a big trolling point and I hate to bring it up, but it's the only other time I've heard the term "activist judge" used -- I won't talk about it any further outside of this context.)

      The thing that I really take away from it is that no matter what side of an issue you sit on, it just doesn't seem right to break the system to get your way, because ultimately, someone else will justify breaking the system to get their way and you may not like it. Was the system broken by anyone in the LGBT case? I honestly don't know, but at the time, the concern was valid, and deserved some consideration. Interestingly enough, (and depending on your point of view) my comment about breaking the system could be applied to both sides of either case where the term "activist judge" was thrown around. I guess it just comes down to a golden rule: "Don't be a dick." I guess we have quite a few politicians who could care less about that.

      --

      -Turkey

    288. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zoombat · · Score: 1

      200 years ago black people were not considered humans either. We can logically assume that 200 years from now there will be -- say monkeys and dolphins -- who will be given some sort of consideration.

      Heck, if monkeys, dolphins or even AI become so cognitively aware that they can be considered "consenting adults" then they should be able to marry. Future lawmakers can decide whether they want to allow inter-species marriages (think of some of they very successful inter-species Star Trek marriages here), but they should at least be able to marry within their species.

      But at least until they are adults able to give informed, voluntary consent, you can't marry your monkey, dog, or a child.

    289. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by clickster · · Score: 1

      Grutter v. Bollinger, affirmative action programs- Justices cited an international treaty

      Quick question, did the US sign that treaty? Or was is solely between other nations?

      Also, as for "cited", that doesn't necessarily mean the same as "used as the basis for a decision". Lots of people outside of the US have meaningful and insightful views on subjects. I often "cite" or "quote" people when defending my own decisions because they have the same opinions that I have, but are far more eloquent.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become less powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    290. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by fr2asbury · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh let's see. The right to inheritance, the right to visit and make descisions for your spouse in the hospital, the right to file your taxes as a married couple, certain states have married only property rights with regards to real estate. Gay and lesbian people who want to get married know the list of rights and privledges much better than I do (a straight divorced guy), but I'm sure there's many more.

    291. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by niktemadur · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute, people.

      There is a LOT of noise and precious little facts in the controversy surrounding so-called "gay marriages". The subject is being approached from the wrong angle, a fundamentalist christian angle. Which is just what a Jerry Fallwell, a Pat Roberston or a Jimmy Swaggart want you to do, both as an attacker or defendant of the concept.

      The fact that should always be kept in mind is what a few states are actually granting homosexual couples: the status of CIVIL UNION.

      Civil Union is NOT a marriage in the full sense of the law, has nothing to do with the church, but it does grant some of the legal rights that married couples enjoy, such as hospital visitation rights, taxation, inheritance rights, social security, etc.

      I personally believe that all couples, be they hetero or gay, married or unmarried, should have legal rights. The separation of church and state is there to, among other reasons, have the law protect all citizens from religious dogma, no matter what religion it may be.

      When law and religion merge, folks, we are in deep doo-doo, backtracking our way to the good-old, glory days of middle ages. Just ask the people who lived under the Taliban.

      Thankfully, on our way back to the past, we have a Thomas Jefferson to reckon with, standing there like a giant, guarding the threshold he helped us cross once.

      Let's jettison the word "marriage", copy-paste "civil union", so that public discussion on the subject can come back on track. You will find that the argument becomes clearer that way.

      --
      Lil' Thindime, lilting a lacrimose lament, krashes the kwaint konfines of Kokonino Kounty
    292. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rworne · · Score: 1

      The issue in California is that the law is being challenged by activists on constitutional grounds or being ignored by local politicians to make a political point or push an agenda.

      Judicial activism comes into play where the constitution may say nothing about the issue in and of itself, but the judge will find and twist some interpretation that will support his/her opinion, sometimes reaching quite far up his/her ass in order to pull it out.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    293. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please retire the "it's natural" argument, mkay?

      Only when the other, ignorant and bigoted side stops using the "it's unnatural" argument, mkay?

    294. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Knightowlz · · Score: 1

      but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      Oh you mean like when they decided against changing the definition of marriage which said that a 30 year old man could marry a 12 year old girl? Oh wait I don't think that's legal anymore...

      Or like when they decided against changing the definition of marriage by allowing people to choose who they marry instead of having their parents decide? Oh wait that's not normally done anymore (US/Canada/Europe)

      I agree.. we need to stop this whole changing the 4000 year old definition of marriage thing in its tracks now! Before the humans and the cats and dogs are all getting married!

    295. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by An.+(Coward) · · Score: 1

      Sure it is. Anti-discrimination laws elevate specific classes of persons or their attributes to a protected status. That is, by definition, a "special right."

      Anti-discrimination laws make no mention of a preferred class of people. They're written in a completely neutral way and apply equally to all, e.g. "it is illegal to fire someone on the basis of their race, gender, or sexual orientation"--not "it is illegal to fire someone for being black, female, or gay."

    296. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      At least around here, most of the employment contracts I see have the "We can dismiss you for any reason" part in them.

    297. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      A good argument, but it rests on the assumption that women and men are the same.
      My argument does not depend on that assumption. I agree that such an assumption would be false. That does not bear on my argument at all.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    298. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Altus · · Score: 1



      Thanks! Learn something new every day!

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    299. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      I also recognize that gay men have a higher average income than the general population

      Considering proportionally more of them live in major urban centers with high cost of living and high wages, that is not surprising and does NOT prove that discrimination doesn't exist. San Francisco proves my point almost on its own, extremely high gay population, and extremely high wages and cost of living. Try adjusting wages by the local cost of living and see what you get.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    300. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, the world isn't that simple. There is a continuum between male and female, and a surpring number of children are born into it ("intersexed") to some degree. For those with true hermaphroditism, to a significant degree (somewhat rare, but still extant), often the call between "male" and "female" might as well be made by the toss of the coin. Historically, most of them would be made into girls, because it was traditional practice to perform surgery right away, and the surgery is easier. Nowadays, this is largely rejected - there have been very high rates of gender identity disorder among such children, and even those who don't have problems with their assigned gender, often grow up quite mad at having the procedure done to them without their consent.

      These aren't just "little differences" or mutations that "look like" male or female. The gonads can often be intermediary between testes and ovaries. There can be an organ intermediary between a penis and clitoris. The uretrha can be at its base or even on its side. Etc. Where do you draw the line?

      If you're going to say chromosomes, think again. In fact, there are many women out there with CAIS (Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome). They're XY, but for all effective purposes, they seem like normal women (although are usually infertile; rarer conditions have led to fertile XY women). A minor genetic defect leads their androgen receptors to not bind to early developmental androgens, causing the body not to masculinize. Should these women only be allowed to marry other women? There are many other cases - other types of XY women, XX men, and things like XXY, XYY, etc. One case of a perfectly normal seeming XY woman was traced down to a mere *two* base pair mutation.

      Humanity tends to gravitate toward two extremes, but that doesn't change the fact that gender is a continuum. Draconian binary laws aren't appropriate for such situations.

      Besides, even if there was some sort of absolute "difference", some unbridgable chasm: who are you to say that marriage must be between two "different" entities? Many cultures throughout history have completely disagreed with you.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    301. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Kafir · · Score: 1

      Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can?

      It's too bad you added,"a cat" to your question; cats are incapable of understanding marriage, let alone giving meaningful consent. As for why three men can't get married - good question. I can't think of any reason the arguments for gay marriage shouldn't apply to loving, committed relationships of three or more people, and I'm disappointed by the inconsistency of those who want to legalize the former and not the latter.

      I don't have any objection to gay marriage or to plural marriage - my own opinion is that governments simply shouldn't be in the business of deciding who is and isn't married. If you can find a church that will marry you, or just want to declare yourself married, go for it. Insurance companies can find some other way of dealing with partner benefits.

      Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club.

      Social constructs are changeable, and have changed in the past - and the evidence (of sexual dimorphism, testicle size, anthropological data, and so on) suggests that humans evolved in an environment of mild polygyny - the males in our ancestry often had multiple "wives".

      That isn't too surprising - the biblical kings and patriarchs were polygynous, for instance - and it's also totally irrelevant. What people are trying to change is not marriage as an "evolutionary construct", but marriage as a legal institution. Legally limiting marriages to those between a man and a woman, on evolutionary grounds, doesn't make any more sense than legally limiting marriages to those between a man and a small harem, on (somewhat better supported) evolutionary grounds.

      If our state and federal governments are going to be involved in marriage at all, they might as well recognize gay couples, and plural marriages, since it will make those people happy, and it won't hurt you a bit.

      By the way, a good friend of mine got married, legally, only because it would get him his wife's health coverage, while saving her on taxes. They divorced a year later, when the marriage was no longer useful. He also had a girlfriend at the time, to whom he was not married. That should help you appreciate the distinction between marriage as a social construct/evolutionary development and marriage as a legal institution.

    302. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rworne · · Score: 1

      Hence my qualification which was deleted in your quote of my original post.

      I was just trying to make a point that lack of potential mates and sexual frustration could easily explain homosexual behavior in the animal kingdom. I was not denying that homosexuality exists in nature.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    303. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Phisbut · · Score: 1
      Sure, I can accept that homosexuality occurs in nature - but I don't see a whole lot of it. At least not on the scale it occurs in human society.

      That's because animals are aware that they need to procreate, and more often than not, they consider the survival of the race as more important as the survival of one member.

      Humans (from the West) today don't really care about that. In America, we'd rather have fun right here right now than care about the survival of the spieces. Just look at how America pollutes everything they can without caring about the future generations who'll have to clean it all up. Same goes for homosexuality. Gay humans don't care about reproduction, so they are more tempted to actually act gay. Gay animals still need to procreate, so they probably get females just for reproduction's sake.

      On another note, we always talk about gay animals... are there lesbian animals too? Never heard of it...

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    304. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage is for starting a family, starting a family is for raising (potential) children.

      You really think marraige is about commitment and love? Tell me why over 50% of marraiges end in divorce (here in Amerikkka)!

      Think of the children, how are they going to be protected by a group of people who seem only to push their beleifs on others.

    305. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1
      If the law isn't taking assault seriously enough, then we should change that - not cook up extra "thought crime" statutes to tack on. And the use of the phrase "thought crime" here is completely apt - we're talking about a law that criminalises the thought behind the crime, rather than the act itself. This is a very very very bad precedent, regardless of any other aspects of it - thought crimes are a category of laws that should never be made, for any purpose whatsoever, period.
      Laws based on intent are part of our legal heritage. The differences among First Degree Murder, Second Degree Murder, and Manslaughter are based on the thoughts of the murderer. If you killed by accident, it's manslaughter. If you spontaneously decided to kill someone, it's Second Degree Murder. If you decided to kill someone, made a plan, and then went out to kill them, it's First Degree Murder.

      Your state of mind is already debated in court. It's called mens rea. That's why we treat the sane and the insane differently. That's why we treat accidents differently from premeditated acts.

      There is a difference between spray-painting "Nirvana rocks" on the back of your school and spray-painting "DIE JEWS DIE" on a synagogue. The former makes people roll their eyes; the latter terrorizes people, makes them fear every stranger, makes them always look over their shoulder expecting some their, makes them hide.

      A hate crime takes an awful toll on a community. It stifles discourse, innovation, and creativity. It traumatizes and it spreads fear.

      Wear of yellow tshirts is not a historical cause of hate crimes. If it were, it would be on the legal list of aggravating circumstances just as committing a crime due to the race, gender, sex, sexual orientation, creed, or disability of the victim is.
      --
      Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
    306. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the current system, what is protected? Children production capacity? Married couples without children are not a special category. Adoption? What is the basis for thought that gender roles are valid or that economic stability is not then the determining factor for government recognition of the relation in marriage? Clarification of laws to modern standards is essential for their proper application. Pair the religious concept of marriage with the relation it has been used as shorthand for in current laws, also set relation formerly described in shorthand as marriage and associated benefits as an alternate and include standalone concept. There is no problem then outside of religious objection; protests and rallies at least formerly could be conducted by anyone in the US so release religious opposition there and not in legislature that governs all US citizens.

    307. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true faggot. Gj.

    308. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      If you mean "preservation of society" as in "keeping the population up", we're not having a problem on that front. Nonbreeding members of society are actually a boon in such a situation. If you mean something else, you'll have to be more detailed.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    309. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cryptess · · Score: 1

      I actually learned about it when I was two, including the existence of homosexuality, kink, fellatio, contraceptives, diseases, emotional concerns ... With this knowledge, I was still not ready. And knew it. And waited till I was engaged. Blue state, with blue parents.

      Now, my aunt is a bit more conservative. Kinda purpley or something. So, when her kid was about 8, he came to ME asking where babies come from, and when I told him to ask his mom, she thought I was sexually abusing him.

      Cute, huh?

    310. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mhortman · · Score: 1

      I think the main difference is that no one gets beat up and left for dead because they are left handed, or monosexual.

    311. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Oh, really? Ok, then, lets make it so that interracial marriages are banned again. Sound good?

      That WOULD BE redefining marriage.

      Heck, lets go further: blacks can't marry, period. Sound better?

      Don't try that bullshit. Do NOT try to equate the struggle for racial equality with the battle over equality of sexual orientation. It belittles us both for you to try.

      Richard Simmons and Jim J Bullock are NOT MLK.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    312. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Funny

      Federal law assignes some 1,080 benefits to married couples.

      If they're willing to put up with years and years of misery just for some so-called federal benefits, I say let 'em. They have just as much a right to be unhappy as the rest of us.

    313. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The amendment actually prevented laws protecting gay, bisexual, and lesbian people from discrimination. It did not prevent laws protecting the rights of heterosexual people - and, in fact, in the Colorado cities that had previously had sexual-orientation protections before Amendment 2, those continued to apply - to straights.

      So you couldn't be fired for being heterosexual, but you could be for being gay.

      And that's why it got struck down. All the "special rights" people somehow manage to leave out that all these laws protect them, too - because they know they don't really need that protection, being in the overwhelming majority, and besides, their point is to ensure unequal status before the law.

    314. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by computational+super · · Score: 1

      And I should be allowed to watch!

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    315. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      The only thing that could not be effected by a Christian boycott in the US is the drug and porn industries.

      Then again we do have Pat Roberts, and Babtists.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    316. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shirov · · Score: 1

      Who defines the modern standards? A minority of people?

      Food for thought...

      --shirov

    317. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ZedmanAuk · · Score: 1

      Here is a different set of rules:

      - One man may marry one woman of the same race.
      - One man may NOT marry anyone other than one woman of the same race.
      - One woman may NOT marry anyone other than one man of the same race.

      In each of the three previous lines, it DOES NOT MATTER whether said man or said woman is black or white. The rules apply to everyone equally! So how is this discrimination?

      Personally, I am glad that the Supreme Court found the inherent discrimination in the above rules (which are pretty much as they were written in Virginia and other states) in 1967. If they had not, then I would not have been able to get married to my current wife.

      So I sympathize completely with gays today, because the court decision that made my current family possible did not happen all that long ago...

      --
      -ZA
    318. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ABaumann · · Score: 1

      Aah, you must be a libertarian. That, truly, is the difference.

      Libertarians believe that the standard lies in whether or not something is harmful to others (and sometimes even to themselves).

      My beliefs rest around whether or not something is moral, which is admittedly a higher standard then the libertarian system, and one that I cannot possibly keep. (I lie all the time. I swear. I speak poorly about others.)

      The point is, I try. Just like everything else, I aim for perfection. I'll never hit it, but I'll come a lot closer then someone who's just hoping to hit the target.

    319. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bushidocoder · · Score: 4, Insightful
      What's the best solution? Get the government out of the marriage business, period. Leave the status of "married" up to the church. Each church has the right to decide whether or not marriages from another church are valid. Governments should only deal with "unions", as far as rights and privileges go; a union should be a legal status, and a marriage a private one.

      I can't agree with you more. I believe that marriage is an institution of religion, and that the term marriage should be applied to couples who are wed by an accepted religion (no scientology or cults, please). The government should take whatever benefits they have historically given married couples and make up a new type of union with exactly those benefits, and allow them universally to all couples of either gender.

      As a rational member of society, I believe that I do not have the right to dictate to you what is love. I don't have the right to infringe on you whatever I may believe. As a Catholic, though, I believe that homosexual relationships are wrong (when sex is involved). No one can shake my belief on this, because part of faith is the idea that there are some things whose correctness is established by God, and not subject to my review or approval. When my conscience interferes with my faith (as it does here), I believe that my conscience is malformed.

      America allows me the right to passionately believe what I do, but it only works when the rights of all of its citizens are defended. When the government calls it marriage, I feel compelled to try and intervene somehow because I believe that the weakening of the instition of marriage is the cause of many of today's problems, and in my eyes this weakens it further by taking the word and dilluting it even further from what it was meant to be. If it was just called something else, I'd support it fully.

      I can't describe in words why such a trivial thing like renaming the civil act means so much to me. Perhaps its because true faith in modern society is so dilluted already - sure there's a conservative political movement, but there are few things less Christian than a mass of people who declare a person who declare one form of sinner is less human than another form of sinner, who endlessly warmonger to solve some feeling of vengeance that seems to endlessly beat in their chest, and try to evangelize publically while ignoring the teachings of their own faith in their own homes. Regardless of motive, the worlds of religion and politics were never meant to be such close bedfellows and any time you try to secularize a thing such as marriage which has existed for thousands of years in various incarnations, but all of them religious, you're going to end up in trouble. Encourage people to set up families with tax benefits and everything else, but secularize it AWAY from marriage and stop trying to poach a sacrament that millions consider holy that predates my own religion - that solves a number of conflicts various religions have with the implementation of secular marriage and is the only solution that truly seperates church from state.

    320. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Come on now.. you're just being inflammatory.

      Heck, lets go even further: women are chattel. Sound even better?

      But yes, that does sound good. You get my vote.

    321. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by blueskies · · Score: 1

      Because I promise you that if the SCOTUS had the arrogance to do this

      What does arrogance have to do with this? If SCOTUS decides that it violates the constitution it is their duty to overturn them. Just because it is unpopular doesn't mean they should run away from the issue.

      I sure hope I don't live through a time when an amendment is passed to limit people's rights. I'm embarrassed enough by my country's missteps.

    322. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Eric+Damron · · Score: 0

      It's not a boycott that they worry about. They just don't want to piss off the far (far, far) right that is controlling our government right now. It would make it more difficult to push through laws that they need to kill Open Source and maintain their monopoly position.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    323. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how does preventing loving couples for legally marrying somehow promote marriage?

      Seems like those couples will just stay together and give marriage the finger, and anyone who respects their commonlaw marriage will do the same. That's a pretty big loss for marriage.

      Anyway, bending the words doesn't change the facts.

    324. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't have the right to marry a man, neither does a gay guy. All I'm saying is that under tha law we are equal. Neither one of us has rights not granted to the other one.

    325. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by jjoyce · · Score: 1

      There wasn't a peep out of the right about activism when Roy Moore was booted off the bench.

    326. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      That is "marriage in the context of breeding". It's banned because the assumption is that they will breed, which creates people with serious medical conditions that are a drain on society (at the very least, through medical costs). Gay people aren't going to breed, so it's a moot point. They might adopt, but the child won't be a drag on society. Furthermore, incest often has serious problems with consent.

      If it wasn't for the genetic problems from inbreeding, by the way, and there was no incest consent problems, then, why not? To quote Thomas Jefferson (on a different subject), "It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg."

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    327. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by moz25 · · Score: 1

      The basis of democracy likes in the combination of key factors: on the one hand, the "will" of the majority counts, but on the other hand the rights of everyone - also of a minority on an issue - have to be protected. That's why people don't get thrown in prison or murdered simply because the majority wants it. So, no, in a strict sense, appeasing the majority would not be a requirement for standing up for one's right. But.. it does help.

    328. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mirio · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, technically under the law gay people have all the rights of straight people. A gay man has the right to marry a woman and two straight men may not marry. I'm not saying it's right, but equality does exist. What you're talking about is extending the rights of everyone, which is something I have no problem with.

      And while were on the subject, why is polygamy a felony in many states? I may not agree with it, but I see it as an equal cause to gay marriage (not to mention the fact that there are religious freedom implications with polygamy).

    329. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OTOH equating it with religious freedom is a perfect analogy. For instance jews being treated as subhuman merely for their beliefs.

    330. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      Gay? I'm a family man mon frere!!! And yes, I believe that certain people should be afforded special privelege, namely those without power. Those who have power should have their priveleges limited. Works out rather nicely. You libertarians are just conservatives who want to smoke pot and get away with it.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    331. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      BTW, I'm not trying to say that being gay is the same as being ugly, just a comparison of things that might get you fired that don't change your work. I appologise if I came off that way.

    332. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More specifically, those were state CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS not just state laws. The whole reason for that is because they're afraid that activist judges would overturn laws already in the books. Currently 39 states have "Defense of Marriage Acts" as laws, as well as the federal DOMA.

      Even more specifically, they're afraid that knowledgable and competent judges will rightly find their bigoted and pointless laws in violation of constitutional protections, and over-turn them. So they have to circumvent the fact that the courts aren't packed with reactionary bigots by encoding their own bigotry and ignorance right into the constitution itself.

      It wasn't activist judges that made gay marriage legal in Massachusettes. A valid court case was brought before the judges and the judges rightly ruled that there was no constitutional reason to not grant the civil licence, and turned the issue back to the legislature to rectify. Which they did. And gee, the sky didn't fall.

      Equal Protection under the law: it's for everybody.

      Religious right-wing bigots hate that, though, which is why they're going through and trying to circumvent rational judicial rulings by encoding their hateful bigotry into the very constitutions themselves.

      There's a reason the founding fathers put the Bill of Rights in there and stated over and over again that the Constitution and its amendments were there to protect minorities from the "tyranny of the majority". Civil Rights should never be put up to a popular vote. An individuals basic and fundamental rights should never be subjected to mob rule.

      It should be noted that when interracial marriage was legalized, over 90% of the population was against interracial marriage. It should also be noted that virtually all of the histrionic gnashing of teeth about the disaster that "changing marriage" would unleash upon the country that we're seeing over the gay marriage issue is almost identical to the same crap that was spewed by foes of interracial marriage several decades ago.

      And yes, marriage is a civil right. Among the more than 1000 rights granted by a civil marriage license are such things as freedom from being compelled by the state to testify against your spouse, and the freedom from having the government break up your family and deport a spouse because they're not a citizen. These are rights that are not available in any other way, through any other legal document that can ever be drawn up.

      The simple fact is that these laws are not only pointlessly punitive encoding of ignorant bigotry into law, but they're violations of religious freedom. My religion, and the religions of a great many people, does not prohibit same-sex unions or marriages. The only real justifications ever cited against same-sex marriages are religious in nature. Why should the dogma of one religion be encoded into law (or the constitution) and not another? The state, as yet, has cited absolutely no compelling reason for denying gay couples a civil marriage license.

      As long as two athiests who cannot have children (like my friends Mark and Jennifer) can go down to the justice of the peace and get a marriage license with nothing more than the required fee and two witnesses, then I can see no rational, reasonable, or ethical justification for denying the same exact right to a gay couple.

      But that's just my two cents.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    333. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Flash back: 50 years in the south:

      "Why should only same-race couples be able to marry the ones they love?"

      Because, by definition, that's what marriage IS.


      Flash back: 150 years in the south:

      "Why should only white couples be allowed to marry the ones they love?"

      Because, by definition, that's what marriage IS.


      Flash back: 250 years in America:

      "Why should women become chattel, and men their effective owner?"

      Because, by definition, that's what marriage IS.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    334. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Embedded2004 · · Score: 1

      I don't see it....and the argument given "Well, it is in the governments interest to encourage people to have kids which will be future tax payers". I call BS on that...people will fuck and have kids no matter if they get a tax break or not. I cannot imagine the conversation has ever come up, "Hey Marge, lets have another kids...need that extra deduction..."

      Well, I have seen it make a difference, my parents who were not particularly had five kids, and I know those deductions probably helped them out. I have seen people not have more then two children simply because they could not afford to, which is just sad, lack of money should not be a reason not to have children.

    335. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      OTOH equating it with religious freedom is a perfect analogy. For instance jews being treated as subhuman merely for their beliefs.

      No, that one's ever further off. Jews were/are persecuted because of their beliefs. In places where homosexuals are persecuted, it's because of their actions. There is a world of difference.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    336. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bani · · Score: 1

      Religion is a choice too.

    337. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      From http://www.christiangays.com/marriage/rite.shtml

      I'm not saying you're wrong, but I'd put a little more stock in your quotes if you referenced an independent source(s).

      Sort of like "Microsoft claims lowest TCO!" and "Slashdot says Microsoft is dying!"

      At least trick me into thinking they're independent.

    338. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I almost feel sorry for Microsoft. Almost."
      Not me.
      A West Coast company sells out homos?
      WOW.
      Its not like Christian trailer trash could use anything different than Windows, so what has M$FT so scared?

    339. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      At least there's a good reason for that. Consanguinuity is a problem further on down the line genetically. I've never quite understood why you can't marry and adopted sibling, but that's just another one of those stupid things, I guess.

      Telling everyone that they can do what they want as long as it's not the thing they actually want to do isn't really freedom, especially when what is happening isn't a burden or problem to other people around it. Again, what possible reason could the state have for not permitting such an action? It harms nobody. It's essentially a much cheaper version of getting a lawyer to draw up the contract for you. Gays and Lesbians can get married in the United Church, so they can even have their weddings blessed.

      There's no rational reason that I've heard to let these laws stand.

    340. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ichthus · · Score: 1

      "Firt of all: we all know that conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers..."

      Why?

      --
      sig: sauer
    341. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dav3K · · Score: 1

      What makes me laugh is how touchy people get about this. By changing the way marriage is defined will have ZERO impact on heterosexual religious zealots, as they are completely within their rights to continue practicing marriage exactly the way they are used to. Furthermore, they are also still completely allowed to keep people out of their religions if they don't conform to these views. The people fighting against the changes mentioned are not the people impacted by the lack of change. Kinda like having celebate priests determine birth control practices.

    342. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody, by default is damned to eternal suffering.

      Some of the authors of the reformation seemed to have a different opinion (predetermination of who would go to heaven and who would go to hell). The basic logic is hard to argue with: If God is omniscient and omnipotent, then how can anything be anything BUT predetermined? Yes, I know this is a simplification of Calvin's arguments, but....

      Anyway, heathens like myself say that our country was based on concepts fo good governance we inherited from our Prechristian forefathers in Greece and early Rome (before the empire). Monotheistic states are inherent theocracies, and if you want that, go live in the Middle East.

    343. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by symbolic · · Score: 1


      You could turn a heterosexual into a homosexual and back into a heterosexual against their will by laying down situations and forcing a sexual response from them if you were immoral and ruthless enough to choose to do so.

      Sure. It's all physical. Nothing else matters.

    344. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All I'm saying is pass a law that means something, not just pandering to gay people who are obviously hurt by the current state of affairs.

      That I can agree with. It's a fine conservative principle to carefully consider any action, and take small steps instead of giant leaps.

      So why is it that so many so-called conservatives are in such a hurry to change the constitution for the current fad?

    345. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radar2k2 · · Score: 1

      OK but what is your opinion on judicial review and the concept
      that state statutes can't conflict with state constitutions and the
      state laws, state constitutions, and federal laws can't conflict
      with the federal constitution?

      Judges aren't having monthly meetings and creating a top-10
      evil law list. They are responding to citizens who are claiming
      that some statutes are in conflict with state and/or federal
      constitutions. They are then ruling on whether there is indeed a
      conflict, this is judicial review.

      It fair criticism to pick apart a specific judicial argument and
      thus identify a logical failure in the argument but it is just
      grandstanding to jump up and down and say judges are
      "arbitrarily reading their own values into the Constitution".
      If you want someone other than a lemming to agree with you,
      you need to fill in a few missing steps in that argument.

      With respect to the marriage laws the "value" that is being
      championed is the concept of equal applicability of the laws
      as specified in many (all?) state constitutions and the 14th
      Amendment of the US Constitution. The judges aren't making
      up this "value" it is right there in black and white.

      Maybe you don't believe in equal application of the laws or
      maybe you don't believe that marriage laws are in violation of
      the concept of equal application of the laws or maybe you just
      don't believe in judicial review. Maybe it is something else.
      I'm listening.

    346. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zoombat · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I didn't mean to be insulting or patronizing. I apologize for coming off that way.

      For a rebuttle you can read the two people who posted before I did about how neither of them (one heterosexual the other homosexual) about how neither of them had had sexual experience before becoming aware of their sexual orientation.

      What I didn't like about your post was that you phrased it as a blanket statement not just applying to people in the same specific situations described.. and you described it as fact, not just what some people in some situations have experienced based on this limited research.

      I'm certainly not an expert on the topic either, and am actually quite undecided about whether sexual orientation is a "learned" behavior which can be changed, a fixed from-birth characteristic, both, or something entirely different.. but I am interested in learning the truth, and thought you were making a logic misstep and thought I'd point it out.

    347. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      An individual's civil rights are not subject to your approval. If we waited for the masses to vote for things like equal rights for african-americans, they'd still be in chains. Civil rights for minorities are rarely won by popular vote, and "mob rule" would be a horrible way to determine who gets what rights anyway.

      Federal courts haven't been arbitrarily reading their own values into the constitution. The constitution has a pretty clear "equal protection" clause, and is pretty clear about separating church and state (if not explicitly in the constitution, then in the subsequent writings of the authors thereof, Thomas Jefferson in particular was very clear about the concept).

      If a state super-majority were to decide to strip people of color of their right to vote, the Judiciary would have ever right to step in and say "no, that's wrong", and they'd be absolutely right to do so. That's not being an "activist judge" (the latest code-word for a judge who decides something based on reason and logic rather than on the speaker's prejudices and wishes). That's a judge doing their job. Just because a judge comes to a decision you don't personally like or feel comfortable with, doesn't mean they're being "activist" or in fact that they are wrong.

      The judges coming down on the side of treating gays and gay couples equally under the law are making the correct decisions. You don't have to like it, and that is your choice and your right. But that doesn't mean that the judges are wrong.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    348. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by uncqual · · Score: 1

      Fortunately for strict constructionists, they have been endowed by God with the super-human gift of being able to read the minds of people who died 200 years ago. Naturally, they use this power only for good.

      If a practice was conspicuous at the time the Constitution, or the relevant amendment, was ratified, often no mind reading is required. If, in the decade or so following ratification, the courts and even the authors of the Constitution/amendment didn't find that said practice to be in violation of the Constitution or amendment, it's pretty obvious that said practice is NOT in violation of the Constitution or relevant amendment. An example of this is that the establishment clause was obviously not interpreted as meaning what the Federal courts currently interpret it as.

      Obviously there are times when it is necessary to interpret the Constitution in light of technology or situations that did not exist at the time of ratification. Examples of this would be the invention of the telephone, radio, TV, internet where.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    349. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1

      "Honestly persuaded"??? You must be joking.

      Here's a quote from the good reverend from iidb.org:


      In an interview with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published Oct. 14, Hutcherson said judges are legislating from the bench. He said he and his allies were going to work toward the removal of judges and those politicians who support same-sex marriage.

      Observed Hutcherson, "We're going to change your office window view."

      Asked if that's why he and others are holding the rally 18 days before the general election, Hutcherson replied, "That's why we're holding the rally. Because politicians understand one thing: how to stay in office, whether they are Christians or not."


      The man is a terrorist. Pure and simple.
      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    350. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by McNally · · Score: 1
      I can't believe MS is really afraid of a religious-right boycott, especially when they're still the darlings of the other side of the Republican party (the economic right).
      I, too, doubt that Microsoft is much afraid of a religious boycott motivated by their support for gay rights legislation.

      However, a boycott isn't the only way that a large church in Redmond could inconvenience Microsoft. Imagine if the church membership included or had influence over local officials responsible for zoning decisions, planning permits, road construction and maintenance, and/or other functions of local government in Redmond and/or King County. How much inconvenience do you think you could cause Microsoft, and what concessions might Microsoft be willing to make to ensure smooth sailing the next time they need to build a new office building or condemn a bit of land that belongs to someone else?

      Hopefully that's not their motivation -- it would reflect poorly of Microsoft and even more poorly on the church if that was the way things were working. But it wouldn't even be close to the first time such a thing had happened. Local politics is often a full-contact sport..
    351. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by grae · · Score: 1

      The law trumps what's in those contracts. There are certain kinds of discrimination that are illegal.

      Basically, just imagine the words "except anything that we can't enforce because of the law." Just because something's in a contract doesn't mean it's enforceable.

      For example, a woman might get fired because she's a woman. Even if she signed a contract that said she could be fired because she was a woman, that wouldn't be enforceable: it's illegal to make employment decisions based on gender. (Now, proving that she was fired for being a woman is a bit more difficult, so in practice it's possible to get fired for being a woman... But it happens less often than otherwise because it's illegal.)

      (In some jurisdictions, it's illegal to make employment decisions based on sexual orientation. But there's no such restriction in federal law, so it's still legal to be fired simply for being gay in many places.)

    352. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If it were up to me, I would rather see your list of marriage privilidges revoked for everyone. You want equal rights -- fine. Nobody gets priviliges. Would you still want gay marriage if there were no priviliges involved?

      What's to keep two friends from claiming they are gay just to share insurance benefits? Or transfer of a 401(k) fund tax-free? Gee, I'm 88 years old and about to die, so I'll just claim this lawyer is my partner and he can have my money tax-free. Gee, this insurance for being single is too high, so a friend and I are partners until we both turn 25 to get the lower marriage rate.

      I would like to see the next step legalized -- make polygamy (marriage to multiple partners) legal. See, if you can union with a same sex person, then my rights to union with a same sex person while I'm married are being repressed. Not to mention my rights to as many spouses as I can afford.

    353. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      The idea of discrimination is based on what is constant in your life. What were you born with, who are your parents, what color is your skin, yada yada yada (yeah, yada isn't a noun either).

      We dont say someone was discriminated against because he got a DUI, we say he messed up his career. Try getting a serious job without experience or a college degree, you wont get it, and you wont get any sympathy from people... because people dont see age discrimination as valid only because everyone is born at the same age, and age is variable.

      You wont get a job at the EPA if you go around driving a 4x4 with "Charlton Heston is my president." If you drive a bike to work, and yell "save the pather" at random you'll probably end up with employee of the month.

      We know that if sexual orientation hiding was possible it would be trivial to dismiss discrimination based on orientation. The problem here is proving that hiding is reasonably easy.

      Now lets look at the difference of religion and sexual orientation. In our current society (virtually) nobody is raised with a homosexual orientation. That's right, the vast majority of people with "alternative" orientations have that orientation because they chose it for themselves. This is a good thing, but it doesn't make any sense.

      Why would you choose a lifestyle incompatible with so many "intolerant" people? No really, there should be a reason. Maybe you could get a job at a gay bar, maybe you could get a job as a stripper... neither sounds too appealing to me, and I'm sure hardly anyone switches their oreintation for such a lame reason.

      The only reason I see for people declaring a homosexual orientation is to bother people, or generally just cause trouble. Unless there really is another reason (please, do tell), people who switch to incompatible orientations should be dealt with in the same way as people with other social problems are dealt with. No, I dont think they should be jailed, but I dont think jailing drug dealers or substance abusers is very productive either.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    354. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Affirmative action,

      Fullilove v. Klutznick, 448 U.S. 448

      Where the Court upheld the constitutionality of affirmative action set asides.

      "The Court based this on the fact that Congress was willing to accept the higher bids of MBEs if the bids were reflective of attempts to cover increased costs due to present effects of past discrimination"

      See that "past discrimination" part? That's what I'm talking about.

      One example of many.

    355. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Anti-discrimination laws make no mention of a preferred class of people.

      Allow me to quibble and say "protected," not "preferred."

      They're written in a completely neutral way and apply equally to all, e.g. "it is illegal to fire someone on the basis of their race, gender, or sexual orientation"--not "it is illegal to fire someone for being black, female, or gay."

      It all depends on the enforcement, doesn't it? It almost doesn't matter much what happens to you if you are a straight white male, your chance of getting legal relief for a real injustice of any magnitude is vanishingly small, except for maybe age discrimination, but even that is dicey. You would probably come out ahead standing out in a thunderstorm and trying to be hit by lightning to collect the insurance money. On the other hand, most employers would be terrified of firing a black lesbian who was looting the company treasury unless they had video, a sting, a long paper trail, the blessing of the corporate attorney, DA, and the blessing of an oracle.

      Playing the race/gay/gender card isn't popular "just because," it is popular because it is effective.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    356. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stevejobsjr · · Score: 1

      Strict behaviorism was found to be an incomplete theory over 50 years ago, bud. Cognition and physiology play a large role in psychology. That is to say, conditioning can't control everything.

    357. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A gay person has every right I have, right now

      Wrong.

      he can marry pretty much any woman I want.

      And what about lesbians? You're saying a lesbian has the right to marry a woman?

      Sounds like discrimination to me.

      it's doubelespeek to say that the law treats us differently.

      Bullshit. You can marry someone you love, a gay person does not have that right (and you *did* say that it was a right.)

      How is it that *you* have a right that a gay person doesn't but you call it "doublespeak"?

    358. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      What minority protections are at stake here, anyways?

      Just because you are ignorant of the more than 1000 rights granted by a civil marriage license (among them are rights that cannot be obtained through any other means like rights of immigration and the right to not be compelled by the state to testify against your partner), that does not mean such rights don't exist.

      Your whole rant was completely ignorant, I have to say. We're talking about the civil rights of individuals and equal protection under the law. Such things should never be put to public vote, as they are in herent in the whole idea of the constitution, and to the very idea of what it means to be free.

      Of course citizens should have a say in the laws that govern them, but they should not have any say in which people should be targeted by punitive denials of civil liberties just because they don't like them.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    359. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "State constitutions are not beyond reach of SCOTUS."

      That's debatable at best. Article III Sec 2 enumerates the jurisdiction of the judicial branch of the Federal government. It specifically mentions the Federal courts (including the SCOTUS) as having jurisdiction over cases involving two states or citizens of two states, but never mentions cases between a citizen and their own state.

      Of course, that won't matter to those who enjoy filling in lots of extra words in the Constitution so that it sings and dances and says/does whatever they want it to, but the fact remains that Constitution never gives the SCOTUS the authority to lay a hand on internal state matters.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    360. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Assault someone because they're wearing yellow or very nearly any other stupid reason in the world, and it's assault. Assault that SAME person with a slightly different, similarly stupid motivation (skin tone, religous jewelry, presumed or acknowledged sexual orientation) and suddenly it's a "hate crime" with far more severe consequences.

      That's not really different in principle than classifying homicide into murder and manslaughter, and then each into various degrees. For whatever reason, premeditated killings receive a harsher sentence than accidental or self-defense killings. Knowingly killing a police officer can similarly carry a much harsher penalty. Intention has always mattered.

    361. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least that's how you convince yourself those couple of years of "salad tossing" don't make you gay.

    362. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tverbeek · · Score: 3, Insightful
      why does a human rights bill need the financial backing of a big company to get passed?

      Because there's opposition to it that has the financial backing of big companies. Money is required to accomplish anything (good or bad) in U.S. politics.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    363. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Eric+S.+Smith · · Score: 1
      All the major religions that sanction marriage (not to mention the fact that one of them invented it)...

      Modern marriage is a civil instituion with an optional religious component. If you insist that the religious component is essential, then please consider that some churches are actually in favour of same-sex marriage. Here's a random Christian supporting it.

      If this is truly about benefits, then I say eliminate all marriage benefits granted by the government.

      Ah, the "toy-throwing" response.

      It is really about social acceptance, forced at that.

      You're not forced to like anybody: take a pill. Do you get this exercised about inter-racial marriage?

    364. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      The reference to murder was a tongue-in cheek joke, as anyone capable of walking without the use or their knuckles could have (and did) deduce.

      (Hint: It's not really legal for Bill to order executions in Redmond...that was part of the joke.)

      Sheesh...lay off the paint chips already.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    365. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Listen, I need to say this first. Slavery is bad. So bad that there is no real language to describe how bad it is.

      But that doesn't make discrimination right. You cannot justify doing a wrong in response to being wronged, and consider your self a moral person.

      You cannot do bad things to others on the idea that they did them to you first.

    366. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is great news for alternative OS adoption!
      Let's push Free/OSS on the West Coast, in the heart of the M$FT beast.

    367. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you were trying to spell *rebuttal*. If so, you failed.

    368. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Did they try esctacy, heroin, a hooker trained in social work on a long term contract and isolation from other homosexuals? Psychotherapy administered by a member of the opposite sex combined with cuddling and skilled oral administered by the therapist?

      The whole gist of extinction therapy in altering behavior is that you need to provide an alternate path to achieving the gratification that the former path achieved. Which means lots of sexual gratification. Not shock therapy and prayer, all that's going to do is teach you to hate doctors, priests and yourself.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    369. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Bonhamme+Richard · · Score: 1
      The only people that don't use MS products are smart programmer types, like those that read /.

      Based on the /. reaction to the article, open source users LOVE gay rights.

      Any attempted boycott of MS by the crazy minister guy would have, then, gotten MS GOOD PRESS with the ONE GROUP that doesn't use MS products.

      MS could have actually made money off the attempted boycott, but that's what you get when timid beurocrats are making all the decisions...

      Just food for thought.

    370. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zoombat · · Score: 1

      So, what's a foreign law? Do international treaties, like the Geneva Convention count? As I remember, the US Constitution explicitly states that international treaties approved by the Senate are Federal law.

      Do you have a reference for this? I've been wondering about that for awhile now, but wasn't able to find a reference myself. It certainly makes sense; why else would they need to be ratified?

    371. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Pillowthink · · Score: 1

      I don't think it would cause difficulties. As is clearly perceivable here, very little can stand in the way of Mr. Gates.

    372. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by StikyPad · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically), nor is it particularly a disability.

      I know plenty of women who are attracted to other women, but choose to pursue relationships strictly with men. Social pressure? Perhaps. It's still a choice. I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but there's always a choice when it comes to behavior, regardless of our genetic predispositions. I might be more susceptible to alcohol addiction than someone else, but that doesn't mean I'll allow myself to become an addict, or give in to the addiction, depending on how you want to view it. (And I'm not saying that being gay is morally equivelant to being an alcoholic, I'm just talking about predispositions).

      Are some people born predisposed to having a same-sex attraction? No doubt. Have others had bad experiences with the opposite sex and found they can relate better to the same sex? I'm sure of it. To say everyone arrives at the same place in the same way is ridiculously arrogant.

    373. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rizzo420 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      if you are implying that the judges of the supreme court for massachusetts over-stepped the majority opinion of the population of massachusetts, you are wrong. what they did was take the state constitution and looked to see where it defined marriage as that of a man and a woman. it didn't. they then went and said that any laws stating that marriage between a man and a woman were unconstitutional according to their state constitution. just because the majority disagrees with their decision doesn't mean they're wrong.

      the issue of gay marriage is far far more than hurt feelings, uncomfortable situations and disapproval of others. it has to do with tax rights, inheritance rights, the right to visit your partner in the hospital. our country has a very strict separation of church and state. just because christians believe that gays are sinners by definition does not mean that the government believes so. oh yeah, and that separate of church and state is in the FEDERAL constitution. it is not harmful to children to be raised by a gay couple. that has not be proven, nor will it ever be since it's false. what it does do is teach children the ability to accept people who are different, something it seems like you need to learn to do yourself...

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    374. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      You could turn a heterosexual into a homosexual and back into a heterosexual against their will by laying down situations and forcing a sexual response from them if you were immoral and ruthless enough to choose to do so. Read some of the horror stories out there about how women abducted by those in the sex trade are programmed some time.

      So if a woman can be "programmed" into enjoying prostitution, then prostitution is a choice? Or if a suspect can be beaten into confessing, the confession is a choice?

      Sorry, in the world I'm familiar with, such actions are not considered "choices", at least by a court of law.

    375. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tverbeek · · Score: 1
      I'm actually wondering why a corporation is involved in a social issue to begin with....maybe they realized this and withdrew because of that.

      Large corporations are always involved in social issues in one way or another, for much the same reason the government is involved in economic issues: they spend a lot of money, and how they spend it inevitably has ramifications. Whether MS offers domestic partner benefits or not, that decision affects the insurance industry, the local economy, local and state politics, etc. They have great power, and as any Spider-fan can tell you, that gives them great responsibility.

      Given that fact, one of the reasons corporations actively get involved in social issues (whether it's endorsing equal rights legislation like MS has done in the past, or sponsoring displays of the Ten Commandments) is that it presents the corporation as a "good citizen", involved in the sociopolitical life of society and worthy of their position in it. Another reason (but not always the case) is that their directors sincerely believe it to be important, for their own feeling of doing the right thing.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    376. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's not finaicial backing but vocal support of the bill. The law being proposed is actually an employment discrimination bill which will affect large companies in Washington State. So it makes a lot of sense to get backing of our large companies in the state. The irony here is that Microsoft has always had a progressive non discrimination policy and has supported this bill for many years. They just added trans-gender to that very same policy this year. So, it's a shock that they coward to this pastor because they were afraid of getting dragged into this social issue.

    377. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Arker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Laws based on intent are part of our legal heritage.

      True to a degree. And those have always been among the most problematic legal distinctions, the ones that encourage corruption and the rule of men rather than law.

      You see, a court simply isn't competent to determine a persons motivation in many cases. Judges and juries are no more qualified than the rest of us to read a mans mind, or look into his heart.

      Your explanation of manslaughter and murder is incomplete and thus misleading. The old law on the subject relied not on mind reading, but on actions - a man who stood up on the spot and proclaimed his action was guilty of manslaughter - a man who tried to conceal his act and escape justice was guilty of murder. This is an immenently workable system. The abstraction behind it, of course, is what is called mens rea - but mens rea cannot be directly ascertained, but only guessed at based on ones actions.

      Now in modern times we've twisted this horribly. A man who stands up and takes responsibility for his action will be punished MORESO than one who simply keeps his mouth shut, in most situations.

      There is a difference between spray-painting "Nirvana rocks" on the back of your school and spray-painting "DIE JEWS DIE" on a synagogue.

      There's a difference? Well obviously, there are several. The question is what are those differences, how significant are they, from whose point of view?

      Objectively, they are both acts of vandalism, crimes against property. The difference in the words being spelled are very unlikely to be significant at all in any objective evaluation - the cost to repair the damage is going to be the same either way.

      In the minds of the vandals, they are also likely to be nearly identical acts too. Once we get here, though, we can argue interminably with no way to ever settle the issue - unless of course the vandals tell us what they were thinking. Even then, though, that really settles nothing. Because we've already entered the realm of thought-crime, and the smart vandals, when caught, will keep their mouths shut or tell us what we want to hear.

      It may well be that in the minds of some other person that sees the words there is a difference - but if we determine that we can punish people for how other people choose to respond to their words, we've abandoned anything even approximating a concern with justice or law.

      I've been assaulted for being a 'filthy jew.' I've been assaulted for being 'queer.' I've been assaulted because someone resented how much attention I was getting from a girl he thought was his. I can assure you that for me, they were very equivelant experiences - but the more important point is that, regardless of my reaction, they were objectively the same crime.

      Do you really want to live in a society where someone elses emotional reaction to your words determine the legality of your speech? I certainly don't. Neither do I want to live in a society where assault is tolerated - just as long as the assaulters are careful to avoid choosing the politically protected classes as their victims? I don't like that either, but unfortunately we're well down the path to both of those realities already.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    378. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Stween · · Score: 3, Funny

      Most of the girls I know think that that's a waste of 2 perfectly good guys attention that could be focussed on them instead. Preferably at the same time ;)You're referring to the girls you see on a daily basis -- the ones in the dirty movies -- aren't you?

    379. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      we all know that conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers

      Funny, I always thought of Wintel as sort of a red-state OS. I could see conservative xtians using Windows more than I could see them using a stylish, well-designed (ie, "gay," at least to the mouthbreathing masses of rightwingers) operating system like OSX...

    380. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by uberdave · · Score: 2, Funny

      At the aquarium... we have... penguins. It's really cool.

      I would hope so. Penguins are a polar species. "Really cool" is what their natural environment is all about.

    381. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      I hear Standard Oil, Rocky Mountain Non-Ferrous Metals, Amtrak, and Mrs. Mitten's Olde Fashioned Tea Shoppe are also companies that are currently not supporting the bill.

      Oh, I'm sorry...did they also initially support the bill, and then backed down due to threats from a fundamentalist anti-gay preacher?

      No? OK...so how is that at all relevant?
      (Hint: It's not.)

      Microsoft opened the door for this themselves when they proclaimed themselves pioneers of diversity [microsoft.com]. As is obvious now, it was a purely suck-up feel-good political ploy, and when it backfired, M$ backed out.

      If they never took a stand in the controversy in the first place, no one could impugn their subsequent abandonment of said stand.

      I hope that clears things up for you.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    382. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Duhavid · · Score: 1
      When can I expect the death camps to begin?


      Oh, soon, we are working on the decor.
      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    383. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      I was going to use cannibalism, but yours is better.

    384. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nope. The violence against jews is excused by "they control all the media/money/wealth/etc", "jews rape babies","jews drink blood" etc. Quite clearly justified by arguing against jewish actions and not merely beliefs.

      So there's no difference at all.

    385. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      And nothing causes more pleasure than sex.

      Heroin does.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    386. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Stween · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Fuck you, preview. Fuck you.

    387. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by darkciti · · Score: 1

      They're in it with the Aliens, Stuart! I tell you there out there in Pueblo Colorado building Landing Strips for Gay Martians! Stuart! Do you know what the queers are doing to our soil?

    388. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "If you are heterosexual, and fall in love with a member of the opposite sex and want to marry him/her, then those rules are perfectly fine for you. But if you're homosexual, and fall in love with a member of your own gender and want to marry him/her, you're just out of luck. Why should only heterosexuals be able to marry the ones they love?"

      I'm in love with my Geforce 6800 Ultra, yet I cannot marry it. Why should only human-lovers be able to marry who/what they love? Seriously though, there are always going to be standards to definitions that exclude someone. Gays just want to bring it but so far and then stop it from there. I doubt many gays would support people marrying pets or children. Why do they support some exclusions and not others?

      Besides, much of what gays seek through legal, state-sanctioned marriage can be accomplished via contract. Personally, I'd be just as happy to see government get its nose out of the marriage business altogether. Allow states to define supercontracts that any two consenting adults can enter into and let the Federal government decide what it will and will not deal with. Of course, that won't be enough for some people.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    389. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      You program yourself every day. And so does everyone else. And you can program some pretty strange things into yourself if you're indiscriminant. That was the point I was trying to make.

      I was replying to someone who made the blanket statement that homosexually had been scientifically proven to be an inate characteristic. My statements may not be ALL of the truth, but they pretty effectively demonstrate why I believe the post I replied to was false.

      But of course, I get jumped on by everyone with an ax to grind who just reads the controversial words and goes on a tear, rather than actually digesting what I said in my post. Typical.... guess they don't make nerds like they used to.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    390. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tverbeek · · Score: 1
      conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers

      Is that because they're such ultratrendy Apple iBuyers, or because they're such independent-thinking open-source fantatics? Seems kinda counterintuitive to me. Or are you assuming they shun this infernal tech-knowledge-y stuff? Sorry, but we're talking about Calvinists and Baptists, not the Amish.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    391. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1
      I'm talking about "general" sexual orientation.

      So am I, I think.

      That doesn't mean we keep a dildo as a paperweight, or have a cat'o'nine tails and some handcuffs, or a picture from the last "Dykes on Bikes" parade on the wall next to the generic "Perserverance" workplace art.

      I was thinking of everyday things like a coworker's romantic problems, or how much fun Jim in marketing had at the titty bar last night. Leave me out of it.

    392. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh, Microsoft just want to let Apple carry some of the load...after all gay rights is probably more important to the users of the Alternative Lifestyle OS(TM).

    393. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radar2k2 · · Score: 1
      A constitutional representative democracy is not the same thing as a plebiscite democracy. Thus the US has a hierarchy in our legal system:
      • federal Constitution
      • federal statutes
      • state constitutions
      • state statutes
      • local/country statues
      Really important, core believes are up at the top such as what rights are "inalienable" (not subject to majority vote!) or how should our federal government be organized or what is the relationship between the federal and state governments. The structure is designed to make it harder to change the foundation of our system but not impossible. Ultimately there is the possibility of tossing out the entire thing:
      ...That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government... Declaration of Independence
    394. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nice regurgitation of right-wing talking points there.

      That a justice might use foreign laws as one aspect in the justification of their decision doesn't bother me in the least, and I'm not sure why it bothers you. OBviously they came to the result of their decision based on the constitution and thoughtful deliberation. In the explaination of the decisions, I think it's perfectly fine to cite any source they want to in an attempt to make it clear why they decided the way they did.

      And as for ruling against the will of the people, THAT IS THE JOB OF JUSTICES. Otherwise it'd just be put up to popular vote.

      I point out that many of the best decisions have been against majority opinion, in many cases against super-majority opinion. Decisions like the abolishment of segregation or the legalization of interracial marriage. Nobody today really looks back on those as bad decisions (unless they're an unrepetant racist), but at the time, they were wildly unpopular. More than 90% of the people were against the legalization of interracial marriage.

      That number is somewhat less for gay marriage (70-something percent at last poll, I think) today, and the people opposing it today are just as wrong as the people opposing interracial marriage were back in the 50's. It's only a matter of time, but sooner or later, same sex marriage will be legal... just like it's becoming in Canada, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, and across Scandanavia.

      And even in the case of the Vermont decision on gay marriage, the judges did NOT "legislate from the bench". A legitimate case was brought before them, and the judges found no constitutional backing for denying the same sex couples equal protection and rights under the law, so they TURNED IT BACK TO THE LEGISLATURE to rectify the issue as they saw fit. The Legislature there decided to rectify with civil unions. It was a very heated debate then, but now nobody cares. The sky didn't fall. It's similar in Massachucettes. All this strong opposition, but they decided to pass gay marriage, and it's done, and really, the sky didn't fall.

      All this opposition is manufactured outrage and once it's all done, nobody will care, and twenty years down the pike everyone will wonder what the fuss was all about.

      And as for changing the meaning of language, that's just B.S. The definition of marriage changes constantly, generation to generation. Besides, gay marriage doens't affect one single church or religious institution in any way. The fact is that "marriage", the word, applies to two completely separate things... the religious ceremony (untouched by allowing gay marriages), and a civil licence that grants rights and responsibilities to two partners in society.

      I have two friends, Mark and Jennifer. They are both athiests. He had a vasectomy, and she is unable to bear children due to cervical cancer which cause the removal of her uterus. THey met and fell in love. They got married by walking down to the city hall with the correct fee, and two witnesses, and got their marriage license.

      As long as it's perfectly legal for those two to get married, you'll have a very hard time justifing or rationalizing your reasons for wanting to deny the same right to Bill and Ted, or Jane and Marsha.

      You don't have to like it. But your dislike of it is no justification for denying over a thousand very real rights to other people you don't even know.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    395. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I figured you "signed away" those rights. I learn something new every day, and stand corrected.

    396. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      No, I'm *really* not a libertarian. I generally disagree with most libertarian ideas. How exactly do you define "moral?" Why, if something is not harmful, is it still immoral? Essentially the defining standard of morality is whether it is conductive to a peaceful community or not.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    397. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins. They live together, have hatched an egg given to them together. It's really cool.

      PENGUIN LUST! Nothing but URGES FROM HELL! (as Bill the Cat would say...)

    398. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That's just intellectual dishonesty... you're phrasing things in dishonest ways to prove a false point.

      You can marry pretty much any person you want. A homesexual person cannot.

      Funny that you mention intellectual dishonesty and then you commit it on your very next sentence. No one can just marry pretty much anyone else.

      The poster, just like you or I, cannot marry any person he wants. I can't certainly marry my sister, or my mom, or a married woman, or a 10-year old, or two women, or Bob down the street. Can you? Can a gay man? Can a straight man? Can a bisexual man? Can a sheep-loving man?

      It's not a "semantics" trick. It's the very defintion of equality. I suggest that you look it up. You seem to be the one that's trying to change the widely accepted meaning of the English language to suit your views.

      If you feel like you must make a case for gay marriage, do it with honesty. For example, if you believe that for marriage all you should need is love then you can make an argument that two men can love each other. IMHO it would be the wrong argument to make, but at least it would be an honest argument.

    399. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never heard the song Fudge Packers in the Sky, eh?

    400. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      Now they're floridating the water

      To make us more like Florida? That is pretty insidious...

    401. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Thanks, but I already took Con Law I, Con Law II, and Advanced Con Law. I strongly believe in a structure like what we have, because by requiring supermajority powers for certain things, the institutions at the top are very conservative (by which I mean, resistant to change.) This is a Good Thing.

      THAT is why I am so very much against placing controversial issues, even the ones that people feel extremely strongly about, in those higher levels. Let them stay below! People will not change by being forced from above. They will change by accepting the reality that exists around them.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    402. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      It's in the Constitution, the part about foriegn treaties. Background is in the Federalist papers. Can't remember section and article at the moment, but a keyword search on Senate and treaty should find it.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    403. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Only when the other, ignorant and bigoted side"

      So you are on one ignorant, bigoted side and he is on another?

      Still makes you ignorant and bigoted I'm afraid.

    404. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by End11 · · Score: 1
      Get the government out of the marriage business, period.
      Yes. Yes, yes, yes. Why can't more people take a commun sense stand like this? Getting the federal government's nose out of the whole issue is a solution that should be appreciated across the political spectrum.
      --

      Which is worse: ignorance or apathy? Who knows? Who cares?
    405. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      ah yes, now i understand ;-)

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    406. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      That would throw out the entire section on tort law in our legal system. Actually it would fly in the face of Western legal theory going back to before Roman law came to northern Europe. Taking someones money is wrong, but for over 1500 years we've considered payment for violations of rights morally correct.

      I can't reconcile your position with Western legal theory or history.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    407. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by dillon_rinker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Check out the Bill of Rights. Now check out the people involved in its creation. Not a poor man in the bunch, by the standards of the times.

      Learn this in your bones before you try to make any changes in the world: GOVERNMENT IS BY THE WEALTHY AND POWERFUL, FOR THE WEALTHY AND POWERFUL. (That's descriptive, not prescriptive, by the way.)

      It's kinda pointless trying to change a system that you don't understand; your actions my even be counter-productive. Once you've understood the purpose of the system, you can begin to see that it is rational and internally consistent. THEN you can begin to formulate your plans to change it.

    408. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you do have that right, just like everyone else. marry someone of the opposite sex and it can all be yours.

      everyone has the right to marry. no one is taking that right away from anyone.

    409. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "And how does preventing loving couples for legally marrying somehow promote marriage?"

      It doesn't. But two chix having a marriage ceremony isn't a marriage.

      "Anyway, bending the words doesn't change the facts."

      Right, so why are gays so hung up on "marriage" instead of equivalent rights?

      Because to them, the words do matter. They equal acceptance. If you are "married" to many people that conveys a sense of legitimacy and pride.

    410. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering proportionally more of them live in major urban centers with high cost of living and high wages

      What!?!?!?

      I thought that gays live in everywhere, including small towns and suburbs, and the perception that they disproportionately live in urban centers is an ugly, mythical stereotype.

      You homophobic bigot, you!

    411. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in your sick demented world

    412. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dhaos · · Score: 1

      They want to have those special rights like hospital visits

      That's not a right any more than drawing a paycheck is. I have the privilege of going to certain hospitals in particular because I pay for medical insurance. I also have the privilege of opting out of my employer-provided insurance and getting insurance that covers domestic partners.


      You misinterpreted that. The original poster meant that, under current law, same-sex partners are currently denied visitation rights in hospital situations. For example, a significant other is on their death bed, unable to communicate- his or her same-sex partner would be denied the right to visit him or her. Presumably, you understand why this would suck, whatever your opinion on actually being gay.

      --
      It's not what you know, or even who you know- It's how many people recognize your damn .sig
    413. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      American democracy has a long tradition of protecting the minority from the majority.

      Especially the richest one percent of the population.

    414. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Just because you are ignorant of the more than 1000 rights granted by a civil marriage license

      These are not minority protections. They are legal privileges. Desirable things, understandably, but it is nothing like the right to speak, or vote, or have due process. You do not help your case by pretending that it is.

      Your whole rant was completely ignorant, I have to say. We're talking about the civil rights of individuals and equal protection under the law. Such things should never be put to public vote, as they are in herent in the whole idea of the constitution, and to the very idea of what it means to be free.

      Please, just because I disagree with you, doesn't mean am I ignorant. And I do disagree. If such things are beyond the reach of any vote, then from where comes their legitimacy? Even the Constitution is not a dictator. It can be changed through democratic processes. It must be able to be changed, else we are living in a dictatorship. I will not tolerate living even in a benevolent dictatorship. You talk about freedom as though it means being able to feel good about yourself. The idea of freedom, to me, means that I have some say in every single aspect of my governance. Period.

      but they should not have any say in which people should be targeted by punitive denials of civil liberties just because they don't like them.

      You have not made the case that marriage is a civil liberty.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    415. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Alexander Hamilton was a poor bastard (literally) who went to college on a scholarship. He didn't write the Bill of Rights, but he sure as hell helped Madison write a lot of the Constitution.

    416. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by BrooksD_1 · · Score: 1

      Maybe your definition of persecution differs from mine, but I can't find a way to make it OK with my definition. No matter if it's for an action or a belief.

      On that note: Worshiping is an action, declaring that you believe something is an action. If it wasn't for actions no one would know about the belief. Really, religious persecution is because of actions.

      If you don't like that version, think of it the other way. Being gay is a belief that your attracted to and want to spend your life with the same sex rather than the opposite one. The actions come out of the belief. So from that perspective they're being persecuted for their beliefs.

      I won't presume to know your mind, but this sounds an awful lot like you're trying to justify your own prejudices. Gay people just want to live their lives like anyone else.

      They are not hurting you, why do you care if they have equal rights?

    417. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tverbeek · · Score: 1

      I live among conservative Republicans, so I know they come in varying shades. But I also know the party well enough to confidently predict that if you went to its next convention and proposed a position statement denouncing Microsoft as an illegal monopoly, I'm pretty confident it'd be killed without mercy. "They're the crowning example of unregulated capitalism and American ingenuity... and major donors." You personally may not like them, but the economics-minded among your party leadership officially adores them.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    418. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Nobody is being harmed by the existance of a gay couple.

      Not now, but at the time that these laws were enshrined into popular morality thousands of years ago, there was little medicine and no protection. Sexual promiscuity and homosexuality are both vectors for disease, which placed the entire community at risk.

      Considering the social situations of the time, it was actually a sensible rule to make. If it weren't for condoms, it would remain so.

      Doesn't really change anything, but looking at it that way makes it a lot easier to discuss things like this with people without getting pissed off at each other... they're rules that were sensible at the time they were created who's time has arguably passed, not simply rules created by prudes to cause harm to minorities, not rules handed down by the creator god.

      And if you can sway the religious right to recognize this, you can move the argument to a framework where you can win. As long as they think those rules came down from god, you're not going to convince them.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    419. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      When can I expect the death camps to begin?

      It is most likely to be after enough people who take your views seriously get just enough power to rule the majority by some combination of force, guile, and perverted law.

      (Maybe the "funny" moderation should be changed to "ha ha funny" so nobody gets confused.)

      We have a republic, if we can keep it.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    420. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by zardo · · Score: 1

      Hah, not all of us buddy. Nobody's pure libertarian either. Personally I'd rather not see people ruining their life with pot but whatever... can't do much to stop them, and the drug war is a waste of money.

    421. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Monf · · Score: 1
      I don't see that as a problem, whether it's gays or straights talking: people tend to have those conversations in private (at the water-cooler when no-ones around or elsewhere).

      I don't think that the general workplace is going to hear: "i sucked the tastiest cock last night" anymore than "i fucked the shit out of some bar-bitch last night".

      Those conversations don't come up in the workplace, I don't see that a person's sexual orientation has any bearing on their discretion in the workplace.

      If that is the rational, then I see that as homophobia...

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    422. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ubrgeek · · Score: 1

      Really? Then why doesn't the "pro-life" movement want to be known as the "anti-abortion" movement. The people pushing the hardest for these laws use the bible as the primary basis of their argument, and according to the bible homosexuality is "detestable" and shall be punished by death. That sounds awfully like they're opposed to something ...

      --
      Bark less. Wag more.
    423. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by vsprintf · · Score: 3, Funny

      Unless this preacher is able to get his followers to switch to Macs or spend a few months learning to run GNU/Linux, then he has no real clout on this issue.

      Gott mit SuSE. (Sorry, I couldn't help but recall some recent celebrations or resist the straight line - double groaner.)

    424. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by The+Big+Ugly · · Score: 1

      "If you feel it would devalue "normal" marriages, then you need to take a close look at mariage statistics. They really can't get much more devalued than they already are"

      check your statistics again. homosexual marriages have a greater failure(ie, divorce) rate than heterosexual marriages. look at amsterdame & canada, two places where gay marriage is legal. not trolling, just telling you the facts.

      second, it is my opinion that laws are based upon shared morals. i'm generalizing, but it is the majority of americans who are morally opposed to murder. hence, it is illeagal. it is my opinion, due to the rapid increase of laws banning gay marriage state to state & based on the population size of the gay community(2% of US population - USWorld news) that the majority of americans are morally opposed to gay marriage.

      finally, i do not believe that it is fair to equate the gay marriage controversy to the civil rights movement. the civil rights movement was to allow basic rights for all. more importantly, the civil rights movement was there to stop discrimination against people who could not control certain circumstances(ie, skin color). it is unfair to equate these two movements as, IMHO, homosexuals CAN control the circumstances. I believe that homosexuality is a CHOICE not an uncontrolable factor such as skin color, place of birth, etc.

      i know this will invite an attack, but i believe that we need to find some common ground. while i do not support homosexual marriage, it is important to make sure that gays are not treated as second class citizens. perhaps some sort of common law marriage or something.

      just my 2 cents

    425. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last I checked, 11 out of 50 is only a little more than 20% - more than the Macintosh market share, but still....

    426. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ho'-mo-pho'-bi-a, adj. The irrational fear that homosexual men will break into ones home and redecorate it.

    427. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      No it wouldn't Money as compensation is not the same as discrimination, and you damn well know it. Property is not governed by the same laws as the citizenry. The very same legal system you refer to recognizes the difference.

      Instead of trying to wriggle out of the uncomfortible position of endorsing discrimination, why not just admit it's wrong but we're stuck with it.

      You talk about "legal" when I talk about right. Stop trying to act like they're the same. I'm sure, however, that at one point slave owners said much of what you have.

    428. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by oscast · · Score: 1

      The rational behind most conservative's (myself included) view of what is right and wrong stems from ideals have been set fourth from the Bible.

      It's not a coincidence that the most fundamental laws in society (not only here in the U.S. but throughout the world) are similar to those established in the Bible.

      What you're asking is for an absolute or different (different because we already have an absolutely definition in the Bible) means to establish right and wrong. The problem with that is that everybody is likely to have an opinion of what defines that.

      The primary problem with this is that the very definition of right and wrong must be an absolute. It can not change for us to be able to adopt it. It can't change with the times because that would make things that were deemed absolutely wrong at one time absolutely right during another.

      So we must look back to the moral authority... the source which was given to us to make these complicated right vs wrong decisions. Of course I'm talking about the Bible.

      Whether or not you disagree with the Bible is irrelevant at this point as it set the precedent by which we define what is moral and what is not.

      Ask yourself this... if you find yourself disagreeing with the Bible and its definitions of morality is it because it happens to contradict your own lifestyle or possibly also because you don't like to live with the possibility that you might be in violation of a moral authority?

      Nobody likes to think they're wrong. That respons is a natural (though incorrect) one.

      It doesn't matter if you don't believe in God. He believes in you.

    429. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Bob+MacSlack · · Score: 1

      Law or Amendment, I'm not sure the people here in California knows the difference. Seems like they stick everything in the constitution.

      Interesting article here.

      "Perhaps direct democracy's profound effect, however, is on the California Constitution, a document that most Californians probably have never seen. Ten times the length of the U.S. Constitution, California's fundamental law has been amended about 500 times by referendum and about 40 times by initiatives since its adoption in 1879. By contrast, the U.S. Constitution has been amended only 27 times in 210 years. The amendments to California's Constitution have specified such grave matters as a fee schedule for permits during the three-year phase-out of gill-net fishing. As a result, our state Constitution is a small book -- a very bizarre, ill-digested, unimpressive book."

    430. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      As a Catholic, though, I believe that homosexual relationships are wrong (when sex is involved)

      I like to be open to people's opinion and respect them. This core religious belief is purely intolerance. I can't respect that. I will not tolerate intolerance.

    431. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take it outside, God-boy.

    432. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do people have such a bad idea of what democracy means? Democracy means rule by the majority, not that I believe that that's the way it should be, especially since the United States isn't a democracy in the first place! The government of the United States is supposed to be a combination of a democracy and a republic, which prevents mob rule. So... I don't know what it is you think you're saying, because, as I said before, democracy == rule by the majority!

    433. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by kalidasa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Marriage was always a civil contract; the solemnization of marriages as religious sacraments comes much later.

    434. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was always my understanding that it was the purpose of the judicial branch to uphold the laws set forth in the Constitution. I always found it odd that the people who are trying to pass new legislation to limit "certain unalienable rights" for which we declared independence are the same ones who call the people upholding a 200-year-old document activists and themselves conservatives.

    435. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Weirdofreak · · Score: 1

      What's somebody who considers the constitution bloated?

      Amendments won't solve anything. They don't prevent prejudice, which is the problem. The solution is to make discrimination 100% legal, and boycott anybody who practices it. If you don't care enough to do that, you get no sympathy from me. It may hurt, but with prejudice in the open, it can be combatted.

    436. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by flink · · Score: 1

      They want to have those special rights like hospital visits

      That's not a right any more than drawing a paycheck is. I have the privilege of going to certain hospitals in particular because I pay for medical insurance. I also have the privilege of opting out of my employer-provided insurance and getting insurance that covers domestic partners.

      We're not talking medical coverage, we're talking visiting rights. If your spouse is in a car accident and you want to get in to visit them, you say "I'm their husband/wife" and you're in, they don't ask you to produce a marriage certificate. If I want to get in to see my partner, I better have a power of attorney contract and possibly a lawyer handy.

      There are hundreds of other cases where federal or state law says you have to be capital-M Married to receive a benefit. These are all laws that exisit to help people build and maintain families, and that's all the quuer community want to do--build and maintain families.

    437. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by wernercd · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As a Christian I believe in the Bible. And as a Christian I have every right to say that Homo-sexuality is unnatural. My viewpoint is NOT ignorant nor is it bigoted.

      Please realize that two of my best friends are Gay. I let them know my viewpoints, and I accept them for the choices they have made. I try to follow the example of Love the Sinner and Hate the Sins. I'm not perfect, neither are they. And they have accepted my viewpoints so I know I'm doing something right.

      Someone says 'Gays are unnatural' and they are supposedly closeminded, bigoted, hatefull... But the second someone says hatefull things about a christian (or like-minded person), its okay for them to say it's 'wrong' for me to believe in what the Bible says?

      It's 'supposedly' wrong for me to say that your wrong and living against the Bible (not that I would force the bible one you personally, but I will let you know my opinion on the matter), but it's OKAY for you to say that I'm wrong and judge me for my following my religion? Its okay for you to judge my life and call me a bigot (or worse - out of your ignorance), but it's not okay for me to believe what I want to believe? that my friends is hypocracy.

      I personally believe that it IS wrong to be Gay. that's what the bible says. But that's YOUR personal choice to make if your believe likewise. The only one that should be judging you, from a strictly christian point of view, should be God. Not the Christian. Are there hypoctrical and self righteous christians that do? yes. And that's just as hypocritical, imo.

      This is a bash against self-righteous christians who judge gays when they should know that God will judge them, and a bash against self righteous gays who think that My right to be a christian is wrong.

      Bring the 'flamebait' mods rain. I'm not afraid to say what I believe in. And I will not be called a bigot and ignorant. You making that statement puts YOU on the 'bigoted ignorant' level that you are apparently so against. That's my soap-box rant. :)

      Chris

    438. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After the Roman Catholic church's handling of pedophilic priests recently, I'm not so sure organized religion is the best place to turn for guidance on what's morally acceptable, either.

    439. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by pipingguy · · Score: 1


      ...throw their personal preferences into the living room of the other 80% of the population.

      Is the implication here that gays and lesbians (aside: are lesbians not also considered gay?) constitute 20% of the population?

      The last figures I remember hearing mentioned 10% and even that figure is undoubtedly inflated for obvious reasons.

    440. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Well okay. I agree with you. So let's stop beating around the bush, because we both know what everybody is talking about: does the U.S. Constitution require states to permit homosexual marriages?

      I cannot see how it does. Homosexuals are not a protected class under 14th amendment analysis, and I certainly don't see a rationale for adding them under the Carolene Products footnote. Thus, the states need only a rational basis for the exclusion, and there are certainly many; for example, promoting child socialization, promoting responsible childbirth in general, and so on. As to specific legal privileges, the SCOTUS may or may not determine that deprivation of that privilege has no rational basis, but as to the marriage license itself, there are plenty.

      My fear, of course, is that the court will dismiss all this and simply hold that some emanance of a penumbra of a right means that could not have been guessed at means that one side wins and one side loses, for ever and ever.

      I guess I might be missing other possible constitutional attacks. Suggestions?

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    441. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a young Catholic myself, I've been told over and over again that gay/lesbian marriage is the purest evil in the world. Hell, we even had a petition to OUTLAW gay marriage. Yes, they actually used the word 'OUTLAW'.

      For me, I respect the relationships between gays/lesbians. But I think I've held onto my faith in Catholicisim a lot longer than the former belief. So (and I encourage anybody to disagree with me) that marriage in the eyes of the law is just that - in the eyes of the government and the general public, you are married.

      But there is also religious marriage. When you're bonded to your partner through your god (whether it is God or any other figure). I simply find it hard when people try to change the laws and rules of the churches.

      It's best to sort of see things like an airplane. You can change the propellors, the wheels, the seats, etc. These would symbolize the Church's attitude to gays and lesbians. We would be somewhat "kinder" or more accepting of their decisions.

      Yet, it's nearly impossible to change the frame of your airplane. You wouldn't have much of a plane after all that. This would symbolize the doctrine/rules of the church. You wouldn't have much of a church if you changed the frame of the church.

      I guess all of this just gives me one more reason to hate MS.

      (Please, enlighten and disagree with me on this one... my way of learning...)

    442. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      Don't try that bullshit. Do NOT try to equate the struggle for racial equality with the battle over equality of sexual orientation. It belittles us both for you to try.

      No one is saying that they're the same thing. Both struggles have different scopes, histories, etc. The women's movement for suffrage, equal pay and the like is a third example, different from the former two.

      That is not to say, however, that one cannot draw parallels between these different social movements. One can take issue with the specifics of a particular comparison (e.g. "you can't change your skin color, but you sure can change your sexual orientation!"), but calling all comparisons off-limits strikes me more as willful ignorance to the lessons of those past struggles.

      Sure, Richard Simmons may not be MLK, but what does Matthew Shephard's death bring to mind?

      --
      iSKUNK!
    443. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      You program yourself every day. And so does everyone else. And you can program some pretty strange things into yourself if you're indiscriminant. That was the point I was trying to make.

      Except you haven't proven in any way that people can actually program themselves into and out of homosexuality. Sure, we program ourselves, but is sexuality within the realm of the "pretty strange things" you speak of?

      If it's a choice, perhaps you can find a person to switch to homosexuality and back. Let's define homosexuality, for this experiment, to be having a sexual response to another of your own gender, and having none for the opposite. It won't take more than a few such volunteers to poke through the "blanket statement", can it?

      Typical.... guess they don't make nerds like they used to.

      Indeed.

      Your proof that people can choose to be gay consists of an example that women can be severely traumatized and actually enjoy prostitution, forgetting that the severe trauma negates choice entirely.

      One more insult from you and you'll be speaking to yourself.

    444. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These are not minority protections. They are legal privileges. Desirable things, understandably, but it is nothing like the right to speak, or vote, or have due process. You do not help your case by pretending that it is.

      The right to not be compelled by the state to testify against your spouse, and the right to not have your spouse deported because they are not a citizen are very much liek the right to speak or vote or have due process. You do not help your case by pretending that they are not.

      I put it to you that you disagree with me precisely because you are ignorant. Ignorant of the impact on gay people of these punative laws that deny them, their spouses, and their children the same rights and protections that you and others take for granted.

      You talk about freedom as though it means being able to feel good about yourself.

      Nowhere have I said anything that would lead any reasonable person to that conclusion. That is your invention and your attempt to inject motivations and words into me that you have prepared talking points to tear down.

      I talk about freedom as it is, or at least should be: equal treatment under the law for all individuals. I think that I should have, just like you, some say in every single aspect of my governance, period. But I also think that just because you don't like who I love and share my life with, that you cannot and should not be able to deny me the same rights you enjoy, in the same way you enjoy them. Similarly, I should not be denied the same rights you enjoy becuase the color of my skin is different than yours.

      And as to your last point, marriage is most definitely a civil liberty. It is a civil license that grants rights that can be obtained in no other way, such as the aforementioned rights of immigration and the right to not be compelled to testify against your spouse. Those are very obviously civil rights, limiting the government's ability to meddle in my personal relationship and partership without any valid reason for doing so. Unless and until you can provide a compelling reason for the state to be able to come in and break up my relationship, but to NOT be able to do the same to YOUR relationship, you have not proven your case.

      And the burden, dear friend, is on you and those who would try and deny me equal rights and equal protection... not for me to prove I am somehow worth of being treated equally.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    445. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Well on the scale of morally right, I don't think you want to try and tally white America's bill from black America. It's pretty big, a good chunk of our current wealth came from discrimination, especially if you add interest owed. So if you want to talk about moral correctness, I don't see how the current discrimination is wrong.

      Legally, we have always allowed regulation of economics to support specific definitions of justice and equality. To do otherwise would be a break from precedent. Your right, though slave owners used a lot of legal and moral wrangling to support their view, much like the anti-gay marriage people today. However, I can support Affirmative Action from both a moral and legal standpoint, so sorry if I was confusing points in previous posts.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    446. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rho · · Score: 1
      This is an important point. I'm not sure if Microsoft actually does provide bennies for gay employees, but the point is a good one nonetheless. Labor laws have many consequences, some of them good, some of them bad, some of them unintended, and some are strategic.

      Mandating that a business be "moral" is little different than mandating that you be moral. The questions always comes down to, "Who is going to define morality, and why?"

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    447. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are what we like to call a dumbass if you can't see the difference

    448. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

      They want to have those special rights like hospital visits

      That's not a right any more than drawing a paycheck is. I have the privilege of going to certain hospitals in particular because I pay for medical insurance.


      You fail to understand that hospital visitation rights is not about going to the doctor to get a checkup or anything like that. It's about visiting a sick loved one in the hospital. Many hospitals will deny visitation rights to non-family members outside of limited hours. Hospitals have no right to define families. When the gay community demands hospital visitation rights, they are demanding that hospitals recognize their domestic partner (non state sanctioned spouse) as a family member.

      When straight couples bow down before the state and the church and ask for their blessings and permission to form a legally recognized family with inheritance rights, the aforementioned hospital visitation rights, and over a thousand other rights that are granted exclusively to married couples.

      Assigning power of attorney is often an expensive legal process. It is automatically granted to legally married couples.

      Insurance companies will frequently provide a discount in insurance rates for married couples. If those same two people, even if they were heterosexual and lived together for many years, would have to pay higher rates because their relationship and love for each were not endorsed by the state.

      The states recognition of a marriage is the only thing has any legal basis. The religious ceremony doesn't mean shit as far as the law is concerned, nor should it. Most of the arguments against granting homosexual couples the right to marry are based on arguments from tradition.

      Personally, I think the state should get out of the marriage business altogether. It should divorce itself from promoting, regulating, and recognizing marriage. I have no problem with recognizing civil unions with most of the benefits that currently come with marriage though. I also have no problem with polyamorous marriages either. Whatever floats your boat, as long as it doesn't interfere with my rights.

      --
      Nice Marmot
    449. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      You libertarians are just conservatives who want to smoke pot and get away with it.

      In a libertarian society government wouldn't be in the business of marriage in the first place. The anti-gay rhetoric has nothing to do with libertarianism.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    450. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by vistic · · Score: 1
      We're tired of being second class citizens. Sick of it, really.


      Not sick of it enough, it seems. Too many people I know who are gay just don't seem to care and are even against gay marriage for one reason or another. How bad does it need to get to finally piss us all off enough to actually give a crap that we're being treated unfairly by a bunch of ignorant jerks?
    451. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rho · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Congratulations, you invented a point nobody made and defeated it!

      Some call it masturbation, but I call it "strategeric thinking".

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    452. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      If a state super-majority were to decide to strip people of color of their right to vote, the Judiciary would have ever right to step in and say "no, that's wrong", and they'd be absolutely right to do so.

      Their "right to do so" comes from the explicit language of the Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution, and no where else. You are correct, of course, that there IS an equal protection clause. However, I do not think it means what you think it means. You might want to read up on the Fourteenth Amendment a little, especially the part about "suspect classes."

      I care not at all whether or not the Court's decisions match my preferences. I only care that they are appying the Constitution faithfully and objectively, and not relying on their own personal values and preferences.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    453. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by saforrest · · Score: 1

      Damn, should have previewed. Here's what it should have looked like:

      Marriage is either a social and evolutionary construct between each sex or it's just a club.

      Why is a contract between sexes? Why not a contract between partners?

      I support equal rights as far as survivor's beneifts, insurance, etc, but not changing the definition of a 4-thousand+ year institution simply because some of my fellow americans are stupid and hurt gay people.

      So, you're one of the 'civil union' crowd: you're willing to give gay people all the trappings of marriage: benefits, coverage, etc. but you just don't want to call it "marriage".

      For the life of me I don't understand this crowd: even the gay-bashing religious folk make more sense to me.

      But clinging to a word -- it just makes no sense! What is so precious about the word 'marriage' that you can't bear the thought of having it applied to gay people?

      This institution, whatever it is called, will be functionally identical to heterosexual marriage in every way (if it's not then we have another argument). Gay people will own property, have children, get messy divorces, and general acts like all other married couples.

      For me, the whole "civil union" thing is comparable to a hypothetical situation at the beginning of the 20th century in which a guy would argue that, while women should be granted suffrage, that it really shouldn't be called 'voting'.

    454. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mention of modern standard was in regard to language and in updating laws governing a populace to cover all of its members according the precepts that the initial laws were written according to for the initial populace. I meant here of course that the ideas establishing equality of default status, excepting the allowed differences due to inheritance of wealth, that was established for the US citizens according to the document written by the wealthy in 1776, increased to apply to those with more recent African heritage in 1868 with the fourteenth amendment to the US constitution to equalize the populace that then included entitled former slaves, and that now the populace includes significant numbers of homosexuals so that in line with that trend the laws require expansion to cover that segment under the precept of equality.

    455. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Combinare · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As a gay man, I wholehearted support your right to believe anything you wish. What I don't understand is why you think you have the right to "share" with me what you think of my "lifestyle," unless I've specifically asked you to do so. I wouldn't dream of telling any religious person, whatever their religion or denomination, what I think of their religion. Why should you be held to a different standard?

    456. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by grassy_knoll · · Score: 1


      Someone very big must have threatened them, or, more likely, we simply don't know the story here. I think a boycott would have been GREAT for MS. Firt of all: we all know that conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers -- second of all: MS would get to look like a good guy for once by doing the right thing -- and thats great publicity.

      Not necessarily.

      Considering how broadly the anti-gay marriage laws passed in the last election, being seen as a staunch supporter of gay rights might not be the best PR move.

      Microsoft may not want to been seen supporting an unpopular cause.

    457. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When threatened, people will lash out. It's obvious that you are threatened by the fact that there are still people in this world who are not brainwashed by the liberal doctrine that you are so 'rabidly' defending. If this is indeed America, then Ken Hutcherson has just as much right to speak against homosexuality as you have to speak for it. Oh wait, I forgot, you're obviously a liberal, so you wouldn't understand true equality and tolerance.

    458. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It doesn't. But two chix having a marriage ceremony isn't a marriage.

      No? Why not? I know a lot of legitimate male+female marriages that don't live up to the ideal, do you not count those as marriages? If the two chix are deeply devoted to each other and spend the rest of their lives together (for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health...), that's not a marriage?

      Right, so why are gays so hung up on "marriage" instead of equivalent rights?

      Well, if it was possiable to get equal rights in any other way, then it probably wouldn't be the issue it is. Separate but equal has been tried, and it failed pretty miserably. It varies from state to state, but there are still huge differences between marriages and civil unions. As long as the wording is different, they can be treated differently.

      But you're right that the word does convey legitimacy. It is a loaded word, that is why the issue is so hot.

      So first I say that wording doesn't matter, and then I say that it does. Well, what I said is that bent wording doesn't matter. Calling something the PATRIOT act doesn't make it patriotic. Calling something the Defense of Marriage Act doesn't mean it does. On the other hand, where there is a difference in wording, it is all to easy to have a difference in fact. That is why "civil union" will never be equal to "marriage".

    459. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tsotha · · Score: 1
      But the "consent" argument is pretty slippery, as in "halfway down the slippery slope". If it's OK for two men to get married because it's consentual, why isn't it OK for twenty? One hundred? Clearly not all consentual unions are "marriages". Traditionalists want to draw the line at a man and a woman, and clearly you would like to see it expanded to include two men or two women. But where do you say it ends, and why?

      Let's say a brother and sister want to get married. Now, traditionally this is frowned upon, not just because most people find it icky, but also it's not a good idea for two closely related people to have children. Under the "consent" logic, I suppose it's OK as long as one of them is sterile. And what about a man and his brother? His son?

      Even people who support gay marriage start to squirm here, but if one responds "it's all good," then at least it's logically consistent (if impractical. Would a company be required to put 20 people on the health plan as a result of one new hire?). But that's not what I usually hear.

      The response I always get when I ask this question is "well, it's not about that. It's about two unrelated people that love each other." Maybe so. But surely laws must be based on logic at some level. Where is the logical endpoint of this argument? If the response is "it stops at two people because that's the way it is" then you don't have a response to people who say marriage should be only for heterosexuals because "that's the way it is".

      By the way, I'm not against gay marriage, provided it's done at the state level through state legislatures. But there are some logical inconsistencies that need to be resolved for me before this is a "civil rights" issue to be addressed by federal law or (especially) courts.

    460. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Frustrating. Like having a conversation with a five year old.

      DISCRIMINATION IS WRONG. MORALLY. EVEN IN RECOMPENSE FOR PREVIOUS DISCRIMINATION.

      The fact that you REFUSE to acknowledge that illustrates that you are willing to twist the definition of moral to suit your uses.

      Wrong is wrong. And you CAN'T support affirmative action morally, because then you're a hypocrite. There are no other choices.

      It's sad that your moral compass is so fucked up that you think discrimination is acceptable.

    461. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by halivar · · Score: 1

      Oops. In retrospect is seems pretty clear in the great-grandparent. Damn regression cycles make me a lazy reader. ;)

    462. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      That means let the majority religious belief system define it, as long as it doesn't hurt the minority.

      Careful there. "Congress shall make no law...."

      Can't civil unions give you what you want?

      If federal/state laws were rewritten as you say, granting the same rights to married as well as civilly-united couples, then that would probably be good enough for most people---the "marriage" vs. "civil union" semantic would be just a legalism. (Same-sex couples would still call themselves "married," and in time, most people would as well.)

      I don't think, however, that anyone considers a rewrite of this scale to be viable. Especially at the federal government level.

      --
      iSKUNK!
    463. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by flink · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A gay person has every right I have, right now. It is just as illegal to punch me in the face as it is to punch him in the face.

      Yeah, but that is samll consolation if it happens all the time anyway. The guy that beats you up this week isn't going to care that some stranger that did it last week got punished. It's not gonna help if the homophobic cops don't take you case seriously.

      That's why we have all these marches and activism. The marches aren't for the bigots, they're not even necessarily for the friendly straight people. They're a chance for everyone to get together and say "Hey, it's tough, but we're all still here and we're all still ok." For some people it's the only day out of the year they can express their sexuality in public without fear.

      The laws are necessary because it's a matter of health and public safety. Do you think most school districts would cover queer issues in health class or sex ed if there weren't a state law requireing them to? The point is to raise awareness, expose people to different ways of living, and hopefully the next generation will grow up a little more tollerant than this one. Hopefully there'll be a few less teen suicides. Hopefully, a few less kids will get dragged behind trucks or tied to trees.

    464. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

      * Ability to live in neighborhoods deemed "families only"

      Do these really exist? How is this legal?

      --
      Nice Marmot
    465. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Sure, Richard Simmons may not be MLK, but what does Matthew Shephard's death bring to mind?

      The dangers of Drug abuse.

      Matt Shephard was killed when someone tried to rip him off. They raised the "gay panic" defense because they thought that the court system would give them more mercy than if the murder was about drugs.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    466. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by codeviking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's simply the way it is. In our modern society you are not allowed to stand against anything unless it's Christianity. I am a Christian, by the way, and have been involved in many of these types of conversations. I've concluded that people will just block out whatever you have to say, so it's really pointless to try and explain yourself.

      --
      My way back has been erased.
    467. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Why does the government need to be involved with this on any level?

      Um, because the government is the arbitrator of the social compact that is society? Government codifies and applies the collective rules we live by. For example the "government" has no intrinsic interest in whether two people are married or whether that affects their taxes. It is the codified interests of the society that make it a government issue. Unfortunately, we now seem to have entered an era where the lawmakers are divorced and insulated from mainstream society.

    468. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Gay people just want to live their lives like anyone else.

      Then why do they keep reminding everyone that they're not like anyone else?

      They are not hurting you, why do you care if they have equal rights?

      The problem is that they aren't seeking "equal rights", they're looking for special rights.

      They want next of kin status for their partners, that's fair. They want to inherit property and make medical decisions for their partners, that's fair. They want visitation rights to children that aren't biologically theirs but they helped raise, that's fair. They want to redefine marriage to suit their desires, not fair and this is what the battle is over.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    469. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radar2k2 · · Score: 1

      I was assuming we were talking about "equal application of the laws" and so your comment seemed out of place. Sorry for the Constitution 101 but it seems like lots of people here can understand kernel vs. library but not Constitution vs. Statute.

      To clarify my point, the legal questions aren't about the myriad of state laws associated with a marriage certificate. If the legislature had simply gotten rid of marriage all together there would be no raison detre for the lawsuits.

      The legal analysis hinges on the interpretation of "equal application of the laws" which is one of those really big issues that probably shouldn't be subject to simple legislative action.

      And by the way, slavery was a pretty damn controversial issue at the time yet it was ultimately addressed at the Constitutional level. I understand your point, but "controversy" isn't a very useful indicator of how to interpret our laws or whether a statutory or constitutional approach is appropriate. Logical reasoning is (a little) more helpful.

    470. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1
      Wow, that was a hard comment to read. I wanted to respond and I'll say first that I am a Christian too. And I would argue that I am not sure I can agree that people totally choose to be gay. I believe there is some genetic predisposition there. Definetly not as overblown as others think (do you know there is a gene called GAY? Somewhat implying that overexpression of that gene would turn someone automatically gay?)

      Then there is your assumption (as I understand) that people choose to be gay to shock their parents, make a statement, experiment, be different. I think it is not as simple as that, and there is probably something in the middle. I think that gays have a genetic predisposition to being who they are. Not all who have that predisposition will become gay and not all that don't have it will be straight. But that is just that a predisposition. I have a predisposition to diabetes, someone has a predisposition to be a good runner, or someone may be predisposed to cancer. It doesn't mean that ultimately all those things will happen to each one of the individuals. It is up to the individual to choose what they become and that sometimes means fighting and resisting certain predisposition, whether genetic or formed by habit or learned or otherwise acquired. Sometimes there is not much specifically a person can do if they are predisposed to Parkinson's or cancer as far as we we know. But the idea that one should fight and resist presiposition and temptations goes in the face of the today's American society's motto "Always be happy and be comfortable" because sometimes to do the right thing means being uncomfortable, or means being unpopular. So if I am predisposed to diabetes or obesity I should probably eat stuff that is good for me and exercise even though that will make me "uncomfortable" at times. If I have a predisposition to being a good athlete, it would be waste not develop it, but I surely don't have to, if I don't want to. I think the same thing goes for being gay, some poeple will let that determine who they are and they will choose to be gay at some point, some people can suppres it and I think they can overcome it, even if it means they will be "uncomfortable"

      Notice how I have not said so far whether or not being gay is wrong. I'll say it now, I am not a moral relativist ("you are right, I am right", "you are ok, I am ok") I personally believe it is wrong to act on gay tendencies. Also I will not say that is just my subjective opinion, I think it is generally wrong (objectively). [ if that doesn't get me modded down on Slashdot then I don't know what will].

      Having said that I think the whole issue homosexuality is too overblown and hyped up by both Christians and gay activists alike, both acusing and pointing fingers at each other that most people (whatever their beliefs) will see both as a little too extreme to identify with. Any issue related to sexuality if so overblown, why aren't people just as rabbid about theft, pride, deception and greed. Those can be just as damaging and serious sins. Why are Christians accusing anyone and say they are "going to Hell" and that's it. That is not very Christian at all. (I not implying you do this, I am just talking in general) I don't think sexual (or anykind of) discrimination should take place. And I would agree with you here that this shouldn't even be an issue. Microsoft or any company should have to have policies regarding the treatment of gay, straight, religious or racial groups. They should just be making money, provide thier product and look at qualifications not who the person chooses to have sex with, or what they look like.

    471. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "If the two chix are deeply devoted to each other and spend the rest of their lives together (for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health...), that's not a marriage?"

      Nope,sucks for them, but they're stuck with it.

      "Well, if it was possiable to get equal rights in any other way, then it probably wouldn't be the issue it is. Separate but equal has been tried, and it failed pretty miserably"

      Works fine in Vermont. The fact that something failed previously is THE worst excuse for not trying it again.

      "It varies from state to state, but there are still huge differences between marriages and civil unions. As long as the wording is different, they can be treated differently"

      They ARE different. Two men is not sociologically, physically, mentally or emotionally the same as a man and a woman. They should be treated differently. What's wrong with that?

      Aren't we supposed to be "celebrating our differences"? Unless of course they prevent us from getting what we WEEEELY WEEEEELY want.

    472. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, in a lot of places, he's only protected from discrimination against age, race, sex, religion, and national origin. A lot of states have laws against discrimination due to handicap, but I doubt that would apply everywhere (no one would be surprised to find you can discriminate against people in wheelchairs applying for lifeguard positions).

      Since being ugly, short, bald, and fat is NOT a handicap, you can easily discriminate on that basis. (I think that was a subject for a Dilbert cartoon)

      (P.S.-Disclaimer: I'm not a USian, but that's what I understand from 42 USC 708)

    473. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Unless and until you can provide a compelling reason for the state to be able to come in and break up my relationship, but to NOT be able to do the same to YOUR relationship, you have not proven your case.

      Look, I'm not opposed to you, in policy. In other contexts I would very much support your points of view. But in the constitutional context, I'm afraid I don't. The state does not need a "compelling" reason to pass a law. All of these things we are talking about, important to you though they may be, are questions of policy. Policy questions deserve to be hashed out in legislatures, by means of argument and persuasion, which you are effective at, trust me!

      I don't think that your argument for constitutionalizing this issue is cogent. I sympathize with your personal feelings and hardship; I don't disagree it is backwards not to at least have these legal rights by civil union. But consider this: I also don't enjoy the rights that you talk of. Why? Because I'm single! The state has certain rights and priviliges for married people that single people do not have. Is this to be unconstitutional as well? The state takes money from the rich and provides certain benefits to poor people. Is this not unequal treatment? The state provides low-interest loans to college students. The state provides huge tax incentives for home owners. Is this not discrimination? I agree, more or less, with the Supreme Court's current distinction between suspect and non-suspect classifications. I guess I wonder what rationale you think is appropriate to determine who can and cannot be discriminated against by law. Simply adopting the position of "never" is warm and fuzzy, but plainly silly in practice, for law by its very nature classifies and distinguishes.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    474. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some call it masturbation"

      I call it 'strangling potential children'

    475. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Denial is a human trait. More non-homosexuals are infected (worldwide), and many of them are equally adamant about ignoring the problem. So, don't just fault gays for being flawed humans. We all (potentially) are.

    476. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Thrawn1138 · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why various lobbying groups in general seem hell bent on imposing their special priviledges on the rest of society. Rather that granting more "rights" to some special group, we should be repealing special priviledges already granted to other groups. Many people like to sight that laws exist protecting discrimination based on gender or race. I would argue that these laws are inherently flawed and infrige on each of our individiual liberties. Each of these laws is just a stepping stone to more laws protecting the "rights" of some new group.

      When it comes to hiring for jobs, I'd be willing to bet it would be a tiny minority that would discriminate based on sexual preference, gender, or race. Each of us discriminates in one way or another every day...be it by the stores we shop at or the tv we watch. If some business was discriminating based on race, I'm sure it would become apparent relatively quickly. If it came to the public's attention,most people would probably exercise their right to discriminate by not patroning that business.

      America has already headed too far down the road of granting special priviledges to specific groups. I don't see how we are helped just doing it once again. We are best served by preserving our individual liberties. In a free society we are most protected when all persons can discriminate as they please in all facets of their lives.

      The one positive aspect to this story is that at least this is being pushed through the state legislature where a healthy debate can take place. Too often new interpretations of the law are discovered by judges not elected by the people.

    477. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by crimson30 · · Score: 1

      Well on the scale of morally right, I don't think you want to try and tally white America's bill from black America.

      I didn't add to that "bill", so I shouldn't have to pay it! Why should I be responsible for the actions of people that died before I was even born!?

      Your arguments do not address individual acts of discrimination which are inherently wrong. Justice is supposed to be blind, don't you see? People should be evaluated for who they are. Don't you have any real concept of justice?

      To do otherwise would be a break from precedent.

      The slavery you are trying to make reperations for was at one time both lawful and precedented. Legality is in no way a moral justification for anything.

    478. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      so something is wrong becuase you don't agree with it even though it brings no harm the the people participating or anyone else around them? How can that be? Does that make it "morally" wrong for me to read a book in my free time (an activity I enjoy and which has no harmful effect on myself or others)? is it "morally" wrong for me to own a gun or knife (things which pose a potential hazard to those around me but which I have yet to actually use in any manner directly threatening them)?

      If those are morally wrong why are they accepted?

      If they're not morally wrong, how is somebody's sexual orientation in any way morally wrong?

    479. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by deglr6328 · · Score: 1

      Yeah because, you know, people totally see animals killing eachother all the time and then think it's ok to do because of that. Idiot.

      --
      - "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"
    480. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Just what exactly does Ken Hutcherson have on Bill anyway?

      Pictures of him and Linus doin' the nasty "on the white house lawn"?

      --
      What?
    481. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by larkost · · Score: 1
      So... since you are proposing that the Bible is the ultimate arbiter of what is right... then the clearest laws should be the 10 commandments, yes? So...
      • only Judeo-Christian-Muslim religions are allowed (first commandment... and there are good arguments saying that only Judaism qualifies, since the latter two put others in front of God)
      • You can't have a crucifix with the image of Jesus (since he is somewhat God... commandment 2)
      • People should be arrested for saying "Oh God" (third commandment)
      • Working on either Friday or Saturday (dependent)... that is punishable by what, stoning? (fourth commandment)
      • Didn't listen to your mother and take out the garbage... well time to go to jail (fifth)
      • murder, adultery, and stealing... ok, we have the middle as a civil offense, but these we are close on... (sixth, seventh, and eigth)
      • no lying/false accusations... well there goes politics... (ninth)
      • don't keep up with the Joneses... ok, we are in big trouble here

      Ok... my scorecard says we are 3/10. Now if you are looking to live in such a society, I can recommend Iran... since they clearly recognize all 10, as do several other muslim states in that area.

      Now, more realistically, many laws are similar all over because in order to have a working society there are a lot of things you simply have to forbid (murder, stealing, etc). These things are necessary for a society... that they happen to be "right" is secondary.

      But, even as an atheist/agnostic (and a heterosexual), I recognize that some things are "rights", and that there is a "right/wrong" concept that is universal. What I will strongly disagree with is that a person's sexual preference (and the natural acting upon that) is "wrong". And I even more strongly object to the religious right's assertion that they have the authority to pronounce judgment on that.

      To back up that last statement you can look to the Bible itself. In it God declares that only he can judge people. Also, if you look at the German translation (remember, this is all coming out of original ancient Greek writings about sermons delivered in ancient Aramaic) of the second commandment, you will get the idea that God did not want anyone presuming to know what he wanted/proporting to be his mouthpiece. Granted this does not work well with the Catholic Church and it's Pope(s)... (Russian and Greek Orthodoxes)
    482. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Yunzil · · Score: 1
      Even if I disagree with it, at least I have a voice in the process. I DO have a problem with federal courts arbitrarily reading their own values into the Constitution and overriding the decisions of even state supermajorities.


      Shame. The reason we have a Constitution, a separation of powers, and a representative legislature is to protect the rest of us from people like you.

    483. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      Matt Shephard was killed when someone tried to rip him off.

      Assuming that Mr. McKinney and Mr. Henderson were telling the truth.

      The fact that the "gay panic" defense has ever been used at all (and not always unsuccessfully) is quite instructive as well....

      --
      iSKUNK!
    484. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      ... acceptance ... a sense of legitimacy and pride

      And we certainly can't let them have that.

    485. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      They're about promoting marriage, not opposing a group of people.

      Would you mind explaining exactly how preventing same-sex couples who are unrelated and of legal age from obtaining over one-thousand legal rights and benefits currently available to any opposite-sex couple who are unrelated and of legal age somehow "promotes" marriage, or did the anti-gay propaganda not go into detail on that matter?

    486. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as there is a straight guy in the room with them running the video camera...

      A gay guy is ok as long as he remains behind the camera...

    487. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      If black people were systematically disadvantaged, which you as a white person currently profit from, then how is discrimination to re-distribute that profit, morally wrong?

      I don't think you are factoring in the facts that the infrastructure and advantages you currently enjoy as a white American were built by disadvantaging black Americans. As long as you use the existing infrastructure and wealth, you are profiting from historical descrimination. Isn't that morally wrong? Either give up your inherent advantage (which is pretty much impossible) or accept a compromise like affirmative action.

      Until white America no longer profits from it's historical robbery of black American's wealth (labor, land and cash), in other words, when black Americans have equal ability and oportunity to succeed (as evidenced by Census numbers), this form of descrimination will be morally wrong. Until then, not supporting affirmative action is morally wrong.

      You'd only be correct if you did not currently profit from the historic criminal behavior of this country. Let me put it this way, white America is in recievership of stolen goods. Those goods were stolen from blacks in the form of codified discrimination until 1965. The bulk of the wealth of this nation was generated before 1965, and the wealth generated after that used the wealth generated previously as start-up capital. Affirmative Action is an attempt to redistribute stolen goods back to their rightful owners. Imperfect? Yes, but we've considered temporal law to be imperfect justice since the Protestant Reformation. Immoral? Not by a long shot.

      Explain to me how affirmative action is immoral again?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    488. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed the point of the poster's comment. The point is marriage has been redefined before. He/she is saying you should rollback all those other changes if you're against redefining marriage.

    489. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Activist Judges? Please explain to me what an activist judge is.An activist judge is one who supports something you disagree with. On the other hand, if they DON'T support something you DO agree with, it's judicial tyranny. Hope that helps!

    490. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      The fact that something failed previously is THE worst excuse for not trying it again.

      You don't think much about the logical consequences of your arguments, do you?

    491. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say that since you're single, gays shouldn't be allowed to marry?
      You have a choice to marry someone, they don't.
      It is *not* unequal treatment, because gays are not given the option of marriage, while you are.

    492. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by MellowTigger · · Score: 1

      "Assault someone because they're wearing yellow or very nearly any other stupid reason in the world, and it's assault."

      I agree. The victim had the misfortune to wear the clothing (which can be avoided) or be at the location (which can be avoided) or carry the money (which can be avoided) that made them temporarily a target of a criminal.

      Contrast that situation with one in which the "fault" of the victim is that of simply existing... and having the wrong gender, or the wrong faith, or the wrong sexual orientation, or the wrong skin color. These features are not avoidable. A criminal who targets someone based on these inherent qualities induces a fear (I hesitate to call it terroristic) in the subject because of the certainty that the attack can never be avoided by "doing the right things". A person can do nothing to avoid being "victim" to someone who attacks based on these motives.

      Attacks based on motives of type-hatred are different from attacks based on motives of greed or other kinds of territoriality. Different motives require different names ("hate crime") and different deterrants. The motive is an essential piece in understanding any crime. Motive can make the difference between murder and manslaughter. It also distinguishes hate crimes.

      Having the thought is no crime. Using the thought to perpetrate harm is a crime... and it is different from causing harm based on other motives. We should ask a victim if it's different. (Theft-attack versus hatecrime-attack.) Do you think the difference in motivation has no effect on the target?

    493. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Nope,sucks for them, but they're stuck with it.

      Why isn't it, or are you just arrogantly declaring your position beyond question?

    494. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Seriously, though, this is a MAJOR issue...Microsoft withdraws its support on a subject it's been championing for years, becuse of threats from one rabidly evangelistic, gay-hating preacher???

      Just like city officials cave when a small group of homosexuals complain about something in their local town or when a small group of atheists complain about the 10 commandments being displayed in the open. City officials bow down to them like they are something special and they are sometimes only a handful of people making complaints. At least MS is caving the right way considering it is someone's choice to be gay. It isn't someone's choice to be female or black. Christians outweigh any other group by a large margin in the US and supposedly the majority in any situation is supposed to have some say in the matters of law and other things that are voted on dealing with matters like this.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    495. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      You didn't add to it, but your name is on there. You were raised using wealth stolen from black folks. Even after you were 18, you went to colleges that were built using this wealth, you worked for corporations built using this stolen wealth as well. The prices you pay for land, goods and infrastructure have all been subsidized by theft from black Americans.

      Unless you've lived outside the US since the age of 18, you aren't as blameless as you'd like to believe. I agree that you did not add to the bill. Neither did I, but I don't deny that I've (unwittingly, unknowingly) profited from stolen goods.

      Justice, any definition in use by the courts, recognizes that regardless of your knowledge, you are responsible for recieving stolen goods, caveat emptor. In fact, this principle extends back to common law and cannon law, so I'd say the morality here is pretty well established.

      Look, it's not fair that our generation has to deal with this, we didn't commit the theft. But that does not release us from our responsibility when we have also profited from it.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    496. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Protection is one thing but the homosexuals just want special attention and privileges, plain and simple.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    497. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by crimson30 · · Score: 1

      Heck, lets go even further: women are chattel. Sound even better?

      Well, when you put it that way... :P

    498. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      American democracy has a long tradition of protecting the minority from the majority. I guess that no longer sits well with you? When can I expect the death camps to begin?

      I read a phrase in the Times entertainment section that piqued my curiosity: "jump the shark". Curious, I did a Google search and found that the phrase refers to the "Happy Days" episode where Fonzie, on waterskis, literally jumps over a shark. The point was that the show was never quite credible, never really as good as it had been, after this moment. And it suddenly hit me that the re-election of George W. Bush marked something similar.

      The U.S. decided it hated gays and feared Muslim extremists more than it valued freedom and liberty. That moment showed that all you had to do in this country to fuck the poor and hand over the country to the rich was talk like an honest Texas Good Ol' Boy and not a spoiled millionaire's son educated at Yale. We've embraced fear in the name of security, hate in the name of Christ, lies in the name of justice. The spectre of Al Qaeda is invoked whenever the people question the government, yet the government is curiously unconcerned with capturing Osama bin Laden. We preach freedom while locking up people without trial; we invoke Jesus while arrogantly abusing our power. In short, the country has jumped the shark.

      We've got some good years in the country yet, and I still love it in many ways. But it will never be the same for me. I feel like America is a love who has betrayed me, and I still love her, still care about her, still want the best for her. But I'll never completely trust her, ever again.

    499. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I guess you would say I'm a humanist, and I agree with your 'risky behavior' historical explanation, anal intercourse being an extremely efficient way to spread disease. But I think there is a greater social impact to some alternative lifestyles that condoms won't fix. We ultimately have to address all the implications of everybody doing their own thing, whatever that may be.

      As always, we'll decide - as humans - what kinds of behaviors society can handle, then the religionists will claim that's how we should have interpreted the holy writings all along.

    500. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Yes. Yes, yes, yes. Why can't more people take a commun sense stand like this?

      Because they want to rally around a statement like this and shout "See! They really do want to DESTROY MARRIAGE".

      It's a win-win for them. Argue for marriage benefits, and you're trying to destroy the institution of marriage. Suggest that the government get out of the marriage business altogether, and suddenly you're destroying the institution of marriage. They toss this shit out to their flock, many of whom buy it up because they're convinced that if their faith does not have government backing (in the form of supporting only marriages that their religion endorses), then it will falter.

    501. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think geeks can be as arrogant and unreasonable as fundamentalists and get something done? You think MS doesn't know this?

    502. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've gone off-topic onto whether hate crimes are a good idea. This isn't a hate crime bill. Whether intention should be taken into account in defining crimes is a completely different issue from whether non discrimination means "special rights." The post said is that this bill adds "sexual orientation" to the Washington non-discrimination law. Gay is a sexual orientation. Straight is a sexual orientation. This means that your gay neighbor can't be fired, evicted, denied a loan, etc. for being gay, but neither can you be fired, evicted, denied a loan, etc. for being straight. Please explain how this amounts to special rights for gays. Just because gay people would have more to gain from this bill since they are the ones that most of the discrimination is directed against does not make the bill unfair or mean that it gives some people more rights than others.

    503. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should I have special protection from being fired for being unattractive?

      Yes, and you should get free plastic surgery from your HMO so that will never happen.

    504. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glitch23 · · Score: 0, Informative

      It needs backing because the homosexuals realize that it is the best way to get something that helps them to pass in Congress. They have already witnessed that just by letting the people vote on an issue dealing with homosexuals (marriage) that millions of people across 11 states didn't like the idea so now they resort to using MS's cash flow to force/bribe their lifestyle into the mainstream.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    505. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      That WOULD BE redefining marriage.

      Marrige used to be defined as the union of a man and a woman of the same race.

      When the US Supreme Court struck down that definition, do you believe it was the wrong thing to do?

      Do NOT try to equate the struggle for racial equality with the battle over equality of sexual orientation.

      Why? Because it makes you uncomfortable?

      Richard Simmons and Jim J Bullock are NOT MLK.

      Funny how no one tried to make this comparison. Almost like you're tossing out stupid strawmen in an attempt to prop up your arguments.

    506. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radar2k2 · · Score: 1

      Actually I think the question is does the Federal Constitution permit states to allocate statutory rights based on gender and/or sexual orientation? Marriage, from a legal point of view, is really a collection of lots (over 500 in Connecticut) of statutes.
      Each one could be individually challenged using the "rational basis" approach.

      Even if the Federal Constitution permits such allocation. The court rulings in VT and MA were based on the state constitutions, which they concluded did not permit such restrictions. So in those cases there would have to be a Federal finding that the Federal Constitution prohibited the state courts interpretation of their own state constitutions in order for those rulings to be overturned on Constitutional grounds.

      Your argument, using the federal "rational basis" analysis, is an reasonable argument, but since the same criteria you suggested (child socialization, responsible childbirth and so on) isn't even used as a rational basis for handing out marriage certificates to straight couples, it is hard to see how it could be used as rational basis against same-sex couples. There might be an argument to be made that there are parenting-rights that could be subject to such restrictions but that would be a subset of the existing marriage-rights and it seems to me would have to apply equally to straight couples to have any logical consistency. So your approach (at least for the rational-basis motivations you suggested) would argue for a "partnership license" and then should you decide to have kids, a separate "parenting license" under different terms. Sounds like a good way to really redefine "marriage".

    507. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up, you fucking queerbait.

    508. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      In places where homosexuals are persecuted, it's because of their actions.

      What "actions" define a homosexual. Be specific.

    509. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      There's MUCH more to marriage than just love.

      That's true. It currently is about creating a legally recognized familial relationship where no blood relationship exists. It confers upon the people entering the marriage contract a variety of legal rights and benefits, many of which are not available through any other contractual method (and, if Virginia's heavily bigoted law is interpreted the way many think that it will be, even the currently available options will be shut off).

      Now, can you explain why those legal benefits should be available to unrelated persons of the opposite gender, but not of the same gender?

    510. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      They are being treated like a person just like everyone else. They aren't being killed off and/or targeted. They aren't being enslaved either. They just want special treatment now. They want to be allowed to marry each other but it is their choice to be gay. No one forced it on them and no one is forcing anything else for that matter on them to make their lives "miserable". The Christians on the other hand aren't even asking for anything but instead are being forced to push themselves and their beliefs into the shadows(wrongfully arrested or targeted for murder in some case). So cry me a river over how the gays and lesbians are having it rough. I guess you missed the memo on how the Christians are having, in some cases, a worse time than the homosexuals.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    511. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Do NOT try to equate the struggle for racial equality with the battle over equality of sexual orientation.

      Why not?? What's the difference between religious orientation and sexual orientation? According to your belief, neither has genetic origins. What makes religion so special? Or is discrimination based on religion ok to you also?

      --
      What?
    512. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Marrige used to be defined as the union of a man and a woman of the same race.

      That restriction was a redefinition. Race was never a condition of marriage before slavery.

      Why? Because it makes you uncomfortable?

      Because it's moronic. It's offensive. It's inaccurate.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    513. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I'm in love with my Geforce 6800 Ultra, yet I cannot marry it.

      *shock*
      You mean to tell me that there are still morons out there trying to make idiotic analogies involving inanimate objects, animals and underage children even though none of them can enter into legal contracts?

      Besides, much of what gays seek through legal, state-sanctioned marriage can be accomplished via contract.

      Much != all, and you're leaving out both the fact that it's far easier for a blood relative to have such contracts declared null and void by a court as well as the incredibly massive expense and time required for all of the contractual arrangements when compared to an opposite-sex couple simply going down to city hall and getting themselves a marriage license.

    514. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by superyooser · · Score: 1
      And how does preventing loving couples for legally marrying somehow promote marriage?

      They are preventing themselves from marrying, legally or otherwise, by choosing partners who, by nature of their sex, have made their relationships incapable of constituting marriages. No, they have to find somebody of the opposite sex, just like everybody else does.

      I know I didn't address your question in the way you had expected, so see argument 1 here.

      For the record, I reject your premise that a couple who embraces and encourages each other's degeneracy is demonstrating love. Love does not rejoice in unrighteousness. Love rejoices in truth. (1 Corinthians 13)

    515. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Why isn't a car a camel? The answer is the same for your question.

    516. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      You missed the point of the poster's comment.
      I didn't miss it, it doesn't apply.

      He/she is saying you should rollback all those other changes if you're against redefining marriage.

      The racial restrictions on marriage were the result of a redefinition. When the SCOTUS struck it down in Loving V. Virginia, they WERE rolling back a redefinition.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    517. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      There has never been and will never be an argument against gay marriage on the basis that it would weaken heterosexual marriage.

      If you support heterosexual marriage, you believe people should be encouraged to have stable heterosexual relationships.

      If you are against homosexual marriage, you believe people should not be encouraged to have stable homosexual relationships. If homosexuals are not to have stable homosexual relationships, then they either have to have stable heterosexual relationships or no stable relationships at all.

      If you think gays should be in heterosexual relationships, or no relationships at all, you're a true right-wing loony. If you think they should just sleep around, then there's a disease from the early 80's you should read up on.

    518. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by gurumeditationerror · · Score: 1

      That's because animals are aware that they need to procreate, and more often than not, they consider the survival of the race as more important as the survival of one member.

      The animals are acting on instincts designed to selfishly ensure the survival of their genes, not the species. The animals at best "care" for themselves and immediate family members, who carry a lot of the same genes.

    519. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Why isn't a car a camel? The answer is the same for your question.

      Okay, do you have an explanation that does not involve an inane false analogy where you attempt to compare two contractual arrangements that technically differ only in a physiological aspect of the parties involved and two physical objects?

    520. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      What "actions" define a homosexual. Be specific.

      Participating in sexual activities with members of the same gender.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    521. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Finuvir · · Score: 1

      I agree with all of that up until the last paragraph. Would you deny marriage to atheists, or others without a formal church? Marriage is more a cultural institution than a religious one. The legal union of two (or more?) people should be called marriage whether or not any church cares to recognise it as such.

      --
      Why is anything anything?
    522. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      What makes religion so special?

      The first amendment to the US Constitution guarantees religious freedom.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    523. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just publicly said that you're gay (pro-gay) on slashdot. Now expect all of your posts to get trolled and get flaming replies from now on. And expect all your posts to get unreasonably modded down. I've got people 'stalking' (I know, it's a big word) me on slashdot for far less than this. Enemies supporting people who are against me in an argument, modding down my comments serially - 3-4 of my posts on different articles are suddenly modded down at the same times -, etc etc. Now I bet you're going to be in a much worse situation. You better get a new account. Or stop caring about what people say on slashdot.

    524. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Um, sorry to burst your overly critical and factually incorrect bubble, but there was no analogy in there.

      Why should I attempt to have a conversation with someone who twists reality to suit their argument?

    525. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And isn't a rollback of a redefinition, by definition, itself a redefinition? I mean, you are defining it differently than you were before, even if it was the same as you used to define it years go.

    526. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Typical. Instead of reason, you get snottiness. You people wonder why you lost the last election.

      (No, I Didn't veote for Bush)

    527. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they want the SAME rights. You call it 'redefining marriage to suit their desires' because you want to DENY those rights to a class of people.

      To paraphrase John Lennon, "Faggot is the Nigger of the World".

    528. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the principles discussed entailed not testifying against one's spouse and not having said person deported. Being single (and therefore without a spouse) does tend to make you unable, by definition, to enjoy these rights. Is this really the basis of your argument?

      It's funny to me that when many conservatives what to demonstrate control over the laws that govern them, those laws passed always seem to govern others (abortions, gays, etc.). Personal freedom indeed.

    529. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      You should call homosexuality degenerate and unrighteous and link to James Dobson right in your first post instead of buried down at the bottom of the thread. It would be more intellectually honest. It would also get you laughed at and ignored more quickly.

      And BTW, for every one gay person who struggles and fakes it through his whole miserable life in a heterosexual marriage, there are ten closet cases who divorce at age 40 and are much happier for it. Legitimizing and accepting homosexuality would just save them and their former spouses a lot of misery.

    530. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's wrong for God to have made you gay. If it was a choice, there would be no gay people.

    531. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bushidocoder · · Score: 1
      I specifically stated that it was the act, not the people, that was wrong. All people are created in the image of the Lord, and all of us are sinners in his eyes. Intolerance of people is a sin, because you're not accepting something the Lord himself clearly loves.

      But are you really tolerant of all actions? What about murder? Child rape? Tolerance of all actions implies that there is no such thing as evil, or good for that matter. There are some acts universally agreed to be evil - and many, many that society does not agree on. I believe that homosexual acts are an affront to God, just like thousands of things I've done that are equally offensive to him. We're all sinners, and we can all be forgiven for our transgressions, but that doesn't mean the things we did to lose our state of grace in the first place still aren't wrong.

      So what does my intolerance of their actions mean? Am I going to support laws that mean busting down doors and arresting of people the government suspects are gay? Absolutely not, that's an abomination of freedom, and the freedom to do what we want, even if it is offensive to God, is a gift from God. I won't do anything, save say that the act is wrong and be there to talk to my friends if they ever want to learn the Truth. What would you do if you saw a friend doing things you fundamentally believed was wrong - stay silent and do nothing? How is that moral?

    532. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      They want to redefine marriage to suit their desires, not fair and this is what the battle is over.

      Why isn't it fair? Unfair to whom? Why should this "redefinition" affect you?

      Marriage is an entirely artificial construct created for various social and/or religious purposes. We can and should modify it for the greater social good.

    533. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by taernim · · Score: 1

      Has the US ideals of democracy sunk so low that this is just a given now and not worthy of comment?

      You must be new here...

      --
      "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
    534. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Cu · · Score: 1

      The way you construct the situation in the first paragraph makes it a sexual discrimination issue. After all, if a man can marry a woman, shouldn't a woman enjoy those same rights? This is more or less what got the Texas sodomy statute overturned. (It specifically outlawed male-male sodomy.)

      As to your question, a quick googling of polygamy and "gay marriage" gives you the arguments on both sides.

      --
      I'm Abram Bender. You're not.
    535. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dorothy+86 · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points, I'd definitely mod you up. I agree whole-heartedly. I will admit, though, that it's extremely tough for me to look at homosexuality as an equal to other sins.

    536. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      So put up some reason of your own -- why shouldn't they have those things?

    537. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by manthrax3 · · Score: 0, Troll

      But you're forgetting that gay people CAN get married! See, marriage is, by definition, a union of a man and a woman. Gay people can marry all they want. They just can't marry someone of the same sex. There's no discrimination here. Things just are what they are. Shall we argue that men can't have babies, and call that a "civil right?"

    538. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bushidocoder · · Score: 1

      Civil contracts in societies where the leadership IS the religion is just as much a religious contract as it is civil. Before that (in the west at least, I don't know much about how marriage evolved in the east), marriage was an issue of the exchange of property which I don't think counts as a starting point.

    539. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      While I am no fan of judicial activism, the 14th amendment does give the Federal government vastly greater power over the affairs of states than was originally enumerated in the Constitution.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    540. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      They should. I never claimed anywhere that they shouldn't.

      But you assumed because I have reservations about gay marriage, that I hate gays.

      Oops.

      Oh, and by the way, you fucked up. Just admit it, I got the better of this one.

    541. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Double check your history. Gay relationships are out of fashion only in the current time. Historically in many cultures they have been accepted and even praised.

      The US is it's own nation. We should not be basing our laws on some other nation nor do we have to. Just because other countries do it doesn't mean it is right either. Gay relationships are STILL out of fashion it's just they are doing their damndest to change that despite what millions of other people say concerning the situation("millions" is a little more than the "some" you use to describe them). They don't want to hurt the homosexuals and they don't hurt the homosexuals so don't say that they do. They just don't want the homosexual lifestyle the center of attention, nor do they want it to be celebrated. As someone else said, they don't want to be treated like everyone else but instead be treated special.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    542. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      people like you.

      You mean, "lawyers"?

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    543. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      No no no no no...2 girls == less women for us men. We need to encourage male homosexuality and discourage female homosexuality to ensure that us true heteros have our share of women

    544. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Um, sorry to burst your overly critical and factually incorrect bubble, but there was no analogy in there.

      Oh, so you weren't even pretending to make an argument. You were just tossing out a non-sequitur so that you could dismiss those who don't accept your position as fat as "ignorant".

      Why should I attempt to have a conversation with someone who twists reality to suit their argument?

      It's hard to find intelligent conversation partners when you insist that you're right and refuse to support your position by delcaring people who don't accept it to be morons without further discussion.

    545. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      Don't be so preoccupied with winning the argument; it's not that important. What is important is equal protection under the law, and that means that we can't have laws that place heterosexual couples above homosexual couples.

      Within the context of arguing against homosexual marriage you said that marriage would give homosexual relationships legitimacy, so forgive me for assuming that you feel homosexual relationships are less than legitimate.

    546. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      "The question is what are those differences, how significant are they, from whose point of view?"

      The differences are significant becase a phrase like "Die Jews Die" essentially amounts to a threat.

      Seeing "Nirvanna Rocks" isn't likely to interfere with my ability to feel secure.

      It's the same thing with hate crime. Killing a person randomly isn't likely to cause a specific group of individuals to feel threatened. Killing a Jew and cutting a swastika into their chest is.

      If you call me and annoy me, it could possibly be harassment. If you call me and tell me that you're going to kill me, it's a threat. The punishment is far more severe.

      That's the difference between a "normal" crime and a "hate" crime.

    547. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Read the ninth amendment. Tell me why sexual orientation should not be included also.

      --
      What?
    548. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iamweezman · · Score: 1

      Good for Microsoft. Nice to see a move in the right direction.

    549. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by _merlin · · Score: 1

      Search for "yaoi hentai" (guy-on-guy cartoon porn). Teenage girls in Japan love that stuff.

    550. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      You are making the rational basis analysis stricter than it really is. A rational basis doesn't even have to be why the law is actually enacted, it just has to be a rational basis for believing it promotes some legitimate government interest that could possibly be claimed by the state. It also can be over- or under-inclusive. It doesn't have to be the best way to promote the legitimate interest. It doesn't even have to be logical, just rationally related to a legitimate government interest (which for the state, are the police powers: health, safety, welfare, morals(?; maybe not after Lawrence), etc.)

      As to your point about state constitutions; I don't see any legitimate basis for the federal courts to overturn the VT, CT, or MA courts' decisions. In fact, it's not at all uncommon for state constitutions to be much more protective than the federal constitution. They just can't be less protective, so the federal constitution is a baseline minimum that the states can freely build on, as far as legal rights and privileges are concerned.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    551. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by synquest · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Well stated Chris. This is posted on my web site as additional commentary: Gay Marriage Going Down to Defeat Across the Nation by Jeff Lundholm Constitutional amendments to ban gay marriages and civil unions are passing in state after state, with Kansas being the latest. I've abstained from comment on the topic only because it seems so clear it's hard to know where to start without feeling that I am stating the obvious. But here goes... I am certainly in agreement with the majority belief that gay unions are not deserving of the recognition and legitimization that legally sanctioned marriages and civil unions would bestow. It has been very difficult for many people to quantify why this is the correct moral position for our country to take, even though they feel it in their hearts. And understandably so... what is the moral compass, or tenents being used to justify this position? That is the problem. In this age of bleeding heart liberal, deathly afraid of offending someone age, (also read as "no backbone"), people are afraid of quoting the only consistant moral compass this country, or the whole world for that matter, has ever had, the Bible. We look to our courts, our laws, our ever changing state and national constitutions, for moral guidance. I call it "morality by legislation", in other words if it is legal then it's moral. If it is not moral... make it legal. A close look at the Catholic Curch over the last couple of centuries, and more recently, provides a classic look at what happens when our moral underpinnings drift away from the Bible to manmade laws and rules of moral conduct. We, as well as our laws, are subject to which ever way the wind blows. The Bible does not change. Many gay rights activists say the Bible does not condemn their actions. It most certainly does, along with a host of other things that we are all guilty of to some degree or another. Some of what the Bible has to say on this... and many other sins... Rom 1:24 So God let these people go their own way. They did what they wanted to do, and their filthy thoughts made them do shameful things with their bodies. Rom 1:25 They gave up the truth about God for a lie, and they worshiped God's creation instead of God, who will be praised forever. Amen. Rom 1:26 God let them follow their own evil desires. Women no longer wanted to have sex in a natural way, and they did things with each other that were not natural. Rom 1:27 Men behaved in the same way. They stopped wanting to have sex with women and had strong desires for sex with other men. They did shameful things with each other, and what has happened to them is punishment for their foolish deeds. Rom 1:28 Since these people refused even to think about God, he let their useless minds rule over them. That's why they do all sorts of indecent things. Rom 1:29 They are evil, wicked, and greedy, as well as mean in every possible way. They want what others have, and they murder, argue, cheat, and are hard to get along with. They gossip, Rom 1:30 say cruel things about others, and hate God. They are proud, conceited, and boastful, always thinking up new ways to do evil. These people don't respect their parents. Rom 1:31 They are stupid, unreliable, and don't have any love or pity for others. Rom 1:32 They know God has said that anyone who acts this way deserves to die. But they keep on doing evil things, and they even encourage others to do them. (CEV) 1Co 6:9 Don't you know that evil people won't have a share in the blessings of God's kingdom? Don't fool yourselves! No one who is immoral or worships idols or is unfaithful in marriage or is a pervert or behaves like a homosexual. (CEV) As for marriage itself, if the homosexual union is obviously wrong, how can legal marriages or unions even be considered? This is not about hatred or gay bashing in any way, shape, or form. These types of accusations are the product of a morally indefensible position. It then becomes easier to put moral conservatives on the defence by attempting to make them feel guilty or to appear just plain wrong. Well, it doesn't wo

    552. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by deejer · · Score: 1

      What about us singles? I want 1,080 benefits also. I don't think that is a valid argument.

      Man, lets get rid of some of those benefits and simplify things a bit instead of adding to the problem. Keep It Simple Stupid.

    553. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Ok,I would like you to listen. Seriously. You and others have a misconception about gay marriage. It is NOT about equality. Listen, and I promise I'll explain. You can disagree, but my points are still reasonable. Gays have equality as it rlates to marriage. I know you want to yell. Wait. I can only marry a woman. A gay man can ALSO only marry a woman. The same is true for women. Gay marriage would require the establishment of a new right/privelige. That of marrying a same sex partner. That is currently legal for no one. Now I know, why would I want to marry a man? Not the point. But the two men love each other and should be allowed to commit legally. ALSO not the point. The point is that currently, the law allows for perfect equality in marriage. No special protections for anyone. Now what you need to ask yourself (because I have taken time to read your posts) is WHY has the discussion been framed as an "equality" issue? Why do the people you agree with have to engage in such intellectual dishonesty? I am not against gays committing, legally equivalent to marriage. But it is not marriage. Gays should take the opportunity and say "Fuck the establishment" and creat their own ceremony. Then get it legalised. Like Kwanzaa. Why don't they?

    554. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by BAM0027 · · Score: 1

      Answer #1: Government Corruption

      Answer #2: Yes

    555. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Then why do they keep reminding everyone that they're not like anyone else?

      They don't. Everyone keeps reminding them. They want to do normal thingsmarry, raise children (oh my god! gay adoption!), put pictures of their spouse on their desk at work, even dance in public placesand everyone raises hell about each of these things because of their one difference from everyone else.

    556. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by crimson30 · · Score: 1

      You didn't add to it, but your name is on there. You were raised using wealth stolen from black folks. Even after you were 18, you went to colleges that were built using this wealth, you worked for corporations built using this stolen wealth as well.

      My childhood was subsized by taxpayers at large (black & white). My dad was in the Army and I went to schools on base. After that, I joined the Air Force and continued to survive on taxpayer money. I've never gone to college aside from a couple community college courses.

      The prices you pay for land, goods and infrastructure have all been subsidized by theft from black Americans.

      Everybody has the same access to said land, goods and infrastructure, black or white.

      you aren't as blameless as you'd like to believe.

      I still don't understand how the blame falls on ME. I didn't do anything! I am no more responsible for the actions of slave owners than I am the actions of Hitler and Stalin. I have no connection to these people!

      any definition in use by the courts, recognizes that regardless of your knowledge, you are responsible for recieving stolen goods, caveat emptor. In fact, this principle extends back to common law and cannon law, so I'd say the morality here is pretty well established.

      Laws shmaws. See slavery, or the article topic. The legal stance of a topic, in and of itself, has little relevance on whether it is moral or just.

      Unless you've lived outside the US since the age of 18, you aren't as blameless as you'd like to believe. I agree that you did not add to the bill. Neither did I, but I don't deny that I've (unwittingly, unknowingly) profited from stolen goods.

      I lived half my childhood in Germany and when I joined the service at age 18, I went to Iceland and then England, having only recently returned (about 2 years ago), not that it has a whole lot to do with this argument. I just wanted to rebuke your assumptions of me being well-to-do, college educated and always having lived in the U.S. :)

      As for profiting from stolen goods, I will concede that point only to offer that everyone gets the same benefit from said stolen goods. That is to say, blacks have equal access to reaping the benefits of any stolen goods and are just as guilty of using those stolen goods!

      This is not some caste based feudal society. Just about everyone has the same opportunities I've had in my life: access to public education and the opportunity to enlist in the armed forces (assuming no physical handicap).

      But that does not release us from our responsibility when we have also profited from it.

      My point overall is, mileage my vary slightly, but blacks my age have profited just about as much as *I* have from the slavery instituted over a century and half ago.

    557. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by nebaz · · Score: 1

      Don't be so sure. You need 3/4 of the states to agree to it and 2/3 of Congress. Even with the red states, I doubt you'd get these numbers.

      --
      Rhymes that keep their secrets will unfold behind the clouds.There upon the rainbow is the answer to a neverending story
    558. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err...

      church |-------------| state

      Let's try and keep that little bit of distance there, shall we dude?

      Laws are for everyone. Religion is for those stupid enough to follow it.

    559. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Joe+Jarvis · · Score: 1

      Explain to me why 3 men and a cat can't get married but 2 men can?

      Because gay men don't like pussies.

    560. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by metamatic · · Score: 1
      Well, technically under the law gay people have all the rights of straight people. A gay man has the right to marry a woman and two straight men may not marry.

      And back in the 50s, a black man had the right to marry a black woman, and a white man had the right to marry a white woman. And every person had the right to sit on the bus with other people of the same color of skin. So, no equal rights issues there either, right?

      Except somehow the courts didn't seem to see it that way...

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    561. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dunno bout you but three chicks offered me money to make out with my friend joe for them on sunday (yeah, we're both guys) because they thought it would be hot. (we were just hanging out at my friends house watching porn and shit)

    562. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Is a car a camel? Why not? You can get into specifics, but ultimately the reason is they are different.

      A gay couple is not the same as a straight couple. the differences, some subtle, some glaringly obvious, are important. So important, that I believe they deserve different distinctions. Not because I think one is better or worse, but because good marriages deserve to be recognized as special. I don't believe expanding the definition at the outcry of any group is a good idea. Marriage has a place in our society that is too fundamental, too important, to be diluted by any group tacking it name on.

      Gays deserve equal protection in every way. Civil unions or whatever you wish to call them, with all the ceremony (probably more fun too) and rights and responsibilities.

      But marriage is a special ceremony reserved for straight couples. Why is that a bad thing, that a group gets to have something unique?

    563. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 1

      I think finding the "Gay Gene" would make interesting bed mates in the fight against abortion.

    564. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 1

      and why is it, that because you want to see 2 girls make out

      I think that the reason that many guys like to see 2 girls make out is that they have a morbid fear of "catching teh gay" if they even see a penis, let alone watch it in action.

      Funny thing is that these are probably the same people who are less straight than the majority, hence they know that should they see a handsome penis they might feel some arousal. So by denying themselves this they only deny themselves harmless pleasure really.

      Personally, I think girl on girl is rather dull. I guess a lesbian would disagree. Different strokes for different folks (excuse the innuendo).

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    565. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How noble the law, in its majestic equality, that both the rich and poor are equally prohibited from peeing in the streets, sleeping under bridges, and stealing bread!
      -Anatole France

    566. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't really that the followser would have to switch. The problem is that the followers couold make enough noise to riase eyebrowes at levels of importance to make microsofts life hell.

      Religous groups that aren't considered "crazy" (hence the clintons administration labeling ever group they killed as fanaticle and such) Have alot of clought with the governemt law makers. After enough people became aware, the government would be force to do somethign against microsoft so the politicians could get re-elected. Laws could be passed that might hurt them, New anti trust actions could be pursued and even the existing anti trust action might be revisited because of presure with these people. Sometimes a religous leader also has clought with companies in a position to upgrade from office 2000 to office 2003 just because they think the new software "should be better". Think about sales for server 2003 and longhorn when windows 2000 (server) or XP is enough to work productivley for a coupld of years. Maybe by then linux or mac or even some other OS would be ready to replace microsoft.

      I bet microsoft was backing the gays as long as it didn't threaten the business. As soon as it did they chose not to fight it. They probably have some policy that dictates this as company policy and would do it for about anything that wouldn't cost them more money. Once there is a threat of damaging thier business they are instructed to stop or calm it down publicaly. I'm sure that protesting microsoft for somethign that's thier fault (like security bugs) would be treated differently because that would cause them to admit guilt as well as cost them more money to remedy the situation.

    567. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    568. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by MSBob · · Score: 1
      OK. Listen now. Your god does not exist (no other god exists either) and you are sadly deluded and blinded by your religious zeal. Just let go of it and you'll feel much better.


      There is no god and I am his prophet.


      Deep in the heart of hearts you know that what I just wrote is true.

      --
      Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
    569. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, glitch23, since you seem to be all over this topic today, where do any of the articles relating to this piece say the bill has anything to do with marriage?! Jesus man, try reading sometime. Furthermore, before you try to make it sound like nobody wants anything like gay marriage (Nevermind that again this is -not- the focus of the bill) by saying that millions of people across 11 states (Out of many more than 11, and you ignore there are states that have actually been successful with passing legislation regarding said subject), try to do some research. Find some results of some surveys or polls to get some semi-solid data.

      Exhibit A -- Here's one survey for you, showing that "according a survey conducted by television network NBC, and one in three think those open about their sexuality should not be accepted."

      Exhibit B -- Another survey with very many points for you to examine as to how people feel about these things.

      Those are but a few representations about how the US population in general feels. For the most part, this issue is very nearly a split down the middle, leaning towards a "No you can't marry or enter into a civil union" at this point, but just remember how much the world has progressed much from the ignorance and hatemongering (In the name of religion more often than not, and I'm not going to single out any specific religion) of the past in such a short timespan.

      This is all quite off-topic, though, I just felt I needed to address your point.

      As for this bill in particular, you're coming off as pretty cold-hearted denying someone the ability to make a living simply because of who they love and spend their life with. Corporations need to get the hell out of our personal lives, and that's what this bill is for, to protect from a company going corrupt, and to prevent management from firing people for stupid reasons that have nothing to do with the job. I mean, that's basically what this bill is trying to prevent. I honestly can't see how you're opposed to that.

      And yes, I know the bill tackles other things like insurance, housing, banking, etc... Those are just about as vital, but you should have secure employment before those other things. :)

      P.S. -- If your religion (Which is Christianity if I go by your posts) and views on that religion forbid you from practicing homosexuality, that's great, but there are a lot of people who couldn't care less what your God doesn't want you doing. I'm not a Christian, this isn't a Christian nation by any means and the constitution strictly forbids such a relationship between church and government lest we have a repeat of why the Pilgrims left in the first place, and you have no right to force your beliefs regarding something as deeply personal as this onto me. Gays and lesbians are not forcing anyone to become gay and lesbian by demanding these equal rights and protections from people who think it's okay to make someone's life a pain because of something like this. Christians have it hard? Hah, show me where you guys are being beaten up on a daily basis in schools in America. Show me where you guys are being threatened in public and people don't seem to care at all. Show me how Christians are having such a hard time staying employed if the employer finds out they're Christian. YOU, sir, have NO idea what you're talking about. What Christians are having a hard time with these days is shoving themselves and their beliefs down everyone else's throat. You've been able to do it throughout history but it's getting a bit tougher now that the world is becoming a smaller place. Also, I'd like to know how so many people gain the insight that being gay is a choice when they're not the ones having to deal with being that way. The programs that have been touted to reverse gays to being straight DO NOT

    570. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I can't agree with you more. I believe that marriage is an institution of religion, and that the term marriage should be applied to couples who are wed by an accepted religion (no scientology or cults, please).

      So where do you draw the line between legitimate religion and cults? As far as I'm concerned, Jehova's Witnesses, Mormons, Moonies, Catholics and ultra-right Protestants are just as much of a cult as Scientologists. Have you seen how filthy rich the Catholic church is? Looked like a for-profit organization last time I visited the vatican in Rome!

      That said, as a strong atheist, I don't see why my marriage should be dictated by a religion, or not be marriage at all. (I'm straight, by the way.) Whether or not the gov't is involved, marriage still exists at a cultural level not necessarily connected to a religion. If you want to keep the government out AND religion out, then I say do away with the concept of marriage all together. You can still use the naming, in your own religious context, but we'll need to do away with ALL the benefits and rights given to married couples. Each man/woman for themself. It would make things harder for some people, but easier for others that feel like they're getting the "single tax".

    571. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by oddfox · · Score: 1

      Note to self -- Make sure you don't check post anonymously next time. That was me, sir.

      --
      "We invented personal computing." - Bill Gates
    572. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by radar2k2 · · Score: 1

      Interesting comments re: rational-basis analysis. I'll admit to being in deeper-legal water that I'm used to. It is a bit disturbing, if accurate, that the "rational-basis" analysis doesn't have to be logical. Seems like "rational-basis" is a bit of a misnomer in that case.

      Looking back at your original post I see you were commenting on federal courts re: the federal Constitution. I made, perhaps the incorrect assumption, that you were also directing your critique at the MA and VT state courts but your most recent comment seems to say that you aren't leveling that same critique at the state courts in this case.

      Much of the debate against "activist judges" has been with respect to the VT and MA court rulings. The original posting was about gay rights/marriage. Perhaps I connected the dots a bit too aggressively in your case.

      In any case I think the phrase "activist judge" has pretty much lost its usefulness because it is thrown about by everyone regardless of the strength or weakness of the particular judicial argument in question.

    573. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by truffle · · Score: 1

      Alas I may burn an off topic karma point but all I can say is good post!

      However i disagree the government should get out of the Marriage business and leave things up to churches, because not all (straight or gay) people are religious and want to be married by a church.

      Take a look at Canada for a good model, we're steadly moving towards gay marriage sanctioned by the state.

      --

      ---
      I support spreading santorum
    574. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1
      I think those conversations do come up. What I'm saying is that just because somebody's heterosexual doesn't make it ok for them to tell me about their sex life.

      There is a double standard: I think that people in general dislike hearing about homosexual escapades more than they dislike hearing about heterosexual escapades. My preferred solution is to not talk about your sexual escapades (or problems, or likes and dislikes, or whatever) at work.

    575. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Arker · · Score: 1

      The differences are significant becase a phrase like "Die Jews Die" essentially amounts to a threat.

      Yes, which is why I wouldn't have chosen those particular words to make my point. The possibility of it being a threat makes it more complicated. Substitute 'Jews suck' and you can see my point without the complication.

      My experience with teenage vandals leads me to suspect, when I see 'Die Jews Die' that it's not a threat, just an attempt to feel important by getting a reaction from someone, like most such vandalism. But you're absolutely correct, without knowing more of the circumstances, we can't judge that for certain.

      Now as I go on through your post, however, the agreement ends. Killing and mutilating a person randomly is a threat to EVERYONE, in the same way that killing a Jew and cutting a swastika into his chest is a threat to all Jews. If we treat the latter as more serious than the former we simply give idiot racists ammunition. Racism isn't somethign you can fight this way - at least not effectively. You can try, but the honest truth is it's counterproductive and stupid. And you repeat this meme that keeps coming up in this thread, in finer words and better phrasing, but the though is the same - you want a law to keep people from making others feel a certain way. You can't make anyone feel a certain way. The notion that we are helpless beings that are just forced to feel angry, or frightened, or belittled, or whatever by someone else speech is a very poisonous meme that needs to be killed. I'm not responsible for your feelings, and you're not responsible for mine, and objective law cannot be based on feelings.

      If you call me and annoy me, it could possibly be harassment. If you call me and tell me that you're going to kill me, it's a threat. The punishment is far more severe.

      Absolutely correct. Note that the distinction is one based on factual issues that can be resolved objectively. If I call you and don't actually threaten you, but yet you decide to feel threatened anyway, and externalise that and claim I somehow made you feel threatened... it's still not, and should not be, assault. On the other hand, I could threaten you, and you might not feel threatened at all. You might be quite confident that I haven't the guts to carry through, that you could easily stop me if I tried anything, and feel only amused at my antics. They would still be assault, however.

      What we have with 'hate crime' legislation is the institutionalisation of the exact opposite situation - I can threaten you, I can beat the crap out of you in fact, and it's not taken seriously - unless there is evidence that I did it for one of the politically incorrect reasons.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    576. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by schon · · Score: 1

      It's not a "semantics" trick. It's the very defintion of equality.

      Bullshit.

      A straight person can marry the person they love, a gay person cannot.

      That is *NOT* equal.

    577. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      >>>What basis do you have that Marriage revolves solely around love? That you marry someone BECAUSE you love them?

      Well, I'm marrying my fiance BECAUSE I love him. I love him so much that I want to spend the rest of my life with him, and I wish the gay people I know who are spending their lives with the ones they love could marry too.

      Marriage was, at some points in history, mostly for children. However, if marriage today was solely for the purpose of having children, then infertile people wouldn't be allowed to marry just like gays aren't. Do you think that infertile people shouldn't be allowed to marry? What about people who choose not to have children? My fiance and I have decided not to have biological kids, but to adopt children. If we were a gay couple; (at least in Oregon) then we could adopt just the same, and our marriage would have the same social benefit of raising kids as it will with us as a straight couple. I really don't see children as a strong arguement against gay marriage, unless you want to argue against straight marriages for couples who can't or won't have children.

      As far marriage being one man and at least one woman in most cultures throughout history, well, most of those cultures also thought of the wife as property. I don't really want to follow their example for marriage, do you?

      At one point, slavery was almost as universal as straight marriage. "That's the way it's always been" isn't a good arguement.

      Some people think civil unions are a good comprimise, but if you want to give gay couples the same rights as straight married couples, wouldn't it just be simpler just to let them get married?

      >>>The idea is to abandon the idea of marriage as being between two people who love each other

      Why? I'ld hate to see a marriage between two people who didn't love eachother.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    578. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, your argument seems to rest on three ideas:

      1. Homosexuality is a choice. These people should choose to love the opposite sex, and everyone would be happy.

      I don't think that's true at all. I don't think anyone chooses to be ostracized. You are attracted to who you are attracted to. You love who you love. There's not a whole lot of choice in it.

      2. It would change the nature of marriage. It would lead to polygamy and other degenerate cases.

      Well, it might cause marriage to change. As the judge mentioned, who is to say that alternatives might not be good things? Before you prevent an adult from doing what he wants to do, you have to prove that it would harm someone. We call that freedom.

      3. It's against Christianity

      Which both you and your esteemed doctor mention. Well, I AM NOT CHRISTIAN. Do not force me to practice your religion. Do not violate the constitution of the United States by trying to enact your religion into law.

      I reject your premise that gay couples are degenerate and cannot love each other.

    579. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think this will stop your gay landlord from evicting you because he wants an all-gay house, keep dreaming. We all know what these laws are intended for, and courts have routinely upheld that intent.

    580. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      have we forgotten that when a company switches to a neutral stance on something, its actually good? by going pro for anything, youre declaring a value or moral objection to the opposite by inference. Personally I think that you should never talk about religion, social agendas, sex, any of that crap when youre at work. Who cares if you like to have gay-sex? Why are we even posting about this? So what if someone else doesn't want to support you. Get over it.

    581. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      This isn't a big deal. Everyone knows gay people use Macs.

      (Yes, this was sarcasm.)

    582. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS would get to look like a good guy for once by doing the right thing -- and thats great publicity.

      They did do the right thing, dumbass...

    583. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Colonel+Cholling · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link to the "argument" against gay marriage. I teach an introductory logic course, and that's one of the best examples of the slippery slope fallacy I've ever seen.

      --

      I am Sartre of the Borg. Existence is futile.
    584. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GileadGreene · · Score: 1
      Not now, but at the time that these laws were enshrined into popular morality thousands of years ago, there was little medicine and no protection. Sexual promiscuity and homosexuality are both vectors for disease, which placed the entire community at risk.

      Yeah, I guess that explains why the rampant homosexuality of ancient Greece caused their entire civilization to collapse in short order, huh? Oh. Wait.

    585. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      yes, I've certainly heard that argument before. Thing is, it's just as bullshit as the argument that says women are allowed to marry men, but men aren't, so that's gender discrimination. Both arguments are missing the point, which is that people should be allowed to marry WHO THEY WANT TO (within the bounds of consensual adult relationships), and since one group is allowed to and another group isn't, THAT is discrimination.

      And yes, it's in large part about the word marriage. If there were an existing institution called "garriage" which had exactly the same meaning for gays as marriage for heterosexuals, no one would be complaining. As it is, state-recognized unions between homosexuals are a new thing and we can call them whatever we want - but really the only reason not to use the preexisting word "marriage" is if we want it to have an unequal status. That's why it IS an equality issue - it's the legitimacy, acceptance, pride thing, as you said yourself.

    586. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because, you know, people totally see animals killing eachother all the time and then think it's ok to do because of that. Idiot.

      Way to miss the point, idiot.

    587. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mirio · · Score: 1

      I was referring to the technical merits of the discussion. A gay man and a straight man have the same exact rights, as do a lesbian woman and a straight woman. It's a matter of gender equality, since the choice of a marriage partner is different for men and women.

      And back in the 50s, a black man had the right to marry a black woman, and a white man had the right to marry a white woman.

      Yeah, thanks for proving my point. Black men and white men had different choices available to them...so it was a racial equality issue. As I was saying, this is a gender equality issue, nothing else.

    588. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by macshit · · Score: 1

      The effect on the consumer market may not be the biggest problem for MS -- it may be the erosion of their developer culture. MS's notably progressive stance on such issues is an attractive point for many MS employees. I suppose maybe it's inevitable that MS will eventually be indistinguishable from any other big conservative company, but I think it will definitely hurt them.

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
    589. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0

      Well, for starters, people are born with their race, but performing homosexual acts are a person's choice, not something you're born with.

      --
      moo
    590. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by xQx · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'll bite... I'm interested:
      "fun fact: it's legal for him to do that in Redmond"

      Can you elaborate?

    591. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1
      You make many interesting points, and a good thoughtful post, with the exception of generalizing all right-wingers as bigots... but I digress.

      Anyway, what may be "bigotry" to you may be "preserving good morals" to someone else. And each person thinks the other wrong.


      As long as two athiests who cannot have children (like my friends Mark and Jennifer) can go down to the justice of the peace and get a marriage license with nothing more than the required fee and two witnesses, then I can see no rational, reasonable, or ethical justification for denying the same exact right to a gay couple.


      Well, just because you can't see a rational, reasonable, or ethical justification for it, doesn't mean other people can't. For starters, many people don't see it as an "equal rights" issue for many reasons.
      --
      moo
    592. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1

      So what is adequate recompensation for 100+ years of slavery? Or 100+ years of government discrimination of a race?

      For 100 years, white southern landowners enslaved and brutalized black people. They became wealthy from that discrimination. It was done under the aegis of law. Does that mean the government of the United States has no culpability?

      For 100 years after that, the white southern population in power ignored murders committed by white people against black people, kept them out of professional or well paying jobs, and made sure the education of black children was inferior to white children.

      Unlike slavery, the perpetrators are still alive and could be held accountable. Are you suggesting Black people should put local gov'ts under civil suit and bankrupt them for their previous illegal discrimination?

      For 100+ years, white people enslaved black people. But when it comes to restitution, you say "tough luck".

      But when the violation of law only occurred 50 years ago, and the perpetrators are still alive, you say "tough luck".

      But now when the federal gov't tried to conduct some form of restitution to the minority population for crimes perpetrated by local gov'ts, you say, "that's not fair". You have an odd sense of fairness.

      The parent poster you condescend to is not a child. He's just talking to an immoral person who thinks if he can rationalize what is legal and fair, then he is taking the mature position.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    593. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0

      You can not claim that it "harms nobody" just because it wouldn't or doesn't harm you. One of many ways it may harm others is that it would be the start of the government endorsing what many consider a sin - not something these people look forward to.

      --
      moo
    594. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I can't explain the legal benefits one way or the other, probably because I see the legal implications of marriage as just a tiny portion of what marriage IS. Sadly, many see the legal benefits as the primary reason for marriage.

      --
      moo
    595. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by natedubbya · · Score: 1

      I figured I wouldn't get into this whole debate. But really, I had to when I read this. You know, the Bible is the most studied book in the world, and the translation from the original Greek has been analyzed more than any other book *ever*. Nobody in the linguistics field questions the content of the translation. If you look at the original Greek (and yes, we have the original Greek within 100 years of its first writing...this passage is from Romans), the content of the sentence stands academic criticism. Like it or not, it's true. You can disagree with the legitimacy of the Bible if you wish, but your argument about translation to English is baseless.

    596. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like that old saying goes, "God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve."

    597. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      Justice, any definition in use by the courts, recognizes that regardless of your knowledge, you are responsible for recieving stolen goods, caveat emptor. In fact, this principle extends back to common law and cannon law, so I'd say the morality here is pretty well established.

      Look, it's not fair that our generation has to deal with this, we didn't commit the theft. But that does not release us from our responsibility when we have also profited from it.

      Unfortunately, I am more cynical. (Being a Northerner, I have a problem believing "God Almighty" would be a Southerner. ;) ) But I'm glad these nimrods don't actually call the shots. I don't think they have a clue what federal class action civil suits against local gov'ts with RICO statutes would do to their towns. Or the cost of justice denied. It would make the Civil War look like a picnic. I'm not big on the idea that direct restitution is a requirement, but some people should learn to appreciate half assed justice.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    598. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Under my personal philosophy, if twenty men want to have a mutually consenting, loving, and possibly sexual relationship, they should go ahead (aside from health issues such as STD's).

      That doesn't mean that they should recieve *precisely* the same legal marriage rights as a heterosexual couple, because some of them are illogical/impractical, as you mention.

      I'm also of the position that the government should not give marriages at all. The government should give civil unions to *all* couples.

      If include the understanding that these unions are not necessarily romantic/sexual, you could even give them to siblings, parents/children, more than two people...

      If you want something called a "marriage", go to a church (/temple/synagogue/,,,).

    599. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bushidocoder · · Score: 1

      On a secular level, the United States has already decided what the difference between accepted religions and cults are - just ask the IRS and the FBI respectively. If two people want to enjoy the benefits of a civil union / marriage / Foo who fall outside that definition, they're certainly welcome to if they meet the requirements set by the government. At that point since marriage would be completely seperated from religion, who cares if the FBI calls their faith a cult - they can be married by its religious laws anyway. They would just need to meet the governments rules for the tax stuff.

    600. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by qurk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      OK, so when those Judges got together in 2000 and elected our President on party lines, they weren't activist judges then? Nope they were heros! :)

    601. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I can't agree with you more. I believe that marriage is an institution of religion, and that the term marriage should be applied to couples who are wed by an accepted religion (no scientology or cults, please).

      So, who decides which religions qualify.

      I would bet the identical arguments were used against interracial marriages also.

    602. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      The prices you pay for land, goods and infrastructure have all been subsidized by theft from black Americans.
      Everybody has the same access to said land, goods and infrastructure, black or white.

      Black people don't have that same access to land or goods. You need money to get access to those lands and goods. It was taken from them by the racist, discriminatory, conspiracy and complicity of white citizens.

      On the flip side, I would argue that black immigrants aren't entitled to a cut, and that I, as a northern non-white, have even less culpability than you do.

      As for profiting from stolen goods, I will concede that point only to offer that everyone gets the same benefit from said stolen goods. That is to say, blacks have equal access to reaping the benefits of any stolen goods and are just as guilty of using those stolen goods!

      So when white people steal from black people, white people are theives. But when the victim tries to extract restitution for that theft, they are theives. Ah, that "white" logic, its so confusing to me. No wonder so many of them think they were morally right to invade Iraq.

      My point overall is, mileage my vary slightly, but blacks my age have profited just about as much as *I* have from the slavery instituted over a century and half ago.

      Lesse. Black people your age, who could not benefit from an inheritance of the same monetary value as a white person, profitted from slavery because they still start out economically poorer than the average white person, less likely to get financing to a top notch institution, but have a slight advantage to lower paying gov't jobs, and have the same "opportunity" as a white person, as long as they're willing to lose a limb or their life; while the average white kid can still exploit "opportunity" without losing a life or limb, because his ancestors exploited the black man. Yup, more of that "white" sense of fairness.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    603. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by IANAAC · · Score: 1
      For example, if you believe that for marriage all you should need is love then you can make an argument that two men can love each other. IMHO it would be the wrong argument to make, but at least it would be an honest argument.

      Why would that be the wrong argument to make? Millions of people get married every day based on love alone.

      And many seem to fail at it. Doesn't mean we should deny them the right to try to make it work.

    604. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The poster, just like you or I, cannot marry any person he wants. I can't certainly marry my sister, or my mom, or a married woman, or a 10-year old, or two women, or Bob down the street. Can you? Can a gay man? Can a straight man? Can a bisexual man? Can a sheep-loving man?

      Don't be an asshole. Nobody wants to marry a sheep, or at least they aren't asking for that right to be recognized. They want to be able to marry the single non-relative 18+ person of their choice.

      For example, if you believe that for marriage all you should need is love then you can make an argument that two men can love each other. IMHO it would be the wrong argument to make, but at least it would be an honest argument.

      I wouldn't argue that - love isn't a legal requirement and isn't present with a lot of hetero couples. All that's needed is two people who decide to get married.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    605. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Luthair · · Score: 1

      check your statistics again. homosexual marriages have a greater failure(ie, divorce) rate than heterosexual marriages. look at amsterdame & canada, two places where gay marriage is legal. not trolling, just telling you the facts.

      It hasn't been legal for a long period of time in Canada (~1 year I believe), the only case I've heard of was done to change law stating that only man/woman couples could divorce. I'd like to know where you get your 'statistics' showing that homosexual marriages have fewer divorces.

      finally, i do not believe that it is fair to equate the gay marriage controversy to the civil rights movement. the civil rights movement was to allow basic rights for all. more importantly, the civil rights movement was there to stop discrimination against people who could not control certain circumstances(ie, skin color). it is unfair to equate these two movements as, IMHO, homosexuals CAN control the circumstances. I believe that homosexuality is a CHOICE not an uncontrolable factor such as skin color, place of birth, etc.

      You'd be wrong, homosexuality appears to be part genetic and part enviromental. Its also important to note that studies have shown other mammals also have a similar amount of homosexuality. I don't see how you can claim that some rams choose to be gay.

    606. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. What's frustrating is when someone makes an assertion, and then claims that others are slow/ignorant/"fucked up" because they disagree--regardless of their argument. If you came to this discussion to discuss, then you have to allow that people may disagree with you. If you came to shout that X IS WRONG, MORALLY, then why are you here? If you can't defend your opinion (by which I mean both creating a coherent argument for it and responding to criticism with coherent counterarguments) then people have no reason to change their opinions. It really doesn't matter how loud you shout.

    607. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I stand against all sorts of things, including Organized Religions of all stripes. Some of my friends wonder just what there is that I don't dislike. I guess I'm just cynical at 23.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    608. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus Christ learn some HTML you faggot. That gigantic block of text you just posted is unreadable!

    609. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fulcrum of Evil wrote:
      Don't be an asshole. Nobody wants to marry a sheep, or at least they aren't asking for that right to be recognized. They want to be able to marry the single non-relative 18+ person of their choice.

      I don't know. Give it some time before the bestiality folks start coming out of the closet. How about polygamy? Thats one thats been consensually practiced since the dawn of time. Where does it end?

    610. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      Right, so why are gays so hung up on "marriage" instead of equivalent rights?
      Well, if it was possiable to get equal rights in any other way, then it probably wouldn't be the issue it is. Separate but equal has been tried, and it failed pretty miserably.

      In one instance it appears to have failed (racial discrimination). So it has to fail miserably when civil union and marriage is defined the same (or nearly the same)?

      But you're right that the word does convey legitimacy. It is a loaded word, that is why the issue is so hot.

      The word "marriage" does not convey legitimacy to a union between two adults. In fact, that is the whole problem. The reason why the issue is so heated, is because of religious nimrods seem to think if a secular gov't conveys legitimacy to a homosexual union, then its an act by gov't against God. The homosexuals think because they have "rights", they have the right to compel gov't to bestow a religious sacrement.

      The answer is that marriage is a religious sacrement, and gov't has no business to imbue a religious status upon any couple. It violates the concept of separation of state and church.

      Unfortunately, the gov't conveys legal amenities based upon marital status. To apply legal privileges to a heterosexual couple and not to a homosexual couple is apparent discrimination (in the 21 century Western civilization).

      The answer is for gov't to get out of the religious business. What they should do is recognise "civil unions" between all couples and leave the "marriage ceremonies" to their respective institutions of worship.

      I for one, will not drop dead if they call the hetero unions marriages, and the homosexual unions "civil unions". The only issue I see here is that gov't treats both unions equally under the eyes of the law. If gay/lesbians want to try to legislate the word "marriage" to their unions, so be it. But in a culture where they are threatened by physical violence and murder over their sexual status, suffer discrimination in the workplace, and had a President antithetical to their interests elected because of this issue, they really should smarten up and pick their fights more carefully.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    611. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by glaucopis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ...part of faith is the idea that there are some things whose correctness is established by God, and not subject to my review or approval. When my conscience interferes with my faith (as it does here), I believe that my conscience is malformed.

      I'm a Catholic too, and, for what it's worth, I have a completely different response when my conscience differs with what you refer to as "faith," but what I would just call the Church's teachings. Personally I find faith to be a lot bigger than either the Bible or the Church and not nearly so dependent on humans with human prejudices. I'm not trying to write off the importance of the Church's collected wisdom -- I love the Church's age and ritual and commitment to its beliefs (even when I disagree with them) and efforts to make the world a better place. I simply acknowledge that humans are fallible, even those who devote themselves to a lifetime of service to God, and I feel strongly that the oft repeated statement that homosexuality is a sin is one of these mistakes.

      I started reading the Bible this Lent. Admittedly I'm only up to 1 Chronicles (I'm a slow reader; so kill me), but so far I have only read one explicitly antigay verse (and one calling the wearing of women's clothing by men to be an abomination, if you want to count anti-transgendered verses, too) and a couple of hundred forbidding the worship of idols. Even if God inspired every single word in the Bible, clearly he's more interested in preventing idol worship than in condemning gays. I realize that there aren't millions of idol worshipers running around today for the Church to vent its righteous fury on, but I fail to understand why this one lonely little verse, and the one other I know of in Paul's letters, makes gays the enemy of God. If we were to go by a simple count of words devoted to each abomination, eating pork is far worse in God's eyes than sleeping with someone of the same sex -- so why does the Church act like those in favor of gay marriage are seeking to destroy all morality?

      I don't know. Maybe I'm just upset that if I were to fall in love with a woman and want to marry her in my church, it would be forbidden, whereas I could marry any unmarried non-blood-related man there for any frivolous reason I chose without a word of objection from anyone. Your commitment to your faith and the Church leads you to oppose any change to its current marriage rules; my commitment to my faith and the Church envelopes me in a constant struggle, because I know the Church only values me so long as I toe its silly homophobic line. So I do agree with you that civil and religious marriages should be established as separate institutions, but I hope that someday the Church will take a good look at its teachings and decide to extend the sacrament of marriage to gay partitioners, too. Civil marriage is obviously a more pressing issue for the majority of gays, but having part of yourself perpetually denied by your religion can be as bad as lacking all of the rights granted by civil marriage.

    612. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Irrelevant. People nowadays need computers. The people in those states couldn't boycott Microsoft especially since the average user is too stupid to figure out an alternative OS when they can barely use the one they already have. The boycott would've been pathetic.

    613. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The right to inheritance, the right to visit and make descisions for your spouse in the hospital, the right to file your taxes as a married couple, certain states have married only property rights with regards to real estate.


      Hmm while I agree with the part about hospitals I see the second part as probably the biggest reason as to why gay people want to be recognized as being married.


      I don't see why two gay couples can't just give each other rings and declare themselves as married (ie. they vow to not leave each other) but then they won't get all those cool discounts on insurance and other stuff. So in essence it seems that it's all about the money (as usual) and I strongly disagree with that.


      Now I know I will be moded as troll and will get flamed (ie why I am posting as AC) but you know what? People have different opinions and my personal belief is that marriage is between a man and a woman. Now you can go make up your own definitions of what a union between gay and lesbain couples, thats fine. But a marriage is between a man and a women.

    614. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is another phrase for you to look up: over the top, as in, "your post was over the top."

      Good grief, the re-election of George Bush traumatized you THAT MUCH? If that is the case you need a bigger circle of friends, some counseling, or both.

      Exactly when did the "US" decide it "hated gays"? Was it when states started passing laws to maintain the institution of marriage exactly like it is now, and has been since.... oh, pick a date, 1492 in America in regard to gay people's wishes? Did the pot stirring of a portion of the gay activists effect you that much? There is by no means univeral hunger in the gay community for marriage. But the fun is only starting: gay divorces are on the way, and boy won't that be fun. Ugh.

      Fear Muslim extremists? Like the ones who have already killed us by the thousands, and want to repeat that by the millions inside this country, literally? (Their stated goal is to kill 4 million Americans.) I don't know that we "fear" them, but don't you think it would be a good idea to maybe try and stop that from happening? Just look how much economic disruption 3,000 people killed and one building destroyed caused. What do you think would happen if they slipped a nuke into Manhattan?

      the government is curiously unconcerned with capturing Osama bin Laden.

      Look up "jump the shark". People in this country are able to evade law enforcement for 5, 10, 20 years, or longer despite all of the police and sophisticated law enforcement tools, computers, and all of that what not. Now strip all of that away, move the search area to one you can't generally enter, surround the prep with a sea of friendly tribesmen, don't use the phone, send your messages by donkey, move only at night, and, .. well, ... do you get the picture? Isn't cultural sensitivity a bitch?

      I'll leave the rest of it alone for now, but I will say this: I have to wonder if the American you think you loved ever really existed, and I wonder if the American who you seem to feel has spurned you in some way actually exists either. I doubt it in either case. I do think you will be happier if you get a wider circle of friends if the ones you have now spend all of their time talking the same sort of nonsense you expressed here.

      If it makes you feel any better, try thinking of things like this: In the last election, a Yale graduate who was a member of Skull and Bones was beaten by the same. 1st place went to the Harvard MBA, 2nd place to the Boston U law grad. I sometimes forget which was a man of the people.

    615. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      Replace "race" with "religion."

      Also, if homosexuality is not an inborn trait, then gays must be the most masochistic fellows ever to walk the earth.

      --
      iSKUNK!
    616. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Copid · · Score: 1
      But you're forgetting that gay people CAN get married! See, marriage is, by definition, a union of a man and a woman. Gay people can marry all they want. They just can't marry someone of the same sex. There's no discrimination here. Things just are what they are. Shall we argue that men can't have babies, and call that a "civil right?"

      Let's try this version of it: Banning interracial marriage is not discriminatory becuse everybody is allowed to marry, as long as thier partner is of the same race. That argument leaves a very bad taste in my mouth.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    617. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Durandal64 · · Score: 1
      Wait wait wait... Homosexuality is not a gender. The absence or presence of certain sexual organs defines gender, my friend. It's cut and dry, Male or Female. And while Hermaphrodites may be a special case, almost always they choose a sex and get surgery (or surgery is performed at birth). And as far as I know, the state recognizes them as one sex or the other to keep things simple.
      The only difference between a gay marriage and a heterosexual marriage is the gender of one of the partners. Hence banning one form of marriage is gender discrimination, which makes it unconstitutional. The Vermont Supreme Court came to this same conclusion.
      Now, the fact of the matter is, marriage is deeply entrenched in our laws (think taxes), and the reason Christians are so offended is because they feel that defining marriage to also include "same sex relationships" is stepping on their beliefs. And it is, only the most Liberal of Christian organizations believe that God will sanction a homosexual joining.
      Tough shit for them. No one's forcing Christians to redefine the meaning of "marriage" in the context of Christianity. If two gay people want to get married in the eyes of the government, nothing should stop them. Churches are under no obligation to perform a religious ceremony for them. What needs to be modified is the civil definition. No one's trying to take away religious institutions' rights to be hateful bigots.
      So, what's the solution? Rewrite the laws so that the legal rights of same sex life-joinings are the same as current married benefits and rights. Don't call it marriage. Now, the benefits of this: 1. Religious groups will be appeased with the technicality, since gay couples won't be "married" unless they find a religious organization that will sanction it. They will be "legally joined".
      Marriage is a secular institution subject to secular law. Christ, didn't you know that it's eminently possible for a couple to marry without a religious official of any kind being present? A judge can perform marriages. I've been to such a marriage. No religious overtones at all. It was a purely civil ceremony.

      The law says that gender-based discrimination is unconstitutional. What exactly is not registering here?
      2. Homosexual unions will be allowed by the US, and given equal rights. No discrimination.
      At the same time granting some sort of perverse copyright on the term "marriage" to Christian fundamentalists. That's pure idiocy.
      3. If a gay couple claims to be "married", then the Christians can take offense with the religious organization that sanctioned it, not the couple itself.
      No religious organization is required to sanction any marriage. Do you have any idea how the government works? Or are you just regurgitating the drivel some fundamentalist Christian fed you about how the evil liberals are trying to force their ideas on churches?
      Granted, some "Christians" are so shallow that they would rather hate the individual as well, but they're just using the name to rally behind a cause that is essentially hatred.
      Christianity's views on homosexuals are rather clearly-cut. You're supposed to execute them. Hateful bigots have ample justification in rallying behind the Christian banner.
    618. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      I would like to remind you that you have failed to address my point, as I do not assume that women and men are the same. I know perfectly well that they are different.

      You claimed "I seriously want to hear what you have to say in a logical, intelligent discussion." and I have provided that to you. I believe that you want no such thing, and would much prefer to reaffirm your existing beliefs.

      Throughout this thread, you have dismissed valid, rational arguments without cause. Please consider the possibility that you are irrationally advocating injustice against your fellow human beings.

      Again, would you be upset if you could only legally marry a man? I trust that you would. Similarly, there are women that are upset because they are legally prevented from marrying women. Why should you have that ability and they not? They probably feel just as you would in such a situation.

      Please address my rebuttal to the fairness of your rules.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    619. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Barkmullz · · Score: 1


      Call me crazy, but maybe he just agreed with the pastor based on his religious beliefs. I do not know what church/religion, if any, Mr. Gates subscribes to but maybe he thinks homosexuality is wrong.

      This does not explain why they supported it in the first place, but maybe...

      --
      Ronald said nothing. He flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse, and rode madly off in all directions.
    620. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you think morality is absolute then you've got bigger problems than affirmative action.

      BTW, you're more likely to get that job you missed out on if you spend more time getting more qualified than ranting about being discriminated against.

    621. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell love is an emotion and cannot really be verified by an outside observer, which makes it a poor standard for law. Also, as far as I know in the United States (and very true in my area) love is not a prerequisit for a marraige. (considering in my area 15 min of paperwork and 50$ gets you a marraige) So we are both free to marry without love.

      If homosexuality is a choice, then we both have the choice to marry a woman we love. Just like if a student chooses not to apply for student loans, that does not make their lack of desire for student loans an inequality.

      On the flipside, If homosexuality is not a choice, but is instead an unintended trait. This is where the argument about love not being a requirment for marraige. They are totally free to marry woman I am free to marry (Excepting close realatives). It is tough luck to be born that way, but it's also tough luck to be born unintelgent, but we don't redefine NASA job requirments for those people who do not have the apptitude, yet the laws of our country are still equal in law if not in apptitude, if the unintelgente person becomes smarter, they can still try to become a rocket scientist, and thus our law and society is still equal.

    622. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Copid · · Score: 1

      Well, if you can list some that are logically possible to do by yourself (e.g. inheritence taxes, the right not to testify against your spouse, etc.), we'll talk.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    623. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Copid · · Score: 1

      Just like everybody was equal when interracial marriage was illegal. Everybody had the right to marry somebody of their own race. Damn those wackos with weird taste and their demands for special privileges!

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    624. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by crimson30 · · Score: 1

      So when white people steal from black people, white people are theives. But when the victim tries to extract restitution for that theft, they are theives. Ah, that "white" logic, its so confusing to me.

      *I* am a white person. *I* did not steal from black people. *I* am not a thief. Therefore, if they try to extract restitution from me, then yes, they are theives! It's not "white" logic. It's just plain logic. I don't owe black people any more than I owe anyone else.

      Lesse. Black people your age, who could not benefit from an inheritance of the same monetary value as a white person, profitted from slavery because they still start out economically poorer than the average white person

      I did not say "the average white person". I said: have profited just about as much as *I* have. I. Me. If anyone starts out economically poorer than me, they still have the same opportunities *I* did. They have access to public schools and you can go on from there to get the same place I have.

      I'm not saying that black people aren't statistically disadvantaged to white people. I'm just saying two things:

      1. Regardless of any disadvantage, people of all races are currently able to overcome. It is sooo not hard to get a decent job and have a fine, stable, enjoyable life in this country. Maybe you need to visit somewhere else so you can see REAL poverty, because I don't see it here. I don't see people living in mud huts, shitting pretty close to where they live, starving and burning fires as the only source of heat. Here in America, I see people that have royally fucked up their lives by getting into drugs and credit card debt and all kinds of stupidity that *they bring on themselves*. I've seen plenty of people with my same exact background fuck up their lives (military brats I grew up with that are now fucked). There is a lot of opportunity in this country. People of all races throw these opportunities away.

      2. TWO WRONGS DO NOT MAKE A RIGHT. This is the point that is being ignored here. Discriminating against me or anyone else based solely on their race/skin color is simply unjust! End of story. If some white guy down the street punches some black guy, that does not justify that black guy taking it out on me.

      And just a quick question: what about asian folks? Do they have a part in this? Are they responsible for any of this? When I was graduating from high school, it was well known that one of the local universities were applying affirmative action, making it more difficult for asians to get into engineering because there were "too many". Do you think this is fair?

    625. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      How about polygamy? Thats one thats been consensually practiced since the dawn of time. Where does it end?

      What about Gay Marriage? That's what we want to know - what basis does the government have for telling two guy that they can't be married? Goatfuckers don't have much basis for argument - goats can't consent to sex or marriage. I figure that it will end once gays are no longer controversial. When was the last time you saw someone work themelves into a froth over a white woman and a black man, anyway?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    626. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by HyoImowano · · Score: 0

      You know what, Stuart, I like you. You're not like the other
      people, here in this trailer park.

      --
      By now you should have guessed...I'm your magic negro.
    627. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Maagma · · Score: 1

      If it's anti-gay, then it is anti-beastiality too.

    628. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by tokabola · · Score: 1
      But you see, the very act of gay sex is considered harmful to both parties.

      Considered harmful by you perhaps, but not by everyone. If you force your opinion down everyone else's throat, sooner or later someone will force their fist down yours.

      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
    629. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually in a "Right to work" state you can be fired without cause. Meaning they replace you when they feel like it. If they are stupid enough to say it is because you're the wrong gender/race/religion, then you can sue them for discrimination. In the state I'm in it would have to be you that sued them as the state does NOT prosecute businesses for discrimination.

    630. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by shawnywany · · Score: 1

      Yet another example of society trying to obsessively categorize everything. Skin color, body size, and gender. You're either black, white, skinny, fat, male or female.

      Very frightening.

    631. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it reveals that bill himself is gay

    632. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Mmm+coffee · · Score: 1
      That's why we have all these marches and activism. The marches aren't for the bigots...
      Actually, they are. The first gay pride parade was held after the Stonewall riots. Prior to this they were constantly harassed, beaten, jailed, institutionalized, and sometimes even killed just for being gay. The first pride parade was held as a way of showing the world "We refuse to hide ourselves anymore, so we're going to march right down the street and be as noticable as possible!"

      That's why gay pride parades are so goddamn gawdy (and potentially offensive to a large portion of the population). It's not because of wickedness or anything of the sort. It's because it's an open act of defiance against repression and each and every crew cut having obese topless bull dyke on a motorcycle [1] is a huge flashing arrow pointing at this group saying "We're not going to hide anymore."

      Gay pride parades exist specificaly for the bigots.

      [1] No offense intended. I've had the pleasure of knowing quite a large number of lesbians during my short journey on this planet, and I must note that they are nothing like what you see in the pornos. However, if you need your truck fixed or some plumbing work done then by all means hunt down a lesbian. They're quite handy creatures to have around. Plus they usually accept beer as payment, which comes in handy when you have a full fridge and an empty wallet.
    633. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard of lesbian heifers that will mount other heifers.

    634. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins. They live together, have hatched an egg given to them together. It's really cool.

      That is pretty cool.

      How often do they have gay sex? (serious question)

    635. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by stam66 · · Score: 1
      If you are correct, why even have elections?

      Sadly, in both the US and in any other "democracy", "elections" are far from true choice. When there is no true proportional vote and we are forced to choose from essentially 2 alternatives, we are forced to "take the good with the bad". I don't want to live in a communist country, so I must agree to the banning of gay unions.
      Not to mention the role of campaigning through media and social/religious groups, which in turn is directed by cash flow, in (mis)informing the majority who doesn't care to really get involved with the issues.

    636. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Suhas · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up please.

    637. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Why is Microsoft just now starting to worry about being unpopular?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    638. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it is intolerant. Religion usually includes a set of laws, and religions usually don't tolerate breaking their laws. Much the same way society doesn't tolerate breaking its laws.

      You do whatever you want. But don't expect everyone to tolerate what you do.

    639. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

      Oh I stand on anything that affects *my* liberties. Personally I have no problem with anyone believing what ever they believe as long as they keep it to themselves. Unfortunately all the Abrahemic religions seem to have a requirement to evangelise. If someone believes something is evil then that's their porogative but don't force me to follow.

    640. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

      But those rules were written down in Leviticus. Using the same logic that homosexuality is evil, eating shellfish is also evil (Lev 11:10), eating pork (Lev 11:6-8), touch women at certain times of the month (Lev 15:19-24) and being a blind christian (Lev 21:20). In over two thousand years you'd thought we moved on.

      And where does it make one any more evil than another? If you take the bible literally is not presumptive to believe that you can interpreter the mind of god by assigned levels of evilness.

    641. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by spacecowboy420 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wow, so that's it - you guys simply don't get it.

      It ISN'T about hating Christians, it is disapproving of actions of those that would inflict THEIR world view - "How things should be" on others. I am absolutely cool with anyone of any religion even though I disagree with the very concept of organized religion. This is simply because MY view is just another view and just as valid.

      Any public policy should be unbiased in all ways including religion or you affect the freedoms of those that believe otherwise. Good policy is devoid of any influence except those of the public. Some of the public is gay and wants to marry another gay person, some are Christians and feel homosexualality is a sin - and most of the public just simply doesn't care as long as you don't mess with them.

      Christians like to do things that are ONLY rational if you believe in their religion.

      If I told you that religion is bullshit. The bible is just mothergoose written by unsophisticated cultists long, long ago and that we have much more plausible answers now so now it is illegal to do unnatural things like believing in a "Holy Ghost" or empty morality and I am going to ammend the constitution to reflect the removal of your right to practice Christanity - you would hate non-Christians wouldn't you?

      Oh wait...

      --
      ymmv
    642. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1

      *I* am a white person. *I* did not steal from black people. *I* am not a thief.

      But you are a citizen of the United States, and the state gov'ts were directly complicit in crimes against minorities. Your father has responsibility in the institutional discrimination perpetrated by his gov't, whether by action or inaction. Are you suggesting gov't has no responsibility in the discrimination they institutionalized? Or that you are not a U.S. citizen? The classic response of the residents near Buchenwald was that "I didn't push Jews into the ovens. Why are you blaming me?" Were they right?

      Therefore, if they try to extract restitution from me, then yes, they are theives!

      There were Germans after WWII that felt the same way towards reparations to the Jews. Where they right? Funny, I feel the same way about restitution, given that I'm not white or black. Are you suggesting gov't should individually identify survivors of institutionalized racism prior to 1960, set a cash award, and then make all taxpayers responsible for funding it? Is that fairer or more reasonable to you? How about just letting those class action suits decide what is fair? And who gives a damn if an entire region of the country goes into economic chaos?

      On the other hand, if restitution consists of not getting into a university slot because you could beat out a black guy, but not the lowest accepted white guy, is society really keeping you white guys down as a racial group? Is that an insurmountable disadvantage? If so, then how can you claim black guys can overcome the same disadvantage? And why should anyone care, when in your pure grade driven meritocracy, the asian guy is going to get your spot anyway (statistically speaking)?

      1. Regardless of any disadvantage, people of all races are currently able to overcome.

      True, but you ignore the fact that the reason black people are statistically disadvantaged to white people is the policy of discrimination perpetrated by the gov't. If you do not introduce a means to address that disparity, any discriminated people will stay statistically disadvantaged, statistically speaking. I don't see why society is required to favor a privileged class by defending its current status obtained by illgotten means.

      If you argue that advancement by meritocracy is the best way to resolve the situation, I have no problem with that. When you take statistically poorer black people, and deny them statistical representation in institutions of higher learning, because they can't afford it or came from inferior funded education systems and the gov't will not address the circumstances of their past discrimination, aren't you still being a white racist by trying to maintain the status quo? If not, how can you claim your race isn't enforcing discrimination against minorities by denying them access to higher learning based on ancestor wealth? Is it not discrimination if you merely deny that its discrimination?

      2. TWO WRONGS DO NOT MAKE A RIGHT. This is the point that is being ignored here. Discriminating against me or anyone else based solely on their race/skin color is simply unjust! End of story.

      Ignoring discrimination perpetrated by gov't in the past is unjust too! End of story. How do you propose they be redressed?

      And just a quick question: what about asian folks? Do they have a part in this? Are they responsible for any of this? When I was graduating from high school, it was well known that one of the local universities were applying affirmative action, making it more difficult for asians to get into engineering because there were "too many". Do you think this is fair?

      In an ideal world, no. But we don't live in an ideal world. As a pragmatist, I see college important because of the connections they will make, not so much that the educa

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    643. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if not in apptitude, if the unintelgente person becomes smarter

      Good luck with that, by the way.

    644. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dabido · · Score: 1

      Guy + Guy = Good because it leaves more girls + girls + girls + girls + girls for MEEEEEEEEEE! Woo hoo!
      Those guys might be batting on the other team ... but in the long run, they make us hetro-guys winners! :-)

      --
      Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
    645. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      > Humans (from the West) today don't really care about that

      Yes, with 6 billion people on this planet, our last worry is underpopulation. Funny that.

      P.s. I had a pair of gay rabbits :)

    646. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iainl · · Score: 1

      Yes, because Apple are really going to set themselves up as the ideal home for homophobic morons, aren't they? That'll sit just perfectly with their hippie media types image.

      There really isn't anywhere for rightwing idiots to go in the OS business, so they're stuffed unless they want to back to banging rocks together.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    647. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      I think it's you that is thinking like a 5 year old.

      Consider this: Say after many many years of discrimination, all the people in power are white, and all the poor people are black.

      Now you remove the discrimination but you still have all the poor people are black, and all the people in power are white.
      Is it morally wrong to discriminate a bit in favour of black people for a while in order to try to get some black people into power, or is it morally better to just leave the system as it is, knowing that it is going to take an extremely long time for the blacks to work themselves up, along with all the social problems that will cause?

      Stop thinking all issues are so clear cut, and that you can just shout 'discrimination is wrong' without thinking.

    648. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      This could be tested by seeing if bisexuals like girl-on-girl.

      Personally I doubt your reasoning. Guy-on-girl gets boring, and it's good to spice things up :)

    649. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by TheWormThatFlies · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No they arnt. If you think that "lot[s] of girls are just as turned on by ..." then you must have been exposed to an extremely untypical group of women.

      Bwahahahaha! Please, look up "slash fanfiction" on Google.

      I think that's a sufficiently large number to be called "a lot".

    650. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I believe that marriage is an institution of religion, and that the term marriage should be applied to couples who are wed by an accepted religion (no scientology or cults, please). The government should take whatever benefits they have historically given married couples and make up a new type of union with exactly those benefits, and allow them universally to all couples of either gender.

      you and GP miss one point. The government and church mean nothing if there are no people to be governed or go to church. The fundamental responsibility of gov is to help the society survive. That's why all those rights and priveledges and benefits are in place - to support procreation. Some legal right can be given to 'consenting individuals' but show me one gay couple that made it to the next generation without leeching off a child from a heterosexual couple via adoption. In this case, the traditional strong family view will win in the long run, because gayism is biologically self-destructive.
    651. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People do not have a right to knowingly say something that is factually wrong, unless in "The Lies To Children" teaching case (where I would argue it is also probably wrong) particularly when it is meant to be offensive. "Homosexuality is unnatural" is a factually incorrect statement scientifically- for many reasons, including the wishywashy argument for what is natural. However, also homosexual behaviour throughout Mammalia has been documented for centuries. Thus it is an evolutionarily preserved trait for whatever reason. "Homosexuality is unnatural" is also offensive, even if not intended, for the simple reason that "unnatural" is the expression to relate that something goes against what one feels is Right.

      I applaud you in saying that the Christian thing to do is to let God be the Judge. However, you do not have a right to say that homosexuality is unnatural- silent belief I can do nothing about, but vocalisation, and adjusting law to fit that vocalisation, is wrong as offense cannot but be created by this statement.

      Perhaps this is the wedge dividing my, EUian, view of a right to free speech, where opinion which is unwarrantedly offensive is not accepted by the majority, and the USian, which the nature of the opinion does not affect the right.

      And don't get me wrong, two of my best friends are straight devout Roman Catholics, I've told them my viewpoint on their "God" and their "lifestyle" and they've accepted that I think they are Wrong and Evil, and they do not in the slightest feel hurt by my assertions of biblical, qu'ranic etc. fallacy and moral weakness.... Are you so sure your two gay friends actually accept your position, even if they don't voice dissent? Or maybe they've just given up arguing.

      Finally, everyone stay away from the "I accept their lifestyle choice" argument- unlike religion, where the belief or disbelief in a religion is influenced totally by choice (atheism) and/or regional upbringing, homosexuality and bisexuality are universal through humanity. Sure it's a choice to be a big giant slut- but the majority of gay people aren't!

    652. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > why does a human rights bill need the financial backing of a big company to get
      > passed
      > Has the US ideals of democracy sunk so low

      Of course, you'd know the answer to these questions already if you'd been reading between the lines when reading papers/watching the news. Or if you'd read any Chomsky (for example "understanding power").

    653. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you could go to the site and check the references. That's the difference between an argument and an article.

    654. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by iainl · · Score: 1

      Not all right-wingers are bigots, no. Just all the ones who are opposing equal rights bills.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    655. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1
      why does a human rights bill need the financial backing of a big company to get passed? |

      Simple. Because government operates in self-interest, exactly the opposite of what it claims. Government is, after all, nothing but a collection of human beings, each who operate in self-interst by human nature. So let's cut to the chase: what's in it for government?

      --
      You took his stuff. You pound him.
    656. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1
      American democracy has a long tradition of protecting the minority from the majority.

      Sure, that's why American democracy has resulted in the near-exponential growth of American government, and ultimately, the most expensive, most powerful, most dangerous government in the world. But don't worry -- most of that excess power goes to protecting the minority against the majority!

      --
      You took his stuff. You pound him.
    657. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Civil contracts in societies where the leadership IS the religion is just as much a religious contract as it is civil.

      So you're saying that in a theocracy, every time you buy lunch it's a sacrament? That's the consequence of this statement.

      Before that (in the west at least, I don't know much about how marriage evolved in the east), marriage was an issue of the exchange of property which I don't think counts as a starting point.

      You're redefining marriage for your own convenience. The "exchange of property" aspects coexist with Christian marriage ceremonies from the beginnings of Christianity well into our own century. Christianity picked up marriage solemnizations from the surrounding cultures; and in those cultures, solemnizations developed as a way of integrating marriage into the religious life of the community.

    658. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ye gods, if you ever want to start a political party please let me know. I've been shouting long and loud for the abolition of *all* 'modified' assault charges(including assault on a police officer), simply replacing it with an increase in the basic sentencing for assault.
      Unfortunately it isn't politically correct to hold these views so I'm just another crank with a big mouth. :|

    659. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soooo, if someone is burning a handicapped person as a witch on a stake, you'll just walk on by, eh?

      Or if someone is being tortured to release that ol' devil Satan from their soul, you won't make a peep, eh?

      I think your "standard" is precisely the problem. Your "standard" seems to be to whine when something affects you, but don't say anything about something that doesn't have a benefit for you. Nice "standard".

    660. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it certainly doesn't mean the judges are right!

      Your arguments are quite meaningless. There are many poor and outright bad laws, all over this planet. After all, judges used to come down on the other side of the issue, so what means that they are correct now? They are just caving in, as usual, to a particular interest group of whiners.

    661. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by raduf · · Score: 1

      As a gay man, I wholehearted support your right to believe anything you wish. What I don't understand is why you think you have the right to "share" with me what you think of my "lifestyle," unless I've specifically asked you to do so.

      Maybe I'm missing the point here, but isn't this a public forum? isn't its point to "share" opinions?

    662. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by raduf · · Score: 1



      Instead of gay marriages maybe a better option would be to just be able to give this rights to any person over 21... that would cover pretty much the real injustice and pass over the flamed debates.
      Adoptions are a problem though... could be solved the same way but there will be some real opposition though...

    663. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by manthrax3 · · Score: 1

      Everyone knew that was coming, but interracial marriage is still marriage (ie, man/woman: the very definition of the thing). Gay marriage means changing the meaning of marriage. It's not a civil right, it's a social change, and more of a lateral change. Listen, if you can convince a majority of people to accept this change as necessary and prudent, then I'll be tolerant of it. And truly, let's not compare the "gay rights" movement to the civil rights movement. They're not in the same universe. Gay people are some of the wealthiest, most comfortable people in the US. Blacks could barely survive out there and were denied the most basic of civil rights (education, voting).

    664. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A gay guy is ok as long as he remains behind the camera...

      No, a gay guy is ok as long as he is not behind me.

      *ducks* --

    665. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were watching shit? You mean there was scat play involved too! Jeez man, I think you need to step away from the drug cabinet.

    666. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always said that Congress would instantly pass a bill called the "hot lesbians get hitched for your entertainment" bill.

    667. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by riske · · Score: 1

      You believe that it's wrong to be a homosexual. That's fine; you're entitled to your belief.

      The problem is that some of those who share your viewpoint are intolerant. They seem to think that people should not be allowed to make this choice, and should be penalized for doing so.

      I applaud you for standing up for what you believe in, but being tolerant of dissenting viewpoints and respectful of the decisions of others.

      There is nothing that I find more offensive than self-righteousness - no matter who it's coming from.

    668. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by fr2asbury · · Score: 1

      How would that work? Most of the things I listed depend on being somehow "linked" with another person.

    669. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rpresser · · Score: 1

      ... exactly like it is now, and has been since.... oh, pick a date, 1492 ...

      Interesting that you should pick that particular date. While to you it may represent a shining moment in history, the beginning of America ... to me it recalls the Spanish Inquisition and the Expulsion of Jews from Spain. Which ties in nicely with what I'm getting the impression you'd enjoy doing to those who support gay marriage rights.

    670. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rpresser · · Score: 1

      He wrote: Nobody is being harmed by the existance of a gay couple.

      You wrote: Sexual promiscuity and homosexuality are both vectors for disease, which placed the entire community at risk.

      Are you that blinded by your bigotry that you can't see the difference between a gay couple and sexual promiscuity?

      How does homosexuality between one couple become a vector for disease for the entire community?

      A far more important vector for disease at the time you speak of was poor sanitation. Yet there's no law in the bible against throwing your garbage in the street, is there?

      (Although there is in the Talmud.)

    671. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Gender is not a protected class. Neither is sexual activity (which is what homosexuaility is) You despit your attempts to obfuscate, you cannot have inequality where PERFECT EQUALITY exists. What those people WANT is not relevant. You didn't refute my argument, you just spouted your lame taking points. Again? "which is that people should be allowed to marry WHO THEY WANT TO (within the bounds of consensual adult relationships)" Why qualify it? Why not three? Ten? Children? You're discriminating based on age, to use your own twisted logic. Why can't a 12 year old marry if they want to? "That's why it IS an equality issue" Either you're trying to be obtuse, or you don't know what equality is. Deny it all you want, you're wrong, and I've proved it. And now we're done.

    672. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by svennieboy · · Score: 0

      And as a Christian I have every right to say that Homo-sexuality is unnatural.

      I fail to see what your Christian belief has to do with your opinion that being homosexual is unnatural. If you were an atheist, it would be wrong to think homosexuality is unnatural?

      Please realize that two of my best friends are Gay. I let them know my viewpoints, and I accept them for the choices they have made. I try to follow the example of Love the Sinner and Hate the Sins. I'm not perfect, neither are they. And they have accepted my viewpoints so I know I'm doing something right.

      What do you mean by "choices"? Being gay (or straight, for that matter) is as much a choice as having blond or brown hair. You can fake your hair color by dyeing it, but that won't change your real hair color.

      And where do you get the idea being a homosexual is a sin? Every time I ask a Christian why God lets so many people die of famine every day, their answer is "The Lord works in mysterious ways". But it seems that on the subject of sexual preference, the Lords ways are crystal clear. If we are all children of God (gay people as well as straight people), then God must have created gay people as being gay. Which means God must have some reason for creating gay people.
      Even if you believe that being gay is a sin, I still admire your "love the sinner, not the sin" way of thinking. If more people would do that, gay people wouldn't be the social outcasts they sometimes are now.

      It's 'supposedly' wrong for me to say that your wrong and living against the Bible (not that I would force the bible one you personally, but I will let you know my opinion on the matter), but it's OKAY for you to say that I'm wrong and judge me for my following my religion? Its okay for you to judge my life and call me a bigot (or worse - out of your ignorance), but it's not okay for me to believe what I want to believe? that my friends is hypocracy.

      There is a difference between respecting someones opinion and agreeing with someone. I always try to respect other peoples opinions, no matter how hard I disagree sometimes.
      It seems to me you are trying to do the same.

      I personally believe that it IS wrong to be Gay. that's what the bible says. But that's YOUR personal choice to make if your believe likewise. The only one that should be judging you, from a strictly christian point of view, should be God. Not the Christian. Are there hypoctrical and self righteous christians that do? yes. And that's just as hypocritical, imo.

      Can you tell me where in the bible this is stated? And there are a lot of things the Bible says are wrong, but we do them anyway. For example: "You shall not drink an other mans blood"... Does this mean you shouldn't get a blood transfusion when you had an accident?

      When I die, I believe God will judge me and how I conducted myself. I don't believe God will judge my sexual preference, as I don't believe He will judge the color of my hair or the size of my shoes (other things I haven't chosen).

      To me, being a Christian means helping other people to the best of my abilities and to love my neighbour as I love myself. It doesn't mean judging people on completely arbitrary characteristics.

      --
      -- Slackware linux... because wizards are for wussies
    673. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Radar+Penguin · · Score: 1

      The answer is that marriage is a religious sacrement, and gov't has no business to imbue a religious status upon any couple. It violates the concept of separation of state and church.

      Marriage is a religious sacrement for those who wish it, but legally that aspect is immaterial. Or are you saying non-religious heterosexuals can't get married either?

    674. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry if I haven't replied to all of your points of discussion, I HAVE read them thoughtfully, and I thank you for your time. I wish I had time to write similarly lengthy and thoughtful replies. Anyway, to attempt to address your question:


      Again, would you be upset if you could only legally marry a man? I trust that you would. Similarly, there are women that are upset because they are legally prevented from marrying women. Why should you have that ability and they not?


      Well, some people see homosexuality as grossly immoral for both religious and non-religious reasons. In light of that, it makes perfect sense for these people to want to discourage immoral acts by legal means, just like we discourage murder or rape by legal means as well.

      So to some people, a law allowing gays to marry would be as equally disturbing as a law allowing rape or murder. I'm not saying the YOU should feel that way, I'm just saying that's how many people look at the situation.

      I hope this clears things up.
      --
      moo
    675. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "even though none of them can enter into legal contracts?"

      There's the problem with your argument right there - either the state has the power to define who and what can enter into contracts, or it cannot. Not a single state in the union has, thus far, decided that two same-sex people can enter into this particular contract. Either the state has the right to determine who may and may not legally enter into a contract or it does not.

      Even if you're going to try to limit it just to adults over 18, (which is just a simple modification of law rather than a 'civil rights' struggle) then you're left with the situation in Utah where you'll have 20 of them looking to jam themselves into the same contract. Are you ready to defend polygamy to get what you want?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    676. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1
      Not all right-wingers are bigots, no. Just all the ones who are opposing equal rights bills.


      You need to try to see the issue through their eyes. To them, it's not an equal rights issue. To them, a law allowing gays to marry would be as equally morally reprehensible as a law allowing rape or murder, since homosexuality is equally immoral in their eyes.

      So go ahead and say they have screwed up morals if you like, but do NOT claim that they are against equal-rights, because that's not how they see it.
      --
      moo
    677. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by raduf · · Score: 1



      And how exactly is a childless marriage a "link"?
      I don't have a SO, and if by any chance I wouldn't have close family either I'd like to give some of these rights to my best friend. Such as "family" status in a hospital. Or maybe the possibility to own property together. What does anybody has to say as to weather we have sex or not? We're close enough and that's what it should matter. And it completely solves the "same sex" issue: it's not about sex. It's about people.

    678. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "While I am no fan of judicial activism, the 14th amendment does give the Federal government vastly greater power over the affairs of states than was originally enumerated in the Constitution."

      Indeed it does. However, the scope of the 14th is limited, and so long as you're not discriminating based on characteristics of a person like race or gender (though many instances of the latter are allowed), you're pretty much fine as per the simple and to-the-point wording of the 14th. Gays are allowed to enter into the marriage contract; just not necessarily with whom they want. If I want to marry my cell phone, the state does not allow that either. Why? Because my cell phone lies outside the legal standard for entering into this particular contract. Either the state may set the standards for the contract, or it may not.

      There's no concern with the 14th Amendment here. I'm not gay, but I'm not allowed to marry another man any more than a homosexual man would be. This isn't a case where gays are forced to do anything differently than heterosexuals. There are no separate bathrooms for gays, separate water fountains, separate schools, or anything along those lines. Gays are treated no differently by marriage laws than straights - they just don't like the options they're given by the law.

      I don't think Terry Shiavo's parents were particularly thrilled with the options given to them by the law either, but they did accept them and worked within the law to try to get their way (which is more than I can say for Congress and the President in that case). People these days seem to be under the impression that they have a right to be made happy by the government. It's this sense of entitlement that's drained the desire to better ourselves and which has put us at the mercy of the Federal government. If gays want to get married under the state-sanction contract, then they need to work within the law to get legislatures to pass laws, or people to pass state constitution amendments allowing them to do so. This end-run around the legal system with the help of judges who shouldn't even be sitting on the bench is BS. No one is entitled by the US Constitution to do whatever the hell makes them happy at the moment.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    679. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >As a gay man, I wholehearted support your right to believe anything you wish. What I don't understand is
      >why you think you have the right to "share" with me what you think of my "lifestyle," unless I've specifically asked you to do so.

      I couldn't care less laws for (group name) except for:

      a. I shouldn't be forced in the workforce to go through sensitivity training towards ____ (insert your group, race, religion) when my demographic receives no such preferential treatment.

      b. No special extra rights should be granted to any group. In other words, do not discriminate aganst everyone else. This means that group X can not have a special government office while other groups do not. For example, if there is a congressional woman's office, then there must be a congressional men's office or better yet have not special demographic group office at all.

      This has led the USA down the noneding path of identifying each and every demographic group and then having a protracted battle as to if and what should be done to add specific laws, regulations, government offices, etc for that group.

    680. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by halber_mensch · · Score: 1
      Sure, I can accept that homosexuality occurs in nature - but I don't see a whole lot of it. At least not on the scale it occurs in human society.
      Hey, sure! I can also accept that speech occurs in nature - but I don't see a whole lot of it. At least not on the scale it occurs in human society.

      Humans are not the status quo of the animal world. Just because humans display a trait or behavior that isn't seen in other creatures doesn't mean that it is necessarily unnatural.

      In the case of homosexuality, understand that identity and relationships in most animals is a case of physical and hormonal attributes. Humans develop their identities mentally more than physically. Our relationships are all based upon emotion and mental stimulation, and not sexual reproduction. Why is it then unnatural for humans to develop relationships that are not otherwise seen in nature? Human relationships like "pen pals" and "best friends forever" and "aunts" and "step-fathers" and "fathers-in-law" don't occur anywhere else in nature, but we all agree that these relationships are not unnatural. Homosexuality is another extension of the human ability to establish relationships on mental and emotional terms not regarding sexual reproduction.
      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    681. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      I understand all of that perfectly well, but it has nothing to do with our discussion, in which I invalidated the claimed fairness of the rules you described. I feel that I have shown that:
      The rules apply to everyone equally! So how is this discrimination? It sounds to me like some people want to change the rules rather than have the rules applied equally, since they already are!
      These statements are false. You are advocating laws that are do not apply to everyone equally, and they are a hardship for some people. You may believe that this is the only moral option, and you are also wrong about that, but you can no longer claim that the rules are "fair" unless you figure out a new way to do so.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    682. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      " I have seen people not have more then two children simply because they could not afford to, which is just sad, lack of money should not be a reason not to have children."

      I gotta disagree with this one. Like I mentioned in the original post....children are a HUGE responsibility that should be thought out before you have them. One of those considerations is "Can I afford to have this child, and be able to provide for it". If you can, great, have it. But, I shouldn't be force to subsidize your want to reproduce by giving that parent a tax break...which if I don't since I don't have kids....in essence, I'm subsidizing your having one. It is the parents responsibility...no one elses....

      I don't have anything against people having kids...I just don't want to pay for them. I don't have kids....I've not reached an economic level I'd be comforatable with...where I could maintain my standard of living AND support a child without having to give things up. That's my choice....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    683. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by geekpuppySEA · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Obligatory quote from evolutionary psych courses: Just because it happens in nature doesn't mean it should happen in human society. "Is is not ought."

      --
      Intelligent Design: because MATH is HARD.
    684. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      I'm not a bigot. I'm trying to offer an explanation for the writings in the bible that are the basis for current western morality.

      If you're going to understand another persons thinkings or writings, you need to leave your own opinions aside and try to understand THEIR internal logic within the framework of THEIR experiences. Which is what I'm doing. Kind of the opposite of bigotry. Kind of resembles open-mindedness and an attempt to understand anothers point of view.

      And I didn't say that gay people were sexually promiscuous, I tried to offer an explanation for the very broad sexual boundaries laid down in the bible. Why are you so goddamned determined to interpret comments with blinders on and cannons at the ready?

      Try to stand up for other peoples rights to engage in a lifestyle you have no personal interest in engaging in yourself and get called a bigot. Nice job.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    685. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      Okay, if you want to be pedantic about it, lets just reword the rules down to one rule that applies to everyone:

      - Every man or woman, regardless of race, color, creed, or sexuality, may marry one person of the opposite sex.

      Okay, there's one rule to apply to everyone equally. To me, that one rule appears to codify the "current" meaning of marriage. Now where is the discrimination?

      --
      moo
    686. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      " unless you want to argue against straight marriages for couples who can't or won't have children."

      Ok, I would argue that providing incentive before they have children is a bad idea, and only providing the fact that IF they have children then they get the benefits.

      I have absolutely no problem with that in heterosexual arguments.

      Your argument of "love" is moot, yes you love your fiance, and you may marry him and never have children then, oh well, you get the bennys without meeting the intended goals.

      Like I said, this is something that can be fixed, and you can lobby your congress to remove benefits for couples without children, I have absolutely no problem with this and encourage you to do so if you beleive in equality on this situation.

      I also did not say that cultures were marriages between one man and one woman.

      I would also encourage people to lobby for polygamy as well, but I fear this is not something that will be happening soon.

      As to your point on Slavery, individuals worked hard and worked through a very national system of civil war to get it removed. If you feel that you can muster up the required number of combat troops to accomplish the goal in the same way, then by all means do so. Please give warning though so that some of us not invested in either side of the issue can re-locate to Canada during the conflict.

      Your argument toward the end of giving the same rights to gay couples as straight is not what would be accomplished through a civil partnership. It would not necessarrilly confer on them rights to logical inherentence or to step children, or incentives currently provided for child rearing such as tax breaks provided to make co-habitation less expensive.

      It would be seperate, and could imply all of the things of marriage or it could not, I leave it as an excersize to future lawmakers.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    687. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shirov · · Score: 1

      Let's play with your logic a bit... There are a signifigant number of rapists and murders in the U.S. Should we change the laws to make those acts legal?

    688. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Seriously, that's not my problem. I don't believe in such things, so why is the government trying to make me live my life in a way that conforms with OTHER people's religous beliefs?

      If a person doesn't believe in same-sex marriage, that's fine. They don't have to marry someone of their gender. People that DO want to marry people of the same gender should be permitted to do so, and I still haven't heard a reasonable argument why not. All of them come back to someone believing that it's not right - but that's an unreasonable argument to use. Would it be reasonable to OUTLAW pork if the country were run by Jews? No! The Jewish could just NOT EAT THAT, and the rest of us should be allowed to decide for ourselves.

      The government shouldn't be in the business of legislating morality. It's your choice to have sex before marriage, cheat on your spouse, or any number of other things that are considered morally reprehensible by some.

      A lot of this argument boils down to semantics in the end, I find. A lot of people are concerned with the term 'marriage'. They feel that they're somehow giving something up by letting homosexuals get married, which I personally find a fairly ridiculous position. However, if everyone was joined in a civil union, and the actual 'marriage' was the blessing in the church, they'd complain a lot less.

      It'll be different 20 years from now, mark my words. The newer generation approves of same-sex unions in greater numbers than the older generations. Two or three generations from now, nobody'll understand what we were fighting about.

    689. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by psylew · · Score: 1

      You have made a very good point very clearly. I wish more people were willing to understand it.

    690. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      I'm not being pedantic. I believe rather firmly that you are completely incorrect, and, as I said, advocating a serious injustice. I'm not nitpicking. You have not changed the meaning of your statement.
      Okay, there's one rule to apply to everyone equally. To me, that one rule appears to codify the "current" meaning of marriage. Now where is the discrimination?
      All of my arguments continue to apply to this one rule. Some people, who feel just as you do about women, are prevented from marrying women while you are not. Your rule discriminates against them.

      I trust you would feel discriminated against, as a heterosexual, if we changed the law so that:

      - Every man or woman, regardless of race, color, creed, or sexuality, may marry one person of the same sex.

      I certainly would. Just because you can write it in one sentence and apply it to everyone equally doesn't make it fair or non-discriminatory. And you thought I was being pedantic?
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    691. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by crimson30 · · Score: 1

      Your father has responsibility in the institutional discrimination perpetrated by his gov't, whether by action or inaction.

      So? I am not responsible for my father's actions.

      Are you suggesting gov't should individually identify survivors of institutionalized racism prior to 1960, set a cash award, and then make all taxpayers responsible for funding it?

      I'm suggesting that if people want restitution, they need to go to the source. If someone robs you, you need to go after that someone, not his family or his race.

      I don't really shed tears if an informal quota existed which kept higher scoring asians from getting a spot at UCB than a lower scoring white or black guy.

      I know this sentence is out of context, but you're condoning discrimination here.

      You do not propose any means to redress gov't induced discrimination against surviving victims. Please demonstrate your sense of fairness, and present how you think the issue should be redressed.

      I say the burden should fall on everyone, instead of instituting discrimination against any given race. Your example of taxpayers footing the bill on a case by case basis would at least be a solution that doesn't perpetuate injustice as a method of remedying previous injustice.

    692. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      So go ahead and say they have screwed up morals if you like, but do NOT claim that they are against equal-rights, because that's not how they see it.

      Yeah, and every racist I've ever met has told me they aren't racist. Just because they don't see themselves as racist (or against equal rights) doesn't mean they aren't.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    693. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by bushidocoder · · Score: 1
      I think it depends on when you start calling unions of men and women "marriage" - obviously men and women were procreating before the advent of language and society altogether. My definition of marriage doesn't start at that time.

      If you consider marriage as the binding of a woman to a single man, the appearances of that were secular but in theocratic states, and in those cases, the reasoning behind the fact women should be bound to a man was at least rationalized in the faith at the time.

      I consider the roots of modern marriage to appear when a sense of rights and position for both the male and female partners entered society. In the west, I believe that the earliest indications of this were in Judaism, which held that each time a man took a wife, the union was blessed under God. Marriage in Greek and Persian societies, which gave exclusive rights to the female partners of most (but not all) relationships, was also rooted in religious rituals around the same time. Moving forward in time, I believe it was also Judaism in the west which first introduced monogamy around 1000AD. Catholicism was spread across a large number of unique cultures, and the rights of marriage appear to not have been solidified in my Church until about 1400AD.

      I didn't get much chance to read last night, but from what I did read, it sounds like there were civil agreements of marriage in China pretty early on. I need to do alot more reading on that, though.

    694. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rpresser · · Score: 1

      Apologists should expect to have their apologies attacked. Make arguments in a contentious area and you had better grow a thicker skin.

      If controversy makes you uncomfortable, stay out of it. But don't expect people to respect your discomfort.

    695. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      A straight person can marry the person they love, a gay person cannot.

      What if I fall in love with Mrs. Smith down the street? I can't marry her if she is already married. What If I fall in love with a 10-year-old, or my daughter, or my sister, or my mother, or Bob down the street, or two women at once? I can't marry any of them either.

      You can make an argument that people should be able to marry anyone they love, but you can't say that there is inequality in the current state of affairs.

      Marriage is not just about love. But like I said, if you want to base your argment on love alone, go ahead. Just be honest about it.

    696. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I trust you would feel discriminated against, as a heterosexual, if we changed the law so that:

      - Every man or woman, regardless of race, color, creed, or sexuality, may marry one person of the same sex.


      I wouldn't feel discriminated against. I'd say that the law is terrible because it forces marriage to become something completely immoral and completely backwards (at least legally speaking) with respect to what marriage has been for the past 4000+ years. I could go on and on with reasons why that would be a terrible law. But it's still not discrimination.

      Calling it discrimination is just trying to tie it into slavery. But truly, there are no similarities between the two situations, IMHO.
      --
      moo
    697. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      Do you feel that being against affirmative action is racist? If you do, then hey, I'm a racist in your eyes, but that doesn't bother me one bit. Similarly, if thinking that homosexuality is immoral makes me a "homosex-ist" or whatever it's called, then fine, I am.

      --
      moo
    698. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Is a car a camel?

      No.

      Why not?

      One is a mechanical construct, the other is a biological organism.

      You can get into specifics, but ultimately the reason is they are different.

      No. I could get into specifics, but touching upon the most general aspect applicable to all cars and the most general aspect applicable to all camels and noting that the general defining aspect is fundamentally different for both makes going into specifics irrelevant.

      But marriage is a special ceremony reserved for straight couples.

      And why is this the case? Can you offer something more than BISS?

      Why is that a bad thing, that a group gets to have something unique?

      If "civil unions" with legal rights and benefits identical to those afforded opposite-sex couples were available to same-sex couples, I probably wouldn't argue. Unfortunately, the majority of those strongly fighting against same-sex marriage don't even want that much. The majority of those opposed to same-sex "marriage" -- at least those with political clout -- want to deny any legal protection available to same-sex couples, and in some cases (like Kansas and Virginia) deny even the existing options available.

      I fight for the extreme because I know what the other extreme wants: the right to kill homosexuals on sight.

    699. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Love is not arrogant"

      or

      "Love does not insist on it's own way"

      You will love your neighbor as yourself

      You pick out three or four passages to degrade, demean, oppress, and otherwise bully a group of God's children and ignore the hundreds that demand you love, care for, and be kind to your neighbors. Yeah, thanks for being such a wonderful posterchild for Christianity. Oh, and it's only degeneracy because you claim it to be. Biblical interpretation aside (we will inevitably disagree on this), you can not find one major psychiatric, psychological, or medical organization that will support such a claim.

      The American Psychiatric Association has removed it from the DSM about 20 years ago (meaning it's not an illness and not a condition to be treated)...

      The major health and wellness organizations have advocated for gay rights and pediatric assocations claim same sex couples make wonderful parents and the children? They seem to turn out just fine.

      Then again, we Christians have been behind the curve and didn't like being told we were wrong...I remember a dude named Galileo. He was right. He contradicted the Bible. He was wrong. Years later? He was right! Wow...

    700. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Participating in sexual activities with members of the same gender.

      So what about homosexuals who are not sexually active? Is it impossible to discriminate against them?

    701. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1
      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    702. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Errr...yeah, the government...religious sacraments. Only when Bush is in office baby...Jesus!

      Marriage is a dual institution - Church and State. Homosexuals want the State to offer the legal benefits only marriage will grant.

      Churches are protected by the first amendment from ever doing such a thing. For instance, there are churches which refuse to marry biracial couples. Sacraments belong to the church.

      Churches will, however, grant same sex marriages. Actually, Reformed Judaism and much of Conservative will, The United Church of Christ, The Episcopal Church, and many ministers within other denomination will do the same.

      I don't think your problem is that a license can be given to homosexuals, I think your problem is your Biblical Interpretation is not Law

    703. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I can't explain the legal benefits one way or the other, probably because I see the legal implications of marriage as just a tiny portion of what marriage IS.

      Not when you're discussing what the government does. Any other signifigance to marriage is applied by entities outside of the government, and the government has no business telling the parties involved (and by that I mean not only the married couple but also family members to whom the marriage might have some importance) exactly what that signifigance is.

    704. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Because love is not a legal requirement for marriage. Love is a religious requirement, but not a legal one. From a legal stand point, the state is just concerned with stability to ensure the next generation.

      Which means that as far as the state is concerned, love is not a sufficient argument for marriage. It may or may not be a sufficient marriage from a religious stand point, but we are talking about legalizing gay marriage.

      But even if the case of people marrying for love alone, if we analyze these marriages further, we may find out that they meet other criteria besides love: Both parties must be single, of an acceptable age, and in the current state of affairs, of different genders.

      These requirements are different than the religious requirements that do indeed require love. That is the reason for example, that Mormons can, from a religious standpoint, marry more than one woman, but at the same time that isn't a legally-binding marriage recognized or endorsed by the state.

    705. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world, you're correct. The reality is that the government's actions in this matter WILL affect how non-governmental entities (churches, etc) treat marriage.

      Another way of looking at it is this: if there was no concept of "marriage" outside of government, would government have "invented" marriage? I doubt it. Thus, the government's definition of marriage is undeniably influenced by non-governmental entities.

      --
      moo
    706. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      Ok. You have effectively responded to my assertion about your feelings.
      Calling it discrimination is just trying to tie it into slavery.
      I don't know what you are talking about. You are the one who brought up descrimination, with your point that:
      In each of the three previous lines, it DOES NOT MATTER whether said man or said woman is gay or straight. The rules apply to everyone equally! So how is this discrimination?
      Based on this statement, I assumed that your definition of discrimination was whether the rules apply to everyone equally. I pointed out that they do not. If you would not like to call that discrimination, that's fine. Your original post is still completely incorrect. I have explained the unfairness of your rules, exactly as you requested, and you have not supplied a rebuttal.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    707. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      There's the problem with your argument right there - either the state has the power to define who and what can enter into contracts, or it cannot. Not a single state in the union has, thus far, decided that two same-sex people can enter into this particular contract. Either the state has the right to determine who may and may not legally enter into a contract or it does not.

      Oh dear. I'm not really where where you get this idea.

      A contract is a legally binding agreement between two consenting parties. Inanimate objects cannot consent to anything, and as such they cannot enter contracts. Children cannot legally consent to anything without the permission of a parent or guardian, and as such they cannot enter legal contracts with few exceptions.

      Two people of the same gender who are of legal age can enter most contracts. So now the state needs to justify denying the ability for them to enter into a marriage contract.

      Are you ready to defend polygamy to get what you want?

      Sure, if you can explain how existing marriage laws can be quickly adapted to allow for multiple partners.

      I really hate the polygamy comparison because it demonstrates that the person making it has not, in any way, studied the relevant issues but is instead relying upon stupid analogies because they can't actually come up with a good reason to deny same-sex couples.

      Allowing same sex couples would merely involve removing the existing gender restrictions of a marriage contract. That's it. All legal rights and benefits would translate directly with no alteration whatsoever to existing marriage law.

      Allowing legal polygamous marriage would require a heavy retooling of existing marriage law. Suddenly you have to adapt to new inheritence concerns because a death might lead to multiple surviving spouses. Are they all entitled to an equal share of the estate? That would be a matter of whether or not it's a single person entering multiple contracts with their multiple spouses or if each added spouse creates a single group contract to which they become a new party. This also creates issues for custody issues, and what happens if one person wants to leave the marriage? Do they get divorced from a single individual, or do they end up completely outside of the group? There are a hell of a lot of issues for polygamous marriage that just aren't comparable to the one issue of allowing same-sex marriage.

      Bringing up polygamy, animal marriage or marriage to inanimate objects only demonstrates that you don't actually have a good reason against same-sex marriage so you're bringing up irrelevant garbage in an attempt to distract from the real issue.

    708. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Don't be an asshole. Nobody wants to marry a sheep, or at least they aren't asking for that right to be recognized. They want to be able to marry the single non-relative 18+ person of their choice.

      So much for sense of humor. Anyway, I know of groups that want to be marry multiple non-relative 18+ person of their choice. I also know of some that want to marry the single, relative 18+ person of their choice. Then there is a whole other group that wants to marry a single non-relative sub-18 person of their choice. And of course, there are all kinds of wild combinations.

      The current state of affairs is that you can marry the single, oposite sex, non-relative 18+ person of your choice. You want to do away with one requirement. Others want to do away with other requirements. That my friend, is the issue at hand: Marriage is currently narrowly defined both by law and by tradition and those characteristics are what differentiate it from other legal contracts.

      I could care less if anyone gets married religiously based on other premises or enters into a civil-union-like contract. It's the characteristics of the state-recognized contract that we call "marriage" that I believe shouldn't be subject to negotiation.

    709. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      >>>Ok, I would argue that providing incentive before they have children is a bad idea, and only providing the fact that IF they have children then they get the benefits.

      Which incentives specifically are you talking about?

      >>>Your argument of "love" is moot, yes you love your fiance, and you may marry him and never have children then, oh well, you get the bennys without meeting the intended goals.

      We're planning on adopting children, so we'll be raising children just like anyone else, including gay families in Oregon and whereever else gay adoption is legal. If marriage is to help people raise children, why shouldn't we (and anyone else who adopts, gay or straight) get the same benefits as those who give birth to children?

      >>>Like I said, this is something that can be fixed, and you can lobby your congress to remove benefits for couples without children, I have absolutely no problem with this and encourage you to do so if you beleive in equality on this situation.

      Why would I do that? Actually, what benefits do childless marriages get? If the two make about the same amount of money (which is likely without kids) they actually get less back in taxes than if they weren't married! All the other tax benefits for children actually require children! Pensions and Social Security are usually gotten well after the children are grown up, so they're not for the kids. Health insurance and other employee benefits are the choice of the employer, and many of them give benefits to domestic partners without a thought about kids, so I guess those aren't just for kids. The other benefits of marriage are things like hospital visitations, medical decisions, inheritance, etc, and why would you want to take those away from people without kids? What benefits are childless married couples getting from marriage that you think they shouldn't have?

      >>>I also did not say that cultures were marriages between one man and one woman.
      Did you forget a word here? This doesn't make sense to me.

      >>>As to your point on Slavery, individuals worked hard and worked through a very national system of civil war to get it removed. If you feel that you can muster up the required number of combat troops to accomplish the goal in the same way, then by all means do so. Please give warning though so that some of us not invested in either side of the issue can re-locate to Canada during the conflict.

      I find it ironic that you list Canada as a neutral place to go, considering they have already legalized gay marriage. Hey, didn't they also get rid of slavery without a bloody war? Hmm, your relocation idea sounds pretty good.

      >>>Your argument toward the end of giving the same rights to gay couples as straight is not what would be accomplished through a civil partnership.

      That's why I don't support civil unions/partnerships/whatever. It's simpler, better and makes more sense just to make gay marriage legal.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    710. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      >>> Do you feel that being against affirmative action is racist?

      Depends on your reasons for being against it.

      >>>Similarly, if thinking that homosexuality is immoral makes me a "homosex-ist" or whatever it's called, then fine, I am.

      Glad you admit it.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    711. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by filmchild · · Score: 0

      What if Utah passed a state constitutional amendment that let the authorities run roughshod over your rights... tap your phones, put cameras in your house, break in at any time to search and seize your property. that would be unconstitutional and I would expect the federal courts to overturn the beliefs of the supermajority in Utah.

      They already can, all they have to do is call you a "Terrorist". God bless Amerikka.
    712. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      Oh, a person who respects the literal, unchanging word the Bible. How refreshing. How is your campaign against Red Lobster (for serving shellfish - an "abomination" before the Lord) going? Have you made any progress shutting down textile mills that produce cloth made from two kinds of fiber? How many people have you stoned for working on the Sabbath (or lighting fires on that day) recently?

      I could keep going on for hours. In short: what gives YOU the right to choose which parts of the bible are "obsolete/replaced" and which parts are not? And what makes *your* religion more inherently deserving of rights than mine, here in *America* where congress is to make no laws establishing a religion or prohibiting free exercise thereof?

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    713. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      Cities have a great deal of leverage in zoning laws. The zone you live in, if you own a house, is likely a variant of "Residential Single Family". Having two adults who are not married living in such a situation is technically illegal. They'd have a hard time if they tried to take you to court over it, but the situation does exist.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    714. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      What's to keep two friends from claiming they are gay just to share insurance benefits?

      What is to keep a man and woman who are friends from doing the same. Nothing. Has society as we know it fallen apart? Nope.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    715. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Shirov · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. What gives YOU the right to choose? If there is no common basis for a view then everyone is right and we should all be allowed to do whatever the hell we want... Atleast this is the logical conclusion that your logic leads to...

      --shirov

    716. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by snol · · Score: 1

      we are done, because I thought our argument was heading toward the reasonable and the non-namecalling, but evidently not.

    717. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      So what about homosexuals who are not sexually active?

      What about them?

      Is it impossible to discriminate against them?

      How would anyone know?

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    718. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I think we simply disagree on what is fair or unfair, since I do not see any unfairness that you claim to have pointed out. Besides, just because a law is "unfair" does not make it unconstitutional. We don't allow minors to vote, that is often seen as "unfair" yet it is not unconstitutional.

      --
      moo
    719. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Rei · · Score: 1

      Just a minor issue... the Catholic Church isn't actually doing that well; it's had serious cash flow problems recently. It has a lot of things that are deemed "priceless" which technically could be sold, but the backlash would be incredibly severe (up now on Ebay: The Sistine Chapel!). Each diocese has a lot of physical assets in terms of land, churches, schools, and cemetaries (the Chicago Archdiocese, one of the largest, has over 2B$ in assets), but again, that would be worsening their cash flow to sell them (well, some things, like the schools, are a drain on their funds, but they're viewed as essential to their mission), and those assets are not under the control of the Vatican. The Vatican has several sources of income from the dioceses and from individuals, but they have a huge outflow because they run so many operations worldwide (missionary, aid, diplomatic, media, etc). Overall, they're huge (around the size, economically, of the British government) - but they're huge on both the income and outflow side.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
    720. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      When was the last time you saw someone work themelves into a froth over a white woman and a black man, anyway?

      A white woman and a black man are, are you sitting down? They are a man and a woman!

      what basis does the government have for telling two guy that they can't be married?

      You're right, the government doesn't have a right to tell them that they can't go to a "gay" church and get married. However, the government doesn't have to recognize that marriage either since efficient reproduction, the primary reason why the government has a vested interest in marriage, doesn't come into the picture.

      The parent's polygamy argument is a good illustration: Your church may treat polygamy as legitimate (cough, mormons, cough), but the government doesn't have to recognize polygamy marriages because they are not the most efficient means to ensure the next generation.

    721. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rworne · · Score: 1

      Wow, it seems that I am getting people riled up and doing so without even stating a position on homosexuality and it's place in society.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    722. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      How would anyone know?

      Are you saying that the only way to know that someone is a homosexual is to know that they have engaged in sexual activities with members of the same gender?

    723. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      Jews were/are persecuted because of their beliefs. In places where homosexuals are persecuted, it's because of their actions. There is a world of difference.

      So the reversal of that is therefore okay? ("Christians" who believe the acts of homosexuality are deseving of punishment or unequal treatment)

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    724. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      A white woman and a black man are, are you sitting down? They are a man and a woman!

      Heh, you're a dense one. 50 years ago, the black man would have been lynched for such an offense. Now it's normal.

      You're right, the government doesn't have a right to tell them that they can't go to a "gay" church and get married. However, the government doesn't have to recognize that marriage either since efficient reproduction, the primary reason why the government has a vested interest in marriage, doesn't come into the picture.

      Sorry, no. Church has nothing to do with this - this is solely about government recognition of a union, and the government should have to recognize that union, as the primary reason that they're interested is because married people have a bunch of rights already enumerated in this thread. The high points are inheritance, parental rights, and social security.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    725. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      "Why would I do that? Actually, what benefits do childless marriages get?"

      IN some states they get benefits and recognition in plans due to plans at companies.

      " All the other tax benefits for children actually require children!" - Perfectly fine with me.

      ">>>I also did not say that cultures were marriages between one man and one woman.
      Did you forget a word here? This doesn't make sense to me." - No I was more accurate in saying it was between one man and more than one women. I do not restrict myself to a specifically Christian Centric view.

      "I find it ironic that you list Canada as a neutral place to go, considering they have already legalized gay marriage. Hey, didn't they also get rid of slavery without a bloody war? Hmm, your relocation idea sounds pretty good." -- Moving to Canada may be a good bet, they have a 5 year wait on citizenship, and the process is not quite as easy as you think.

      I was not refering to Canada as an example, I was refering to the United States and how it got rid of Slavery. If you would like to lobby your government to get the laws _changed_ then by all means. This is a country by the people and for the people. Trying to force it as a rights issue begins to shift it into the Judical system, when it is not a rights issue.

      Homosexuals are not an ethnic minority. So arguments based on classifying yourself as an ethnic minority seems a bit odd to me.

      Homosexuals are a social minority, but there are thousands of those. democrats are a social minority (if the 2004 electon is an example). Pedophiles are a social minority, Gamers are a social minority, slashdot users are a social minority, etc...

      They all have something in common, a choice about lifestyle they choose to participate in. Social minorities are fluid and you can move in and out of them at will.

      Ethnic minority status is relatively static. I hope I have shown the difference here.

      You do have opportunites to change the laws, and this is through lobbying. Homosexuals are, politically, a special interest group, and they get what they want through lobbying and laws. Even the civil rights movement went the law route vs the judicial route. They had a congressional act to work from to work against a set of laws at the state level based on interestate commerce.

      No such leg to stand on when arguing the homosexual position.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    726. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Both black and white men had the same choices available to them--the choice to marry someone with the same color skin as them.

      Keep squirming.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    727. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by frikazoyd · · Score: 1
      What needs to be modified is the civil definition. No one's trying to take away religious institutions' rights to be hateful bigots.
      And that's what I'm trying to say. You're so angry because I say "Christian" that you fly off the handle, not even taking into consideration what I'm saying. I'm saying, in the laws, call it "Legal Joining" or something like that. Then you redefine the laws to take this new word into consideration, passing rights to everyone.
      Marriage is a secular institution subject to secular law. Christ, didn't you know that it's eminently possible for a couple to marry without a religious official of any kind being present? A judge can perform marriages. I've been to such a marriage. No religious overtones at all. It was a purely civil ceremony.
      Yeah, I know that too. I was drawing a line between "Marriage" and "Legal Joining". I was saying, if the gay couple can find a church that will "Marry" them, then they say they're married. Otherwise, they say they're life partners or whatever the current catchphrase is, because they were joined at a courthouse instead of a church. Again, not reading what I'm saying, I'm not negative about Christianity, so I must be retarded, right?
      At the same time granting some sort of perverse copyright on the term "marriage" to Christian fundamentalists. That's pure idiocy.
      Go look in a dictionary, look up marriage. The primary definition is "union between a man and a woman". Only recently has it even entered any dictionary that marriage should also encompass same sex marriages. And the definition comes from religious contexts, so the word "Marriage" stems from the very idea of two people uniting as one in a ceremony. So, to keep one side happy, you don't redefine "marriage" because you are getting rid of the history of the word, which is why there's such a big hubbub about it all. It's called a compromise, and the govermnment is good at using compromises. Hell, the whole fact that we have two houses in Congress (Senate and House of Representatives) stems from a big compromise. The most fundamentalist Christians don't want the union to be able to happen at all. You give some, you get some. And besides, gay couples can be called "married" too if they want, they just have to find a church that will support the claim, like I said. Not hard, considering churches in Canada will reportedly do this. So, churches here in the U.S. will allow it as well, depending on their doctrine and views.
      Christianity's views on homosexuals are rather clearly-cut. You're supposed to execute them. Hateful bigots have ample justification in rallying behind the Christian banner.
      Wow, you don't know anything about the Bible, do you? Just because God has killed homosexuals in the past doesn't mean Christians have the right to. In fact, Christians don't have the right to kill anyone. Anyone who kills in the name of Christianity, as I said, is rallying behind the name to push their hatred of others forward as a group. If a Christian befriends a homosexual person, it doesn't make them a bad Christian. Quite the contrary, it makes them a good one. Get your facts straight before pushing out anti-Christian FUD.
    728. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      I think we simply disagree on what is fair or unfair, since I do not see any unfairness that you claim to have pointed out.
      I seem to be unable to describe a rule about marriage that you consider unfair or discriminatory. This makes your original post extremely disingenuous, because you acted as if it was both a valid and important point that the rules you described were fair and non-discriminatory.
      Besides, just because a law is "unfair" does not make it unconstitutional. We don't allow minors to vote, that is often seen as "unfair" yet it is not unconstitutional.
      You continue to bring up completely irrelevant issues. Your original point was that the rules you described are neither unfair nor discriminatory, which I maintain that I have either falsified or shown meaningless, depending on your definitions of fairness and discrimination. I can't imagine why you would bring up the US constitution, except that perhaps you would like to distract from your logical failures.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    729. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by superyooser · · Score: 1
      "Love does not insist on its own way"

      I'm insisting on God's way, and God's way is the way of love.

      You will love your neighbor as yourself

      How would I be loving my neighbor by excusing his offense against God, nature, and humanity?

      You pick out three or four passages to degrade, demean, oppress, and otherwise bully

      They have degraded and demeaned themselves through their behavior.
      Oppress?? I'm a guy with a keyboard.
      Bully? Better to receive a stern word from a man than to be left in the hands of an angry God.

      a group of God's children

      Until they are born of the Spirit, they are Adam's children. See 1 Corinthians 15:47-50.

      The American Psychiatric Association has removed it from the DSM about 20 years ago (meaning it's not an illness and not a condition to be treated)

      God has not changed His position.

      The major health and wellness organizations have advocated for gay rights and pediatric associations claim same sex couples make wonderful parents and the children? They seem to turn out just fine.

      No, they don't.

      I remember a dude named Galileo. He was right. He contradicted the Bible.

      Galileo did not contradict the Bible. He contradicted an opinion of the Vatican.

    730. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of "consenting adults" don't you understand?

      I've noticed that other nations in the world which currently support gay marriage have yet to disappear. Maybe it's the one that doesn't support it which is at risk of disappearing. Our constitution is getting pretty old...

      Consenting adults.

    731. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      Or are you saying non-religious heterosexuals can't get married either?

      Any non-religious couple should be able to have a civil union. Only God can imbue sanctity into a union between two people. That makes marriage is a religious ceremony, and thus the purview of a religous institution. Gov't is not a religious institution; it should not be performing marriages.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    732. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by davidology · · Score: 1

      The Bible does condemn people to stoning who wear unnatural fabrics. Personally, I'd like to enforce that little rule on all the polyester-wearing, bible-thumping, holier-than-though bigots as they come out of their churches. it may be time the *thinking* populace in this country start playing by the same rules the rabid xtian fundamentalists' like to use.

    733. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      So? I am not responsible for my father's actions.

      But you live in the country whose gov't conducted racist policy. If you say the gov't is to be charged, you're still liable for it, as a taxpayer.

      I'm suggesting that if people want restitution, they need to go to the source. If someone robs you, you need to go after that someone, not his family or his race.

      Well, local laws were in the books, and all that would need to be done is produce a witness, and you have grounds to sue the local gov't. That can also apply to where the state gov't has conducted discrimination against the citizenry. So basically, you have no problem with enforcing the law, even it it could cause another civil war in this country.

      I know this sentence is out of context, but you're condoning discrimination here.

      No, as I said, as a citizen of the U.S., I am still liable for legal decisions against the localities where I live. Its not discrimination if it redresses previous wrongs, and done in a manner that negatively impacts an entire racial group. Its a plea bargain deal.

      Your example of taxpayers footing the bill on a case by case basis would at least be a solution that doesn't perpetuate injustice as a method of remedying previous injustice.

      Its one damaging to the country. So basically, you're against discrimination when it impacts your racial group, specifically your least intellectually qualified individuals. And you don't care if the United States can function after such legal judgements are rendered. Which makes you the ultimate selfish individual.

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    734. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by DanAnderson26 · · Score: 1

      As a man I don't understand why you think you (in the plural sense) have an obligation to "share" your "lifestyle" unless I specifically ask you (which would be in very bad taste).

      I wouldn't mind gay people if they would shut the hell up about it, and quit throwing it in our (collective) faces. (Granted, not all gay people feel this need, I respect those that don't)

      I certainly don't walk around telling people about my sexual practices, or groping my wife in public. Within reason I expect the same from everyone else. Lord knows I never felt the need to "out" myself to my friends and family, neither should you. Your mom doesn't want to know where you stick your "thing" and neither do your friends, and neither do I.

      I won't wear a "Proud to screw chicks" shirt, you can get rid of your "proud to screw guys" shirt.

      Dan

    735. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "I fight for the extreme because I know what the other extreme wants: the right to kill homosexuals on sight"

      Youare an imbecile. I have no idea why you would post such an idiotic statment.

      "If "civil unions" with legal rights and benefits identical to those afforded opposite-sex couples were available to same-sex couples, I probably wouldn't argue. Unfortunately, the majority of those strongly fighting against same-sex marriage don't even want that much. The majority of those opposed to same-sex "marriage" -- at least those with political clout -- want to deny any legal protection available to same-sex couples, and in some cases (like Kansas and Virginia) deny even the existing options available"

      Yes, but that's not ME, so why bring it up in a conversation about what I think?

      "And why is this the case? Can you offer something more than BISS?"

      Answer my question first. Why shouldn't straight couples be allowed to have a unique ceremony?

      Because YOU said so? Gays say so?

    736. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If a state super-majority were to decide to strip people of color of their right to vote, the Judiciary would have ever right to step in and say "no, that's wrong", and they'd be absolutely right to do so. "

      WRONG!!! Actually, if the nation or state passes a law as a constitutional ammendment, the judge cannot do anything about it but to enforce it and interpret all laws and make sure that they don't contradict this new ammendment. At the same time, he needs to make sure that laws fit with the spirit of the previous ammendments. So if an ammendment saying that all (gay/white/black/straight/your pick) people need to be put on leashes and tied up to the front porch passes, then the judge has to somehow interpret laws (regardless of his own personal opinion of the matter) so that the spirit of the all the ammendments is enforced (not his personal belief).
      These ammendments in essence dictate what is constitutional and what is not constitutional (hence the word constitutional) and the judges job is only to make sure that the laws passed fit in the spirit of those ammendments.
      By the same token, regardless of how wrong a judge believes a law to be, he cannot rule it unconstitutional if it does not violate an ammendment.
      The only exception to this rule is that a federal judge can rule a state ammendment as being unconstitutional if he believes it violates federal law but even the federal judge cannot do anything about Federal Ammendments.

    737. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
      Marriage is a dual institution - Church and State.

      Actually, I think of any such pairing as a legal contract (hetero or otherwise). Its "marriage" that I consider a religious sacrement.

      I don't think your problem is that a license can be given to homosexuals

      I think its an inviolate obligation of gov't not to apply laws differently based on religious dogma. If you make laws affecting inheritance, child custody, guardianship, divorce, etc. which affects a hetero couple, then gov't must provide those same legal mechanisms to a same sex couple. Otherwise, it is gov't institutionalizing discrimination based on sexual orientation. You cannot have a "just", secular gov't without doing this.

      I think your problem is your Biblical Interpretation is not Law

      Do you have the slightest comprehension of Constitutional concept of separation of church & state? If the gov't conducts a ceremony considered to be of religious significance, it is violating that concept of separation. Gov't should be in the "civil union" business, not bestowing religious sacrements (marriage).

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    738. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. You are clouding the issue by refusing to understand the concepts presented. It is solely that the rules made to govern a populace used language describing the contemporaneous populace, and that as populations change the laws are made to apply to all equally as it was and remains a central precept in the US that equality as described before be maintained. There is no precedent for redefining the character of the crimes of rape or murder, acknowledged throughout the history of the US as a nation as illegal outside of the formerly proper confines of a formal duel and the legal rules of war for murder or of rape outside of cultural dispositions against its report formerly-granted responses change over time. Your supposed extensions are not logical, and have no relation to the topic. The point is as stated above and before.

    739. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Apparently in dairy herds it's common for cow to engage in pleasuring each other.
      The register had an article about it.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    740. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "Inanimate objects cannot consent to anything, and as such they cannot enter contracts. Children cannot legally consent to anything without the permission of a parent or guardian, and as such they cannot enter legal contracts with few exceptions."

      Who decides that? Who decides which contracts are enforceable and which are not? Who decides the age at which a person may enter into a contract? Who decides the exceptions? Ahh, yes, our government... which is also the entity we expect to uphold the contracts we allow.

      "Two people of the same gender who are of legal age can enter most contracts."

      There are plenty of contracts they cannot enter into. One of them is marriage. Again, the state governs by the laws we the people allow the legislatures to pass.

      "Sure, if you can explain how existing marriage laws can be quickly adapted to allow for multiple partners."

      Which just makes it seem as though the entire issue is more about convenience than anything else. Either it's a 'civil right' to be able to marry whoever you want, or it isn't. The convenience of the laws shouldn't be a concern.

      "I really hate the polygamy comparison because it demonstrates that the person making it has not, in any way, studied the relevant issues but is instead relying upon stupid analogies because they can't actually come up with a good reason to deny same-sex couples."

      Deny what? They have equal protection under the law. What they're looking for is more options under the law, and they're looking for it in the wrong place. Laws are made in the legislature, and what's irked me in this whole gay marriage issue has been the failure of the courts and the legislatures to control those who would legislate from the bench. If a state wants to allow same-sex marriages, then by all means do so, but I think they're opening a door to things they aren't going to like. When you start redefining marriage, you really have to ask, where does it stop?

      "Bringing up polygamy, animal marriage or marriage to inanimate objects only demonstrates that you don't actually have a good reason against same-sex marriage so you're bringing up irrelevant garbage in an attempt to distract from the real issue."

      What real issue? How is it that the inevitable consequences of allowing homosexual marriage are irrelevant? Or do you really believe it'll stop at gay marriage?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    741. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Heh, you're a dense one. 50 years ago, the black man would have been lynched [wsws.org]for such an offense.

      Nope, you're dense. The interracial marriage issue is not related to gay marriage. The crux of the problem is that gay marriage is marriage within the same sex (not gender, sex). Interracial marriage is marriage between different sexes. It's funny how you are trying to imply that one has to do with the other while at the same time dismissing the polygamy argument.

    742. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Sorry, no. Church has nothing to do with this - this is solely about government recognition of a union, and the government should have to recognize that union, as the primary reason that they're interested is because married people have a bunch of rights already enumerated in this thread. The high points are inheritance, parental rights, and social security.

      Have you wonder exactly WHY married people have those rights? Why is the government in the marriage business to begin with? It's because the points that you mention have to do with the long-term preservation of the society and the perpetuation of the state. In other words: Efficient and effective reproduction and child-rearing. Gay marriage, just like marriage between relatives or polygamy, by nature have aspects that are contrary to that principle.

    743. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Yunzil · · Score: 1
      You mean, "lawyers"?


      Good God. If you are a lawyer and still don't understand how the system works... I fear for my country more than ever.

    744. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ManoMarks · · Score: 1

      No, they complained about other things, but it was really clear that Roy Moore had gone too far in actually breaking the law. Remember, Moore was kicked off by his fellows on the Supreme Court, not by a federal judge.

      --

      That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere

    745. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by The+Big+Ugly · · Score: 1

      i agree with you. thank you for your support. i do agree that environmental factors play a role in homosexuality - which does not disprove my theory that it is/could be choice.

      if you want to draw parrallels with other mammals, we can. i think many biologists or whoever studies mammals would agree that they have the capacity to make decisions/choices given different environmental factors. different environments lead to different behaviors. I am not speculating on the sexuality of rams, simply because i do not care. i'm merely suggesting, as your post reaffirms, homosexuality is likely a choice. by choice i mean a decision made by a free will over time, given varring circumstances, or enviroments as you say. homosexuality, imo, is developed after dealing with several life decisions. while not scientific, friends in the field of early childhood development have rarley seen homosexual behavior out of their preschool classes. this has helped me to believe that is a choice/adaptation over time - not from birth.

      as for the genetic aspect, i have not formulated an opinion. i know so little about genetics. more importantly, i have read conflicting articles on both sides of the subject. the few articles i have read seem to affirm the environmental influences rather than born traits.

      finally, as i mentioned in my previous post, this is merely my speculation & opinion. i respect the right for us to disagree & welcome further discussion.

    746. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ManoMarks · · Score: 1

      And that's the rub isn't it? If your interpretation of the Constitution says one thing, then it's activist to rule something else. It's only "legislating" from the bench if the ruling isn't something you agree with. The truth is when judges are accused of "legislating" from the bench, it's not because they actually say "This is now the law, abid by it" it's because they are saying "No, that law isn't right, and here's why."

      The fact is that the Consitution itself is very vaugue on a lot of points. For instance, the phrase "cruel and unusual". What does "unusual" mean? Does that mean that this is not a common kind of punishment? In which case, it's appropriate to go around looking at other laws and find what is "usual".

      --

      That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere

    747. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
      If I want to marry my cell phone, the state does not allow that either. Why? Because my cell phone lies outside the legal standard for entering into this particular contract. Either the state may set the standards for the contract, or it may not.

      Your cellphone isn't another person protected under the 14th amendment.

      I'm not gay, but I'm not allowed to marry another man any more than a homosexual man would be.

      Yet women are allowed to marry men. If everyone were excruciatingly literally equal under the law as you suggest, then ONLY gay marriage would be legal, since there would only be one marriable sex. Either marrying men would be legal, or marrying women would be legal. Right now the law says you can marry anyone, as long as you are the opposite sex. That is discrimination.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    748. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Have you wonder exactly WHY married people have those rights? Why is the government in the marriage business to begin with? It's because the points that you mention have to do with the long-term preservation of the society and the perpetuation of the state. In other words: Efficient and effective reproduction and child-rearing. Gay marriage, just like marriage between relatives or polygamy, by nature have aspects that are contrary to that principle.

      First point: hetero marriage doesn't always involve child-rearing, and some gays want to adopt children. Whether you agree with this, I would argue that nearly anything beats being raised in an orphanage. Second point: a stable society is a separate issue from reproduction. Gay married people can be every bit as boring and domestic as straight people. They just want legal recognition for their personal commitment to each other.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    749. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      The issue here, to my mind, is equal protection under the law.

      It's not about things you don't have as single that someone else does have as married.

      It's about treating two equivalent situations different based on some irrelevant issue. In this case, it is treating two relationships as different under the law based on the sex of one of the members of the couple. THESE couples get rights, but THOSE couples don't, for an arbitrary reason that is not under the control of either party (we don't "control" whom we fall in love with and who our soul mates are).

      Again, I don't think that civil rights should be subject to mob rule.

      And it is the right-wing that is trying to encode discrimination such as this -- a limiting of a set of available rights that essentially denys those rights arbitrarily and completely form one subset or class of citizens -- into state and even the federal constitution that I find even more abhorrent.

      The basis for such discrimination is nothing more and nothing less than simple ignorance and bigotry. These laws and amendments are nothing more than punative punishment on gays and lesbians, and their relationships and families. There is simply no compelling interest for the state to deny marriage licenses and the associated rights and responsibilities to gay couples, and in fact there is evidence that denying gay couples a civil marriage license actually hurts society on the whole. Additionally the only rationale provided for such laws and amendments is religious in nature, and codifying a particular religion's dogma into secular law just seems unconstitutional to me on the face of it.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    750. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The interracial marriage issue is not related to gay marriage. The crux of the problem is that gay marriage is marriage within the same sex (not gender, sex).

      Sure it is. People used the same arguments against interracial marriage 50 years ago, including the point you just mentioned; just change same sex to some hand-wringing about keeping to your own kind.

      It's funny how you are trying to imply that one has to do with the other while at the same time dismissing the polygamy argument.

      The polygamy argument is a non-sequitor - there is no way that allowing 2 guys to get hitched will lead to more support for harems in the US. The only similarity is that bigots view both of them as wrong. Why else would they also drag man-boy relationships and bestiality into the debate? What we're talking about is 2 adults in a consensual relationship, not any of that other crap.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    751. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      See, marriage is, by definition, a union of a man and a woman.

      That is your very narrow definition of the word, it is true. But it's not the only definition that has ever been used in history.

      Marriage is constantly evolving. Marriage used to be one man and as many women as he wanted. Marriage used to be about property, not love. Marriage wasn't always considered 'sacred' either.

      Today, marriage is generally about love and life-time partnership. By this definition, gay people most certainly cannot get married, because they are barred from marrying the people they love and wish to build a life together with. In fact, the civil rights afforded to married couples are specifically designed around two people living as one.

      The religious definition of marriage can be anything that religion wants it to be. Many churches to this day will not perform inter-faith or even interracial marriages. And that's fine.

      But any given religion's definition of marriage should NOT be forced on everone via secular law. My church does not in any way prohibit same-sex marriages, and in fact has been joining same-sex couples into holy unions for decades.

      There is no compelling reason for The State to deny same-sex couples a civil marriage licence. This is a completely separate issue from religious marriage ceremonies.

      There is most definitely discrimination here, your rationalizations to the contrary notwithstanding.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    752. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Durandal64 · · Score: 1
      And that's what I'm trying to say. You're so angry because I say "Christian" that you fly off the handle, not even taking into consideration what I'm saying. I'm saying, in the laws, call it "Legal Joining" or something like that. Then you redefine the laws to take this new word into consideration, passing rights to everyone.
      Why? So Christians can have some sort of copyright on the word "marriage"? It was hardly their idea. Creating a new category of legal joining just for gays enforces a "separate but equal" mindset that was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
      Yeah, I know that too. I was drawing a line between "Marriage" and "Legal Joining". I was saying, if the gay couple can find a church that will "Marry" them, then they say they're married. Otherwise, they say they're life partners or whatever the current catchphrase is, because they were joined at a courthouse instead of a church. Again, not reading what I'm saying, I'm not negative about Christianity, so I must be retarded, right?
      So non-religious people who were married in a courthouse cannot say they are married? That's ridiculous. Implementing a scheme like this into law would create a dangerous legal precedent allowing churches to prevent people from obtaining a legal marriage license, instead forcing them to be "civilly joined." All to appease some bigots. Churches have no place telling the government who is and is not married.
      Go look in a dictionary, look up marriage. The primary definition is "union between a man and a woman". Only recently has it even entered any dictionary that marriage should also encompass same sex marriages.
      And the Constitution only explicitly granted the right to vote to white males. Things change, but appealing to tradition is still a logical fallacy.
      And the definition comes from religious contexts, so the word "Marriage" stems from the very idea of two people uniting as one in a ceremony. So, to keep one side happy, you don't redefine "marriage" because you are getting rid of the history of the word, which is why there's such a big hubbub about it all. It's called a compromise, and the govermnment is good at using compromises. Hell, the whole fact that we have two houses in Congress (Senate and House of Representatives) stems from a big compromise. The most fundamentalist Christians don't want the union to be able to happen at all. You give some, you get some. And besides, gay couples can be called "married" too if they want, they just have to find a church that will support the claim, like I said. Not hard, considering churches in Canada will reportedly do this. So, churches here in the U.S. will allow it as well, depending on their doctrine and views.
      Golden mean fallacy. Simply label both sides as extremes and declare the truth to be somewhere in the middle. Your strategy focuses on appeasement; mine focuses on human rights and dignity. Public opinion or desire is irrelevant if people's rights are being violated. That's why black people and women are now allowed to vote. It's why gays should be allowed to marry.
      Wow, you don't know anything about the Bible, do you? Just because God has killed homosexuals in the past doesn't mean Christians have the right to. In fact, Christians don't have the right to kill anyone. Anyone who kills in the name of Christianity, as I said, is rallying behind the name to push their hatred of others forward as a group. If a Christian befriends a homosexual person, it doesn't make them a bad Christian. Quite the contrary, it makes them a good one. Get your facts straight before pushing out anti-Christian FUD.
      "No True Scotsman" fallacy. God makes it quite clear in Leviticus 20:13 that men having sex with one another is an abomination, and the penalty for such an act is death.
      Leviticus 20:13
      If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them.
      I have my facts straight. I've read the Bible from an objective standpoint that doesn't assume its infallibility or good intentions.
    753. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ben_fucking_franklin · · Score: 1

      In my experience, there is the power of choice. There will always be different choices based on morality, ethics and society. Once one amasses enough choices, one gains a world view - and thereby, a world in which to live. To me the issue of gay marriage is a non-issue. I am religious, despite the lingual terror of my /.name. To me, the words and ideas surrounding marriage, especially the word itself, involve a man and a woman and a blessed form of covenant. To those of you who claim that marriage was first a civil union, let me ask a historical question: Did e.g. the Saxons, or the vikings have marriages between men? Did their society award any particular status and word to same-sex promises of that kind? The reason I ask is because the word 'marriage' is, among other things, a concept. I will never consider two men or two women to be married, to be in wedlock or to have been joined in holy matrimony. All of this is because the concepts are both defined by and tied into religions that mean exactly one thing by it, and one thing only. I fail to see how slapping the word 'marriage' onto same-sex unions can benefit anyone. It's a mostly religious term, and, as a matter of simple linguistic household, shouldn't be redefined willy-nilly. I don't run around redefining words such as strong, courageous, friend, priest, bigot, nature, nurture, science, coward, cowboy, soldier, or king based on whether or not I want those words to apply to me. If homosexuals are particularly in vogue one day, I don't claim to be a homosexual, because that term doesn't apply to me (cue all the comments on homophobia being a sign of latent homosexuality). If we are at all to have a common language - and one that can be used by us all, we can't be idly permissive about the meanings of words. I do not consider the unions of men nor of women to be religious in nature, and therein lies the problem: A religious term is being usurped by those who clearly not fall under it. It is being used to describe a relationship inherently forbidden by the same religions whence the term sprang. This may be scandalous of me, but I just don't mind any of the benefits bestowed upon married couples to be bestowed upon gay couples also. I would have wished that the more vocal people among the gay would have the courage to choose their own words - to stand for what they so staunchly believe is right, if they believe Christianity to be so wrong.

    754. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      Everyone knew that was coming, but interracial marriage is still marriage (ie, man/woman: the very definition of the thing).

      It is now, but only a few decades ago, 90% of the American population would have disagreed with you. See how the definition of marriage changes fluidly over time? It always has, and it always will.

      Gay marriage means changing the meaning of marriage.

      No, it really doesn't. At least not the definition of civil marriage. Many civil marriage laws are even written today without regard to gender. And to make such laws apply to same sex couples, one only needs to replace any references to "husband" and "wife" with "spouse". Voila, the definition works just fine. Nothing is changed. Gay couples can and do raise children (either biological children from previous relationships, or children that are adopted, resulting from artifical insemination, or suragates), and many such families simply NEED the rights and responsibilities and protections afforded by the civil marriage contract... rights and responsibilities that simply are not avialable through any other means.

      The legalization of same-sex civil marriage would not in any way affect the ability of churches and religions to define marriage in whatever way they wish.

      But the fact is: marriage IS a civil right. It is ALSO a religious ceremony. It is two separate and distinct things. You can always have one without the other, but most people get both, and most people seem to confuse the two.

      Same sex couples can already get religious ceremonies in several churches (Unitarians, The Metropolitan Community Church, The Reform Jewish Synagog, The Liberal Quakers, etc). And atheists can get civil marriage licenses from the Justic of the Peace, even if they never intend to have children.

      When interracial marriage was legalized back in the 50's, over 90% of the population was against it. The majority was wrong then. And the majority are wrong now. Allowing same sex couples won't cause massive social change on any real front, any more than interracial marriage has. Some small percentage of marriages will be gay couples, and that's that.

      Gay people are some of the wealthiest, most comfortable people in the US.

      That oft-repeated statistic is actually not all that true. It has, in fact, been rather thoroughly debunked. You'd do well not to rely in this "factoid" when trying to defend the idea that discrimination against gay people somehow isn't wrong.

      And I think it's fair to compare the gay rights movement to the civil rights movement in many areas and in many ways, because much of the rhetoric used by the opposition to the equal rights of others 'not like themselves' is practically identical. And equally wrong.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    755. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      First point: hetero marriage doesn't always involve child-rearing, and some gays want to adopt children.

      I agree with that. I prefer that a child be adopted by a heterosexual couple but if that can't be done, I'm all for gay couple adopting children. There is a certain nobility about willing to adopt, and my hat's off to all of those who do. By all means, I also think gay couples should get the tax credits and benefits that go along with raising a child if they do adopt.

      On your second point, perhaps I wasn't specific enough. It is the future of a stable society that depends not only on reproduction, but on child rearing, and heterosexual marriage is the most efficient means of accomplishing both tasks (efficient in terms of resources as well as results). That's why heterosexual marriage is specifically recognized by government.

      They just want legal recognition for their personal commitment to each other.

      I agree with that too. I just don't think that legal recognition has to mean marriage, because marriage is already defined to be something very specific. And the specificity of this definition has very deep legal, traditional, and religious ramifications. I'm sure that if the country voted on it, civil union legislation would pass hands down. It's the issue of calling it "marriage" that people have a problem with.

    756. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      It may not be an equal rights issue in their eyes, but they're simply wrong. It is an equal rights issue, period. Objectively.

      Anyone who has seen what gay couples have to go through, especially those with children, on a day to day basis can see this fact plainly.

      It's not a moral issue at all. We're not discussing religious ceremonies, religion, or what churches should be required to do. At all.

      This is about nothing more than a set of civil rights, responsibilities, and priveleges afforded to couples by the state.

      Just because they dont' see it as being against equal rights, doesn't mean that isn't EXACTLY what they're fighting against. I'm sure those who were fighting to maintain slavery didn't see themselves as bigots, and I'm sure those who fought against interracial marriages didn't see themselves as fighting against equal rights. That doesn't change the objective fact that that is exactly what they were doing.

      In many decades hence, the people fighting against the equal treatment of gays under civil law will be viewed with exactly the same distain as those who fought against equal treatment of blacks and other minorities in the past.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    757. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Sure it is. People used the same arguments against interracial marriage 50 years ago, including the point you just mentioned; just change same sex to some hand-wringing about keeping to your own kind.

      No it isn't. Race is an arbitrary "distinction". Sex isn't an arbitrary distinction. It is very much real and definite. Did you know that the genetic differences alone between a man and a woman are greater than the genetic differences between a male human and a male chimpanzee?

      The polygamy argument is a non-sequitor - there is no way that allowing 2 guys to get hitched will lead to more support for harems in the US.

      It is no more of a non-sequitur argument than your "interracial" marriage argument. There is no way that allowing interracial marriage should result in allowing gay marriage. In fact, the polygamy argument is more valid than the interracial argument because the interracial argument does nothing to change the traditional, legal, and religious definition of marriage, but both polygamy and gay marriage would change the meaning of "marriage" as it currently stands.

    758. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      Homosexuality is no more inherently immoral than Heterosexuality is inherently moral.

      It's not the state of being, at all, that is the moral issue.

      And the issue of civil marriage licenses is a secular issue anyway... any specific religion's idea of its morality shouldn't really be relevant. Granting same-sexu couples a civil marriage license wouldn't compel a single church to change its marriage policies or to validate or accept any unions it did not wish to. Even today, many churches will not perform or recognize inter-faith or inter-racial marriages. Many will not perform a marriage between first cousins, while others will. This is their right, to determine their own rules for their on rituals and ceremonies. This is freedom of religion.

      But my religion finds that a union between any two people, forged out of love, and dedicated to building a life together, is deeply and fundamentally moral, even if the two people involved are of the same sex. So why should the State choose to enforce YOUR religion's idea of what is moral or what is a valid marriage, while ignoring MY religion's ideas on the same subjects? How is that freedom of religion? And it's not like my religion is some wacked out or weird one... six US presidents and several of the Founding Fathers shared the same religion as me.

      In short, your opinion (and it is just an opinion) that homosexuality is somehow immoral should not affect the secular civil rights that any gay person should be able to have.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    759. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Now this could be crazy talk, but what if my religion has no teachings saying gays can not marry?

      Ther are more religions then the big 3.

      Then again if you want to be literal a couple who do not have sex strictly for the reason of reproduction (any other kind is a sin) and who do not raise childern, can not be married as marriage is only for couples fucking for childern. If your unlucky enough that god made you infertile too bad. If you adopt, still you are SOL. Wilfully going aginst GOD by using birth control or operations to prevent you from haing childern is certainly sinful and such marrages should be nuked by churches all around the country.

      I notice you specify how "good marraiges" need to be enshrined as something special. Considering at least a majority of the straight male population cant fucking keep his wedding vows (A god example of the kind of "man" I am talking about is Mr. Newt Gingrich and Bill Clinton) do you believe straight couple are somehow special. All I see is a lot of people delusing themselves and going on to hurt a bunch of people around them because they stupidly got married when that's not the kind of life they are willing to live.
      What exactly is a "good marrage" and how can we legally ensure only those kind of marrages happen?
      Is it a good thing when most of that special group piss all over that supposed holy unique thing?

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    760. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      "For instance, there are churches which refuse to marry biracial couples."

      I'd like to know where these still exist?

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    761. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Then we need to limit marriage to people who have children. No one can marry till they have them. No one is allowed to marry if they dont have them or intend not to. Adoption does not count for straights if it does not count for gays.

      The funny thing is most of the anti gay marriage people seem to say thing that sound exactly like what was said about interracial marriage back in the good ol days of white supremacy. As someone who is married outside of his race I still sometimes hear someone make comments about who I love. I have a hard time not punching them in the face, I feel the same anger towards people who use the same arguments and language about homosexual partnerships.

      Straights should clean up their own house before criticizing anyone elses marriage practices. Like stop getting married if your not planning on being faithful (as you fucking vowed to), and the list goes on and on how much straight people seem to shit on the supposed sanctity of marriage.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    762. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Sadly I have seen it from time to time. Being part of a mixed race couple opens your eyes to the bigotry and hate still celebrated by some Americans.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    763. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Since when has love been a religious requirement?
      It's a nice bonus, but I can say that through most of recorded human history love has not been a requirement to any aspect of marrage.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    764. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Then we need to ban all no reproductive marriage. In fact people should have to produce offspring (matching them genetically) before they can be allowed to marry. And they must continue to reproduce to maintain married status.
      No marriage for the infertile or those who do not want children.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    765. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a 5K year old scripture that make no such judgments on people. I guess my GOD trumps your GOD.

    766. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      Wish I had some modpoints. This is what sane people should be seeing not all the hate and ignorance.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    767. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mink · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is there are plenty of OLDER religions then Christianity that have marrage ceremonies and all. So what makes the Christian way the only way.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    768. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by jjoyce · · Score: 1

      Right, I'm in agreement with your original post. Pretty much all of what they label activism is really just -- as you said -- reaching a different conclusion. Yet those on the right continue to support Moore, who was actually breaking the law in order to impose his views on others. It's an example of their hypocrisy.

    769. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Then we need to ban all no reproductive marriage.

      Irrelevant. If a lake requires a license to fish, and a person likes to go fishing but has the worst of luck and never catches anything, does he still need license to fish that lake? By law, he is a fisherman even if he catches nothing: He still belongs to a class (group) of people that we call fishermen and though not everyone catches fish, some will, since by and large that's the main characteristing of being a fisherman.

      As a group, heterosexual marriage perpetuates the society. As a group, gay marriage doesn't. By implicitly definining the term "marriage" first as an entire group and then implicitly changing that definition to mean just specific cases (each case that doesn't produce children) you are, through implication, commiting what is commonly known as the informal fallacy of equivocation. Here's another example of that fallacy:

      "(i) Only man is rational. (ii) No woman is a man. (iii) Therefore no woman is rational." (taken from http://www.positiveatheism.org/writ/fallacy.htm).

      or a variation involving a classic example from Lewis Carroll's "Through the Looking Glass":

      "You couldn't have it if you did want it," the Queen said. "The rule is jam tomorrow and jam yesterday - but never Jam today." "It must come sometimes to Jam today," Alice objected. "No, it can't," said the Queen. "It's jam every other day: today isn't every other day, you know". (Taken from http://www.kcmetro.cc.mo.us/longview/ctac/fallacy. htm)

    770. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "Right now the law says you can marry anyone, as long as you are the opposite sex. That is discrimination."

      That's not discrimination because it doesn't matter what your gender is. What matters is that the combination of individuals entering into the marriage must be 1 man and 1 woman. Both men and women are allowed to enter the marriage contract on equal footing regardless of their gender, regardless of their race, and regardless of their sexual orientation. The state is merely defining conditions to enter into the contract. Those conditions do not discriminate between who may enter into that contract, but it does set parameters such as the number of people and the combination of their genders.

      That's quite a bit different from, say, separate water fountains.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    771. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Radar+Penguin · · Score: 1
      Sorry, marriage has moved on, at least in Australia. It is a legal entity & legally has nothing to do with God. If you choose to also have a religious ceremony then that's your business, but it is not a requirement for legal marriage.

      You can't suddenly redefine marriage to exclude those already included just because they didn't include a religious component.

      Sorry, but your God does not have a monopoly on marriage.
    772. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by qurk · · Score: 1

      So.... How is this flamebait. The Supreme Court took the stance to elect our president, before all the votes had been counted and turned out to be in Bush's favor... They took the stance, voted along partison lines, to make sure that Bush would be our president. I said that I have the opinion that by voting along partison lines to make sure that Bush would win before the votes had been counted, that they were "activist judges". Bush later made that phrase popular, because he saw a political advantage on attacking the courts and to push admendments taking rights away from a minority of the populace, to help him gain more votes for the next election. How were the 4 of 7 Supreme Court judges who voted to not bother about the votes in Florida, but to just give their electoral votes to Bush site unseen, not "ACTIVIST JUDGES". And how was my previous message "FLAMBAIT" for pointing that out? Hey if people want to dub their judicial brance "ACTIVIST JUDGES, shouldn't they be consistant? And no, the votes in Florida were NOT counted. The Supreme Court elected the president. How is reiterating the facts "flamebait". Q

    773. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by qurk · · Score: 1

      But wouldn't have have dubbed them outright "ACTIVISTS" if they had let the votes be counted, and Bush would still have won? You don't seem to be very consistant. They did good for you great. They don't agree with you, wow now they are "ACTIVIST JUDGES". Right? They did not let the votes get counted. You guys talking about "activist judges" aren't very consistant. So where in the constitution does it say that the courts have any say on who or who I do not marry. Only if she isn't blonde and white enough skin? Isn't this a dangerous precident?

    774. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      Our relationships are all based upon emotion and mental stimulation, and not sexual reproduction.

      Actually, it's debatable that this is the practice for majority of even humans. Unless you assume that all humans live in the West.

      An even deeper debate could be made on whether this type of arrangement is best for the human race.

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
    775. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ltbarcly · · Score: 1

      This is such a load of crap it has a name: Naturalistic Fallacy.

      There is no definition of natural which isn't shit. It just means something like "guys in white lab coats haven't touched it". Any definition you give can be immediately shown to not work as intended.

      Firstly, this assumes that humans aren't 'natural'. It also would lead you to believe that there is some kind of connection between nature and ethics, there isn't. It is 'natural' for a tiger to eat babies given the chance. Must be ok.

      So for any ethical dilemma, using the word natural is akin to calling someone a nazi. It gets you nowhere. It does not favor any ethical argument over any other.

      A lot of the reason it comes up so much, despite its worthlessness as an argument, is probably environmentalists. They would have you believe that human caused change in the environment is 'bad'. However, they do not tell you why it is 'bad'.

      For something to be 'bad' there must be some criteria for judging 'goodness' and 'badness'. Care to give me a criteria that makes 'natural' to be 'good' without also implying that we should go back to living in caves and stop using this newfangled unnatural controlled-fire?

      I think George Carlin had it right when he said that pollution is bad... FOR US. We can't cause negative changes from the perspective of the Earth, because the Earth does not strive, it does not have goals. Whatever it is is equally good to it. However, by polluting we run the risk of making things uncomfortable and dangerous for future humans, which is the only reason a sane person would care anyway.

      Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.

    776. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ManoMarks · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see what you mean. Good point.

      --

      That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere

    777. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by FireAndGlass · · Score: 1
      the bible does not change

      Man you have your head so far up your ass. That thing has been re-interpretted, ripped apart more than any other book on the face of the earth. I've been a missonary, spend thousands of dollars to a church, spent tons of time to God, and I'm atheist now. Did you forget that the bible wasn't even compiled in Jesus' time, IIRC 400 years later? do you reallize that tons of other people during that peroid were also claiming to be some Christ?

      I've read the Bible tons, more than you would ever understand it. It is the biggest hypocratic piece of shit ever. I assume you also force your women not to talk in church and that they should wear veils over their faces? Cause Paul did that. Do a google search and start your enlightenment.

      But the biggest thing here is, church and state are separate so you can take your ignorant big headed belief and quit forcing them on other people!! Jesus Christ you guys are so ignorant.

    778. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Richard Simmons and Jim J Bullock are NOT MLK."

      So gay people are only white or is it because there are no famous gay black/asian/mexican/etc. people?

      If gay black people made the same analogy, would that be OK with you?

      From your last statement itself it sounds to me that you think most gay people are white and therefore are not really being discriminated against because of their skin color.

      MLK was for rights of the people where everyone got along. Obviously we're not there yet. But since racism is out, we have to find something new to discrminate against. Look, there's gays! They're bad in the bible! We'll do that.

      Discriminating against gays because the bible says it's "bad' is still discrimination, which is what MLK fought against.

      I'll be waiting for your logical reply.

    779. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Stranger has learned that last month the $37-billion Redmond-based software behemoth quietly withdrew its support for House bill 1515"

      The disturbing thing about this to me is not that Microsoft is withdrawing its support for a piece of legislation, but that it has any to withdraw in the first place. The passage of bills is the domain of the elected members of the Legislature, not that of $37-billion Redmond-based software bohemoths. (Well, okay, apparently I'm wrong about that. But it still makes me sad that corporate influence over lawmaking is so commonplace that they don't even try to hide it.)

    780. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by synquest · · Score: 0

      I haven't forced my beliefs on anyone. You didn't have to read it. I can see where a gay man, such as yourself, with weak convictions might be offended by my position. But, to put it bluntly, I don't really care what you have to say as it seems that it can't be said without lacing it with what would normally be the vocabulary of a very weak mind. I'm sorry. Have a nice day. ;)

    781. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

      you are ignorant and bigoted, and not only that, you believe in this ancient fairy tale as the word of god for two long liberals have put up with you racist bigoted creeps who use the bible as an excuse for hatred

    782. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and the Taliban thought they were being good to Afghanistan.

      Keep your goddamn religion in your church on Sundays, and keep it out of my goddamn courtroom.

      I deserve, as an American, to go into a courtroom and have confidence that the judge is deciding based on the actual laws of the U.S., and not on his particular interpretation of verses in the Bible or what he learned in Sunday school.

      You may believe the Constitution allows the 10 commandments on public property, but it does not. Go to Iran if you want a theocratic republic.

    783. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's called the Patriot Act. They can do that now.

    784. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      >>>IN some states they get benefits and recognition in plans due to plans at companies.

      I think companies should be able to give benefits however they see fit.

      >>>">>>I also did not say that cultures were marriages between one man and one woman. Did you forget a word here? This doesn't make sense to me." - No I was more accurate in saying it was between one man and more than one women. I do not restrict myself to a specifically Christian Centric view.

      Actually, what I originally said was "one man and at least one woman".

      >>>-- Moving to Canada may be a good bet, they have a 5 year wait on citizenship, and the process is not quite as easy as you think.

      Did I ever say it was easy? Why are you assuming what I think?

      >> If you would like to lobby your government to get the laws _changed_ then by all means. This is a country by the people and for the people. Trying to force it as a rights issue begins to shift it into the Judical system, when it is not a rights issue.

      I do lobby my goverment. I sign every petition, participate in every rally, and vote pro-gay rights at every election day. I'm not trying to force it as a rights issue; it already is a rights issue. How would you feel if someone told you that you couldn't marry the one you love? Don't you feel that you have a right to marriage and you'ld be rather upset if someone said you couldn't? I would, and that's why I support gay marriage.

      >>>Homosexuals are not an ethnic minority. So arguments based on classifying yourself as an ethnic minority seems a bit odd to me.

      I don't think I've ever heard anyone classify gays as an ethnic minority. I certainly didn't classify them as an ethnic minority, so I don't know why you brought it up.

      >>>Homosexuals are a social minority, but there are thousands of those. democrats are a social minority (if the 2004 electon is an example). Pedophiles are a social minority, Gamers are a social minority, slashdot users are a social minority, etc... They all have something in common, a choice about lifestyle they choose to participate in. Social minorities are fluid and you can move in and out of them at will.

      Being gay is nothing like being a slashdot user. You can't move in and out of being gay at will. I'm not even sure it's possible to change your sexual orientation at all. (Assuming you're straight..) What would it take for you to start only being attracted to the same gender and not be attracted at all to the opposite gender? Imagine (assuming you're a guy..) a hot girl walks past and you don't even notice her and check out her boyfriend instead. What's the likelyhood of you reversing your orientation like that? Probably not nearly as likely as you switching forums or political parties.

      >>>Ethnic minority status is relatively static. I hope I have shown the difference here.

      As I said before, no, gays are not an ethnic minority. However, you have shown me that they cannot be catagorized as a social minority either.

      >>>You do have opportunites to change the laws, and this is through lobbying. Homosexuals are, politically, a special interest group, and they get what they want through lobbying and laws. Even the civil rights movement went the law route vs the judicial route. They had a congressional act to work from to work against a set of laws at the state level based on interestate commerce.

      Sometimes lobbying is what's best, sometimes going through judical channels is better. The Gay Rights movement does plenty of lobbying, which should make you happy to know, but some of the issues need to be addressed through the courts. Interracial marriage was won through the courts, I imagine gay marriage will also be.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    785. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no god and you are too ignorant to judge anyone. For being such homophobic bigots you christians sure do act "gay".

    786. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not gay, but I wouldn't mind theists if they'd stfu about their children's stories. Except christians, I wouldn't mind them only if they were all dead.

    787. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also doesn't hurt that the mass media christians are such fucking lunatic nutcases who seem to want nothing but to impose their idiotic fantasy worldview on everyone and everything.

    788. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      My childhood was subsized by taxpayers at large (black & white). My dad was in the Army and I went to schools on base. After that, I joined the Air Force and continued to survive on taxpayer money. I've never gone to college aside from a couple community college courses.

      Where did the wealth that was taxed to build those institutions come from? The military didn't integrate until after WWII, what about the 350 years of slavery before WWII? Are you claiming that it's moral to just say, oh well, that's the way the cookie crumbles and we'll just have to ignore that? Even if you did not participate directly in that theft, you are still in possession of those stolen goods. You benefited from another's labor dishonestly. It may not be your fault, but morally you are obligated to correct the situation, to remove your own culpability.

      Everybody has the same access to said land, goods and infrastructure, black or white.

      Then explain the discrepancies in the Federal numbers. Are you claiming that blacks are somehow inferior? Why are they not at the same levels of education, home and business ownership and wealth as white Americans? If people are equal, then why have they not prospered the way whites have? If they do in fact have equal access, then why don't the results show it? It can't be a matter of assimilation, these people were stripped of their culture when they got here, their familial and tribal bonds were torn apart. Most converted to Christianity in a vain hope to escape bondage, Christians aren't supposed to enslave other Christians. The only culture they have is American.

      The truth is that they don't have equal access, this is a capitalist system. The inherent disadvantage they have been dealt due to legalized theft in this country has made the black community a poorly defended target of economic poachers. One cannot conscientiously ignore the inherent imbalance in power between black business attempts and white ones, as far as resources and networking goes. A poor white man or recent immigrant might face these same challenges, but they do not do so because their family has been systematically robbed over the past 400 years.

      I still don't understand how the blame falls on ME. I didn't do anything! I am no more responsible for the actions of slave owners than I am the actions of Hitler and Stalin. I have no connection to these people!

      You profited from stolen goods. You are responsible, regardless of whether or not you knew it. Bring up Hitler doesn't help you, Volkswagen and other German companies and Swiss banks have been successfully sued for profiting from slave labor. The current workers and management of these companies and institutions can claim as much innocence as you, but the fact of the matter is that they profited from stolen goods, as have you and every other white American.

      Laws shmaws. See slavery, or the article topic. The legal stance of a topic, in and of itself, has little relevance on whether it is moral or just.

      Canon law is moral law. Common law is moral law. If you understood Western legal history, you'd understand that this isn't about some arbitrary set of rules. The principles upon which I base the claim of receivership of stolen property is well rooted in the moral declarations of the West. You can't make an argument about morality as a person of Western decent and then toss aside canon and common law, it's ignoring your own moral standards.

      I lived half my childhood in Germany and when I joined the service at age 18, I went to Iceland and then England, having only recently returned (about 2 years ago), not that it has a whole lot to do with this argument. I just wanted to rebuke your assumptions of me being well-to-do, college educated and always having lived in the U.S. :)

      I made no assumptions about your background other than you were most likely a white American citizen. My criticisms and assertions are universal, your background is meaningless t

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    789. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Being a Northerner, I have a problem believing "God Almighty" would be a Southerner

      Well, guess you need to meet more Southerners. Besides, we Charlestonians are a different breed.

      As for RICO suits, it wouldn't just be the South that was laid to waste. Most of that wealth went North. There may not be as much blood on Northern hands, but their money is just as dirty.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    790. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem with you calling it a "Christian" nation is that you mean your own particularly narrow-minded Christianity, probably a fundamentalist, evangelical form.

      EVEN IF the founders believed they were founding a "Christian" country (and I don't believe they thought they were), the people involved had much milder, often deistic, interpretations of Christianity. How else do you reconcile this with, for example, the prevalence of Freemasonry among the founders?

      Yes, as figures of the 18th century, they used terms like "Divine Providence" but they also used symbolism like that on the back of the dollar bill, and were deliberately working against the traditional monarchial and ecclesiastical order. The most religious people in the country tended to be Tories, who generally fled in terror, rather than participate in or fall victim to the Revolution.

    791. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      same consumer market that passed anti-gay marriage laws in 11 different states last November?

      Yes, there is a consumer market for politics based on emotion.

      [Time to burn some karma.]

      Allow me to interject two cents, guaranteed to piss off both sides of the gay marriage debate.

      To those opposed to gay rights to civil unions:

      Given that marriage is holy, when have you ever relied upon the Government (you know, the one you mistrust, the one that used to have that paragon of moral virtue Bill Clinton leading it, the one that can't do anything right, etc.) to sanctify anything, to make anything holy?
      To those supporting gay marriage: (see same question above).

      We have separation of church and state for a good reason. Secular laws provide secular protections and legal rights. The government should provide civil union protection to anyone who wants to so encumber themselves. As far as the government is concerned, marriage should be no more or no less holy than a Limited Power of Attorney, a Drivers License, or a Limited Liability Corporation.

      The holy marriage part is something individuals should take up with their God and/or their church - certainly not with their government.

      If we want the government to be involved in determining what is holy or not we'd move to Iran or Israel.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    792. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Copid · · Score: 1
      Everyone knew that was coming, but interracial marriage is still marriage (ie, man/woman: the very definition of the thing). Gay marriage means changing the meaning of marriage.

      Yes, and allowing interracial marriage was changing the definition of marriage at the time as well.

      It's not a civil right, it's a social change, and more of a lateral change.

      The same thing could have been said about interracial marriage. That's why I brought it up.

      Listen, if you can convince a majority of people to accept this change as necessary and prudent, then I'll be tolerant of it.

      Don't you bother deciding for yourself? If everybody had that attitude about everything, no social change would ever happen.

      And truly, let's not compare the "gay rights" movement to the civil rights movement. They're not in the same universe. Gay people are some of the wealthiest, most comfortable people in the US. Blacks could barely survive out there and were denied the most basic of civil rights (education, voting).

      I'm not comparing it to the Civil Rights movement, although there are some comparisons to be made on some scale. I'm comparing it specifically to antimiscegenation laws because the same ridiculous arguments were used to support them. It's unnatural, it's not what God intended, it's not the way we do things now, etc. The one I responded to is my favorite, though: it's fair because everybody has the right to marry somebody of the opposite sex. Even the most basic examination shows that it's painfully dishonest argument, so don't act like you're sick of seeing such a silly response to it, and please don't act like there aren't any parallels between the bogus arguments used in both battles.

      I can turn the reasoning around another way and avoid touching on the civil rights sore spot. Let's execute everybody with red hair. If you have red hair, you can shave it and we'll leave you alone. It's totally fair, because everybody has the same options: Be bald or have hair that is black, brown, blonde, gray, white, etc. There are so many options, how could this possibly be a discriminatory rule?? It even pass your "civil rights" test: it's not nearly as bad as what the blacks suffered during the civil rights movement, so it must be OK. If only I had some vague notion of tradition or "defending our God-given right to non-red hair" or something biblical to base it on, I'd have it made.

      Finally, I'm not sure where you get the statistic that gay people are "some of the wealthiest, most comfortable people in the US." I'm sure it's just a feeling, and I'll grant you that there's no reason to believe that they're systematically being starved to death, but would the fact that gay people can be financially successful somehow justify treating them unfairly in other ways? Serves them right for enjoying success beyond what they deserve as dirty weirdos, right? Having a good job is nice, but it doesn't take away the sting of having the majority of people in your state actively pass a law that does nothing more than restrict your privileges because you're different.

      I'm still amazed that Americans, who pay so much lip service to accepting people and treating everybody fairly, would still go out of their way to pass laws that restrict the rights of a minority while affording no real benefit to anybody.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    793. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, son, that was weak. That all you got? Knuckles and paint chips?

      Nah. You weren't joking, not really. Obviously the situation you described is highly illegal and would never happen - but you'd be laughing and happy if it did.

      The only good Christian is a dead one, right?

    794. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Yes, but their reasoning went on to include the idea that separate is inherently unequal, no matter the physical equality of facilities. The act of separating creates inequality, whether or not there are other factors creating it.

    795. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I would argue that I am not sure I can agree that people totally choose to be gay. I believe there is some genetic predisposition there.

      It all depends on what you mean by "be gay."

      People can't choose who they are attracted to. Sexual attraction is an involuntary hormonal reaction.

      People most certainly can choose whether to have sex with somebody.

      If you define "gay" as "being attracted to the same gender", then no. They can't help it. It's just how they are wired.

      If you define "gay" as "having sex with the same gender" then it most certainly is a choice.

    796. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by qurk · · Score: 1

      So when the radio talk show host says that never before in the last 200 years has this happened.... yet Republicans blocked 17 of Clinton's nominations.... Bush has had what 37? Democrats have blocked like 10? So now it is a huge deal and Republicans have to go crazy and it is a RELIGIOUS matter and take back the power because they are getting mistreated so much? Ya these 7 judges need to be debated. If not..... at the very least..... your fanboy radio show hosts need to point out that Republicans blocked 17 of Clinton's appointments, versus the 10 or 11 that that are getting so worked up about. Even though I disagree with many many things Democrats say I hope that after Republicans do this....it SERIOUSLY comes back to bite them in the ass...although it hurts ALL of us to do so :(

    797. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by rpresser · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. I could have made my point without calling you a bigot. So here I go, trying again.

      You wrote:
      Sexual promiscuity and homosexuality are both vectors for disease, which placed the entire community at risk.

      I will grant that sexual promiscuity can be a disease vector. But that is regardless of whether the sex is homosexual or heterosexual. Monogamous sex by its very nature cannot spread disease beyond the monogamous couple. So the presence of the word "homosexuality" in your sentence is bullshit.

    798. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      Never before has a judicial nomination been filibustered that ALSO had ENOUGH VOTES to be confirmed, should the filibuster end. Clinton's nominees got a vote and were rejected - the were NOT filibustered. The only previous judicial filibusters were against nominees who did NOT have enough votes anyway, so who cares.

      What the democrats in the senate are doing TODAY IS UNPRECEDENTED.

      --
      moo
    799. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by wernercd · · Score: 1

      I would consider myself far from ignorant or bigoted. If you want to use that as an excuse not to approach the issue then you are a coward who has no argument to stand on. I don't hate people, I hate their sins. That must be to subtle of a difference for you to grasp in your oh-so-wise-liberal-ways.

      People who want to hate will use anything, and twist it to fuel their hatred. Your a moron and ignorant yourself if you think the bible teaches hate. Maybe you should read it instead of judging. Maybe you should practice the tolerance you so apparently preach. That would get rid of the hypocracy.

      Then maybe you'd have an argument besides spouting hate... about hate... go figure?

      Those who use the bible as a base for their hatred will be judged by God. They have theirs coming to them.

      But you go ahead and feel good about yourself because your a liberal. Meanwhile I'll attack the issues at hand while not hiding behind some party banner like a kid in a gang. And that's not an attack on liberals, it is an attack on you personally for dodging the issue with lame ass excuses.

    800. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      let me be more explicit: the bible is a fairy tale, on par with jack and the bean stalk
      therefore, people who take it seriouysly are morons, and people who use it to condem others are bigoted.

      IF this discussion were about someone who used the protocols of the elders of zion, or the kkk manual to defend antisemitism or hatred to blacks, would you say they are not bigoted and ignorant.
      the bible is NO better then the "protocols..."

      of course i am filled with hate, since people use this fairy tale to justify there homophobia - don't you feel hatred toward people who use the"protocols..." to justify their antisemitism ? the bible is exactly the same (and ditto for all the rest of organized religion)

    801. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I have every right to say that Homo-sexuality is unnatural.

      Sure, and others have just as much right to call you ignorant and bigoted because of that.

      Someone says 'Gays are unnatural' and they are supposedly closeminded, bigoted, hatefull... But the second someone says hatefull things about a christian (or like-minded person), its okay for them to say it's 'wrong' for me to believe in what the Bible says?

      In my experience, there are far more people who are sympathetic about hatred or insults against religion, than there are about hatred against homosexuality. Outside of this Slashdot thread, support for religion is huge, but there is plenty of homophobia around. So I don't think it's fair to say that you aren't getting to state your views.

      And here's another thing to consider - are you saying that people call you bigoted when you simply say you are a Christian, or only after you have told them that homosexuality is wrong? In the former case, then fair enough, it's wrong for them to call you that just because of your views. But in the latter case, they have every right to say that! You have forced your distasteful (to them) view onto them, and they have given you their response.

    802. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by satans_advocate · · Score: 0

      As a Christian

      Your opinion is boring and predictable, but let's hear it again anyway. We need some churchin-up.

      I believe in the Bible

      Which translation?

      And as a Christian I have every right to say that Homo-sexuality is unnatural.

      Christians don't have any rights. Only people protected by the First Amendment have every right to say whatever they like.

      My viewpoint is NOT ignorant nor is it bigoted.

      Even your first sentence is ignorant and bigoted. It can only go downhill from here.

      And they have accepted my viewpoints so I know I'm doing something right.

      By that I assume you mean you have spread your beliefs without offending them?

      its okay for them to say it's 'wrong' for me to believe in what the Bible says?

      By 'wrong', do you mean morally offensive or just plain simple minded?

      It's 'supposedly' wrong for me to say that your wrong and living against the Bible (not that I would force the bible one you personally, but I will let you know my opinion on the matter), but it's OKAY for you to say that I'm wrong and judge me for my following my religion? Its okay for you to judge my life and call me a bigot (or worse - out of your ignorance), but it's not okay for me to believe what I want to believe? that my friends is hypocracy.

      No, that's an opinion. It's the opinion that Christians don't really have anything constructive or spiritually uplifting to offer society, because their religion is one of judgement, punishment and condemnation.

      I personally believe that it IS wrong to be Gay. that's what the bible says.

      Actually it says that it is wrong for a man to lie down with a man, it doesn't say anything about being Gay. Perhaps you don't know the difference?

      I'm not afraid to say what I believe in.

      Well, that's refreshing. I say that the world would be much better off without stone-age monotheistic religions.

    803. Re:What does he have on you, Bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I certainly don't walk around telling people about my sexual practices, or groping my wife in public. Within reason I expect the same from everyone else. Lord knows I never felt the need to "out" myself to my friends and family, neither should you. Your mom doesn't want to know where you stick your "thing" and neither do your friends, and neither do I.

      Right. So I presume that you keep your heterosexuality a closely guarded secret? You don't tell your family that you have a wife, and don't show her any affection in public, right? Becuse no-one wants to know where you stick your "thing" (as you so quantily put it -- "penis" is a perfectly functional word...) You know, gay people aren't under any obligation to hide their sexual preferences just because idiots like you can't cope with it.

      As for groping poeple in public, are gay people any worse in this respect? I've seen all sorts of different couples getting off in public. Doesn't really bother me that much anyway. Are you jealous because you don't get any sex?

  2. That's pretty gay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    And I don't mean in the homosexual way... but in the bad at sports way.

    1. Re:That's pretty gay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAR HAR, Long live Bill Gayts!

  3. Bad. by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Insightful
    At the April 4 meeting, Smith told members of GLEAM, the gay and lesbian employees group at Microsoft, that the company had switched its official stance to "neutral" on the bill, and took personal responsibility for the decision.

    Followed by

    An Apple a day keeps the bigot away?

    As much as I am for civil rights and gay marriage, this is inflammatory. Just because Microsoft changed their stance from pro to neutral (not against), this makes them bigoted? I don't buy that. I don't buy that at all.

    This is the same kind of black and white reasoning that George W. Bush uses. "You're either with us, or you're with the terrorists." Just because someone wants to back away from the battle, doesn't mean all of a sudden that they're on the side of the religious right.

    I know it's in-fashion to bash Microsoft on this site, but the fellow who wrote this article takes any sort of GBLA equality achievements with a grain of salt. Kind of like giving a donation to a charity the first time around, and being called stingy for not doing so every time.

    Sure, it's disappointing that they backed off. Sure, I hope they change their mind, and I hope plenty of people call them. But to call them bigoted for turning neutral (and not against) is simply going too far.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:Bad. by computerme · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      >Just because Microsoft changed their stance from pro to neutral (not against), this makes them bigoted?

      Well it certainly does not make them courageous...

      A trait we all should work towards having...

      Shame on microsoft.

    2. Re:Bad. by rpdillon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right on.

      I think the answer to most discrimination issues *is* to be totally neutral (not to discrimination, but to whatever basis people are using to dicriminate). Black? White? Latino? Gay? Lesbian? Bi? I don't care...how well can you program? What experience do you have unit testing? Are you familiar with functional programming methods?

      I'm usually against MS, but on this, I agree...they shouldn't have a position on issues like this; these issues are personal and irrelevant to the business. Making it out like they're suddenly a "bad guy" because of THIS, of all things, is kind of absurd.

    3. Re:Bad. by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      An Apple a day keeps the bigot away?

      Yeah, because Apple has been such a champion of gay rights. Oh wait...no they haven't done anything.

      MS may be backing down in the face of a country that (in case you missed the last election) is rabidly against the gay rights movement. But at least they tried to do something.

      When is the last time Steve Jobs ever tried to do anything for gays (or for Africa, or any number of other charitable causes that Bill Gates gives big $$ to)?

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    4. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup,

      Bill G is considered one of the biggest philanthropists of the time but lets all bash him becasue he runs Windows.

    5. Re:Bad. by PaxTech · · Score: 1
      Heh.. I bet myself when I clicked on this story to read the comments that the top post would contain some kind of attack on Bush, even though this story has nothing at all to do with him, and that it would be rated +5 insightful.

      I guess I win. :) The Bush bashers are currently more in fashion on /. than the MS bashers are, so it was an easy call.

      --
      All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
    6. Re:Bad. by Guano_Jim · · Score: 1

      As much as I am for civil rights and gay marriage, this is inflammatory. Just because Microsoft changed their stance from pro to neutral (not against), this makes them bigoted? I don't buy that. I don't buy that at all.

      From TFA:

      Some proponents of the legislation expressed shock and anger at the company's decision, characterizing it as a capitulation to extreme social conservatives that appeared to run directly counter to the company's internal policies which stress diversity and are considered gay-friendly; Microsoft, for instance, offers domestic-partner benefits.

      They changed from pro to neutral after being threatened with a boycott from a single pastor.

      Cowardly, to say the least.

    7. Re:Bad. by EconolineCrush · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I dunno, all those iMac colors were a little gay. Ditto for the pastels with the iPod Mini.

    8. Re:Bad. by Monf · · Score: 2, Informative
      "a country that (in case you missed the last election) is rabidly against the gay rights movement."

      wtf?

      it's not the country, it's an irritatingly loud, trolling, flamebating mob of right-wing religous fundamentalist extremist zealots...

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    9. Re:Bad. by Politburo · · Score: 1

      MS may be backing down in the face of a country that (in case you missed the last election) is rabidly against the gay rights movement.

      In case YOU missed the last election, and the 6 months that have followed, the nation is not unanimous when it comes to gay rights. For instance, Connecticut, with a Republican governor, is about to pass a bill creating civil unions in that state. This bill came about purely as a result of legislative action. There were no courts involved. My state of New Jersey has created domestic partnerships. While these don't go as far as civil unions, it's still a step in the right direction, and far from "rabidly against the gay rights movement." We also recently had a governor declare that he was gay, and based on public polls, there was little negative backlash (there was backlash about the associated scandal, but that's another story).

    10. Re:Bad. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      An Apple a day keeps the bigot away?

      What, do you suggest this gay thingy has anything to do with Apple users?

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    11. Re:Bad. by Decameron81 · · Score: 1

      You don't know but I am clapping at what you just said.

      --
      diegoT
    12. Re:Bad. by AuntieC · · Score: 1

      Just because Microsoft changed their stance from pro to neutral (not against), this makes them bigoted?

      No, it doesn't. It simply makes them indifferent.

      Active hatred I can handle. This is, somehow, worse.

    13. Re:Bad. by rtkluttz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It isn't bashing, it isn't homophobia, it isn't bigotry and "coming out" and saying something isn't wrong just because the current political climate (Political Correctness) says we shouldn't say something doesn't make it right. I am not the "Christian Right" and am simply Christian.

      Being gay is wrong. It says so in the Bible. Just because "your" views may differ doesn't mean that I am a bigot, homophobe, or anything else. It simply means that I am Christian.

      I am Christian and I am also quite often wrong as I would be if I were to steal something. I havn't discriminated by saying something is wrong. I am not uneducated because I have a view different than yours or because I have faith in God.

      I also am not posting this to be inflammatory or to provoke. So moderators.. use your mod points wisely. This is simply an alternative view that is shared by most Christians.

      --
      Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    14. Re:Bad. by Ieshan · · Score: 1

      Here's my question. How are you evaluating those people in their ability to program?

      Because if it's by evaluating them through looking at their past performance, often, their past performance will be colored by the fact that they faced discrimination in the workplace that hindered their ability to work on things like group projects and technical collaborations.

      That's why you shouldn't be neutral. You should recognize that those people faced problems in succeeding that other people didn't have to face on account of their minority status. This recognition should lend you to give extra weight to their application, not consider everyone part of an equal and fair meritocracy.

      It isn't an equal and fair meritocracy. That's why people fail on account of their minority status.

    15. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft withdrew its support from the bill without explanation after an anti-gay people preacher complained loudly about the support. This can only be considered Microsoft being against non-discrimination, i.e., for bigotry. Don't even begin to compare this to Bush. Cite a single significant example of Bush changing a position (not counting violating campaign promises). There is no comparison.

      Even more sickening is that you bring up Bush that anti-gay bigot as your redemption for Microsoft's ill behavior. I suspect you are a bigot yourself.

    16. Re:Bad. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that they also shouldn't have employee benefits for heterosexual domestic partners?

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    17. Re:Bad. by Monf · · Score: 1
      Ah, the Bible.

      Isn't it scary how a very old book gives people the courage and selfrightousness to do horrible and unspeakable acts, as well as the comfort to be bigots, murderers, discriminators, etc...?

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    18. Re:Bad. by Sarkohma · · Score: 2, Informative

      Being gay is wrong. It says so in the Bible.

      The Bible also says that it is alright to sell women into slavery and other ludicrous things. I understand that you believe strongly in the documents of your faith, but I really doubt that Jesus would approve of discrimination towards anyone for any reason, or any form of hate, even if they are a "sinner"

    19. Re:Bad. by mrisaacs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are entitled to your belief and opinion. You are not entitled to inflict them on others whose beliefs and opinions differ from your own. I come from a religeous background as well, but mine does not include an intolerance for Gays or Lesbians. Why should your religeous belief trump mine?

      Gays and Lesbians are not asking for special treatment, they are asking for equal treatment under the law.

      If you replace Gay/Lesbian with Black, Oriental, Jewish, Moslem, Buddhist, Christian, etc., you should see my point.

      You don't need to change your view. You need to realize that not everyone shares it, and that even if you are the majority, you live in a society that should aspire to protect its minorities.

      Intolerance has lead to more grief in this world than anything else.

      --
      ...carrier dead.....
    20. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Being gay is wrong. It says so in the Bible. Just because "your" views may differ doesn't mean that I am a bigot, homophobe, or anything else. It simply means that I am Christian.

      Just because it's your religious belief, doesn't mean it's not bigoted. Being a Christian is not a free pass. The origin of your belief is irrelevant - if you believe that being gay is wrong, then are are a bigot, more or less by definition.

      This is one problem with religions in general. They teach people to discriminate - homosexuality is a frequent target, but some religions also discriminate against women or ethnic minorities. When they do those things, it's bigotry. Just because it's religiously motivated doesn't make it any less repellant.

      Your analogy with stealing is flawed. Theft affects others, which is why we consider it wrong (and make it criminal). Being gay does not, and frankly shouldn't be anyone else's business.

    21. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christians are the USA's Taliban. Maybe someone will come in and liberate us?

    22. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the n-millionth time: homosexual special rights is not a civil rights issue. A black man doesn't choose to be black. A woman doesn't choose to be a woman. A person DOES choose their partner. And if homosexuality is just as legitimate a choice as heterosexuality, then where would humanity be if everyone chose to be homosexual?

    23. Re:Bad. by srussell · · Score: 1
      This is the same kind of black and white reasoning that George W. Bush uses. "You're either with us, or you're with the terrorists."

      No, it is more like saying "You either approve of the 13th amendment, or you're a racist." There's a difference.

      Although, you're fundamentally right; MS is going neutral because they think it will be better for business, not because they've suddenly become intolerant of gays and lesbians.

      Of course, this just emphasizes the total lack of any ethics in the company; no matter which side you're on, a person (or company) who changes an opinion for expediency is always pathetic. Successful, perhaps, but certainly pathetic, unethical, and undependable.

      --- SER

    24. Re:Bad. by Dr.+GeneMachine · · Score: 1

      You are a bigot. You choose one part of the bible and stick it to others. Do you adhere to the food regulations in leviticus? Never wear clothes made of different fibres? etc. etc.
      If yes, I am sorry. If no - you're a bigot.

      --
      This comment does not exist.
    25. Re:Bad. by rtkluttz · · Score: 1

      I have not said that I am intolerant. I believe a gay person should the right to do anything that I can do.

      I do however still believe that being gay is wrong. I have not discriminated against anyone by saying that being gay is wrong. Even a gay person. No one says that someone discriminates if someone says stealing is wrong. The analogy is the same. People falsly believe that tolerance is the same thing as acceptance. You can tolerate and still not accept. I would fight for a gay persons right to do the same things that I do, but I STILL would tell a gay person to their face that what they do is wrong, please change your ways.

      --
      Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    26. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      • Being gay is wrong. It says so in the Bible.

      Which makes it even more so that gay people should get the same rights as everyone else, due to a little thing called the First Amendment, where the government CAN NOT make ANY laws "respecting the establishment of a religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof".

      You may thing it's wrong, but you have NO RIGHT to enforce that on other people by denying them equal rights. It's not "special" rights, it's the SAMN DAMNED RIGHTS AS EVERYONE ELSE.

      And if you claim that it's justified to give some people less rights than others (notwithstanding violent criminals, during their incarceration), then you are a BIGOT. Full stop.
    27. Re:Bad. by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      Black? White? Latino? Gay? Lesbian? Bi? I don't care...how well can you program? What experience do you have unit testing? Are you familiar with functional programming methods?

      I'm usually against MS, but on this, I agree...they shouldn't have a position on issues like this; these issues are personal and irrelevant to the business.
      Your stated belief and support of Microsoft in this matter are actually unrelated. Microsoft's actions were never different from "Black? White? Latino? Gay? Lesbian? Bi? I don't care...how well can you program? What experience do you have unit testing?" They were supporting legislation that would help put all their employees on equal footing.

      To "be totally neutral" while one and only one segment of your employees are stepped on is not neutral.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    28. Re:Bad. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Amen, Jesus often took "sinners" under his wing and provided them with many things, a providing a "sinner" with a job if they are qualified, is definatly something Jesus would do. Now of course he would also try to show them the light in an honorable polite manor, something few Christians (I am a Christian btw) seem to know how to do. Most are interested in bashing people because they are "sinners" as opposed to forgiving them for their sins and helping them find God.

    29. Re:Bad. by rtkluttz · · Score: 1

      This is always the battle cry of the non-religious.

      "You do this wrongly so they should be able to do this wrongly".

      Two wrongs don't make a right. Everytime that I do something that the Bible says not to do.. then I am also wrong. Just as wrong as a homosexual. We both should have our inalienable rights, and I would fight for them for both straight and gay. That is however irrelevant. Before the eyes of God, if we have done something that the Bible says not to do then we are WRONG. That is not bigoted or anything else.

      --
      Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    30. Re:Bad. by alecks · · Score: 1

      and by 'mob' you mean 59million people who voted to keep bush in office.

    31. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it's disappointing that they backed off.

      I have no fucking idea why a software company would be involved in this in the first place. Or why it's on Slashdot... oh wait, I forgot: page hits.

    32. Re:Bad. by Monf · · Score: 1
      No, I don't think the 59 million people who voted Bush into office were galvanized together in massive support to suppress gay rights movements, but some of those 59 megs are part of a very vocal and threatening minority of the Republican party that most Republican politicians wish would just fall off the face of the earth...

      While I don't have the numbers, I certainly don't believe that a majority of them want to institutionalize or continue discrimination based on race, creed, gender, religion, OR sexual orientation...

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    33. Re:Bad. by Dr.+GeneMachine · · Score: 1

      Did I state that I'm non religious? Ahh... I see, religion means your specific flavor.
      But that aside - the question remains: why are you specifically picking out the biblical ban on homosexuality to rant about? Why don't you spend your energy promoting an anti-shellfish law?

      --
      This comment does not exist.
    34. Re:Bad. by bushidocoder · · Score: 1

      They're not going neutral - they are not dropping their extensive domestic partner benefits for employees. They're just not publically supporting a bill that tried to force other companies to have the same types of benefits plans that Microsoft already offers, and has no intention of backing off of.

    35. Re:Bad. by blamanj · · Score: 1

      If they haven't done anything, why are they considered one of the top gay- and lesbian- freindly companies in the US?

    36. Re:Bad. by PaxTech · · Score: 1
      Two wrongs don't make a right. Everytime that I do something that the Bible says not to do.. then I am also wrong. Just as wrong as a homosexual.

      But you don't see religious people picketing Red Lobster with signs that say "God Hates Shellfish Eaters" passing out tracts and trying to pass laws against eating shellfish, and saying anyone who eats shellfish is going to hell. Why not? According to Leviticus, it's just as wrong as being gay.

      Hell, Christians seem to get more bent out of shape about gays than they do about people breaking any of the actual Ten Commandments. Compared to the Commandments, the gay thing seems pretty minor to the Big Guy in the sky. I mean if it's SUCH a big deal who people choose to fall in love with how come it's not at least the Eleventh Commandment or something?

      --
      All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
    37. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, 'cuz look at all the Linux companies supporting this bill....

    38. Re:Bad. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      I'm not bashing, or being phobic, or anything, but it's really not surprising you feel that way if you've been taught Christian beliefs/values, etc.

      Being Christian is wrong. Logic and reason tell is this. Even a cursory examination of the bible is enough to show that it's full of contradictions and errors, and the values it instills are dubious at best, and downright dangerous at worst.

      I am not posting this to be inflammatory or to provoke, so moderators.. use your mod points wisely. This is simply an alternative view that is shared by most atheists.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    39. Re:Bad. by darthwader · · Score: 1

      I'm a Christian, and I think that it is morally wrong to be untrue to how God made you. If God makes you homosexual, then it is an insult to God and yourself to pretend to be hetro, or to be celebate.

      So, one Christian says that being gay is wrong. Others say that being gay is OK, but acting on it is wrong (i.e. those who say all homosexuals must be celebate). A third says if you're gay, then acting gay is right.

      The world is complicated. Not everyone agrees. That's all part of the wonderful diversity of God's creation.

      I'm not trying to start an argument with the parent poster. I just want people to realize that there is a variety of views even within christianity.

      (Oh, and to get to the actual topic of the article, I'll say that MS is fully within thier rights to have a neutral stance. It's nice if they go out of their way to make the world a better place, but they are a software company, not a civil rights movement, and they can decide to focus their efforts on software instead of civil rights if that's what they want.)

      --
      I hate it when I make a joke and I get modded "+5 insightful". Mod the stupid comments "funny", not "insightful", pleas
    40. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's my question. How are you evaluating those people in their ability to program?

      Because if it's by evaluating them through looking at their past performance, often, their past performance will be colored by the fact that they was hired by a fucking moron who thought he was better than the populace through reversing imagined discrimination.

      That's why you shouldn't be neutral. You should recognize that their collegues faced problems in succeeding that other people didn't have to face on account of their majority status. This recognition should lend you to give less weight to their application, not consider everyone part of an equal and fair meritocracy. It isn't an equal and fair meritocracy. That's why people is hired on account of their minority status.

    41. Re:Bad. by cod3po37 · · Score: 1

      But the Bible also says, with more clarity, that DIVORCE is wrong...why isn't there a clamoring for a constitutional amendment to outlaw divorce?

      More people are affected directly or indirectly by heterosexual divorce in this country than could possibly be affected by gay marriage or ending workplace discrimination. Why aren't we working to end divorce? It seems like that is a bigger threat to the institution of marriage. I'm tired of Christians selectively picking out things their religion believes to be a sin that other people are doing and trying to write prohibitions against them into law. Did you know that Justice Scalia actually laments the fact that masturbation isn't regulated?

      I'm very glad you have faith in God if that rocks your world...but you don't get to ruin my life because you're superstitious. I really can't put it any plainer than that. I have no idea what happened between the Age of Reason and now but I thought most of this crap was already settled. We don't care how many angels can dance on the head of a pin because there aren't any angels. Personal Gods should be personal. And although I'm ever so happy that you can hear Him, I'm not confident enough in your faith that I should want to have you legislate for the rest of us what you think He told you.

      I'm sorry but you are uneducated. You apparently have no idea of the history of how certain terms in the bible have been translated and retranslated. How the Romans weeded out the various gospels that didn't agree with a strong centralized church. How the Bible is chock full of inconsistencies (starting with 2 creation stories in Genesis that don't match). And don't get me started on the fact that the Earth is not only 6,000 years old!

      An alternative view that is based on uneducated, antiquated, pseudo-scientific, superstitious mumbo jumbo should be kept to oneself. It has no place in rational discourse in a modern civil society.

      I'm sorry if this post offends but the time has come to say no more of this.

    42. Re:Bad. by cryptess · · Score: 1

      It's still hypocritical for you to demand Biblical obedience from others when you don't do so yourself. You cannot effectively take a thorn out of your brother's eye when you have a plank of wood in your own.

      I think it was Ghandi who said you should be the change you want to see in the world -- why don't more Christians do that, instead of ranting on about gays? It seems to agree with the 2x4 parable, at any rate.

    43. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a bigot. There are many Christians who do not believe that the Holy Bible says that homosexuality is wrong.

    44. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's your right to believe that homosexuality is wrong and it's even your right to try to amend the Constitution to outlaw it, but I beg that you consider the consequences of such an action and what road it leads us down as a nation. I believe it to be a misguided attempt by a portion of the country to impose on others their subjective beliefs. They are fundamentally uncomfortable with the notion of others expressing their freedom in ways that merely offend their sensibilities but have little to no impact on them otherwise.

      Social conservatives (theocrats) seem to have the somewhat common misconception that the law has its basis in religious morality. I ask you, why is murder illegal? Is it because God told Moses that it's a sin? No. It's illegal because to kill another without their consent is to deprive that person of their liberty. The purpose of the Constitution and our system of laws is to preserve freedom. Over time, that has been perverted by those that confuse their personal beliefs on morality with what should be the law, and also by those who while attempting to instill a subjective idea of "fairness" have curtailed freedoms without proper justification (not that it's always unjustified). To decode that last statement, generally speaking social conservatives curtail freedoms to stop "immorality," while liberals do so to instill "fairness." Two men having sex in the privacy of their bedroom in no way deprives you of your freedom no matter how repugnant you find the idea. I believe consenting adults should be able to do whatever they want with each. Once their actions pass from merely offending others to actually depriving others of their freedom, then that should be outlawed. Homosexuals aren't depriving you of any real freedoms but you are actively working to deprive them of theirs.

      I'm sure you are an intelligent person, but I doubt your worldview is internally consistent. For example, I'm guessing you consider yourself more patriotic than most, yet you seem to detest what America stands for and want to create a nation where merely offending others should be outlawed. Sound familiar? You're no better than the worst of P.C. thugs. In fact, you are far worse. While the intent of political correctness (though somewhat misguided) is to prevent hatred and hostility, your brand of it seems intent on encouraging both.

      Take some time to read Locke's The Second Treatise on Civil Government and Mill's On Liberty. You may also want to study the history of the Bible and how it was written and compiled to have a better idea about the basis for your beliefs. It's particulary interesting to study each book in light of when it was written.

    45. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a look around, and you'll find the Bush bashers are everywhere. Apparently most of the voters who put him in office don't speak out about it. Oh that's right, they got their way and have nothing to complain about. My bad!

    46. Re:Bad. by radish · · Score: 1

      If being a Christian led you to believe that the world was flat, or that 1=2, you'd still be wrong. I fully support your right to believe whatever you believe, but I reserve my right to label you how I see you. Hiding behind your religon ("but god told me to kill that man") is easy, and smacks of weakness to me.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    47. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Isn't it scary how a very old book gives people the courage and selfrightousness to do horrible and unspeakable acts, as well as the comfort to be bigots, murderers, discriminators, etc...?

      Likewise with the Constitution, my friend, likewise with the Constitution...

      With both books, there is simply more information available now that counteracts some of the things they say. Oh, but they can't be wrong, oh no. They are Sacred(tm).

    48. Re:Bad. by radish · · Score: 1

      I would fight for a bigoted, homophobic persons right to do the same things that I do, but I STILL would tell a bigoted, homophobic person to their face that what they do is wrong, please change your ways.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    49. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1

      Before the eyes of God, if we have done something that the Bible says not to do then we are WRONG. That is not bigoted or anything else.

      Yes, it is. You are trying to argue that because your motivation is religious, that your bigotry isn't bigoted. This is an invalid argument; the origin of your belief is irrelevant. A bigoted belief is bigoted whether it's based on religious doctrine, personal whim, or the phase of the moon.

    50. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But you don't see religious people picketing Red Lobster with signs that say "God Hates Shellfish Eaters" passing out tracts and trying to pass laws against eating shellfish, and saying anyone who eats shellfish is going to hell. Why not? According to Leviticus, it's just as wrong as being gay.

      You've hit the nail on the head here. The Bible is a different book to different people. A lot of it contradicts itself. So, you take the parts you like and dismiss the parts you don't. That's why you have fundamentalists, but also why you have good, compassionate Christians, too.

      There's nothing wrong with this: it's how the book should be used. Due to life experiences, we all see different truths in it, religious or non-religious.

    51. Re:Bad. by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 1
      much as I am for civil rights and gay marriage, this is inflammatory. Just because Microsoft changed their stance from pro to neutral (not against), this makes them bigoted? I don't buy that. I don't buy that at al

      You would understand imediately if you knew that the leader of GLEAM is Zapp Brannigan himself.

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
    52. Re:Bad. by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Microsoft wants their good performing gay and lesbian employees to have the same benefits and morale as their straight counterparts?

      Maybe they want their workers who are gay to be happy and as productive as their straight counter parts.

      Employement is a dual edged sword. The employer just wants results the cheapest and best way possible while the employee wants the best work environment, pay, and benefits for their family. Lower performance and job terminations happen when the needs are offballanced.

      My hunch is lawsuit prevention might have changed Microsoft's mind on this. Any termination no matter what the cause can be turned into a "poor old companyX fired me because I am gay boo hoo".

    53. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1

      I do however still believe that being gay is wrong. I have not discriminated against anyone by saying that being gay is wrong. Even a gay person. No one says that someone discriminates if someone says stealing is wrong. The analogy is the same. People falsly believe that tolerance is the same thing as acceptance. You can tolerate and still not accept. I would fight for a gay persons right to do the same things that I do, but I STILL would tell a gay person to their face that what they do is wrong, please change your ways.

      In the first place, your stealing analogy is broken. Theft negatively affects other individuals and society as a whole, which is why we criminalize it. Being gay does not adversely affect others, and isn't really anyone elses's damn business.

      In the second place, I have a quick question for you. What happens if you substitute "black" for "gay" in your little rant? Would it be okay to go around telling black people that you tolerate but don't accept them, and that they should change their ways? Or would that be bigoted? If you believe, as most people do, that it would in fact be bigoted, please explain why you believe it's not bigoted to treat gays in that way?

    54. Re:Bad. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Being gay is wrong. It says so in the Bible.

      I say this as a fellow Christian: don't worry about it. Whoever of you is without sin, let him cast the first stone.

      Allow them to do whatever they want on Earth. They've heard that the Bible "says" that homosexuality is "wrong", and no more amount of ranting will change the minds of those that haven't changed yet. (Honestly, has any true gay (not an undecided) gone back in the closet in response to the Bible?) If indeed homosexuality is wrong, God will take care of it soon enough.

      You do believe God is capable of taking care of it, right? We're here to spread the Good News, not to make moral judgments in His place.

    55. Re:Bad. by Cecil · · Score: 1

      So, inquiring minds want to know:

      Why DID they vote Bush into office then?

    56. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're exactly right. To judge others is to put yourself above God which is blasphemous.

      I just can't figure out why these people chose homosexuality as their pet sin to rail against. Why not spread the word about the condemning of eating shellfish in Leviticus? Seems they'd save a lot more souls that way as I'm guessing there are a lot more shrimp lovers than same-sex lovers.

    57. Re:Bad. by Monf · · Score: 1
      wartime president? don't change horses mid-stream? Democrat's message too advanced for them? :-p

      Are you suggesting that the gay rights issue was the catalyst that prompted 59 million votes for Bush?

      --
      Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
    58. Re:Bad. by Quantum+Skyline · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Being a Christian is not a free pass. The origin of your belief is irrelevant - if you believe that being gay is wrong, then are are a bigot, more or less by definition.

      Correct me if I am wrong, but doesn't the Bible say to hate the sin and not the sinner? As far as I know, its ok to be gay and be a member of the Roman Catholic Church, but it is not ok to perform homosexual acts. (I can't speak about other Christian denominations.)

    59. Re:Bad. by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      When you try to codify your moral views in a secular state, it is wrong and it is bad. Furthermore, I regard it as treason. You just want to legally discriminate against gays today, but what happens when you come after me because I don't look at Baptism the same way as you?

      It's happened before, among Christians of European descent no less. We resolved over 200 years ago to keep religion and government separated in this country. Either get with the program or go find someone else's country to screw up. Keep your religious beliefs out of our laws. The state has NO OPINION on moral issues.

      By definition, you cannot have religious freedom without a secular state.

      I don't give a damn how many Christians share your view, our government isn't Christian. On the other hand, it is charged with protecting minority rights from the tyranny of the majority.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    60. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're probably right. I wouldn't know, I'm not a Christian. Don't see how it affects my argument, though.

      My point is that bigotry is orthogonal to religious belief. GP poster was essentially saying "I'm not bigoted, I'm just a good Christian". I'm merely pointing out that a religious motivation doesn't magically turn a bigoted belief into a non-bigoted one.

    61. Re:Bad. by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      You do realize that you are making a moral relativist defense of Christianity, right?

    62. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because it's your religious belief, doesn't mean it's not bigoted. Being a Christian is not a free pass. The origin of your belief is irrelevant - if you believe that being gay is wrong, then are are a bigot, more or less by definition.


      Eh... no. Not quite correct.

      My personal Christian viewpoint is that homosexual relations are a sin. You don't have to like it. You don't have to agree with it. I may even tell some homosexuals that.

      I'll also state that I'm not going to treat them any differently than I would anyone else; if I did, I couldn't really claim to be Christian. Does that still mean I'm bigoted? Or does that mean I just have different beliefs?

      bigot, n. a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices.

      I guess it does, by strict definition. Unfortunately the word 'bigot' also has negative undercurrents to it, yet I defy you to tell me that I don't have a right to the particular beliefs I choose. Do you really want to use that strong of a word to describe my position on the issue?
    63. Re:Bad. by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      No, if he irrationally discriminated against gay people, i.e. if the belief affected his behaviour to the point that it became illogical and inconsistent, he would be a bigot. Lowering one's esteem for someone due to a sin is hardly either, as his esteem for you will probably drop the same amount for any other sin you might commit. It's asking him to lighten up on one particular sin which would make his actions illogical an unbalanced with regards to sexuality, i.e. if he followed your advice, THEN he would be a bigot.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    64. Re:Bad. by jayloden · · Score: 1

      bigot: "A bigot is a prejudiced person who is intolerant of any opinions differing from his own"

      (From the dictionary)

      Believing that something is wrong is not the same as being intolerant. I also believe that it's wrong, but I am not intolerant. I will not discriminate against or take hateful action against someone because of their sexual, religious or political preference.

      You're right; being a Christian is not a free pass. Neither does disagreement constitute bigotry or intolerance; simply disagreement.

      -Jay

    65. Re:Bad. by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      And by advice, I of course refer to the implied "you should stop holding this ideal" which I think is the background message. I guess if you were intending to convey "You should stop following the bible altogether", then your advice would, in fact lead to consistency. Stupid communication, so hard to correctly interpret tone.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    66. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nature discriminates homosexuals too... if all people were homosexual, we wouldn't have this discussion now...

      don't get me wrong... I don't care where you put your dick... but technically, if you are homosexual, you've got a bug...

    67. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's an accurate word to use. If it makes you uncomfortable to be described that way then the solution is not to attempt to redefine the word to include a 'religion exemption', but instead to question your own position.

    68. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1
      According to the OED definition of 'bigot' a bigot is (among other definitions):

      2. A person obstinately and unreasonably wedded to a particular religious creed, opinion, or ritual.

      Being obstinately wedded to the opinion that being gay is 'wrong' is, I would argue, unreasonable (i.e. not supported by a rational basis), and therefore bigoted, by dictionary definition.

    69. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has it ever occurred to you that there's a remote possibility that perhaps the Bible is somewhat flawed?

      Is it not possible that the human race may have advanced in the last two thousand years? Some of us like to put the book in its historical context rather than taking every word literally.

      Just a thought, this is simply an alternative view.

    70. Re:Bad. by Quantum+Skyline · · Score: 1

      I'm merely pointing out that a religious motivation doesn't magically turn a bigoted belief into a non-bigoted one.

      That's fine and very true, and you're right, it does not affect your argument. I think that it was the way you presented your argument that rubbed me the wrong way.

      I know I'm tangenting here, but the problem with religion and homosexuality is that some religions treat the definition of a 'homosexual lifestyle' (term used loosely here, but invariably includes homosexual acts) as 'intrinsically flawed'. The flaw, however, needs to be applied to both sides.

      From the religious standpoint, we have 'hate the sin and not the sinner.' Religious people need to remember that the majority of religions support free choice, but part of the job of being religious is to set the example and point out errors. Because we're human, the implementation of that usually doesn't work out, but the intention is there. (Yes, I know, that doesn't excuse some acts.) Remember, a religion is a package deal, and those who choose to follow a religion need to accept its tenets. Going about preaching the Word the wrong way is probably a sin. Religion is not teaching bigotry as you put it, but it comes across that way sometimes when religious point out an error in decision making from their viewpoint. The 'from their viewpoint' is the essential part here.

      But hey, I'm no apologist. I do, however get asked these questions from a Roman Catholic point of view, and I try my best to not be an arse when explaining the way the Church looks at it.

      From the other side, homosexual 'activists' (term used loosely here) need to remember that religion does not 'hate' gay people. They need to accept that religions say that homosexuality isn't part of a religious life. I get pissed when I see activists blasting religious people, and I get equally pissed when the reverse happens.

      However, as with all passionate debates, people don't think properly, which is why every debate I see about this usually results in someone getting agitated and making some public comment that exacerbates the issue.

      I hope that made sense. Its hard to explain.

    71. Re:Bad. by rtkluttz · · Score: 1

      It is faith plain and simple. I say that gay is wrong because it says so in the Bible. It does not say that black or any other skin color is wrong.

      --
      Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    72. Re:Bad. by mrisaacs · · Score: 1

      Do you actually listen to yourself? You say:

      "I have not said that I am intolerant."

      and then go on to:

      "...but I STILL would tell a gay person to their face that what they do is wrong, please change your ways."

      Your comments are full of intolerance. Do you tell members of other religeons that they're beliefs are wrong when they conflict with yours?

      And if you truly believe and are not just saying:

      "...a gay person should the right to do anything that I can do."

      Then you would support legislation to give gays complete protection under the law, regardless of our personal beliefs.

      --
      ...carrier dead.....
    73. Re:Bad. by elemental23 · · Score: 1

      Could it have anything to do with the old Apple logo?

      --
      I like my women like my coffee... pale and bitter.
    74. Re:Bad. by rtkluttz · · Score: 1

      This is the most flawed of any arguments.

      Only ONE has ever been perfect on earth. To say that because one person sins, he cannot point out sin in another is ludicrous. I sin. Sometimes I do it knowingly with regret later, other times I may sin and in the heat of the moment may not even notice. I expect to be told of my sin. I ask for forgiveness from God. That is the way it is supposed to be. If your argument held any truth, then there would be anarchy because no human would be able to point out sin in any other persons actions.

      --
      Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    75. Re:Bad. by cryptess · · Score: 1

      So you're disagreeing with a Biblical passage?

    76. Re:Bad. by Trifthen · · Score: 1

      Oh noez! Your imaginary invisible man, written about in a storybook condemns gays! Whatever will them poor gay people do!?!!??!?!??!!!111one!!1

      --
      Read: Rabbit Rue - Free serial nove
    77. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1

      It is faith plain and simple. I say that gay is wrong because it says so in the Bible. It does not say that black or any other skin color is wrong.

      It's a thought experiment. I realise that the Bible doesn't actually say that. I'm asking you to imagine how your argument would run if you substituted 'gay' for 'black'. Would the mere fact of its appearance in the Bible exempt it from being bigotry in that case too? I would argue not.

      Just because it's your faith, doesn't automatically exempt it from also being bigotry. Quite the reverse, in fact.

    78. Re:Bad. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Only ONE has ever been perfect on earth

      Are you sure about that now?
      I presume you mean Jesus.. but what about Asa? He was perfect:

      2 Chr.15:17
      "The heart of Asa was perfect all his days."
      Well.. except of course, when he wasn't...
      2 Chr.16:12
      "And Asa ... was diseased in his feet, until his disease was exceeding great: yet in his disease he sought not to the LORD, but to the physicians."

      Noah was perfect, too
      Gen.6:9
      "Noah was a just man and perfect."
      Gen.7:1
      "For thee [Noah] have I seen righteous before me."
      Though it has to be said, this doesn't sound too righteous and perfect:
      Gen 9:21,22 And he [Noah] drank of the wine, and was drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent.
      And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without.

      And let's not forget good ol' Job
      Job 1:1, 8
      "Job ... was perfect and upright, and on that feared God, and eschewed evil."

      But of course, everybody knows there has NEVER been a perfect man or woman

      1 Kg.8:46
      "There is no man that sinneth not."
      2 Chr.6:36
      "There is no man which sinneth not."
      Ec.7:20
      "For there is not a just man upon earth, that doeth good, and sinneth not."

      You know, it's a good thing the bible doesn't ever contradict itself, because that would get really confusing, and might even undermine it's authority.
      All quotes from King James version btw.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    79. Re:Bad. by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      The bible was used to justify slavery I grew up Catholic, I learned you can use the bible to justify anything you want. from http://www.thisischurch.com/sermon/ethics.htm Slavery was justified by Genesis 9:24. Races were considered descendants of the sons of Noah - white people from Jahphet, Jewish people from Shem (Hence Semitic), and Black people from Ham. Ham's descendants were destined to be slaves. Apartheid. The arguments used to show Biblical support for slavery have also provided racists with a biblical justification for segregation and apartheid. Humans were seen as either 'Aryan', 'Semitic' or 'African'. (See also Deut 32:8 & Acts 17:26)

    80. Re:Bad. by tc · · Score: 1

      From the other side, homosexual 'activists' (term used loosely here) need to remember that religion does not 'hate' gay people. They need to accept that religions say that homosexuality isn't part of a religious life. I get pissed when I see activists blasting religious people, and I get equally pissed when the reverse happens.

      It's an easily observable fact that there are many people in the US (and elsewhere) who lobby quite hard to deny homosexuals rights afforded to other citizens, and who cite a religious motivation for those efforts. I'm not saying that you, personally, fall into those groups, but it's pretty hard to deny that they do exist.

      To those on the receiving end of such efforts, hair-splitting distinctions along the lines of "we don't hate you, we just hate what you do" appear self-serving at best. It's a cheap get-out clause, allowing the perpetrators to sidestep otherwise awkward moral questions, at least to themselves.

    81. Re:Bad. by rzebram · · Score: 1

      Just because it "says so" in the bible doesn't mean that that is what it actually means. Have you ever tried reading the Bible literally (I'm assuming so, here)? You'll notice that if you take everything it says literally, it makes absolutely no sense, things are always contradicting themselves or don't make any logical sense to figuring anything out. The 10 commandments were broken before they even got off the mountain, so maybe we shouldn't take them, just like the rest of the book, as a literal interpretation as what is trying to be said. Perhaps, then, if you take the concept figuratively and apply it to yourself, then you may actually learn something about yourself.

      I'm sure this will be an unpopular statement and will be modded as flamebait, but have you ever considered internalizing these sorts of things? If you're having such a reaction to this concept, take it inside and apply it to yourself, figure out why you're reacting, and maybe learn something about yourself you never knew. Everything that was written in the Bible happens within you on a daily basis (see, if we take it literally, it makes no sense, but if we take it figuratively and actually take the time to apply it, you begin to notice things). You have an image within you of every last character in the stories and of every last person you meet. When something pisses you off, it's trying to show you something. When you react, you're meant to learn something. This is more of a rant than anything else, but for God's sake, don't take the damn thing literally and stop with your discrimination, you and every other person (self-inclusive) on this planet are homosexual (figuratively, remember), so by criticizing them or calling them wrong, you're only insulting yourself.

      I am really hoping that we don't have the entire story with this, but maybe organized religion really has become such a cult (M-W says: " A system or community of religious worship and ritual.") that they have this much influence over Microsoft. Bah, what a world we live in.

    82. Re:Bad. by rzebram · · Score: 1

      Here's a quick hint: Read the bible figuratively, as an interpretation of yourself and what you go through, and it won't contradict itself. Perhaps that's why it's written this way? So we don't read it literally?

    83. Re:Bad. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      If the whole thing's just one big abstract metaphor then I suspect I'd be better off with a copy of Alice in Wonderland.
      Nice to know that the universe is in the hands of a God who's deliberately vague and nonsensical though.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    84. Re:Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "This is one problem with religions in general. They teach people to discriminate"

      OK, maybe you're trolling with a comment like that, but I figure this is as good a place to jump into the fray as any. I consider myself religious and I work at Microsoft, which with the statements made against religion and against Microsoft so far, probably makes me something of a minority here.

      I can say that my religion's teachings have helped me find personal spiritual peace and have provided a doctrinal foundation for unconditionally loving others.


      And what I like is that my religious beliefs are completely in harmony with the culture at Microsoft. I have a picture of my wife on my desk, others have pictures of their same-sex domestic partner. This is not a problem at Microsoft. Someone in an earlier post said they couldn't do that at their employer and they had to keep everything hush-hush or something. On my team at Microsoft we're all busting our chops at our jobs and we have a mutual respect and trust of each other's technical skills regardless of whatever other differences we have outside of work.

      If discussion does shift to religion, politics, or sex, we can agree to disagree, and get on with putting in an honest day's work for an honest day's pay. Oh wait, this crowd doesn't believe in getting paid to write software. Well, for what it's worth, my religion doesn't believe in paid clergy. So I'll confess, maybe some information was meant to be free. :)
    85. Re:Bad. by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      You would understand imediately if you knew that the leader of GLEAM is Zapp Brannigan himself.

      Oh, Zap... He was just born to wear that hot unisex Captain's uniform.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    86. Re:Bad. by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Neutrality is apathy. Allowing oppression to continue without working against it is to be complicit. Sheep are evil.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    87. Re:Bad. by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Oh, go figure. That makes a hell of a lot of things bigoted, then. Seems to take all the impact out of the word, then, as it would make things like "obstinately refusing to let the madman burn down the orphanage" an indication of bigotry.


      Oh, well, one less thing I have to take as an insult.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  4. Uh... by sjrstory · · Score: 5, Funny

    Anyone else read this as Microsoft Abandons Gay Bill?

    1. Re:Uh... by Jakeypants · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, I made a similar mistake. I thought Gay Rights Bill was a new Microsoft mascot that went the way of Bob.

    2. Re:Uh... by xutopia · · Score: 1
  5. Could it be that business interests... by sharkfish · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...come before social interests? Nah. Couldn't be.

    1. Re:Could it be that business interests... by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Funny

      Of course. They're worried about competition from lesbian linux.

    2. Re:Could it be that business interests... by theodicey · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Actually, aside from the basic human rights issue of anti-discrimination, being gay-friendly is in microsoft's business interests.

      Gay customers buy a lot of computers, and they tend to be cultural trend-setters or bellweathers, i.e. the people who Microsoft is trying to attract from Apple.

      Also, large companies have a real interest in ensuring that their homebase becomes a culturally vibrant area which attracts professionals and creative types. Gay-friendly laws encourage cultural vibrancy and improve the hiring pool, since people won't live in cities with a reputation for intolerance. Just look at Procter & Gamble's opposition to the Ohio anti-gay constitutional amendment.

      (Although, being based in Cleveland, P&G had a little more incentive than MS...)

    3. Re:Could it be that business interests... by E_elven · · Score: 1

      That is, actually, Cincinnati. In the elections they did help repeal a previously established discriminatory gay bill the city had.

      --
      Marxist evolution is just N generations away!
    4. Re:Could it be that business interests... by schon · · Score: 1

      Gay customers buy a lot of computers, and they tend to be cultural trend-setters or bellweathers, i.e. the people who Microsoft is trying to attract from Apple.

      I'm sorry, but could you please *TRY* to present gays in a more stereotypical way? I notice you didn't once use the word "flaming" or put your arms on your hips and talk with a lisp.

      And next time, you should to prefix at least one sentence with "there is a gay guy at my work..."

    5. Re:Could it be that business interests... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      that was the most long winded way of saying "apple is gay" i have ever seen

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    6. Re:Could it be that business interests... by theodicey · · Score: 1

      I think "cultural trend-setter" is a stereotype almost anyone would appreciate. I'm not just talking about the cast of "Queer Eye" here.

      Anyway, whether the stereotype is accurate or not (and from what I've seen in San Francisco, there's a lot of truth to it) is beside the point. Businesses are making policy decisions based on the idea of transforming cities to make them more gay-friendly. Google "creative class", or look at this recent Salon article about the economist whose writings on the creative class are getting published in the Harvard Business Review and other business-friendly locations.

    7. Re:Could it be that business interests... by bani · · Score: 1

      I'd rather the CEO of MS/P&G oppose anti-gay bills on an ethical/moral basis rather than a purely economic one.

  6. But by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Windows is still gay.

    1. Re:But by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Honey, I think gay people have a little more taste than that horrid blue-and-green default XP theme..

    2. Re:But by johneee · · Score: 1

      And using the word "gay" as a derogatory term is exactly the kind of crap that causes hate to begin with. Damn I hate that.

      Unless you're anthromoporphising Windows and saying that it is sexually attracted to same-sex people, in which case it's ok.

      --
      - ------- There are ten kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary, and those who... Huh?
    3. Re:But by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Well, Windows does tend to enjoy homogeneous environments. ^_^

  7. How surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like anyone expected Microsoft to hold high moral principles. But you gotta wonder - how much of their customer share are really christian-fundamentalist-bigots?

    1. Re:How surprising by Bongzilla · · Score: 0

      what's more, this comes from a christ-as-jailer perspective of christianity--that side of the huge and multifaceted religion that would bring damnation on earth to avert sin.

      A long ways from the buddy jesus concept. I'm really glad everyone decided that was the wrong way to go. I guess a thumbs-up, affirmative type of religion is better left to a different time, or a different people, than us today.

      --

      ;///////////////////////////////////////////////// /
  8. yes indeed by nil5 · · Score: 0

    i for one welcome our new GLBT overlords.

    Looking forward to the official GNAA reply.

    Cheers!

  9. Entirely Predictable by Harodotus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That Microsoft did this actually this was fairly predictable, even though I too am a strong advocate of gay rights.

    Regardless of TFA says, what I think happened is that there is a some major customer of Microsoft software is strongly anti-gay rights (like the Bush run federal government or a large corporation or a major customer who allies itself with the religious right extremists mentioned in TFA) told Microsoft that they wouldn't purchase X 10s of thousands of copies of Office if Microsoft undermined their anti-gay political policies / laws.

    Microsoft wants to be known as socially responsible, but faced with a reduction of revenue, their greed took precedent and they became non-political on this issue. Of course they can't publicly admit this backroom concession.

    Surely no one here would be surprised that Microsoft went for the money before social responsibility. Heck most companies would do the same thing if enough money was at stake.

    --
    Its not users who are broken, it's systems not taking account their likely behaviour and fixing it technically.
    1. Re:Entirely Predictable by DaHat · · Score: 2

      What is this... 'social responsibility' you speak of?

      Rather than blaming greed... did you ever consider that maybe they did what was best for their shareholders and employees?

    2. Re:Entirely Predictable by hey · · Score: 4, Funny

      So you are saying:
      they are whores with no principles.

      I agree.

    3. Re:Entirely Predictable by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      In theory, corporations are suspose to advance the public good. This is the over riding principle being granted a charter. This goes beyond providing best value for thier shareholders.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    4. Re:Entirely Predictable by cOdEgUru · · Score: 1

      Yes.

      And have you heard of "Do no evil"?

      They took the easy way out. And that reflects poorly upon themselves as individuals, the company and its employees.

    5. Re:Entirely Predictable by DeusExMalex · · Score: 1

      and how is doing what's best for their shareholders and employees not greed?

    6. Re:Entirely Predictable by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I too am a strong advocate of gay rights.


      "Gay rights" often means different things to different people. Many people say that since "one man can marry one woman" regardless of whether they are gay or straight, and also that "no two men can marry" whether they are gay or straight, then their rights are already equal. Gays asking for men to marry men and women to marry women are asking for "additional" things, not equal things.
      --
      moo
    7. Re:Entirely Predictable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. This is one case where MS did the morally correct thing, or at least came close to it.

    8. Re:Entirely Predictable by bluprint · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What theory says they should "advance the public good", $this_way ?

      Certainly, any action that helps people, doesn't help all people the same amount. And increasing value for shareholders and employees is helpful to those people. Nothing says they have to help people in some particular manner that you get to choose dynamically.

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    9. Re:Entirely Predictable by Kwil · · Score: 1

      If you're given your charter for the express purpose of helping society, you don't get to decide what "helping society" entails. Society does.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    10. Re:Entirely Predictable by bluprint · · Score: 1

      Sorry, going into business doesn't mean you sell yourself into slavery, no matter how much you like to believe that.

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    11. Re:Entirely Predictable by tsotha · · Score: 1
      Regardless of TFA says, what I think happened is that there is a some major customer of Microsoft software is strongly anti-gay rights (like the Bush run federal government or a large corporation or a major customer who allies itself with the religious right extremists mentioned in TFA) told Microsoft that they wouldn't purchase X 10s of thousands of copies of Office if Microsoft undermined their anti-gay political policies / laws.

      Do you have any basis at all for this, or is it just the tinfoil talking? I realize lots of people have legitimate disagreements with the Bush administration, but how can you blame Bush for something you have no reason to believe actually occurred?

      Surely no one here would be surprised that Microsoft went for the money before social responsibility. Heck most companies would do the same thing if enough money was at stake.

      Corporations have no business trying to insert themselves into social politics. As a Microsoft shareholder I want management at Microsoft to refrain from spending my money persuing their personal convictions and get back to making me money. That's what corporations are for.

    12. Re:Entirely Predictable by bushidocoder · · Score: 1
      They're legally obligated to - in today's political climate, if they ignored a potentially very effective anti-Microsoft campaign when they were trying to roll out the Xbox2 in the consumer market over something completely unrelated to their business, the shareholders could sue management and would most likely win. Its an astronomical business risk given Microsoft's current positioning with the Xbox2, iTunes and Tiger, and one that has no potential happy ending for MS shareholders. No one is going to drop their Apple because Microsoft stuck to its guns on this issue - its lose / lose.

      That said, Microsoft's internal policies are amoung the most open I've ever seen - that's not changing. They're not changing tunes, they're just backing off a potentially very ugly PR campaign at a very bad time.

    13. Re:Entirely Predictable by cybermage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you give the grand parent too much credit in granting the premise that Corporate charters are granted to "advance the public good" at all. That might have been the intent 200+ years ago when they were debating creating a national bank; but, Corporations are all about shielding their owners from liability, unearned income (i.e., profit), and self-preservation.

      Because of the generally selfish nature of the artificial entities we call Corporations, one would expect that we will always advocate for legislation that is in their best interest, often at cross-purposes to the "public good."

      I would suggest that Corporations have no place in the political/legislative process what-so-ever -- advocating neither for nor against legislation; and, interestingly, that is also in the interest of share-holders as profits are not wasted on advocacy.

      As an aside, would the Free State Project support passing a gay-rights bill in New Hampshire; or, is that not the kind of Liberty you have in mind?

    14. Re:Entirely Predictable by geekee · · Score: 1

      "As an aside, would the Free State Project support passing a gay-rights bill in New Hampshire; or, is that not the kind of Liberty you have in mind?"

      Libertarians support gay rights, so I see no reason why this group would oppose such a measure.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    15. Re:Entirely Predictable by geekee · · Score: 1

      Actually, to clarify, Libertarians believe a business owner can hire and fire anyone for any reason, provided it doesn't violate an existing contract with the employee. They believe making rules about who you can hire and fire is a violation of the business owner's freedom. So, theoretically, a bigot could discriminate against gay people in hiring practices. On the other hand, Libertarians would have no problem with gay marriage between consenting adults. So when you talk about a gay-rights bill, it depends what you mean. Gay people would have the same rights as everyone else in a Libertarian society.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    16. Re:Entirely Predictable by brontus3927 · · Score: 1
      a large corporation or a major customer who allies itself with the religious right extremists

      The only company on the Fortune 500 that still discrimonates against GLBTQ's is Exxon

    17. Re:Entirely Predictable by bluprint · · Score: 1

      I entirely agree with you on every point, I gave credit to the grand parent, only as a premise for his own argument, that is, assuming the statement was true, what does it mean?

      Personally, I have nothing against someone who chooses to be gay. On one hand, as a christian, I do see it as a sin. Also as a christian, I see that I'm expected to show as much love and compassion to a gay person as anyone else (or rather, show love and compassion regardless of such things).

      On the other hand, as a fairly strict libertarian, I would not support such a bill. I think if you, as an employer/company, want to discriminate with regard to who you hire or otherwise have affairs (social, business or otherwise) with, you have that right. It kind of makes you an asshole for doing such, but whatever. The flip side to that coin is that, by arbitrarily eliminating a portion of the population you would hire, you are doing harm to your own business (since some of that portion would be beneficial for you to hire), so there is a cost to such behavior. I can't say what the Free State Project, as an organization, would support off hand. I would assume that since they associate themselves with libertarian principles, they would take a similar stance.

      On a related note, just to further clarify my position, I am against legalized marraige for homosexuals. I am also against legalized marraige for heterosexuals. Marraige is between you, your spouse, your family, friends and God (if you so choose). I don't think any government official or institution, in his capacity as such, should be involved in any manner.

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    18. Re:Entirely Predictable by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Microsoft wants to be known as socially responsible

      Well they just moved a peg away from evil in my book, and a mark twards morla responcibility.

    19. Re:Entirely Predictable by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 1

      "Gay rights" often means different things to different people. Many people say that since "one man can marry one woman" regardless of whether they are gay or straight, and also that "no two men can marry" whether they are gay or straight, then their rights are already equal. Gays asking for men to marry men and women to marry women are asking for "additional" things, not equal things.

      That's easy to solve: Make it illegal for a gay person to marry a person of the opposite sex and make it illegal for a straight person to marry a person of the same sex. Then everyone is treated basically equally AND nobody is forced into a potentially unhappy relationship.

      --
      That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
    20. Re:Entirely Predictable by miyako · · Score: 1

      In all fairness to microsoft, this may not be it at all.
      I'm going to preface my argument with the fact that I'm not a huge Microsoft fan, I use Linux and Mac at home, and I do believe that microsoft has taken part in (and still takes part in) unfair business practices.
      That said, the bottom line might have had little to do with this decision. The fact is that it's very misleading to say "X withdraws support for law Y" because it might not mean that "X is against Y". We don't know if microsoft withdrew support from this bill because of some change in stance on Gay rights. For all we know the law might have been something to the extent of "LGBT people have equal rights in the workplace.....and it's legal to kill children and rape kittens on the third tuesday of every month".

      --
      Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
    21. Re:Entirely Predictable by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      Well, you do have point in that Corps have no place in the political process. The Revolutionary war was over limiting the rights of Corporations as much as anything else. Just because we have lost sight of that does not change what is actually on the law books.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    22. Re:Entirely Predictable by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Nope. But it does mean you agree to the terms under which you're allowed to do so, otherwise you don't get to legally form the business.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    23. Re:Entirely Predictable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Right. The idea being that people won't patronize businesses that persecute customers or employees. We'll never know if that will work in practice, because it's never been tried. The gist of the idea is to get people to realize that they're wrong voluntarily instead of forcing it down their throats. It's much more likely to really get through to them that way.

      Notice how many businesses make a point of mentioning that they not only tolerate diversity, but encourage it. The reason is that it's good business sense. There's a better chance of good ideas coming out of a great big pool of ideas than a small pool. Also, you tend to learn a lot more about each other and respect each other much more when you work together.

      When I was in college, I worked at a coffee shop whose owner would only hire people who at least appeared to agree with her political views. She went out of business when a new shop moved into town (not Starbucks) that actively recruited people with diverse backgrounds. They still make the best drinks in town. Granted, that's not proof that diversity == successful business, but their employees are a lot more interesting, and better workers, than most of the people I worked with.

  10. They are beginning to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...Mac OS X as a threat (rightly, in my opinion), so they are now attacking the problem at the source.

    1. Re:They are beginning to see... by Jakeypants · · Score: 1

      Hey, just because I have an iPod full of U2...

    2. Re:They are beginning to see... by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Funny

      "...Mac OS X as a threat (rightly, in my opinion), so they are now attacking the problem at the source."

      Oh, enough with the FUD. Just because OSX was built from eunuchs doesn't mean that it appeals only to gays!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:They are beginning to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Lesbo's use it as well.

      Hmmmm lesbians... **cough**

    4. Re:They are beginning to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but only the bull-dyke-cant-tell-if-its-a-man-or-not lesbians use macs. The super hot lesbians actually don't use computers cause they're too busy having sex for our enjoyment.

  11. How are gays discriminated against at work? by elucido · · Score: 1

    Gay is not a race, its not like you have to tell all your employees your sexual orientation.

    1. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      Neither is religion but it's illegal to discrimante based on that as well.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    2. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Mr.+Mikey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I take it you never saw the movie "Philadelphia" ?

      Let's say you have a picture of your partner on your desk. You might be told that personal pictures are "inappropriate"... even though others have pictures of their wives or husbands on their desks. You might be passed over for promotion, get your hours cut, or fired for "poor performance" or "poor attitude."

      Sure, you can be gay at work without anyone knowing... if you never talk about your personal life... and you laugh along with everyone else when someone makes a "faggot" joke... and you express the same level of admiration for this week's actress or calendar model of choice... and you never refer to your partner in any way that sounds like you aren't "just friends"...

      --
      wants to be the first monkey to touch the monolith
    4. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by dkh2 · · Score: 1

      I believe the idea is, "you are not allowed to beat up the nerdy kid because you've never seen him on a date with a girl and because of that he must be queer."

      The real issue for the folks who try to stop this type of legislation is:

      Antidiscrimination laws do nothing to prevent people from being a member of any litigiously (sp?) protected group and doing all sorts of things that some think are a moral sin against God and nature. They're there to prevent the those people who think that from painting pink triangles and yellow stars on your house, and all manner of other nasty things that their religion prohibits them from doing anyway.

      --
      My office has been taken over by iPod people.
    5. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Kyrene · · Score: 1

      A good friend of mine who happens to be bi works in a law office where he endures a constant stream of anti-gay jokes on a regular basis. It's right up there with contributing to a "hostile work environment" and I'm sure if he went to HR he could complain about inappropriate sexual and/or bigoted humor, but still, the problems exist.

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    6. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by GeckoX · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ah yes, because you can only discriminate based on ones skin color right?

      Your post is actually discriminatory against gays in that it is marginalizing the gay community, and then justifying that by stating that that fact doesn't matter as it can be hidden.

      Just because something doesn't apply to you doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.

      --
      No Comment.
    7. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 0, Troll

      Homosexuality is not a religion. It is a choice you can make. You can go in and out of the group based on how you feel. You do not have to be able to prove it. Religion is protected because it is religion and there are consequences to the choice. Repression can involve violent uprising by the religion to maintain its ability to be what it is.

      Homosexuality is something you could claim to be or not claim to be totally based on how you want to avoid or not avoid something.

      If I found that homosexuals could get scholarships that i could not, i could just tell everyone I was a homosexual.

      Unlike being a black man. If I am a black man and feel that white people get more benefits, I cannot just go and tell someone I am white and expect them to beleive me. The same goes with age (though you can try to hide it), sexuality (again you can try to hide it), etc...

      With homosexuality you can just go and say "I am gay" and there would be no way to prove it, or deny it for either party. You couldnt ask them to prove it with sex, as there are plenty of heterosexuals that have never had sex, or kiss a guy if you say that you find it repulsive to kiss someone you do not love.

      It is a choice, no matter how much that choice may fundementally beleive. If you feel that Religion should not have protections on this, then you should move to a different country or lobby to have the 1st ammendmant change, I leave that as an excersize to the reader.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    8. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by magefile · · Score: 1

      You're exactly right. And the biggest problem is that people (gay and straight) don't feel a need to speak up. Racial/religious bigotry will quite often get a response from people who aren't being picked on; other minorities, including (but definitely not limited to) LGBTs, don't always get the same kind of support

    9. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sure, you can be gay at work without anyone knowing... if you never talk about your personal life... and you laugh along with everyone else when someone makes a "faggot" joke... and you express the same level of admiration for this week's actress or calendar model of choice... and you never refer to your partner in any way that sounds like you aren't "just friends"...

      replace gay with atheist and faggot with heathen and you have my life. Here in the midwest, I find myself having to pretend to be a christian just to survive, sometimes.

    10. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is interesting. You seem to know a lot about being gay. Do you think about this a lot?

      When you make the choice of who to love, is it up to another person to take that choice from you? If a white person choose to love a black person, should the white person be penalized? Should the white person lose their job? Should the white person be denied promotion, health insurance, housing? Should the white person be denied entrance to your church?

      I am just wondering what you think labeling this as choice somehow makes bigotry okay.

    11. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The situation you describe is not "discrimination", it's "conforming to culture". If you don't like a company's culture, you can find another company to work for.

      If you feel you should not be punished for not conforming, well that is a valid complaint, but don't call it discrimination.

      --
      moo
    12. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homosexuality is not a religion. It is a choice you can make. You can go in and out of the group based on how you feel. You do not have to be able to prove it. Religion is protected because it is religion and there are consequences to the choice. Repression can involve violent uprising by the religion to maintain its ability to be what it is.

      Homosexuality is something you could claim to be or not claim to be totally based on how you want to avoid or not avoid something.


      How is this any different than religion??

      I wasn't born a Baptist, nobody was. It is a choice, and you are just as free to leave, based on how you feel.

      What consequences, other than the rules of said religion, are there in chosing to be affiliated with Judaism, or Christianity, or Taoism, or anything else? I can claim to not be Christian, to suit a certain situation, just as well as claim to not be gay.

      They're both life-style decisions, and they both should be protected.

    13. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come to California. As a christian here I feel like I have to pretend to be an atheist to survive.

    14. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by AviLazar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religion is a choice - and sexual orientation is not a choice. It is an urge - and while some people are confused, some people go both ways, etc it is really a feeling. For me, just thinking about kissing another guy is totally revolting and makes me want to puke - so no I really don't have a choice about my sexual orientation. I have friends, who are gay and lesbian, who agree with me - to them kissing someone of the opposite sex is revolting. I do not know your sexual orientation - but lets assume you are a straight male...Would you go with another male? Why not? And don't tell me "cause i don't want to" - explain it. I explained my reasoning - I feel nautious and sick thinking about it - along the lines of having sex with an animal. But that is my biology.

      The thing is with gay rights - people don't want to have to hide it - just like people don't want to have to hide their religion. THe same rights that protect religion should protect sexual orientation - no matter if you think it is a choice or not a choice (even more so if it is not a choice). Also, gay rights needs to be fought for because many states do not allow gays to get married with their significant others. How unfair is that.

      As for proving if you are gay or not...a private investigator follows you for a few months -- eventually you will get caught. And, obviously, there are the stereotypical gays which scream gay at a mile away.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    15. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My Brother-in-law used to work as a contractor at Microsoft. Once, while in the middle of a technical confrontation with a full-time employee, the full-time employee cursed at him based on his homosexuality. My brother-in-law shrugged it off but another coworker reported the incident and within a week, the full-time-employee was fired without severance.

    16. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by bluprint · · Score: 1

      Has he tried something like "Hey, I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't make those jokes around me"?

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    17. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by SoVeryWrong · · Score: 1

      The point is that religion is a choice. So even if you believe that homosexuality is a choice, discriminated based on it is the same thing.

      By your rationale, if there was a scholarship only open to Christians, what's to keep me from saying I'm a Christian to get it?

    18. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      "Your Muslim? Your fired"
      "Your Christian? Your fired"
      "Your Jewish? Your fired"

      THe law protects you from this "conformity", but the law does not protect you (and in some places punishes you) for being gay.

      "Remove the picture of your gay lover or your fired"

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    19. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by DevNull+Ogre · · Score: 2, Informative

      The part about uneven application of rules ("no personal pictures"), reduced hours, and layoffs certainly *is* discrimination.

    20. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've over generalized, I too live in the midwest and could careless about your beliefs one way or the other; nor have I met/worked with anyone where this was true.

    21. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't know the difference between "you're" and "your"?

      You're fired.

    22. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The situations you are refering too are all covered in current harassment laws. Why do homosexuals feel they deserve preferential treatment just because they are gay?

      Homosexuals are protected from every form of workplace dicrimination outside of the military.

      But one thing that you cannot legislate is the right for someone to hate, whether it is because of race, color, religion or sexual preference. However, many homosexuals are trying to do just that. Maybe homosexuals need to be more tolerant of everyone else's opinions?

    23. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Warpedcow · · Score: 0, Flamebait


      THe law protects you from this "conformity", but the law does not protect you (and in some places punishes you) for being gay.



      I think that many people feel that the law should NOT protect someone for being gay. Just like the law does not protect someone for being a "murderer". And in many people's minds, those two things are equally morally reprehensible.
      --
      moo
    24. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1, Troll

      The part about uneven application of rules ("no personal pictures"), reduced hours, and layoffs certainly *is* discrimination.


      Others see the "no pictures of gay lovers" rule as applicable to all persons, gay or straight, and thus it is not discrimination. The reduced hours and layoffs mentioned by the original poster were for "bad attitude" not for "being gay". Or are you saying they're discriminating against people with "bad attitudes"?
      --
      moo
    25. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by anagama · · Score: 1


      Homosexuality is not a religion. It is a choice you can make. ... If you feel that Religion should not have protections on this, then you should move to a different country

      Generally, religion is a choice. Here are some christian options (please note -- other religions also exist):
      1
      2
      3

      Anyway, I hope I can someday live in a country where "freedom reigns from sea to shining sea". Any advice on where in the world an American such as myself can find such a country?

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    26. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Golias · · Score: 1

      Um... I can reverse what you just said and be just as right. Watch:

      Religion is not a homosexuality. It is a choice you can make. You can go in and out of the group based on how you feel. You do not have to be able to prove it. Homosexuality is protected because it is homosexuality and there are consequences to the choice. Repression can involve violent uprising by the gay people to maintain their ability to be what they are.

      Religion is something you could claim to be or not claim to be totally based on how you want to avoid or not avoid something.

      If I found that religious people could get scholarships that i could not, i could just tell everyone I was religious.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    27. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by nametaken · · Score: 1

      Let's say you have a picture of your partner on your desk. You might be told that personal pictures are "inappropriate"... even though others have pictures of their wives or husbands on their desks. You might be passed over for promotion, get your hours cut, or fired for "poor performance" or "poor attitude."

      Actually, you can [fire / pass over for promotion / cut the hours of] anyone that IS covered under existing law for "poor performance" or "poor attitude". You can fire anyone if you really want to, regardless of anti-discrimination law. Its just a question of how you do it.

      Also, depending on how small your business is (25 employees?), these laws don't necessarily apply to you anyways.

      I GUESS the idea is this:
      Imagine you're a small business. You can't discriminate based on sexual orientation / sex / race / religion / age, and the community around you basically puts you out of business. Now Microsoft could survive a small town boycott, but Bob's Automotive may not be able to.

    28. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      every generalization is an over-generalization, so the word itself is redundant.

      If cnn.com ran a front page poll that said "should atheists be allowed to be US citizens", how much do you want to bet me that the answer would be no?

    29. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by esaloch · · Score: 0

      I suppose just like being whipped for not picking enough cotton was just helping someone conform to culture. After all, once slavery was over they could find another job that would beat them.

    30. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

      This is not true, not true at all. In many states (like Washington) homosexuals are NOT a protected class. That means you CAN fire someone or not hire them because they are gay. You can deny them a loan or housing because of their orientation. Homosexuals would not get "special" rights under this bill. They would get the right to be treated the same as everyone else. Which many in the christian lunatic fringe have decided to label as anti christian bigotry.

      relevant comic

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    31. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by zoombat · · Score: 1

      I think that many people feel that the law should NOT protect someone for being gay. Just like the law does not protect someone for being a "murderer". And in many people's minds, those two things are equally morally reprehensible.

      I think that's an unhelpful comparison. Perhaps a better comparison would be adultery or fornication. Both of those are morally reprehensible to many, and are perfecly legal reasons to discriminated against people in some states, but for the most part laws prohibiting them aren't enforced (like most sodomy laws).

    32. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Zenithal · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Others see the "no pictures of gay lovers" rule as applicable to all persons, gay or straight, and thus...

      Come on, that's completely pointless argument. Within this context "gay lovers" is a synonym for wife or husband. You've moved the discrimination from one part of the sentence to the other. I invoke Catch-22.

      As for "people with bad attitudes", it's par for the course to site a different reason for dismissal than the real reason. What discrimination is all about is the real reasoning, and I think that's pretty clear to everyone. Once again you've picked a technicality in the wording of the argument and completely failed to discuss the spirit.

      --


      Aaron
      AaronCameron.net
    33. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

      Come to California. As a christian here I feel like I have to pretend to be an atheist to survive.

      If you want to fit in, that's definately true. I've had the same experience.

      --
      My other first post is car post.
    34. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Others see the "no pictures of gay lovers" rule as applicable to all persons, gay or straight, and thus it is not discrimination.

      These are the same "others" who would have seen the "no pictures of interracial lovers" rule as applicable to all persons, white or black, and thus not discrimination.

      The reduced hours and layoffs mentioned by the original poster were for "bad attitude" not for "being gay". Or are you saying they're discriminating against people with "bad attitudes"?

      You sound pretty confrontational, there. Are you a young straight non-handicapped white male? If so then a bigoted employer might cut you some slack, but if not then perhaps your next performance review is going to include a discussion of this attitude problem.

    35. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by the_ronster · · Score: 1

      The word "choice" unfortunately gets quite mangled in the common usage when discussing homosexuality. While it is quite true that everyone makes a choice to do anything, whether it be to sleep with men, women, or both, the DESIRE to do so is innate. I've known many men whose innate desire is to be with other men, but for societal reasons, they end up getting married to women and having children and such. Similarly, there are many men in prison who innately desire women, but given the proclivity of other options, the choice is made to have sex with other men. For anyone who is out of the closet, they are simply choosing to align their outward choices with their innate desires. And while I agree with you that regardless of your sexual orientation, you are free to walk around saying "I am gay", I would advise you to be very careful where you say it -- you may end up tied to a fence in Whyoming and beaten to death.

    36. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you haven't already you might want to consider joining the infidelguy.com forums.. there's plenty of other people there in the same situation as you.

    37. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by ajs · · Score: 1

      "The situations you are refering too are all covered in current harassment laws. Why do homosexuals feel they deserve preferential treatment just because they are gay?"

      They don't.

      The examples cited in the GP are not all covered by existing laws (though some are). Harassment is just that: harassment. It's quite possbile to discriminate without harassing.

      What's more, a law that prevents discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation protects you just as much as it does a homosexual. There's nothing special or intolerant about wanting a certain criteria taken off the table when it comes to making business descisions.

    38. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dear Lord, you're dense. Keep your moral judgments to yourself. If your faith has you believe homosexuality is a sin, I don't care. Don't bring it into my workplace or into my laws. You share that space with everyone, and your supposed moral superiority doesn't mean shit. After all, whose to say I'm not morally superior to you. This is a secular country, the state has NO OPINION on moral issues. The definition of marriage or the acceptability of homosexuality are moral questions. I could debate the idiocy of your theology here on /. and walk away, not caring if you maintain a brain-damaged world-view. However, if you intend to step on my liberty of conscience through law or economic discrimination, prepare for a fight.

      No workplace has a rule about "no pictures of gay lovers" and that's the problem. The discrimination isn't codified so one can make a rational choice about where to work, if it were, very few people would work there and the business would likely face boycotts by consumers and shareholders. The "bad attitude" excuse is really just blaming the victim. Because the employer allows a predetory and descriminatory environment, a perfectly normal adverse reaction is conveinently labled a "bad attitude".

      Your word games here are the same tripe trotted about by the White Citizen's Councils back in the 60's. Your attempt to pervert US law to allow for legal descrimination based on religious views is treason. And I do mean treason. Being a Southerner, I've heard this crap muttered under the breath of rednecks all my life. I usually don't care what idiots mutter, but if you fools actually manage to codify your sectarian views into law, expect me to be duty bound by the Constitution and as an American to resist by any means necessary.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    39. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I support their right to be treated fairly. They should be able to obtain employment and housing. However, there are significant differences between "rights for actively homosexual individuals" and the civil rights movement. First, race is a completely arbitrary distinction. Homosexual lifestyle is considered immoral by a large segment of the population, and their opinion has a basis in biology. Even so, I am not against laws protecting them from what are often egregious violations of their dignity as human beings. Sometimes I consider some of these laws unneccessary, as the issues are already covered. Murder is illegal, whether it is motivated by race, jealousy, sexual orientation or whatever. Just as piracy using a computer is no special case, just regular piracy and should be treated as such, so murder committed for a particular reason is still murder, and should be prosecuted as such. If I murder Bob and Sam, I should go to jail for just as long as if I murder Bob and Ann. No new law is necessary.

      However, often the laws being framed are too broad, and grant them "rights" beyond those necessary to treat them fairly. Should a computer company care about their employee's personal life? Not really. Should religious or affiliated organizations be forced to hire or retain individuals whose beliefs and actions are incompatible with the organization? Often the "anti-discrimination" laws being proposed would force them to do so.

      Frame laws that require that people (all people, or any or all subgroups including those leading homosexual lifestyles) be treated with the dignity due their humanity, and do JUST that, and I will always be for it.

    40. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      I never asserted that I or anyone else was "morally superior". Don't put words in my mouth. That said, it's obvious that different people have different morals, and the question is, how do we deal with that?

      This is a secular country, the state has NO OPINION on moral issues.

      Hmm, one might say that punishing murder is the "moral" thing to do, are you saying the state should not do that? Some would say that giving relief money to AIDS victims in foreign nations is the MORAL thing to do, should we stop that too? Sorry, but the government most certainly DOES deal with moral issues every day. You only have a problem when your morals do not equal theirs. The solution is to use your vote or write your congressman/congresswoman.

      But perhaps you meant to say "religious issues" instead of "moral issues". I know plenty of atheist who have good morals.

      Anyway, I'd hate to see a government that had no morals. Apparently, so did these guys:

      What students would learn in American schools above all is the religion of Jesus Christ." - George Washington in a speech to the Delaware Indian Chiefs May 12, 1779

      "It is impossible to rightly govern the world without God and Bible." - George Washington

      "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." - John Adams

      "The general principles upon which the Fathers achieved independence were the general principles of Christianity." - John Adams

      "Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and Morality are indispensable supports." - George Washington

      Now whether or not you agree with those guys, you must admit that SOME people feel morality is a HUGE part of government.

      The discrimination isn't codified

      Maybe that's because it isn't discrimination. Is "no smoking" in restaurants discrimination against smokers, or just a person's choice about how they want to run their restaurant?

      --
      moo
    41. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by bani · · Score: 1

      100% chance.

    42. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Murder is a violation of the right to life. Giving money to relieve AIDS is also part of a foriegn policy which does not rely on moral proclamations, although both of these actions may be considered moral by some, they have valid reasons which are not. Your assertion that because the government makes decisions which you evaluate with a moral component, means that it does as well is ignorant and illogical. The Supreme Court of Mass. struck down the no-gay marriage law because there was only a moral (religious) interest and not any state interest served by the law.

      The government makes decisions based on law and rights. We are a secular state, so the morality or lack thereof doesn't enter the equation. Where it does, we have judges to point out that the legislature isn't doing their job.

      You're "sour grapes" assertion simply shows your ignorance about the legal and political theories that led to the founding of our nation. One would think that someone who loved their country would take the time to figure out why it has the laws it does and just what those "original meanings" are.

      The Founding Fathers discussed this very issue, what happens when you have a government that isn't concerned about morals? They decided that if society couldn't produce moral enough people to run a government, there were bigger problems than the design of the Federal government. You really should go read the Federalist and anti-Federalist papers sometime, they debate this very subject in detail.

      I hate to break the news to you, but George Washington is the least important character in the formation of the US legal system and said a lot of dumb things, you'd be much better off ignoring anything the man said with regard to our laws or the Constitution. The two quotes from Adams do not support the view you think they support. I'm familiar with both. The first is in regard to the moral government point in the previous paragraph. His point there was that the Federal government could not be depended upon to enforce that only moral men served or that those who served would remain moral. If you'd read it IN CONTEXT, you'd see that it supports my position and undermines your own.

      The second quote by Adams has no bearing. It's self-congratulatory and was simply stating that the actions and ideology of the Founding Fathers was in line with Christian principles. Not that they were made because of Christian principles, there's a large difference there.

      Bernard Bailyn's Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Pulitzer prize + Bancroft prize) supports these views and provides the context your posts have so desperately missed.

      While we're pulling out 200 year old quotes, I notice that you don't have any Jefferson. I wonder why that would be? Oh, and where's mention of the Treaty of Tripoli, ratified unanimously by the Senate in 1796 and signed by John Adams:
      Art. 11. As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of Mussulmen; and, as the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries.


      It is discrimination and my opining on your word games stand. Given how badly you understand legal theory or US history, I can't take your claim that it's not discrimination seriously. In the examples given, the courts would see otherwise.
      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    43. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      You are wrong on every point Religion is protected and it is a choice. I can be Buddhist and I can say to everyone that I'm a Christan, take communion and get baptised. How would you know that I don't believe in it at all?

    44. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      (Posting as AC for reasons that should be quite obvious if you think about it.)

      Possibly, yes, homosexuals and other minority groups should be slightly more tolerant of others opinions.

      An explanation:
      On Tuesday, I came out to friends and selected family members. I have Gender Identity Disorder(male to female). And just after I came out, I started to take the first few steps I could towards my transition. One of those made me extremely sensitive to gender-based words and also made me realize exactly how much I was affected by this, and one of the repercussions thereof was realizing that really no one without the same disorder could know what I was going through. So I started snapping at people, even though they were trying to be as nice and understanding as possible. I've stopped now, but it was a hard day.

      I think that's sort of what the homosexual community is plagued by-the fact that those who are not homosexual do not know what they are experiencing. But they're doing well, anyway-I think homosexual marriage rights are really their last battle. And no, I don't think they deserve preferential treatment-once they are accepted at large into society(which they are very close to becoming.)

      But...at the same time, I can tell homosexuals that they have it much, much easier then I do-much, much easier. And I'm far from being accepted(hence part of posting AC). And I think my group does need preferential treatment, because our condition encompasses so much, but we don't have the tolerance problem if we come out and make the transition, as we'll have fought it out by then, in the process of questioning and rediscovering everything.

      Just offering a minority viewpoint that doesn't seem to be very well represented in this conversation.

    45. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Kyrene · · Score: 1

      That's a good question. I'm honestly not certain. I suspect that he must've said something at this point and has on multiple occasions. I'll verify that before I stick my foot in my mouth, however. :)

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    46. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      I will quote myself for emphasis "If you feel that Religion should not have protections on this, then you should move to a different country or lobby to have the 1st ammendmant change, I leave that as an excersize to the reader."

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    47. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll? How the FUCK is that post a troll?
      Jesus f'ing christ people, someone take the mod points away from the ignorant children around here!

    48. Re:How are gays discriminated against at work? by mink · · Score: 1

      Please detail the exact moment you chose all your fetishes and turn on's. What catalog did you use, how did you make those "choices"?
      Personally I find that the things that turn me on were not things I chose. Some I find rather strange, but they still turn me on. Some may be because of society or upbringing, but I dont know where the other ones come from.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  12. Back scratching politics by metoc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Odds are dropping support for this bill was necessary to get support for a bill they really want passed (anti-open source, take over the world, etc.).

    1. Re:Back scratching politics by PastorOfMuppets · · Score: 1

      Not likely. Microsoft employs a lot of people in the state of Washington (this is a state bill), and the taxes that they and their employees pay finance a not insignificant portion of the state's budget. Basically, if Microsoft wants legislation bad enough, all they have to do is threaten to leave the state and they will get it. Boeing has pulled that trick many times.

      --
      If you don't have anything nice to say, shut up you stupid prick.
  13. Wrong angle by chill · · Score: 4, Funny

    What bothers me is that one corporate entity seemingly has so much influence over the legislative process. Specifically, a law that is totally unrelated to their industry.

    I understand the RIAA/MPAA and Copyright legislation, but Microsoft and Gay Rights? WTF?

    Now, instead of "Write Your Congressman!" are we supposed to call MS Tech Support?

    -Charles

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:Wrong angle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power"
      Benito Mussolini

    2. Re:Wrong angle by DrLZRDMN · · Score: 1

      Now, instead of "Write Your Congressman!" are we supposed to call MS Tech Support?

      Interesting observation, you usualy have just as much luck trying to get anything out of either of them.

    3. Re:Wrong angle by TummyX · · Score: 5, Insightful


      Specifically, a law that is totally unrelated to their industry


      Considering the law in no small part had to do with discrimination in employment situations, I would imagine it is totally related to companies that...you know.....employ people.

    4. Re:Wrong angle by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      What bothers me is that one corporate entity seemingly has so much influence over the legislative process. Specifically, a law that is totally unrelated to their industry.

      I understand the RIAA/MPAA and Copyright legislation, but Microsoft and Gay Rights? WTF?
      Workplace rights for gay people are rather related to Microsoft and their industry, because Microsoft and their industry employ lots of gay people.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    5. Re:Wrong angle by chill · · Score: 1

      Considering the law in no small part had to do with discrimination in employment situations, I would imagine it is totally related to companies that...you know.....employ people.

      So, you're saying Microsoft needs a law to tell them how to treat their employees? They won't do the right thing unless a legal gun is held to their head?

      There is nothing preventing ANY corporation from treating gay employees equally. Microsoft would have a hell of a lot better luck telling any insurance company that denied one of their employees benefits based on sexual orientation to "fix it or we'll dump your ass".

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    6. Re:Wrong angle by cno3 · · Score: 1

      Now, instead of "Write Your Congressman!" are we supposed to call MS Tech Support?

      You can, but I doubt the Indian call center employee on the other end would have much influence over the U.S. legislative process.

    7. Re:Wrong angle by TummyX · · Score: 1


      So, you're saying Microsoft needs a law to tell them how to treat their employees? They won't do the right thing unless a legal gun is held to their head?


      Let me sum up what I said so you can understand: Microsoft and many companies clearly have an interest in this law.

      Notice that I didn't actually make any judgements about whether it was right that they be involved in the law making because of their interests?


      There is nothing preventing ANY corporation from treating gay employees equally. Microsoft would have a hell of a lot better luck telling any insurance company that denied one of their employees benefits based on sexual orientation to "fix it or we'll dump your ass".


      Which is why, I would imagine, Microsoft thought government interventation (i.e. a law) was necessary. It ain't perfect (no law is) but it's a step in the right direction right?

      Now all that's happened is Microsoft have gone from publically pro to publically neutral. Big deal.

    8. Re:Wrong angle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. What does this even have to do with Microsoft? I highly doubt they care who you have sex with, as long as you can code and you do code for them..
      This isn't work that just anyone can do, at this point rich people put their bigotry aside for their greed.

    9. Re:Wrong angle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is the parent modded 'Funny'? It is true and it is SAD!

    10. Re:Wrong angle by superyooser · · Score: 1
      What bothers me is that one corporate entity seemingly has so much influence over the legislative process.

      What bothers me is that one judicial entity has so much influence over the legislative process.

    11. Re:Wrong angle by snol · · Score: 1

      Should we just go ahead and amend the constitution to overturn Marbury v. Madison then?

  14. People can be right arseholes about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People can be right assholes about this. Having been told to my face by my manager "look, we'd really love to keep you on but I'm afraid there's no legal protection to you if we fire you over your homosexuality, so we're forced to let you go. Please don't hesitate to contact me if there's ANYTHING we can do for you."

    And you thought Microsoft were the kings of doublespeak & twisted convoluted logic.

    Unfortunately, legal protections can only go so far. If someone wants to fire an employee because they don't like the employee's partner, then they'll find a reason quickly enough.

    1. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      look, we'd really love to keep you on but I'm afraid there's no legal protection to you if we fire you over your homosexuality, so we're forced to let you go.

      In other words, "we need to preemptively fire you for your own protection"? I call BS. Either you're leaving out something, or you were on your way to being fired for a different reason and he was giving you a legal excuse.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm afraid there's no legal protection to you if we fire you over your homosexuality, so we're forced to let you go"

      Sounds like they fired you over your homosexuality, and now you know there is no legal protection for them...

    3. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Did you call a lawyer?

      That is grounds for a major lawsuit. You did not sign anything did you?

      Hell my brothers employer got sued for promoting a secretary as a manager for a call center. A position she was not qualified for and got it by banging a director. She sued after she was terminated because she was a hispanic.

      SHE WON! 1.5 million dollars.

      If frivious lawsuits like the one above can happen then you have a fighting chance to sue your employer back. I mean your case sounds very strong.

    4. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      I'll offer another interpretation, not necessarily better but different:

      "We must let go of someone. Everyone else is in some protected class, so if we let them go, even for cause, we'll be sued. Homosexuals are not currently a protected class, so the risk of lawsuit is lower, so we are letting you go. Sorry about that."

      Whether homosexuals should be considered a protected class is left as an exercise to the flamethrowers.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    5. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good for him, your former manager did the right thing.

    6. Re:People can be right arseholes about this. by deejer · · Score: 1

      I can't believe somebody said that to you. That is wrong, but as you said legal protections can only go so far.

      Not for gay marriage, Not for idiot managers either.

  15. Oh man by The+Bungi · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Microsoft abandons gays? That's a great agline. Just what the doctor ordered, in case there weren't enough things to flame them about.

    Now I'll listen to the zealots ticking off the reasons "M$ is teh suxx0rz" and including "they hate fagz" as well, like most of they care.

    I have to wonder why this is on the Slashdot front page, and why it's not followed by a list of companies like IBM, Novell, Sun and Red Hat and what their attitude is towards gays and lesbians.

    But wait, actually I don't.

    1. Re:Oh man by Kyrene · · Score: 3, Informative
      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    2. Re:Oh man by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

      So was Microsoft, until today apparently.

    3. Re:Oh man by cOdEgUru · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      If you dont like the thread or the discussion, feel free to leave and dont let the door hit yo ass on the way out..

      Since you have a habit of trolling for M$ (yes, that is funny!!) in every thread/topic I got to wonder.. Did M$ make you its bitch??

    4. Re:Oh man by The+Bungi · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      If you dont like the thread or the discussion, feel free to leave and dont let the door hit yo ass on the way out..

      If you don't like what I'm saying, feel free to shut the fuck up.

    5. Re:Oh man by nvrrobx · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know you're actually trolling, but to those who care about other great companies for gay and lesbian employees, here's a good link:

      http://www.businessreform.com/article.php?articleI D=11076&ofid=2&ruser=yes

      The Advocate also publishes a list of the top ten companies to work for every year. Here's the list for 2000 (The 2004 list doesn't seem to be archived on their site):

      http://web.archive.org/web/20040215174655/http://w ww.advocate.com/html/stories/823/823_topten.asp

      The HRC (The Human Rights Campaign) also maintains such a list, the annual State of the Workplace:

      http://www.hrc.org/Content/ContentGroups/Publicati ons1/State_of_the_Workplace/SOTW_03.pdf

      and the Corporate Equality Index:

      http://www.hrc.org/Content/ContentGroups/Publicati ons1/Corporate_Equality_Index2/2004CEIReport.pdf

      If you don't like the subject matter, don't read further into it, but some people around here might actually be interested.

    6. Re:Oh man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. He prefers laughing at your face..along with the rest of us..

      Lamer!!!

    7. Re:Oh man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, I'd like you to go drink some antifreeze linux fatty. I hope you choke.

    8. Re:Oh man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Rapid nirvana?

      i hate u! yew kicked mah dawg!!

    9. Re:Oh man by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      it's realy easy to find out if you use this interesting thing called google HP + SUN http://www.sjgaypride.com/sjgp08_sponsors.htm IBM http://www.tgcrossroads.org/news/archive.asp?aid=7 33 boy that was hard

    10. Re:Oh man by SmallOak · · Score: 1


      HP + SUN
      http://www.sjgaypride.com/sjgp08_sponsors.htm
      IBM
      http://www.tgcrossroads.org/news/archive.asp?aid=7 33
      Sorry for the poor formating

    11. Re:Oh man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I have to wonder why this is on the Slashdot front page, and why it's not followed by a list of companies like IBM, Novell, Sun and Red Hat and what their attitude is towards gays and lesbians."

      Maybe it is because those companies aren't as large and/or influential or maybe it's because this actually is news. IBM didn't drop support for the bill, now, did it?

      I find criticism of the Microsoft critics here tends to be modded up so I'm actually wondering if this just karma whoring here. And regarding your sig, has it occurred to you that "M$" isn't supposed to be "hilarious?"

  16. Full Article here by jasonla · · Score: 5, Informative

    The full article can be found here:
    http://www.thestranger.com/2005-04-21/feature.html

  17. Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's USA by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Gay bashing is now a socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country. See also: Texas to ban gays from being foster parents.

  18. Re:LOL @ #BUTTES, UTTER FAILURES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Wow...this subject played right into your hands, didn't it?

  19. Because, as you probably know... by dkh2 · · Score: 1

    If GLBT people are not protected from discrimination there would be no porn on the internet to corrupt our children.

    Yeah, Right.

    --
    My office has been taken over by iPod people.
  20. Re:So.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thats pretty gay

  21. Microsoft simply rethought their strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rather than pushing for a new standard that has gay rights, they plan to support the current non-gay rights standard. Once the market accepts Microsoft's non-gay rights standard, they'll add back the gay support and lock people in. Embrace and extend, people.

  22. Huh by JeffSh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not sure I understand how a corporations support, or lack there of, for social political issues is relevant..

    I suppose this is analogous to Henry Ford's philosophy for why he paid his workers well, in some respects, but Henry Ford didn't throw his weight behind legislation and bills for workers, did he?

    i think seperation of corporation from government is more important than the seperation of church and state in some respects. Who cares what bills or legislation they do or don't support. I think a company's best influence on society can be made through their own internal HR and resource practices..

    i don't know, seems a bit silly to me.

    1. Re:Huh by Fnkmaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not sure I understand how a corporations support, or lack there of, for social political issues is relevant..

      Allow me to explain. We measure its relevance using a unit known to some as the US Dollar, to others as the "greenback". Legislation in this country needs to be lobbied for. Politicians don't know shit, and don't have much of an incentive to learn about shit unless there is somebody breathing down their neck, using the carrot-and-stick approach to get them to pay attention to an issue. The people who do this, lobbyists, have to be paid by somebody. Since corporations have a lot of money and a common goal within the organization can be easily set, it's pretty straightforward to see how they might hire lobbyists and give them the tools (payola money) to work their trade.

      Now you may think in an ideal democracy this isn't how things would work, but that's not the world we live in. Professional, trade, and random interest groups can certainly wield the same power by swinging some dollars around, and representing some bloc of citizens. But without some sort of organized, funded umbrella organization, it is difficult to get your opinion heard by politicians.

      So, perhaps it's a little more clear now why Microsoft throwing their weight behind this cause might be relevant?

    2. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that corporations can be influential just like prominent citizens. Honestly, it doesn't *really* matter what Tom Cruise thinks of homosexuals either, but if he were to make a public statement about his position that statement does affect public opinion.

      In addition, when prominent and *wealthy* citizens (read: corps like MS) make public statements on social issues, the public, the media, and legislators *do* take notice. (Obviously, otherwise, why is this article on /.)?

      The public discourse on social issues shapes thinking on those issues. That's why you hear so much irrational rhetoric from the those opposed to same-sex marriages. You hear the catch-phrases from the media and politicians coming out of the mouth of joe public, and you see his sense of validation that important people agree with him on this issue.

      Loud voices matter.

    3. Re:Huh by Uzik2 · · Score: 1

      Because it's fairly clear that money buys elections.
      If it didn't why would we have so many regulations
      concerning donations to political parties? Companies
      can, and do, put a lot of money into the system
      to support their owners' agenda.

      --
      -- Programming with boost is like building a house with lego. It's a cool but I wouldn't want to live in it
    4. Re:Huh by east+coast · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not sure I understand how a corporations support, or lack there of, for social political issues is relevant..

      Exactly! Another great Slashdot paradox. If the RIAA was supporting legislation that "protects the interests of their artists" we'd have people up in arms about a corporation being able to support and advance legislation. On the other hand we have MS who withdraws political support and we have the same people chanting "how can they let this happen?".

      By all accounts MS already runs a pretty open office with support for their gay employees. Why should MS bother to get involved at all? MS isn't really a problem in this case and as far as I'm concerned the further you can distance corporations from politicians the better.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    5. Re:Huh by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I understand how a corporations support, or lack there of, for social political issues is relevant..

      Ever heard of lobbying?

      Do you think it was because of a grass-roots letter writing campaign that Congress passed and the President signed new bankruptcy laws?

      Why should a company bother with good practices internally and trying to produce a quality product when they can get Congress to give them special protetction? (For example, the Baby Bells. Or the Airlines. Or Major League Baseball.)

      Of course I'm arguing exactly the same point you are, I think, but your initial statement made my head spin.

    6. Re:Huh by HipCzeck · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I understand how a corporations support, or lack there of, for social political issues is relevant.

      I hesitate to invoke actual Nazis, but by your argument, it's okay for a corporation to say, "The government has decided that slave labor is legal. The government has also determined that my product is critical to the security of our nation. The government is even providing me with a workforce of slaves to allow me to increase production while slashing compensation costs. Yay, the stockholders will be so pleased! Bonuses for everyone (who doesn't run afoul of any of the ever increasing racial purity laws.)"

      Just because something is legal doesn't make it right, and corporations, as virtual human citizens of this democracy, have obligations to the greater good of the institutions that grant them their existence and vitality.

      Corporations should use what clout they have in their community for the well-being of their officers, their stock-holders, their employees, and their community members.

  23. okay, i'll bite... by radarsat1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    okay.... i'll ask....

    what the hell does a software company have to do with promoting gay rights? i don't remember any questions to that effect the last time i installed windows...

    *hands up in the air..*

    *rolls eyes..*

    *walks away...*

    1. Re:okay, i'll bite... by computerme · · Score: 5, Insightful

      its because software companies have these things called people. Only they are not "things" they are human beings and should be treated as such...

      and hint hint... treating your people BETTER usually results in BETTER software with BETTER profits...

    2. Re:okay, i'll bite... by poserFish · · Score: 1

      Maybe nothing, but they chose to get involved in the first place...

      --
      Think your right? Prove it.
    3. Re:okay, i'll bite... by radarsat1 · · Score: 1

      yeah sure, but i mean.. i can see them getting involved with employer/worker relations or that sort of thing, being a corporation and all. but gay rights? that seems like more of a political issue than a corporate one. and such a strange one that politicians themselves treat it at arm's length, let alone corporations...

      i dunno. whatever.
      not my problem, i guess.
      i'm just a little confused by this story. maybe i should read TFA.

    4. Re:okay, i'll bite... by ninjagin · · Score: 1
      Actually, Quark, Inc., makers of the market-dominating prepress application QuarkXPress, was founded by Tim Gill, gay, who also established the Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado. When I worked there, prior to Tim's departure from R&D, Quark was the leader in anti-discrimination workplace practices.

      Not that there's any connection, but Quark was (at the time) very much a Mac shop.

      --
      .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
    5. Re:okay, i'll bite... by karnal · · Score: 1

      You and I must have missed that part of the EULA.

      --
      Karnal
    6. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about "gay rights" per se, it's an issue of "employee rights", and that is very definitely a corporate concern, as well as being a political issue.

    7. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      and hint hint... treating your people BETTER usually results in BETTER software with BETTER profits...

      Ohhh, so Microsoft decided to go with pissed off employees and worse software? Makes sense. Why change what's working for you?

      ...sorry, I HAD to.

    8. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      quite a lot when they are also a huge employer that in general stresses a very open, diverse workplace. As TFA points out, M$ offers domestic partner benefits to homosexual couples for example.

      I know we on /. love to demonize M$, but for the most part, in terms of open, equal-op employment M$ is very much a leader. Seeing that a single minister's threat is enough to make them back down from one of their signature stances regarding gay rights (and one that is demonstrated in their work enviroment and stressed when they hire people) is rather disapointing

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    9. Re:okay, i'll bite... by JimRay · · Score: 1

      Well, considering that Microsoft in not just a software company but one of the largest software companies in the world, employing some 55,000 people, I'd say it's relevant. Microsoft doesn't just build software, they give a lot of people -- even gay people -- jobs. Microsoft's hiring practices have been under the microscope before; legislation has been passed in the state of Washington specifically to counter some of Microsoft's employment techniques.

      Whether this is worthy of a post on /. is another story...

      --
      My other computer is your Windows box
    10. Re:okay, i'll bite... by TummyX · · Score: 1


      what the hell does a software company have to do with promoting gay rights? i don't remember any questions to that effect the last time i installed windows...


      I gyess they won't be promoting gay rights in windows anymore. Good bye Luna.

    11. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      Many large employers are actively involved in promoting gay rights. It makes them a more attractive employer for gay people, and being a more attractive employer is good for hiring and business in general.

      This is both because it is in their best interest, and also because many large employers are run by intelligent people that believe it is the right thing to do.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    12. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing they aren't promoting workers rights! oh, wait..

    13. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you're right. Microsoft should treat people like people and not discriminate against their gay employees. But why Microsoft, as a company, has anything to do with deciding what laws get made is beyond me.

    14. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Tekoneiric · · Score: 1


      Well the tech industry has generally been a more progressive and accepting of differences in people. It has usually been one of the few where tg, lesbian, gays and bi or other people don't have to worry as much about being fired under mysterious conditions. It sounds like MS is making some backdoor deals with the Bush administration where they get more government contracts in exchange for withdrawing support this bill. - Andrea -

      --
      *It's not what you can do for the Dark Side but what the Dark Side can do for you!*
    15. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hint hint... treating your people BETTER usually results in BETTER software with BETTER profits.

      There's a video game company you might like to pass that on to...

    16. Re:okay, i'll bite... by rearden · · Score: 1

      And I will answer, as I actually read not only the article but also the story on Slashdot (being the heritic I am for reading the story and article!)

      The reason this has ANYTHING to do with MS is that this is not a gay rights bill it is an EMPLOYMENT bill and being one of the biggest EMPOLOYERS in Washington state they are VERY interested in an EMPLOYMENT bill for Washington state.

      As for why this is on Slashdot... I would say two reasons, one it is about MS and second because with the erosion of civil rights (or the perception of loss by some people) Slashdot is monitoring things more.

      This is not an attempt to flame, but I think this clarification needs to be put out there.

      --
      Huh?
    17. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its because software companies have these things called people. Only they are not "things" they are human beings and should be treated as such...

      and hint hint... treating your people BETTER usually results in BETTER software with BETTER profits...


      Since when does Microsoft or any other company have to wait for the government to give them the green light on changing their internal antidiscrimination policies? And if such policies are that beneficial in terms of profit margin, wouldn't Microsoft be better off not supporting legislation that enforces a wider antidiscrimination policy, so that its competitors are less likely to enjoy the same performance it does?

    18. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "what the hell does a software company have to do with promoting gay rights?"

      Simple: businesses own politicians, or at least effective lobbyists. Without somebody paying a lobbyist to push in an equal and opposite direction, the only people the politicians are hearing now are the born-agains and their lobbyists.

    19. Re:okay, i'll bite... by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      So, what does the Gay Rights Bill have to do with promoting diversity and better relations inside the company? They can just (better) enforce their non-discrimination policy, which I'm sure they have.

    20. Re:okay, i'll bite... by hobbesx · · Score: 1

      Is that why those bastards took the towels away!? I mean really, they expect you to bring your own towel to work!?

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
    21. Re:okay, i'll bite... by IrishWonder · · Score: 1

      Hmm... are there any stats available as to what % of Microsoft's employees are gay?

    22. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ahh yes, supporting a bill is certainly going to effect company moral.

    23. Re:okay, i'll bite... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      Microsoft opened the door for this themselves when they proclaimed themselves pioneers of diversity. As is obvious now, it was a purely suck-up feel-good political ploy, and when it backfired, M$ backed out.

      If they never took a stand in the controversy in the first place, no one could impugn their subsequent abandonment of said stand.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    24. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      last time i installed windows...

      Of course not. What about last time you tried for a job at MS?

    25. Re:okay, i'll bite... by ninjagin · · Score: 1
      Gosh, I'm right with you up until the last sentence. Microsoft products are all over the govenment landscape already -- what more contracts could there be that they don't already have?

      Now, without intending to add fuel to the fire, it would certainly make sense to me if The Administration mentioned that they were considering moving some systems to Linux, but would probably reconsider that idea if Microsoft were to similarly reconsider its support for this little dinky employment bill in the state of Washington.

      Food for thought, anyway.

      --
      .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
    26. Re:okay, i'll bite... by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      Stopping gay rights is a big issue for the Republican party. It makes sense that in order to get into getter graces with the Republican party that seems will be in power for a long time they would back off on this issue
      you may want to read this
      http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,117487,0 0.asp
      Topping the List Among computer and Internet companies, Microsoft, through its PAC and employees, is the largest contributor during the 2004 election cycle. The software giant's employees and PAC have donated nearly $1.9 million to federal candidates or political groups. Microsoft's donations more than triple those of any other tech company, according to Opensecrets.org. Microsoft's PAC and employees combine to be the 19th largest single donator to the Bush campaign during the 2004 election cycle, contributing nearly $185,000 as of early July. Microsoft also shows up as Kerry's 13th largest donor, giving $136,000 to the Democratic senator from Massachusetts. Opensecrets lists Bush's top donor during the 2004 cycle as Morgan Stanley, with $561,000; Kerry's top contributor is the University of California with $405,000. Of the nearly $1.9 million Microsoft's PAC and employees have donated to political groups during the 2004 election cycle, about half comes from individual employees. Sixty-one percent of that total has gone to Democrats, although only 47 percent of Microsoft's $857,000 in PAC contributions to federal candidates has gone to Democrats. "These are all personal decisions," Microsoft spokesperson Ginny Terzano, says of employee donations. "They're entirely voluntary." It's against Microsoft policy to comment on the PAC's reaTopping the List Among computer and Internet companies, Microsoft, through its PAC and employees, is the largest contributor during the 2004 election cycle. The software giant's employees and PAC have donated nearly $1.9 million to federal candidates or political groups. Microsoft's donations more than triple those of any other tech company, according to Opensecrets.org. Microsoft's PAC and employees combine to be the 19th largest single donator to the Bush campaign during the 2004 election cycle, contributing nearly $185,000 as of early July. Microsoft also shows up as Kerry's 13th largest donor, giving $136,000 to the Democratic senator from Massachusetts. Opensecrets lists Bush's top donor during the 2004 cycle as Morgan Stanley, with $561,000; Kerry's top contributor is the University of California with $405,000. Of the nearly $1.9 million Microsoft's PAC and employees have donated to political groups during the 2004 election cycle, about half comes from individual employees. Sixty-one percent of that total has gone to Democrats, although only 47 percent of Microsoft's $857,000 in PAC contributions to federal candidates has gone to Democrats.

    27. Re:okay, i'll bite... by ninjagin · · Score: 1
      Thank you for copying the latest anti WALMART/MICROSOFT/PHARMA/TOBACCO press release and posting it, sans formatting, sans editing, sans your-original-opinion.


      Look, my company has a PAC. I don't care about the PAC.. your PAC, my PAC, any PAC. I care about how gay rights are handled in the workplace, and that gay/bi/les/tg/tv people can work and contribute alongside everyone else.


      The dollar figures you show are less than 1% of all donations to the respective parties. If you keep your eye on conservative or liberal money, thinktanks gobble up an order of magnitude more than these paltry contributions your press release laid out.


      Really, that's it, and I hope there's no quid pro quo from a religeous standpoint. Microsoft will make money regardless. The question is "Do you want employers to have the freedom to fire/not hire gay people as they wish?"


      In my book, you oughta get hired and fired based on your skills, your challenges, your ability to work well with others, your opportunities and your ability to execute well. Being gay, to me, or l/bi/tg/ts simply is not a factor.

      --
      .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
    28. Re:okay, i'll bite... by SmallOak · · Score: 1


      Sorry about the poor post, bad content and I still learning formatting rules for /.
      Some people would have us believe that all civilization would fall appart if you were not able to discriminate against gays.

      I live in Canada and the sun rises everyday and we go to work just like in the USA, that dispite the fact that you cannot discriminate against gays

      Somehow Israel does not need 'don't ask don't tell"
      Israel Falls for Gay Military Romance
      http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/preview.php?id=1 1136

    29. Re:okay, i'll bite... by samael · · Score: 1

      treating your people BETTER usually results in BETTER software with BETTER profits...

      Do you have a cite for that? What's the curve like? Does it flatten off if I spend too much on treating people better, or does treating them better mean better software even if it tends towards infinity?

    30. Re:okay, i'll bite... by Decimal · · Score: 1

      Dude, check your EULA. There's *tons* of stuff in there. Sorry, you clicked "I agree"; you're officially gay.

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  24. Quite honestly... by Kyrene · · Score: 1
    I'm not sure how people could honestly hate Microsoft more. And alienating a substantially large customer base by caving into peer pressure from a religious nut^H^H^H Evangelical Christian isn't going to help matters much.

    Perhaps they figure that since they own such a substantial amount of the market in software, they can afford to piss off a few more people. Meantime, I'll continue to happily use Firefox and perhaps consider Linux for my next operating system.

    --
    Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    1. Re:Quite honestly... by guardian+alpha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So let me get this straight: You feel that corporations should have a say in politics and be able to sway the opinion of laws and legislation. You also feel that a company taking a neutral stance against a political subject rather than a "for or against" stance, is alienating a customer base?

      Why on earth is a company taking a neutral stance on politics a bad thing? You want to kick and scream if RIAA and MPAA start acting like government/law officials because it's detrimental to YOUR way of life, but when a company comes along that decides to pull it's pro/con statements back and let the government handle government work, you get zealot-like and swear off an entire Operating System.

      If you want companies to start sticking their hands in everything the government does, then I'm afraid you are in for a rude awakening when you realise the full impact that Microsoft has had on the government descision torwards gay-rights; no impact at all.

    2. Re:Quite honestly... by Kyrene · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point isn't that they should have a say, or should be forced to take a stance. The point is that they MADE a stance, and now they're backing down from it--and from pressure from a religious leader, no less. That's not being neutral in the least.

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    3. Re:Quite honestly... by guardian+alpha · · Score: 1

      And yet again, you kick and scream because this isn't the RIAA. I don't care who spoke with Microsoft, even if it was the christian god himself, they still retracted their statement and are now neutral like they should have been in the first place.

      If they started supporting anti-gay bills, then they wouldn't be neutral, would they? If they started supporting pro-gay bills, then they wouldn't be neutral, would they. Since they have retracted completely and throw a "hands off, not touching this one" stance, then the inaction of not taking one side or the other is neutral.

      neutral: a position of disengagement

    4. Re:Quite honestly... by Kyrene · · Score: 1

      Who's kicking and screaming? They're the ones who took a stance to begin with, now they're running away with their tail between the legs.

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    5. Re:Quite honestly... by guardian+alpha · · Score: 1

      And? So they withdrew their stance and are now neutral.

      Yet again, you refuse to answer my question. Why do you see this as a bad thing? A company taking a neutral stance on a political issue, regardless of how or why, is a Good Thing. And yet again, if the RIAA were the ones running away with their tail between the legs, you would be cheering that a company finally took a neutral stance on the issue and let the government handle government issues.

      Choose one or the other, you can't have both.

    6. Re:Quite honestly... by Kyrene · · Score: 1
      If they withdrew on their own, sans political influence from a religious leader, I wouldn't see it as a "bad" thing. However, the circumstances under which they have done a turnabout face *IS* a "bad" thing.

      There were many ways this could've been handled:

      1) Continue to support the bill. It'd piss off the religious right, but it would continue their supposed stance in support of gays' rights.

      2) Withdraw support for this AND ALL OTHER POLITICAL INFLUENCE. *THAT* would be a neutral stance.

      3) Withdraw support for this bill, don't give a reason. Still suspicious, but you can at least speculate, and argue that it's a neutral stance.

      4) Withdraw support due to whining^H^H^H^H^H^H^ pressure from religious right.

      Now, #4 is what they chose. I can't imagine any other way to view this other than "bad," to use your judgment label. It's not a neutral stance, no matter how you slice it.

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
  25. As a gay canadian.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am very glad I run openBSMD.

  26. Wrong. by sulli · · Score: 3, Insightful
    A neutral stance on an anti-discrimination bill may not be bigoted if the company had never thought of it before. But if the company changes its position from in favor to neutral, understanding that this might kill the bill, this is clearly a bigoted position.

    There is no excuse for discrimination against gays. Microsoft of all companies should know that.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
    1. Re:Wrong. by garcia · · Score: 1

      There is no excuse for discrimination against gays. Microsoft of all companies should know that.

      Well, the current government regime in power in the United States doesn't know it and in fact supports discrimination against gays. So why shouldn't companies?

    2. Re:Wrong. by sulli · · Score: 1

      You're justifying behavior of any kind based on that of the Bush administration?! You truly are nuts.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    3. Re:Wrong. by garcia · · Score: 2, Funny

      You truly are nuts if you took what I said to be anything other than blantant sarcasm.

    4. Re:Wrong. by The_K4 · · Score: 1

      Until the law has lots of other amendments attached to it, is reworded and no longer is the bill you supported except in name..... remember that virtually now bill gets ratified without changes.

    5. Re:Wrong. by recursiv · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the trouble is, some people actually think that way.

      --
      I used to bulls-eye womp-rats in my pants
    6. Re:Wrong. by sydb · · Score: 1

      Hey, I missed it too and I'm sensitive to sarcasm! You could at least have thrown in an exclamation mark as a wee hint.

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    7. Re:Wrong. by bushidocoder · · Score: 1
      Point to an instance of Microsoft discriminating against gays - point to a change in their internal policies that says they're going to. Microsoft is one of the few companies I know that offers domestic partner benefits - are they changing that? NO!

      The pastor informed Microsoft that he would organize a boycott of Microsoft's products in a country where there is such a rabid hatred of gays that such a boycott would actually work. Agree with it or not, public companies do not have the right to risk damage to their shareholders over value choices of their leadership. Wall Street would accept Microsoft fighting back in regards to its own internal moral choices, but corporate leadership has no right to risk fiscal damage sticking the companies neck out on an issue completely unrelated themselves (and it is unrelated because if the bill passed, Microsoft would keep doing business the way it always has been). I happen to think that the obvious opinion of Microsoft's leadership (that we should be treating ALL citizens as equal) is the morally right opinion, but there are very opinionated and very loud people who disagree with that. Would it be acceptable to you if the company you had money invested in lost revenue due to a boycott that happened because the CEO of the company supported school prayer?

      Microsoft is having a good year and their corporate solutions would be unaffected by a boycott, but they're obviously in defensive mode in the consumer market. They're trying vainly to fight off iTunes, they have to compete with Tiger and later this year, they need to have a strong release of the Xbox2. The last thing they need is biblebelt churches releasing fliers calling the Xbox2 the "Sinful Gay Box of Sodom and Gemorha" right before the Christmas season.

    8. Re:Wrong. by Nevyn · · Score: 1
      Point to an instance of Microsoft discriminating against gays - point to a change in their internal policies that says they're going to. Microsoft is one of the few companies I know that offers domestic partner benefits - are they changing that? NO!

      Err, removing their support of this bill? Not speaking is an action. I find it hard to believe that they think the govt. will move to Linux (basically the only stick they have) over this. Apart from that I really don't see what anyone could do to them to stop them doing the right thing.

      I guess I can see it if the the govt. hinted at restarting a monopoly charge, but I'd have expected it to happen a while ago.

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
  27. Apple Stickers by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 2, Funny

    I guess Bill was pissed about all those rainbow Apple stickers from the 80's showing up on his car.

  28. Odd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Not that I promote or condone homosexuality, but how can anyone be against the prevention of discrimination? Or is it that some people see supporting a bill that protects homosexuals from discrimination as also condoning homosexual behavior and that Microsoft doesn't want certain people to hate Microsoft because of this perception?

    As an aside, are we going to need laws for every stupid little thing that someone might use to discriminate against someone else? Wouldn't it be easier to just present a list of things you could discriminate against?

    1. Re:Odd by JustNiz · · Score: 0

      >>> but how can anyone be against the prevention of discrimination?

      There is such a thing as beneficial discrimination, unless you wouldn't discriminate against, say, murderers or rapists either.

      On that basis, like most christians, I think discrimination against gays is a good thing.

    2. Re:Odd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't tell.... Are you issuing a strawman argument to support discrimination, or likening gays to murderers and rapists?

    3. Re:Odd by NoizeyMike · · Score: 1

      On what grounds? Have you seen the shirts that say "god hates shell-fish"? One of the cultural studies profs at my school wears one. Apparently it's mentioned that god despises shrimp 5 times more then god hates gays (can't confirm this at this moment). The thing that I tend to notice about fundamentalism and literal readings of the bible is that it is a very selective approach (in reality IMHO to justify cultural norms which is what culture has always done). It seems to me that if such a reading of the bible is going to happen then said Christians should be up in arms about a lot more then simply gay people. Never mind the senseless killing of a whole lot of people outside of North America. Think of all the sinning sea-food lovers and other literal readings of the bible that are going un-practiced. my two cents, Mike

    4. Re:Odd by sulli · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      On that basis, like most christians, I think discrimination against gays is a good thing.

      I'm a Christian and I think you're a fucking dickhead. Do you really think Jesus, who spent his life preaching the Good News to prostitutes and tax collectors, would have endorsed discrimination against anyone? Did the man who gave the Sermon on the Mount ever promote hateful behavior of any kind?

      Sure, Paul was a bigot. But he wasn't the Messiah.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    5. Re:Odd by NoizeyMike · · Score: 1

      On what grounds?

      Have you seen the shirts that say "god hates shell-fish"? One of the cultural studies profs at my school wears one.

      Apparently it's mentioned in the bible that god despises shrimp 5 times more then god hates gays (can't confirm this at this moment).

      The thing that I tend to notice about fundamentalism and literal readings of the bible is that it is a very selective approach (IMHO used unconsciously to justify cultural norms - which is what culture has always done).

      It seems to me that if such a reading of the bible is going to happen then said Christians should be up in arms about a lot more then simply gay people.(which to some degree I suppose they are)

      Never mind the senseless killing of a whole lot of people outside of North America. Think of all the sinning sea-food lovers and other literal readings of the bible that are going un-practiced.

      Please note this is not meant to be directed at any one given individual (Christian) but, rather at those who practice what I'm talking about.

      my two cents,
      Mike

    6. Re:Odd by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Thank you for reminding me why I no longer subscribe to your particular brand of superstition (Christianity).

      On that basis, I think disrimination against Christians is a good thing.

      How do you like it?

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    7. Re:Odd by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      >>> I'm a Christian and I think you're a fucking dickhead.

      well you're not a very GOOD christian then, are you?

    8. Re:Odd by sulli · · Score: 1

      No, I just believe in freedom and equal rights. Why do you hate freedom?

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    9. Re:Odd by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      You sir, are the kind of Christian that the world needs more of. ;)

  29. oh brother. by Canuck_TV · · Score: 1

    As a young, gay, male geek... The second that anything Microsoft does has a significant impact on gay rights, I'm moving to Holland.

    With all the ignorance in government on this side of the pond, the last thing we need is our Software Overloads making some form of impact (good OR bad).

    Why doesn't Bill stick to software. Yeesh. Next headline: "General Motors supports rights of grape pickers in Southeastern France." Who cares??

    1. Re:oh brother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      give us your address, gay infection is cured with broken legs

  30. Another reason to dislike MS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now they're homophobic too!

  31. Mod parent up! by dhakbar · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's a reference to this week's excellent episode of The Office.

    (for all the Brits hating on the US version: we don't care)

    1. Re:Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So typical, the brits make something cool, the hippies fuck it. Common examples: British America, HHGTGH, The Office, etc...

    2. Re:Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Douglas Adams lived in California most of his life. He's as much ours as he is yours.

  32. What is the problem here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Microsoft are making a business decision, and nothing else. At the moment the people worth keeping sides with in government, especially washington are more likely to be less favorable to gay & lesbian rights. That's not Microsoft being harsh to gays & lesbians, it's microsoft doing right to its own continued success and to that of its stockholders.

    1. Re:What is the problem here? by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      That's not Microsoft being harsh to gays & lesbians, it's microsoft doing right to its own continued success and to that of its stockholders.
      Changing from support to non-support IS harsh. It's like saying - "I'll say that I support your goals publicly to curry favour with you, but when the crunch comes, fuck off and die! (but don't tell anyone we've fucked you over)."
  33. THOSE INTOLERANT BASTARDS!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn Microsoft. How dare they not support the homos!

    Microsoft fails to realize the power that the homo crowd wields. Apparently, so does the island of Nevis and Cayman and Jamaica.

    No homos! w00t!

    1. Re:THOSE INTOLERANT BASTARDS!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Missing Cayman link.

      None of the politically correct bullshit in the Caribbean.

      No homos allowed! w00t!

  34. Alternative Headline: by CaryTheSane · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bill Bails on Gay Bill.

  35. Amazing. by RatBastard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The truley amazing thing about this is that MS is scared of someone. Just think about that for a second. The biggest software company in the world, with a monopoly on the desktop and office suite markets scared of someone. Anyone.

    It makes one wonder if there is something rotten in Redmond.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    1. Re:Amazing. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      If you're going to be scared of something, the world's largest religion is a pretty good choice, especially given their track history.

      Know what's funny about all this to begin with? If christianity had risen during greek times, buttsex would probably have been part of the rituals. Christianity was originally a very accepting religion, to the point where women actually ran churches: You see, since the first christians were persecuted basically up until the point where christianity became the dominating religion in the area, churches were generally in houses and women generally ran houses, though the householder was generally the oldest family member. they stopped letting women be in charge of anything to make christianity appealing to romans, who were in general pretty cheauvinistic.

      In other words, had the religion itself not bowed to tyranny back in the day, it would probably be more tolerant today. Microsoft is now bowing to tyranny, but then again, they're a tyrant so it's hard to feel as bad, except that the GLBT community has to suffer as a result.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Amazing. by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      The truley amazing thing about this is that MS is scared of someone.


      Allow me to suggest a different possibility. Perhaps Microsoft's very-public "being gay is OK" slogan was scaring away talent. Perhaps the vast majority of potential employees were seeking more of a "don't ask don't tell" environment, rather than one plastered with colorful ribbons.

      Just a possiblity one may want to consider.
      --
      moo
    3. Re:Amazing. by donutello · · Score: 1

      No. Microsoft is not going to go towards a "don't ask, don't tell" environment. I'm pretty sure they don't care about attracting the kind of talent who would be scared away by their "being gay is OK" stance. All they have done is drop out of the battle for public legislation on the issue. That doesn't mean they have changed their stance on the subject.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    4. Re:Amazing. by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Since when have Islamic religious leaders been called priests?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    5. Re:Amazing. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      It makes one wonder if there is something rotten in Redmond.

      OK mod me down if you will but...

      it took a news like this to make you *wonder* *If* there is *something* rotten in Redmond?

      Pfft...

    6. Re:Amazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The truley amazing thing about this is that MS is scared of someone.

      God?

  36. Microsoft? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2, Funny

    To listen to the commentary here, the gay community is entirely using Apple computers.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:Microsoft? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      I know a number of homosexuals whose computer of choice is made by Apple because of the rainbow bitten apple. They see the Apple as a symbol of the fall from grace (I am not making this up) and the rainbow just closes the deal.

      In fact, I worked for gay.com for a while (save the jokes please, I've heard them all and told many of them, you will not amuse) and there were a lot of macs there, including people who did not work on graphics. (Not that the Mac is actually better for graphics any more, nor has it been for years.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Microsoft? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      I know a number of homosexuals whose computer of choice is made by Apple because of the rainbow bitten apple.

      Which Steve Jobs banished soon after he got back, possibly because of that association.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    3. Re:Microsoft? by greed · · Score: 1
      I know a number of homosexuals whose computer of choice is made by Apple because of the rainbow bitten apple.

      But, for most of us, we pick based on function, price and compatibility-with-what-we-already-have. And sometimes looks.

      Most of the gay people I know have Windows XP; a few are still running 98; a few are on Linux; a few have Macs. I know more gay people than have Macs than industry-average--but that's because I have a Mac, so I'm more likely to know people with similar interests.

      I have a Mac mainly because I hated Windows 95 and I got tired of my then-8-year-old Amiga 2000... which had a rainbow checkmark logo, so I guess I'm not disproving anything here. (OK, if I could have gotten a PowerPC-based RS/6000 for a reasonable price, I'd probably have one of those instead. And have even less commercial software than on the Amiga.)

      My first Mac was an early PowerPC Performa, but I got an iMac anyway later. Those Performas SUCKED, and not in a good way.

      (Anyone want to buy a Performa 6300CD? It can't run OS X, it can't run Linux and it can't run BSD.)

    4. Re:Microsoft? by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      Well, there's a reason "faggot Mac user" is a cliche, you know.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
  37. On the plus side... by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Actually, that's interesting. If Microsoft had followed through with this, would we in the FOSS, non-Microsoft using community have found ourselves flooded with a tide of anti-gay software users?

    I suppose that's a silver lining to this cloud.

    1. Re:On the plus side... by fbjon · · Score: 1
      So you mean, people who would use Windows would be gay? I think many (immature) people already say that.

      Also, it's a bit more complex than a simple bipolar Microsoft-FOSS thing. I don't think there is a magical 'flow' of users between those depending on gay right politics. Is there pro-, or anti-gay support in FOSS?

      Oh, OT while I'm at it. I noticed the 'politics' logo has some stars spangled on a banner.. is this section meant for American politics, not just politics?

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
  38. eh? by Ubi_NL · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I didn't know corporations had anything to say over which laws are passed in parlement. I know we jest on how the government is 0wned by MegaCorps, but to see it brought as bluntly as this (on a topic that doesn't really interfere with their businessplan!!!) is a bit scary. It is possibly even more scary that not a whole lot of posters seems to notice this fact, and apparently accept that the CEO of a company can pass laws in parlement.

    --

    If an experiment works, something has gone wrong.
    1. Re:eh? by DogDude · · Score: 1

      What's more scary is that you are, I assume, at least, say, 12 years old and are just realizing this. Government has been tied to money since the beginning of time. If this really is news to you, then I have some other news for you: Water is wet and the Earth is round(ish).

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
  39. This passes for journalism? by TechnoLust · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Some online rag I've never heard of posts a story and doesn't cite specific sources, some blogger links to said online rag, /. links to blog and posts Microsoft hates gays!

    Can anyone actually confirm that MS pulled support of this?

    --
    "Da ist ein Technölüst in mein Unterpanten!"
    1. Re:This passes for journalism? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Not only is it "some blogger." It's the same blogger who, a few months ago, launched a campaign of personal destruction against a reporter he didn't like, linking that reporter to not merely homosexuality but to homosexual prostitution in order to humiliate him and drive him out of the press corps.

      Bafflingly, this blogger claims to be homosexual himself.

      If that's true, this blogger is the most openly bigoted homosexual person I've ever heard of.

    2. Re:This passes for journalism? by andrewagill · · Score: 1

      It's the same blogger who, a few months ago, launched a campaign of personal destruction against a reporter he didn't like, linking that reporter to not merely homosexuality but to homosexual prostitution in order to humiliate him and drive him out of the press corps.

      Jeff Gannon was not a reporter.

    3. Re:This passes for journalism? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      What? Why do you say that? Of course he was a reporter. He was employed by a news organization that paid him to write news stories for publication. That's what "reporter" means.

      Are you one of those "I say he wasn't a reporter because he didn't write what I wanted him to" kind of people?

    4. Re:This passes for journalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Gannon/Guckert is a former male prostitute
      2. Talon News was an online-only propaganda organ of GOPUSA.
      3. You're full of shit.

    5. Re:This passes for journalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The stranger is a weekly seattle newspaper.

      It's where you go to find out about local shows and events. They also cover local politics.

      They do a better job of predicting how seattle votes than either the Seattle Times or Seattle PI

    6. Re:This passes for journalism? by xnderxnder · · Score: 4, Informative
      The "online rag" looks like a local weekly.. and seems to I dunno, quote sources. Is it less worthy 'cause you didn't see it in the New York Times?

      Some sources from the article:

      Ed Murray, a gay Democrat representing Capitol Hill and the prime sponsor of the bill, confirmed that Smith also told him about the pressure from Hutcherson during an awkward and at times heated March 29 conference call in which they discussed the company's decision to end its active support for the bill.

      [Bradford L. Smith, Microsoft's senior vice president, general counsel, and corporate secretary] told members of GLEAM, the gay and lesbian employees group at Microsoft, that the company had switched its official stance to "neutral" on the bill, and took personal responsibility for the decision.


      I'd quote more, but, y'know, RTFA.
      --
      hooked up funny
    7. Re:This passes for journalism? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I guess the bright side is that you provided an excellent illustration of what I was bemoaning.

      1. Who cares what he's a former of?
      2. People whom you disagree with are as free to publish as anybody else; that's what "freedom of the press" means.
      3. Try a little tolerance on for size. You might just find that you like the way it fits.

    8. Re:This passes for journalism? by andrewagill · · Score: 1

      1. Gannon/Guckert is a former male prostitute
      2. Talon News was an online-only propaganda organ of GOPUSA.
      3. You're full of shit.


      Now, now. You don't know for a fact that he's full of shit.

    9. Re:This passes for journalism? by Qrlx · · Score: 2, Informative

      it's possible that gannon technically meets the definition of reporter.

      but there's a much more accurate term for a reporter like gannon; that term is 'shill.'

      there's nothing baffling about a homosexual outing another homosexual. gannon's softball questions serve to aid and abet a fiercely anti-homosexual administration. in other words, he's a hypocrite. it is the hypocrisy, not the homosexuality, which is bothersome. among other unanswered questions, such as how and why did an ex-prostitute hack for a small time rag get into white house briefings while career reporers from established papers were denied access.

    10. Re:This passes for journalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This:
      Some online rag I've never heard of posts a story and doesn't cite specific sources, some blogger links to said online rag, /. links to blog and posts Microsoft hates gays!

      This online rag is a real paper newspaper -- Seattle has two weekly papers: Seattle Weekly and The Stranger.

      If you RTFA then you would have seen that this was reported to GLEAM who are the gay SIG in the corporation (mailing list and all).
      At the April 4 meeting, Smith told members of GLEAM, the gay and lesbian employees group at Microsoft, that the company had switched its official stance to "neutral" on the bill, and took personal responsibility for the decision.


      GLEAM exists! And you'd think that if MSFT actually beleived this then they wouldn't put up with that crap.

      Of course, you would know online crappy reportage when you saw it.
    11. Re:This passes for journalism? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      that term is 'shill.'

      Please. All that means is that you don't like what he writes. Calling people with whom you disagree names is grammar-school stuff.

      a fiercely anti-homosexual administration

      Okay, we'll that's demonstrably false. Calling somebody with whom you disagree a bigot is also grammar-school stuff.

      in other words, he's a hypocrite.

      Everybody's a hypocrite. I'm a hypocrite. You're a hypocrite. Everybody's a hypocrite. It's part of the human condition.

      When a hypocrite claims to hate hypocrisy ... what is that, but hypocrisy itself?

      Translation: Don't be such a dumbass. The issue at hand had nothing whatsoever to do with homosexuality or with hypocrisy. It had to do with intolerance. The blogger in question wasn't willing to tolerate a different opinion, so he launched a jihad, levelling personal attacks against somebody he didn't like, and then patting himself on the back for his cleverness. It's disgusting and it's despicable, and I don't care what side of the aisle you're on.

    12. Re:This passes for journalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The online rag is indeed a weekly indie paper here in Seattle. They tend to be at least as reliable as other media outlets. Not to say they've never messed up a quote but I'm yet to see them deliberately lie.

      Plus the Stranger is home to Dan Savage. He has a great advice column!

    13. Re:This passes for journalism? by boron+boy · · Score: 1
      how and why did an ex-prostitute hack for a small time rag get into white house briefings while career reporers from established papers were denied access
      Maybe the white house doorman was in need of his "services".
    14. Re:This passes for journalism? by andrewagill · · Score: 1

      Is it less worthy 'cause you didn't see it in the New York Times?

      Funny you should mention the Times.(White House Press Pass Required)

    15. Re:This passes for journalism? by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      I haven't even read anything that Gannon has written, so I have no clue whether or not I would "like it."

      A reporter doesn't just write, he investigates. Consider this exchange between Gannon and McClellan:

      MR. McCLELLAN: Go ahead, Jeff.

      Q: Thank you. The imam [Yassin M. Aref] that was arrested in [Albany] New York last week was discovered because his name appeared in a Rolodex in a terrorist training camp in Iraq before the war. The book was found after, by U.S. troops, but he was in Iraq before the war. Is this another piece of evidence showing the direct terror ties between Iraq and al Qaeda?

      MR. McCLELLAN: One, that's an ongoing investigation. I think the questions related to those particular individuals are best directed to the Department of Justice. And so that's -- I would refer any questions about that investigation to the Department of Justice. We are continuing to wage the war on terrorism on many fronts, both abroad and at home. And I think you're seeing that through the actions that we are taking.

      Q: Let me follow up with a second question. How damaging was the revelation of the deepest mole that we've ever had in al Qaeda? The publication of that man's name by The New York Times -- how damaging is that to our war on terror?

      MR. McCLELLAN: I'm sorry -- which specific instance are you referring to?

      Q: The New York Times published the name of Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, who was described by intelligence officials as the only deep mole we've ever had within al Qaeda.

      MR. McCLELLAN: I'm not sure where it was published, first. Obviously, it was published recently -- the capture of this individual. It is important that we recognize that sometimes there are ongoing operations underway. And as we move forward on capturing or bringing to justice al Qaeda members, we need to keep that in mind. And sometimes we aren't able to go into as much detail we would like to because of those ongoing operations. And I think everybody has a responsibility to keep that in mind.

      That's not reporting, that's espousing propaganda, only in a cleverly disguised Jeopardy-format where you must present your propaganda in the form of a question -- and the lack of an answer signifies tacit approval.

      He reasserst the fictitious Iraq - Al-Qaeda conneciton, then he implies the (liberal) NY Times is undercutting the War on Terror. Central tenets of the dittohead community.

      The end result is that Gannon is the mouthpiece for the mythology this adminstration would like us all to believe, and McClellan does nothing to disabuse the American people of those notions.

      Not only that, it takes time away from what might be a real question.

      Sure, we're all hypocrites. But we're not all shills. Gannon was. I'm surprised you persist in not seeing this.

      But don't take my word for it. If Gannon were a real reporter, why isn't he attenting press conferences anymore?

      More here
      http://mediamatters.org/items/200502020014

    16. Re:This passes for journalism? by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Doorman? Try the President.

    17. Re:This passes for journalism? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Dude, your copy-and-paste skills are certainly above reproach, but can we just get right down to it, please? You don't like conservatives. Anybody who's a conservative, who expresses a conservative opinion, you describe as a shill, a dittohead, a mouthpiece.

      You give liberals a bad name, man. I hate Bush. Hate him with a fiery passion. I think he's an idiot redneck Christian who can barely string a sentence together. He embarrasses me every time he opens his mouth.

      But at least I'm honest. Seriously, at least I'm happy to admit that people who have a different point of view are also entitled to freedom of speech and of the press. Shit, even I -- who marched in a dozen protests before the war -- have finally woken up and admitted that, yes, al Qaeda was in control of Iraq, and they're desperately trying to get that control back by shooting down helicopters and blowing up mosques.

      Be liberal, man. Be progressive. But don't be so fucking intolerant, and don't be such an idiot. Open your eyes and live in the real world.

      Either that, or you're just secretly a conservative posing as a liberal to try to make the rest of us look bad. Frankly, your skreed was so full of stereotypical hate-speech, I'm starting to think that that might be exactly what happened here.

      Oh, and as to why he's not attending press conferences, the answer is that your little pal over at that blog destroyed his fucking life. Is that really how you want to do business? Anybody who doesn't agree with you, toe your party line, gets fucking anhiliated?

      That's not my idea of a progressive America, man.

    18. Re:This passes for journalism? by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Holy Christ. Al Qaeda was in control of Iraq? That's precious.

      Is that really how you want to do business? Anybody who doesn't agree with you, toe your party line, gets fucking anhiliated?

      We spent $70 million and give a special prosecutor free reign to dig up something -- anything -- on President Clinton. Meanwhile the 9/11 Comission, grudgingly appointed by President Bush, gets a budget of $14 million.

      That's the real world, pal. Open your eyes -- and watch where you step!

      Your statement that I "don't like conservatives. Anybody who's a conservative" is demonstrably false. Why just the other day I found myself agreeing with Phyllis Schalfly that database information should not be given special copyright-like protections by Congress, despite what Reed-Elsevier wants. I stood with Pat Buchanan in opposition of NAFTA and GATT, unlike the vast majority of Republicans and Democrats.

      Gannon's life isn't destroyed, but his credibility as a reporter is. And rightfully so. Personally I'd like to see him tarred and feathered. There's nothing wrong with calling bullshit on his shenanigans. When Gannon asks the questions and Helen Thomas gets snubbed, something's fishy in Denmark.

      "The right to be heard does not automatically include the right to be taken seriously." -- Hubert Humphrey

  40. Re:okay, I'll bite... (now literally) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't you read the EULA when you installed Windows? You agreed to whole host of restrictions on your sexuality and sexual preference when you "clicked here to agree".

  41. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by kaje103 · · Score: 0, Insightful

    You're bring Bush into this? Gay bashing has been seen as socially acceptable for years...

    I remember being 12 calling things gay. Bush has nothing to do with it.

  42. Maybe they're planning an office in Round Rock by r3b00tm0nk3y · · Score: 1
    --
    This sig is alpha and shouldn't be viewed on production machines
  43. You take that back! by RatBastard · · Score: 5, Funny
    Windows is still gay.

    You take that back! You take that back right now! How DARE you insult homosexuals like that!

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    1. Re:You take that back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows:
      - Backdoor holes get probed
      - Easily infected with viruses

      I can see the similarity.

      Seriously though, I don't mind homosexuals, as long as it's not in your face "camp" gay. That's just fucking strange.

  44. Why did MS lobby? by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    It's unclear why MS went to bat about this issue anyway. Their website states:
    "Microsoft strongly believes that an inclusive work environment and a diverse employee base have been critical elements of our corporate culture, not only making Microsoft a great place to work, but also enabling us to better understand our customers and create better products," said Ben Waldman, vice president of Microsoft's Mobile Devices Division. The first openly gay executive at the company, Waldman accepted the award on behalf of Microsoft at ceremonies in Hollywood on Dec. 8.
    So if I'm reading this correctly, they are lobbying to make other companies stop discriminating against gays because Microsoft believe that including gays is beneficial to their business.

    Doesn't this strike anyone else as being rather inconsistent with Microsoft's past behavior?

    I mean why would they want to enforce a competitive advantage on their competitors when they typically are so anti-competitive?

  45. We are talking about the Stranger here by Static_Neurotoxin · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is an "Alterative" ad based weekly paper here in Seattle. In my opinion, it's journalistic integrity is slightly above the Weekly World News and roughly that of the Readers Digest.

    Not to say they haven't been right in the past, but their slant is a far left leaning urban newspaper. I imagine their evidence is pretty much Microsoft withdrawing support and a pastor claiming credit.

    --
    --- If stupidity got us into this mess, why can it get us out?
    1. Re:We are talking about the Stranger here by Reignking · · Score: 1

      Informative, because that source -- and the blog that Slashdot linked to -- seemed far from objective.

      --
      One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
    2. Re:We are talking about the Stranger here by TheWatchfulBabbler · · Score: 1
      Actually, their source comes from Microsoft employees (part of a company LBGT -- is that the right acronym? -- group) reporting a conversation in which an exec specifically told them the company was dropping support because they were threatened with an evangelical boycott. So it's sourced, at least, though I suppose there's always the possibility their sources were lying to them.

      Nonetheless, it's remarkable to see Microsoft cave so quickly, given that they've faced down much more serious threats in the past. But, as long as American Christianity remains defined by a absurd focus on sexual behavior, these kinds of stories will remain depressingly common.

  46. No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    You are incorrect. A bigot is by definition intolerant of the opposing point of view. Neither having an in favor stance initially, nor backing down to neutral, indicate any kind of bigotry. Their stance would have had to be radically opposed from the off.

    1. Re:No by Random832 · · Score: 1

      but when "backing down to neutral" is equivalent to "having the bill thrown in the garbage", there is some element of bigotry.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
  47. microsoft... by bird603568 · · Score: 0

    already fucks enough people in the ass, that gays don't have to any more.

  48. M$ changed their minds and did the right thing?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So for once M$ has changed it's mind and is doing the right thing? I suspect that a forecast just changed from flames & scorching to frost warning and flurries!

  49. Church of Gays and Lesbians? by nizo · · Score: 1

    Why can't gays start their own church? That way if someone gives them a hard time, they can claim that it is religious descrimination?

    1. Re:Church of Gays and Lesbians? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unitarians would claim prior art.

    2. Re:Church of Gays and Lesbians? by Kyrene · · Score: 1
      Because people of different religions get discriminated against, too. I know of people who have had problems with custody of children, have gotten fired or otherwise discriminated at work, or outright harrassed due to their religion. So quite honestly, you can't win in this scenario either.

      If you aren't a Christian or a Jew--and with 9/11, being a Muslim can be a problem now too--you face the risk of getting about as much heat as any person in the GLBT community.

      --
      Do not disturb. Already disturbed. http://www.teaaddictedgeek.com
    3. Re:Church of Gays and Lesbians? by Kalyug · · Score: 1

      There are many already. Here's one.

    4. Re:Church of Gays and Lesbians? by sax_therapist · · Score: 1

      Already been done. In 1968, a gay man named Troy Perry was kicked out of his pastorship at a conservative church denomination in Illinois, after his homosexuality was discovered and exposed. He moved to California, came out of the closet, and later started a church for the GLBT community: Metropolitan Community Churches (http://www.mccchurch.org/). Though MCC churches are open to everyone (gay or not), most of the people who attend are in fact gay. These churches have opened up in most major metro areas in the USA (even in the deep South), and a few exist in Europe and South America. MCC is actually similar to a main-line Protestant church, but (obviously) does not promote the literalist, anti-gay reading of the Bible that conservative Christians believe and proselytize. As such, being gay is not the basis of religion in MCC churches; rather, MCC represents a progressive and gay-supportive version of Christianity.

    5. Re:Church of Gays and Lesbians? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats just sick dude.

      That is a church of evil.
      wake up.

  50. The Onion by Doc+Ido · · Score: 1

    This seems like the headline of an article from The Onion.

  51. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Johnboi+Waltune · · Score: 1

    See also: Connecticut legalizes same-sex civil unions. Societal attitudes aren't as black-and-white as you believe.

    --
    "The advanced societies of the future will be driven by competing systems of psychopathology." -JG Ballard
  52. What other changes? by chinard · · Score: 1

    I cant help but wonder if this means they will be changing that default "teletubby landscape" background that comes with windows XP for fear of association with the "outed" Tinky-Winky?

  53. Not causing a problem... by BK425 · · Score: 1

    http://www.komotv.com/stories/36438.htm
    Local tv says the bill has "resurrected". AFAIK this is unprecedented, in Washington when a bill is sent to committe to die (late in the session), generally, they die.
    So if you support expanding protected group status to GLBT, it could be that having Microsoft abandon your cause is a good thing fwiw.

  54. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    >>Gay bashing is now a socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country.

    "now"?

  55. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Mr.+Mikey · · Score: 2

    So, tell us... what test will you adminster to determine whether a couple is "normal" or not? Who gets to decide?

    Feh... being gay is as abnormal as being left-handed.

    --
    wants to be the first monkey to touch the monolith
  56. more proof... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that Microsoft is teh ghey.

  57. US has turned more concervative by master_p · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And Microsoft, since one of the largest companies, follows the trends. By offering support to religious conservatism, MS gets benefits from Bush's government, and the republicans enforce their agenta on a wider basis.

    1. Re:US has turned more concervative by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 1

      Thank the gods Canada's only a hour's drive.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
  58. Serious Question Off Topic(at least a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Alright I will ask it:

    Gay unions, marriages, whatever you call it and whether you are for or against it.

    Question: If gay marriages are allowed, would this also mean I should be able to marry my sister(no Kentukcy jokes), my brother, mom, dad or anyone else.

    I hear Barney Franks speech about just wanting to be together and live normally, etc.

    Could I not substitute my sister in his speech and make the same arguments?(We will assume one of us is sterile).

    What about more than one wife or husband, maybe a combination of both?

    I really am serious.

    9876

    1. Re:Serious Question Off Topic(at least a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't possibly be serious. Barney Frank was not talking about marrying relatives. He was talking about two unrelated men or two unrelated women marrying each other. The only point of any legislation of this type is to lift the restriction on the *sex* of the two (and only two) human partners in a marriage.

      Arguments about polygamy or incest or what-have-you are naked attempts to misdirect the conversation. I'm a guy. I love my boyfriend. I don't know if he's the one I want to marry (hence the AC post), but it gives me a warm fuzzy feeling to think about spending the rest of my life with him. But I, for one, would like some assurance that we have the important protections that marriage allows: hospital visitation rights, power of attorney, hell, even the tax benefits would be nice.

      If you're opposed to gay marriage, that's your prerogative. But don't try to equate it with incest and polygamy. It's insulting to both of us.

    2. Re:Serious Question Off Topic(at least a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for answering.

      I fail to see the difference.

      I love my sister, just thinking about her gives me warm fuzzy feeling to spend the rest of my life with her.

      So why couldn't I marry her?

      You say it is insulting? Why?

      Do you find incest replusive?

      Again I am serious.

      9876

    3. Re:Serious Question Off Topic(at least a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love my sister, just thinking about her gives me warm fuzzy feeling to spend the rest of my life with her.

      Your name isn't James Haven, is it?

  59. Obvious really by GeckoX · · Score: 1

    Had to happen, this has nothing to do with right/wrong and everything to do with commercialism.

    It's nice that MS allows grass-roots campaigns like this to run internally, and even to run with them publicly to some extent, but as soon as a moral issue crosses paths with a financial issue...well what did you expect?

    Me, I'm just impressed that MS ever even remotely stood behind this publicly.

    --
    No Comment.
  60. Good for them by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Since there's currently no litmus test for what constitutes a committed gay relationship (ie marriage), it seems like a bureaucratic nightmare to distinguish between two same-gender friends and a gay couple. For example, there are a lot of single-family residences that don't allow unrelated inhabitants. How does the apartment manager get to decide whether to allow two guys that show up wanting to rent a unit?

    Yeah, I know that's not the best example in the world, but I meant that to demonstrate the millions of ways this could turn into a lawyer-friendly fiasco in record time. If you extend insurance benefits to gay partners (despite their current lack of legal status), do you have to extend it to unmarried straight partners as well? Do gay couples have to file their taxes together, or can they keep the huge tax benefits of filing singly, and if the latter, isn't that discrimination against unmarried straight couples? Do religious groups have to hire gay people even if they are strongly against it? Accept gay volunteers to non-paid positions?

    Honestly, either go with gay marriage (or civil unions or some other process of establishing a legal basis in a relationship) or forget these stupid halfway laws that can't possibly be fairly enforced.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Good for them by hey · · Score: 1

      How about this: to get the insurance you have to sign a form that says you are the gay partner. Done.
      You are inventing problems.

    2. Re:Good for them by andrewagill · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, it has nothing to do with relationships, just with sexual orientation.

      A white man comes to tour an apartment. Realtor quotes him $500/mo. Half an hour later, a black man tours the same apartment. Realtor quotes him $600/mo.

      That's illegal.

      Now, a man comes to tour an apartment, and mentions that he heard about the apartment from a friend at Romeo&Julie's. Realtor quotes him $500/mo. Half an hour later, a man tours the same apartment, and mentions that he heard about it from a friend at Romeo&Romeo. Realtor quotes him $600.

      That's legal, according to current Washington law.

    3. Re:Good for them by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      OK. Is there a form for straight unmarried partners to sign so that they can receive the same benefits?

      The schism really seems to be between married and unmarried couples, rather than gay and straight couples. I think governments would be better served to address that issue than to patch a bunch of smaller laws.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    4. Re:Good for them by Reignking · · Score: 1

      Is there a form for straight unmarried partners to sign so that they can receive the same benefits?

      "Common law" marriage, maybe?

      --
      One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
    5. Re:Good for them by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      As I understand it, it has nothing to do with relationships, just with sexual orientation.

      I don't think that's true. Regarding insurance: a gay man could marry a gay woman (see Andrea Dworkin for a real-life example of that) and receive the exact same policy as a straight man married to a straight woman. The new proposed law would extend those same benefits to gay couples; single gay people would not benefit from that part of the law.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    6. Re:Good for them by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      I could see that as a substitute for civil unions if it were available to both orientations and on-demand. Otherwise, a straight couple could make a pretty reasonable argument that they shouldn't have to wait a year (or however long it takes to be married under common law in Washington) when a gay couple can sign a piece of paper giving them the same privileges immediately.

      Which leads to a related question: if John and Kevin apply for things normally only available to married people by signing an affidavit that they're partners, do they have to go through divorce proceedings to dissolve the arrangement? Do John and Jane married under common law? That's not a leading question; I honestly don't know the answer.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    7. Re:Good for them by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Since there's currently no litmus test for what constitutes a committed gay relationship (ie marriage)Since there's currently no litmus test for what constitutes a committed gay relationship (ie marriage)

      What is the "litmus test" for straights? As far as I can tell, the test is simply whether they applied for a license at the county courthouse. Why doesn't that work for gays?

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    8. Re:Good for them by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Why doesn't that work for gays?

      Because there's no state-sponsored equivalent "certification". That sounds like the real problem people are trying to fight.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    9. Re:Good for them by kindbud · · Score: 1

      And one more thing...

      Do gay couples have to file their taxes together, or can they keep the huge tax benefits of filing singly, and if the latter, isn't that discrimination against unmarried straight couples?

      Married couples can choose to file separately if they wish. If there are "huge tax benefits" to filing singly (??), married couples have always been able to do that. If they do, then one can file as head of household, and can even claim the kids, if any, as dependents. Also, depending on the other person's income, they may be able to claim their partner as a dependent. In fact, you can claim any party in your residence as a dependent, if in fact they are dependent upon you for their support, as defined by the IRS. They don't even have to be related to you by blood or marriage.

      Married-filing-jointly is reserved for those couples who are married, even common-law marriages qualify.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    10. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So because heterosexual people could abuse it by signing up their best friend for insurance benefits, it's not a good idea?

      I like to think of it much the way FedEx did (and several other major companies). They extended benefits to same sex partners. Once marriage was legal in Massachusetts, they issued a statement that they will no longer extend those benefits to MA employees that aren't married.

      Seems perfectly fair to me. Once they CAN equally apply the policy, they do, but in the mean time they try their best.

      Any time I've been involved in a situation where a company extended benefits for a "domestic partnership", my partner and I had to register and sign a statement that we were in a committed relationship.

      Not to say people wouldn't do it, but I personally don't know of any straight guy that would sign a statement with his employer that he's in a committed same sex relationship.

    11. Re:Good for them by ArtStone · · Score: 1

      And in the states who haven't repealed the laws, is adultery outside of a gay marriage a criminal matter?

      And if John is bisexual and marries Jane later without divorcing Kevin first, is that bigomy? If it isn't, does that mean one person can be a party to both a straight marriage and a gay marriage at the same time? (other permutations left as an exercise to the reader)

      If Mary and Jane get married and Mary gets pregnant, does the common law assumption of paternity declare that Jane is the father and required to pay child support and has parental rights to see the child and be involved in decisions regarding its upbringing after it is born?

      Be careful what you ask for.

      --
      Final 2006 "Proof of Global Warming" US Hurricane Count -> 0
    12. Re:Good for them by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

      The company I work for (http://www.gtech.com(Should I mention this?))medical insurance and whatnot has significant/life partnet instead of spouse. During orientation years ago it was hinted that if you were homosexual that means they would be covered. More companies should do this. Also goes for our life insurance, dental, eyecare, etc. Company also helps you out if you adopt which is not something I've not heard of before.

  61. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If no one gets to decide, we might as well let Michael Jackson be a foster parent.

  62. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by middlemen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Atleast people are allowed to be gay in USA. In India a court in New Delhi declared being gay a crime punishable by law.

  63. Only one explanation by sjonke · · Score: 1

    Gates found a code monkey harboring a blue dalmatian iMac in his office.

    --
    --- What?
  64. Something doesn't seem right by 00squirrel · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From TFA:

    The radical right activist reportedly told Microsoft it had better pull its support for the gays or anti-gay bigots would launch a nationwide boycott of Microsoft, and guess what - Microsoft caved. A single anti-gay jerk, and Microsoft chose to reverse over ten years of policy and bash gays.

    Ok, is it just me or does that paragraph just not make sense. Microsoft has millions of customers, and I hardly thing one voice (no matter how loud or how Christian) threatening to boycott is going to make Microsoft do anything, let along change their political stance. I mean, nearly every Slashdotter has been boycotting Microsoft for years, and it hasn't made them do anything!

    1. Re:Something doesn't seem right by izzo+nizzo · · Score: 1

      I mean, nearly every Slashdotter has been boycotting Microsoft for years, and it hasn't made them do anything!

      well, they have made some feeble attempts to look like they're down with open source and whatnot. And they dis Linux. But mostly it seems like you're right.

  65. what?! by grumpyman · · Score: 1

    MS abandoning gay rights bill? Gees, that's gay.

  66. Volk Wagen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They only drive Volks Wagens too.

  67. Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 5, Informative
    I would imagine there are a lot of bible-thumpers who would never hurt another human being, gay or not. And until told otherwise, I'd assume this pastor is one of them.

    Sorry to burst your bubble, but here's a quote from the good Pastor, during the Senate Hearing on HB1515, on March 22nd:



    "Homosexuals have never been considered one-fifth of a human being,"



    (He then went on to say that homosexuals want to molest young boys.)

    Sorry, but with that sort of intolerance, this man has no right to call himself a servant of God.

    All his parishoners should be ashamed.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      why don't real christians band together and have fuckers like him excommunicated and arrested?

      I suspect it's because more people that call themselves "christian" agree with him than you think they do.

      In my mind, just being a christian is endorsement of this guy and Fred Phelps and George W. Bush and all of the other fundamentalist cocksuckers out there that want to throw out the constitution and replace it with the bible.

    2. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by AviLazar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While I am not Christian myself, I think I find the statement: In my mind, just being a christian is endorsement of this guy: wholly offensive. Just because there are a bunch of rotten apples in the position of power/leadership in the Christian community does not mean the entire community (or the faith) is bad.

      For your convenience, I am Jewish.

      Other then that, a good lynchin of bastards who want to take away the rights of others because they are different (and pose no real threat to anyone else) wouldn't be such a bad thing.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    3. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by aoe2bug · · Score: 1
      why don't real christians band together and have fuckers like him excommunicated and arrested?


      arrested for what? believing in something else? also, christian != catholic, there is nothing to "excommunicate" him from.

      --
      -Dan
    4. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that they have been considered one fight of a human being? I've never heard of that one. If he has not either, forgive me for not being shocked.

      Also, why did you not have a direct quote for the shockingly intollerant other statement you attribute to him? I call bullshit.

    5. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm the originial anonymous poster.

      Thanks for the update. It's obvious he's a nut. I feel sorry for the people that go to his church.

      Unfortunately, it's always the nuts on both sides who are spurred to take political action.

      I'm in favor of treating everyone fairly. I don't support special laws for gays for the same reason I don't support special laws for Lutherans, or Lithuanians. We've done enough statistical sampling and catering to special interests in this country. Continuing to over-complicate the legal system and pander to minorities will soon mean that ALL of the laws mean nothing. Surely you can see that a hundred years from now it will be the same bullshit with some other group -- bald, fat sheep lovers or something. At that point we'll have 50 zillion laws all over the place, each a little inconsistant with the others. The democracy cannot survive like this.

      Let's come up with one law -- hey, how about only hire people on the basis of how well they do their work? Or people can form life-time bonds that have special recognition from the state?

      But I'm not signing up for gay tolerance laws. Firstly, you can't make people be nice by passing a law, only piss them off. Secondly we should be any meaner or any nicer to gays than we are to anybody else. Pass ONE law that covers the whole country, not some political christmas gift to a loyal minority group that will only make our country more complicated and weaker.

      ------
      Want some more laws? Have you seen the tax code lately?

    6. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen. I am a Christian, even graduated from a Christian college (eee...that was a weird experience, and I did get into numerous arguments about how God does NOT in fact hate 'gays', incidently, it's fun to tell close minded Christian hate-mongers to get their heads out of their asses)
      and there are a lot of...sane Christians. You know, the ones that don't change what's in the Bible bi-daily to suit their own black minds and hearts. What I really don't understand is even if you think it's so 'evil' and 'wrong'...who are you to judge? If you're such a great Christian, let everyone live their lives and leave judgement to God. I never though most of the Christian persecution I would experience would come from...Christians. Come to think of it, they are the only ones that have attacked my faith and beliefs. Fucked up ol' world.

    7. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by anagama · · Score: 1


      Bowing to the "good" pastor's influence is merely further proof that MS is evil.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    8. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think taking away rights has been the issue, it is/should already be covered in the law; there should be no need to single out a particular group for special treatment oneway or the other. If so, then why stop at gay, should a special provision be included for atheists, skinheads, etc.... seems like a waste of time that could be better spent; ahh politics :)

    9. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Dominatus · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      DISCLAIMER: I'm all for gay rights. I'm assuming, however, that the quote is in reference to the fact that black people in America were considered 3/5th of a person until the 19th century.

    10. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.

      Thou shalt not bear false witness.

      Isn't that one of the Ten Commandments?

    11. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1


      But then why do no mainstream christian groups ever take action against people like this? Kick him out of the church, make sure that his voice is never heard again? It's not like that can't be done. Look at how atheists are treated.

      If christians really thought this guy was wrong this story wouldn't even exist. They all agree with him, whether they know it or not.

    12. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      There really isn't much "we" can do. The minute we got up on a podium and rail against some other movement we would become exactly what we attacked.

      The best response to this from a Christian standpoint would be to show grace and love to homosexuals, and ignore the rest of the crowds that want an excuse to attack Christianity because of their intolerance.

      But you have demonstrated your own variety of intolerance, which I wish you could see, because there are so many more like you out there who cannot see themselves objectively.

      Christians should not discriminate against homosexuals, but non-Christians should not pick apart their neighbors belief structures. Just because I think some activity is wrong doesn't mean I can't be around someone who engages in that activity. Hell, I'll be the first to admit I've also engaged in immoral sexual conduct. Did God damn me to hell? He could have, but He chose not to. The same offer is extended to everyone.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    13. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by WhiplashII · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I do realize that you were joking, but...

      Over the years I have come to realize that we really needs the weirdos on the far right fighting the weirdos on the far left - the constant turmoil prevents complacency, and lets us adapt to new situations more quickly.

      It is a real pain sometimes, agreed. (Although of course you and I would differ on which group does more damage...)

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    14. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      Didn't really burst his bubble--he suggested we assume the pastor would never hurt another human being, until proven otherwise. You proved otherwise. Still doesn't demonstrate that we should have assumed he was a bigot.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    15. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because mainstream Christianity believes the behavior of homosexuality to be an abomination while the people who practice it are to be loved?

      The good pastor is half-right. Religiously, that is. I'm not a practicing Christian, but I repeect their faith, just as I do others. Christianity, for all of the warts, has brought forth western civilization over the last thousand years.

      Christians believe all are sinners. So the good pastor standing up and saying gays are sinners is telling the truth in their eyes. They ALSO believe that we should love one another - -that means no discrimination. That also means that some sort of gay union will probably work out over the next decade or two. Christians are just too kind to hurt other people in the long run (not short run! Different story entirely!)

      Personally, I find the slander of Christians on this board no different from the slander of gays that you hear from some supposed Christians. It's disgusting and pathetic - -from whoever does it to whoever is the target.

    16. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by AviLazar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They all agree with him, whether they know it or not.

      You gotta really stop with the "they all" comments. Not every Christian person has a problem with gays. There might be a legitimate poll out there that gives rough numbers - but I would bet that you couldn't legitmately say "most". It tends to be that the bigots who don't want gays to get equal rights are the loudest voices - while most of us are like "Hey I hope the best for gays...now let me go back to watching Enterprise." Don't let a bunch of loud mouths make you think all of Christiandom is a bad thing.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    17. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by stinerman · · Score: 1

      why don't real christians band together and have fuckers like him excommunicated and arrested?

      My mom is a liberal Catholic, and I asked her this same question. She thinks it is the "it doesn't bother me therefore it isn't a problem" syndrome.

      The "pro-family" right is every organized and energetic. I think it has to do with the fact that their men are running the show. Those for equal rights for GLBTs know that no amount of protesting will change the minds of Bush & Co. (do you recall the protests for the Iraqi war?), so the ones who actually do care are content to sit on their asses because they know its a lost cause until at least the midterm elections and probably until 2008.

      As far as being "Christian" is concerned, I wouldn't use such broad language. Read about the dogmatic differences between southern Baptists and Unitarians and you'll see what I mean.

    18. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by eaolson · · Score: 5, Insightful
      there are a lot of...sane Christians

      Unfortunately the reasonable middle isn't the ones out picketing the funerals of gay people. (Fred Phelps) They're not the one's on TV saying that a gay couple adopting a kid is "violence against the child." (The late Pope) They're not the ones that are saying gay people should be put in jail. (2004 Texas GOP platform)

      The reasonable middle is fairly silent on these issues, and so it is the whackjob-fringe groups that get all the press and the air time.

    19. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Space+Coyote · · Score: 1

      uh, what Bible are you reading? Surely not the one in which it says flat out that homosexuality is punishable by death.

      That same bible isn't too keen on divorce or eating shellfish, either.

      --
      ___
      Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
    20. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe true. The bible says a lot of things that aren't legal in this coutry (like putting gays to death, as well as kids and witches).

      But in this country I don't have to be Christian, and I'm not. My religion doesn't say that homosexuality is a bad thing. I don't mind if the Christian church doesn't allow them to wed, but the governments of the United States aren't allowed to impose your religion on other people.

    21. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Not blacks, but non-free persons. Legally speaking, there was a difference.

    22. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by UCRowerG · · Score: 1

      The same is true on the other side of the fence. The most passionate are out marching, protesting, lobbying for equal treatment. Your average gay man or woman is pretty normal, and I bet many heteros would never be able to pick them out.

    23. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree with you. It's like saying that simply by being a hacker you endorse crackers and script kiddies. Newsflash: IT'S NOT! While I oppose gay marriage I do not believe that they should be treated any different than a straight person.

    24. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my opinion the bible needs to be burned and the archaic institution known as "religion" needs to be shut down forever. If you take life orders from the crude translations of a decrepit derelict of a book that was written by some men based, apparently, on their imaginations, then you are a sad individual. The very idea of it all is preposterous. Mythology has no place outside of the fantasy realm in which it was both conceived and exists.

      And perhaps the problem isn't with people showing affection for each other, whether it be public or not, but your prudish attitude. I take it that you live in America by those comments. Almost anywhere else in the world it is considered commonplace and might even be encouraged in some locales. It is NATURAL to give affection, why should it be only be allowed when you're hidden away behind closed doors? Is your love really that shallow and controlled by your insecurities?

      People like you disgust me. You are the epitome of Luddism and that which would hold humanity back from ever evolving. Instead of using the best tools available, being observation, science and understanding, you choose to close yourself off behind a veil of automatic righteousness. Your mentality is that of "If it says so in the bible, it must be true despite any factual, tangible evidence to the contrary.".

      Not being satisfied believing in your religious world, you attempt to impose that belief upon other, condemning those who would go against it. Normally I wouldn't make statements such as those contained in this message, but I am sick and tired of listening to people like you wax righteous about ideals and a book that many people do not regard any higher than the toilet tissue that you'd wipe your rectum with.

      No, you and any like you are the ones who need to be shot.

    25. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He then went on to say that homosexuals want to molest young boys.

      Ah.. I see what he's done there...
      He's gone and confused "homosexuals" with "church leaders"

    26. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1
      1. In the meantime, the Bible has declared homosexuality to be an abomination, right along with

      Wearing cotten-polyester blends.
    27. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      You mean excommunication? I'm not up to speed on the details of Christianity, but I don't know of anyone but the Catholic Church who has a mechanism for excommunicating members. Christianity is a fragmented religion with no corporeal governing body with that power.

      As for athiests, they're frequently treated like anyone else. I should know, because I was one for a while.

    28. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      Don't let a bunch of loud mouths make you think all of Christiandom is a bad thing.

      I'm not. I'm letting a bunch of loudmouths and almost 30 years of living in the bible belt, where every single person I've met that describes themselves as a christian has also been a hardcore bigot, make me think that.

      My opinion might be harsh and heavily biased, but it's not just based on what I see in the news. I've lived around this shit all my life and I've been discriminated against myself for being a non-christian.

    29. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Porter+Doran · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not standing up for this "pastor" -- but you've got that quote all wrong. What he is saying is that Blacks require protection in law because of their historical mistreatment by laws -- in our very Constitution they are to be counted one-fifth a citizen for representational purposes. Then he is saying that homosexuals do not require protection in law because they have not been historically mistreated by laws -- for exampe, "homosexuals have never been considered one-fifth of a human being" by our Constitution. Better to understand with whom you disagree before commencing argument.

    30. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      Personally, I find the slander of Christians on this board no different from the slander of gays that you hear from some supposed Christians. It's disgusting and pathetic - -from whoever does it to whoever is the target.
      I'll stop if you stop :)

      Oh wait, saying that homosexuality is a mortal sin and that this "pastor" isn't slander in your world, is it?

      Religion is just an excuse for bigotry. Some also require groupthink or the forsaking of intellectual pursuits. Others don't, but that doesn't make them any more enlightened, just better at marketing to prospective members.

    31. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      Are you saying that they have been considered one fight of a human being? I've never heard of that one. If he has not either, forgive me for not being shocked.

      Also, why did you not have a direct quote for the shockingly intollerant other statement you attribute to him? I call bullshit.


      Bullshit call accepted. Here is the webpage that contains the article I quoted. Read it for yourself.

      (By the way, if you're going to reference my posts, at least have the courtesy to read them. The word was 'fifth', not 'fight'.)

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    32. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so is adultry..... Never underestimate the ability of a fundamentalist to "cherry-pick" from the old testament as well as the new testament to try and justify their bigoted views. Funny how they always skip the parts that call for compassion towards others. I don't recall Christ ever calling for the death of anyone. But I guess my inability to morph his teachings into intolerance and bigotry must bar me from being a "fundamentalist" Christian.

    33. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      then why aren't you doing something about all these people that are giving you a bad name? is it that "the meek shall inherit the earth" horseshit that's keeping you from taking action?

    34. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Sexual+Ass+Gerbil · · Score: 1

      He's got a point, though. It's true that Christians aren't all against the teaching of evolution nor against homosexual behaviors, however the truth is that the leaders of most protestant Christian churches teach and believe in creation. And all of the major Christian church denominations (including Catholicism) denounce homosexuality. Oh, yes they say they love the sinner but hate the sin. But the number of family disownments and suicides of homosexuals who grew up in a Christian family tell a different tale.

      If there are Christians who don't believe in the dogma of their church, then why do they keep identifying themselves as Christians? Why do they keep funding their leaders with tithes every Sunday? Why do they elect their church leaders to positions of power? Do they think that they are somehow going to change the church by continuing this behavior? I say that because they haven't changed a thing. Honestly, I feel sorry for these Christians who say that they believe in almost all of what their church preaches-- except for little things like homosexuality and science because these people are afraid to confront their church and make a difference. They just sit quietly in their pew, stand up when told to, sing when prompted, and sit down like good little Sheep.

    35. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by darthwader · · Score: 1

      It is impossible to "kick him out" of the Christian church, because there is no central authority to define who is or who is not part of the church. If he believes in the trinity, he's a Christian. In fact, even if he doesn't believe this, he can still call himself a Christian because there's nobody to stop him (nobody owns a trademark on the name).

      What can happen, however, is that he can be kicked out of one specific Christian organization. For example, it is possible for someone to be kicked out of the Roman Catholic church, or out of the Anglican church, or out of the United church.

      However, that's extremely rare. What is way more common is for the Christian organization to move forward, and the hard-liner to refuse to move, and leave the organization. In other words, these people usually aren't fired, they usually quit. And then they go on to create their own organization, with people that agree with them.

      I belong to the Anglican church in Canada (BC, to be specific). We have worked hard for gay rights. Recently, the church organization has decided to officially bless homosexual unions. A few priests in our area could not live with that, and they left the church. They were not "kicked out", and they would be welcome to re-join the church any time they want to. But they decided that their beliefs are incompatible with the church's beliefs, so they quit. They are still Christians, but they aren't members of the Anglican church any more.

      People often talk about "Christians" as if they were all of one mind. That's as silly as saying "all Americans believe this" or "all black people think that". People interpret the bible and the teachings of respected elders differently, so it is very common for people who all believe they are following the teachings of Christ to have very different opinions on some matters. This is one of those matters.

      --
      I hate it when I make a joke and I get modded "+5 insightful". Mod the stupid comments "funny", not "insightful", pleas
    36. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by bluesangria · · Score: 1
      I believe part of the problem is that the question is framed in an inflammatory manner. By saying that gays want "gay marriage" then conservatives can say gays are trying to undermine the institution of marriage. However, if you REMOVE the word "marriage" and instead just start calling it civil rights (which is really what it is), then most people would shrug and say, "Oh sure. Gays deserve civil rights".

      So, let's be clear on this. Gays are not interested in someone being able to declare their partnerships valid. They can do that on their own. What they DO want is the legal rights given to a heterosexual married couple that are taken for granted like, The right to make decisions for your partner in an emergency, the right to health benefits and insurance benefits from your partner's employment, the right to access banking and other legal records, etc.

      Notice that unmarried hetero couples do NOT have those rights, but can "earn" them by legally declaring to the state "we are unified in family and finances" (i.e. get married), but no such legal action is available to same sex partners. This, to me, is a simple Right to Contract which is being artificially denied to gay couples. Notice that this has nothing to do with wether or not a gay union is recognized in certain churches, but the government MUST remain secular on this issue and it is not doing so.

      blue

    37. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      People often talk about "Christians" as if they were all of one mind. That's as silly as saying "all Americans believe this" or "all black people think that". People interpret the bible and the teachings of respected elders differently, so it is very common for people who all believe they are following the teachings of Christ to have very different opinions on some matters. This is one of those matters.
      Then stop placing yourself in the same group as this guy. Stop calling yourself Christian. Call yourself Anglican, or a follower of Christ, but do everything you can to distance yourself from these types of people.

      Unless you really agree with him and merely find his methods distasteful?

    38. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just did say they should be treated differently.
      It's the whole last freakin' sentence.

    39. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

      For f**k's sake, why can't every religious nut-job out there just go away? Just let people live their bloody lives the way the want to! How does 2 men in a relationship, and, oh no, bumming each other, hurt you? Get over yourselves, please, and go back to your own lives. I don't buy this "hate the sin not the sinner" crap, just stop the self-righteousness already. Surely your stupid god has something in mind for those who, in your blind eyes, "sin?"

      --
      -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
    40. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by nokojones · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Christians, which I'm assuming you call yourself, follow the teachings of Christ, which are found in the Gospels, not in Leviticus, which is the ancient and somewhat barbaric text you get your 'abomination' from. Paul (whose teachings frequently bear little resemblance to the teachings of Jesus in the Gospels) also had a thing against homosexuals, along with fornicators, adulterers, the effeminate, thieves, the covetous, drunkards, revilers, and swindlers. (1 Cor. 6:9-10) That really doesn't leave a lot of people that he doesn't revile - including Jesus (who BTW didn't preach 'reviling', but love), whose first miracle, after all, was to turn water into wine. If you'd like to find a group that most closely follows the teaching of Paul as stated here I suggest you join Al-Qaeda.

    41. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      But you have demonstrated your own variety of intolerance, which I wish you could see, because there are so many more like you out there who cannot see themselves objectively.
      I see no honor in tolerating pure hatred.

      Your god is a god of war and destruction. I wish you could see that.

    42. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking linux fatty, I hope you get hit by a bus.

    43. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about stopping with the guilt by association fallacies?

    44. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Golias · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is, the 3/5 thing was an anti-slavery law which was intended to help black people.

      Counting slaves as "persons" for the purpose of assigning house seats meant that pro-slavery states would be over-represented in Washington.

      Northerners pointed out that Southern legislators clearly did not represent the interests of slaves, and slaves could not vote, therefore they should not be counted when dividing up electoral numbers at all.

      The Southern states fought back, and the compromise was that 3/5 of the slave population would count towards the general population for the purpose of establishing electoral votes.

      This allowed, among other things, the eventual election of Abraham Lincoln as President.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    45. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1
      I'm willing to listen to any arguments would would put forth.

      My guess is you haven't spent much time reading the Bible.

      Or, you've taken the Old Testament out of context and not read any of the New Testament.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    46. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Unfortunately the reasonable middle isn't the ones out picketing the funerals of gay people. (Fred Phelps)

      Actually, I think the gay community needs more people like Fred Phelps, perhaps one in every state. Nothing like an out-and-out wackjob kook like him to point out the ultimate end of a morally bankrupt ideology built on hate.

    47. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Clockwurk · · Score: 1

      He then went on to say that homosexuals want to molest young boys.

      Do you know of any straight men that molest young boys?

    48. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1


      Silly Christian. If you can use "faith" as a logical crutch, I can use "opinion". It's the same thing, after all.

    49. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The good pastor, who is black, was referring to his people being considered three-fifths of a human. He is of course too ignorant to even get the number correct, or perhaps just sloppy with the facts.

      And it was the southern states who wanted slaves counted whole -- they couldn't vote, so they would just have increased the representation of those states.

      I think hate is the only thing Hutcherson understands though. I'd really like to express my undying contempt and hatred of him as a person to his face and in front of congress. I guess I could organize some friends and picket his house.

    50. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      No fallacy about it. How about you stop being guilty by association?

    51. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      I love the bible. It's wack! Here's my favorite part. Deuteronomy 25:11

      If two men are fighting and the wife of one of them comes to rescue her husband from his assailant, and she reaches out and seizes him by his private parts, you shall cut off her hand. Show her no pity.

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    52. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For someone claiming others are using hate speech, what you said is the worst most intolerant hate speech I've seen yet on this thread. Why don't you just admit you hate Christians? Until you do, you have zero credibility. Your leftist rant is so transparent and clearly inflammatory. It is quite offensive and your point of view on the issue of homosexuality is not the only point of view in America. Nor is it or you some how enlightened, more so that anyone else with an opinion on the subject. If you are going to claim others are intolerant, you sure as heck better be tolerant including with the Christians you clearly hate. Other wise your a hypocrite. So what is the solution then to the issue of homoxsexuality? Oh wait, I bet I can guess, a Christian-phobe such as yourself would probably say we should round up all Christians and execute them. WOW, that is SO tolerant of you with regard to a differing view on the issue of homosexuality! The issue is not where or not gay's should be allowed to marry. Who care's one way or another, they'll do what they like, just like everybody else. The real issue is how the government treats it citizens. The fact is most Christians don't give a sh1t about someone else's personal sexual preferences. What Christians are sick of is that homo's feel the need to make an issue out of their preferences and flaunt it over everyone. Last time I checked hetero's don't run around proclaiming they are hetero's. As far as the government goes, it should just treat all citizens equally and not give special privilidges, via laws to special groups, including homosexuals. They already have equal protection under the law. Why should they get equal protection because of their sexuality. That is just plain stupid and gives them something beyond the normal allocated rights to US citizens. If the government passes a law giving them protection because of there sexuality, the the government is in essence saying the homo's are more important to society than non-homo's. That is just plain ridiculous. Are you all the same liberals who claim the government should stay out of the bedroom. If that's the case there should be any laws regarding sexuality. I'm going to suggest the notion that instead the government should just not give any special status to any type of marriage, whatsoever! In fact it should just do away with knowledging marrige altogeter.

    53. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Rs_Conqueror · · Score: 1

      Sorry, not happening. Freedom of religion /= freedom from religion.

    54. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      Actually, I don't have the quote wrong at all. Pastor Hutcherson is marginalizing the discrimination that gays experience by comparing it with the experiences of the black race in this country. Just because gays are not discriminated against with the same intensity and violence that blacks were, does not make it OK. If he wants to get into a pissing match about whose cultural group was shit on the most, I'm sure there's more than a few Jews who would like to take him up on that.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    55. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by guitaristx · · Score: 1

      I am a proud Christian, and I do not endorse this person. I personally dislike the idea that homosexual couples are barred from the same rights and privileges that my wife and I enjoy. This, however, is not an indication that I approve of homosexual relationships.

      Furthermore, I have a problem with politicians who use the bible as a platform for their political agendas. I had a hard time dealing with my fellow church-goers last year at election time because I found both candidates supporting agendas that contained items that were important to me as a Christian. However, I was scowled upon for choosing the agendas that were more important to me as a Christian because of their content, and not because the candidate loudly said, "I'm a Christian, and that's why i'm doing such-and-such." At any rate, I find those people who attempt to maneuver policically under the guise of any religion to be, more often than not, spin doctors and propaganda artists. For this reason, I try (as much as possible) to ignore the professed religions of political officials, and let their actions indicate where their intentions lie. As the Master said, "By their fruits you will know them."

      On a side note, the parent's "real christian" argument sounds amazingly similar to the "no true scotsman" logical fallacy.

      --
      I pity the foo that isn't metasyntactic
    56. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Expression", look it up some time. Freedom of opinion /= freedom from opinion.

    57. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      Fallacious argument. Even if all boy-molesters are homosexuals (which they're not), it does not logically follow that all homosexuals are boy-molestors.

      Thanks for playing though...

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    58. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Other then that, a good lynchin of bastards who want to take away the rights of others because they are different (and pose no real threat to anyone else) wouldn't be such a bad thing.

      Oh the irony.

      Well, what's a little extrajudicial terror against unpopular groups? Anyone for the formation of the GayGayGay*?

      *Say it fast.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    59. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      Ahh, so what your saying is that you're completely unprepared to defend your view that Christianity "tolerates hatred," and you have to resort to making some loose connection with faith to basically say "well, you make wild unsupported claims too, so there!"

      But be my guest, go on with your {belief,opinion} that Christians are the dumbed down sheep who have all been fooled. I'll leave you with this, though--if we were talking about anything else besides Christianity, I bet you would have backed up your point :)

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    60. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would help if you knew what the fallacy was.

      Guilt by Association. "Guilt by Association is a fallacy in which a person rejects a claim simply because it is pointed out that people she dislikes accept the claim."

      I would say your equating one's declaration of themselves as a Christian as being supportive of this pastor's ideas falls right into this fallacy.

    61. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Pentavirate · · Score: 1

      How about a law that says that I can hire or fire whomever I want for whatever reason I want? Or does that fall under the Freedom of Association ammendment in the Bill of Rights?

    62. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TheWatchfulBabbler · · Score: 1
      The reasonable middle is fairly silent on these issues, and so it is the whackjob-fringe groups that get all the press and the air time.

      It's been my experience that, first, the reasonable middle isn't aware that there are perfectly valid interpretations of the Bible that do not excoriate homosexuality (it helps if you learn enough Koine Greek to read Romans and know enough about first century culture to understand Paul's worldview). Consequently, they're afraid to take on the anti-gay groups on a Biblical level, and in fact are not usually aware that there are plenty of theologians and scholars who have studied homosexuality as a valid lifestyle within the Christian faith. Oddly enough, the Catholics are one of the denominations out in front of this issue, though the Curia has aggressively shut down theological discussion (vide Curran, Father Charles).

      Second, I do believe that most national-level journalists just don't understand Christianity, and consequently they tend to box Christians into the "conservative faithful" and "liberal heretics" mold. For them, Christianity is not what's studied and taught in the seminaries; it's what someone like James Dobson (who has no theological background) thunders on the radio. As always, loud and ugly beats down soft and reasonable in the media.

    63. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Pentavirate · · Score: 1

      FYI on the child molesting. That comes from 3 facts:

      1. Nearly all child molesters are men (98%-99%).
      2. 1/3 of all children molested are boys.
      3. Homosexuals make up just under 3% of the population.

      If you put it all together, it says that 2/3 of all child molesters are heterosexual and 1/3 are homosexual yet that 1/3 comes from a mere 3% of the population.

      For what it's worth.

    64. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Christians who discriminate against homosexuals because of a Biblical context are nothing more than hypocrites. Their supposed Messiah abolished the old Jewish laws, and they feel fit to ignore all of them except that which they choose, today, to further their agenda.

      These same Christians are not permitted to cut their hair, eat bacon cheeseburgers, wear polyesther, go out dancing on Friday nights or touch a member of the opposite sex outside of the confines of marraige (shit, can't even touch them at their wedding.) But Christians are ready and willing to ignore all of these laws.

      The next time you see a Christian protesting something silly like this on a Friday night because their church/doctrine says so, pick up the nearest rock and hurl it at their head. That, afterall, is the sentence for their crimes according to their own fucking manual.

    65. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      It would help if you were to quote a correct definition of Guilt by Association.

      And in case one refutation of your BS isn't enough, here's another.

      Nice try, though.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    66. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you are a christian, one would expect something better than this ignorant rant. To say homosexuality is a sin is not a judgement by any stretch of the imagination. It's really annoying when people (Christians or not) sit and just the Thou Shall Not Judge argument. It is a totally fallacy to do so. Nobody is judging anybody by saying something is morally wrong. A judgement would be to say that person X is going to hell because they are a homosexual. For it to truly be a judgement and qualify as a statement in reference to the Thou Shall Not Judge commandment, it must be specific and applied to a specific person. Otherwise, it is not a judgement but a simple statement regarding a moral issue. You make Christians look bad and intollerant by improper use of the term judgement. You really should know better. It is not intolerant to think that homosexuality is wrong, especially when supporting it are biased dissenters actively engaging in said behavior. You cannot claim someelse is intolerant, just because they don't like a behavior your engaging in. What is really wrong is when those engaging in a particular behavior tell other folks they must love and adore said behavior against their own belief and will. That is the true crime. Whatever happened to freedom? How about folks just agree to disagree and move on. We don't need special laws for homosexuals. Instead the government should just completely get rid of any laws giving anyone any special rights or priviledges based on anything whatsoever. It should then proceed to look at and treat all individuals the same regardless of anything. Then going forward if society wants to have civil unions, that are really just contracts between two individuals, that would be fine. That way gays can do whatever they want, and Christians can do whatever they want. End of Story!

    67. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your kidding right? Just because someone disagrees with homosexuality on principle, doesn't mean they hate anyone. That is an out and out lie. The real hate is coming from those who are pro-homosexual. They are the ones who hate Christians, because the reality is that they don't want anyone to suggest to anyone else that what they are doing is wrong. They simply don't like the dissenting view and therefore they are the one's preaching hate against Christians. And I got news for you. The bible does say something about people calling Evil Good and Good Evil. Are you sure that isn't happening here? For thousands of years homosexuals have been considered evil and christians good. Now the homosexuals are saying they are the "good" and that Christians are evil. What is that if not hate?

    68. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by CyberKnet · · Score: 1
      Then stop placing yourself in the same group as this guy. Stop calling yourself Christian. Call yourself Anglican, or a follower of Christ, but do everything you can to distance yourself from these types of people.

      I will certainly not.

      Consider this: You can ask two people of a particular political leaning [republical|democrat|etc] their views on a subject and get different answers... that does not mean either one should stop saying they are aligned with that political group [republican|democrat|etc].

      Also consider this: I (a very white caucasian) can go around calling myself African-American all day long doing REALLY stupid things and being VERY vocal about different issues. An intelligent person would not then tell the African-American community to stop calling themselves an African-Americans because of my idiocy.

      If I happen to have a pinto that never had a problem and has survived three exceptionally large wrecks without issue, you wouldn't tell me to stop calling it a pinto just because of the bad reputation of the rest.

      You are most certainly wrong.

      Instead, I will say proudly that I am a christian, and that this man has (from my perspective) a decidedly unchristian attitude. I will call an apple an apple, and a rotten apple a rotten apple. I would proudly say that whilst i do not condone homosexuality, I do not now and will not ever endorse stripping any person of basic human rights. I will also proudly say that I have nothing but support, love and compassion for any homosexual person... the same as I do for any other person.

      Stop calling myself Christian indeed!

      By the way... if you want to start using such illogical pretenses:
      • I know an athiest who is homosexual. Does that mean that you are homosexual? Or should you stop calling yourself an athiest?
      • I know a homosexual who is christian. Does that mean that if you call yourself an athiest that you are also a christian?
      --
      Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor - Ovidius
    69. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Hey I hope the best for gays...now let me go back to watching Enterprise."

      Pro-gay fans of Enterprise: one downtrodden minority supporting another. Makes my heart glad.

    70. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Brian+Boitano · · Score: 1

      In my mind, just being a christian is endorsement of this guy

      Haha... is that like saying being an American is an endorsement of President George W Bush?

      --
      What would Brian Boitano do?
    71. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Don't let a bunch of loud mouths make you think all of Christiandom is a bad thing.

      True, but on the flip side, Christians need to understand that unless they speak up, the loudmouths will speak for them. I'm not saying you have to be loud, but silence itself is a position.

    72. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Eric+S.+Smith · · Score: 1
      Just because someone disagrees with homosexuality on principle, doesn't mean they hate anyone.

      What principle would that be? The principle of meddling in others' affairs? The principle that two men can't be romantically involved because oh gross which one's the girl! ?

      Now the homosexuals are saying they are the "good" and that Christians are evil.

      Here's a deal: you can both be good. I'll let you out of wearing the shoe on the other foot, being as I'm a soft touch.

    73. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said:
      In my mind, just being a christian is endorsement of this guy and Fred Phelps and George W. Bush and all of the other fundamentalist cocksuckers out there that want to throw out the constitution and replace it with the bible.

      Sure sounds like you're applying the guilt of evil to me.

      BTW, if you would bother to look you'd find both of your references are from the same source, WordNet.

    74. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how you fail to provide the context for his quote. I imagine it shows the pastor in a much better light than your smear job of a post.

    75. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      but non-Christians should not pick apart their neighbors belief structures

      If you want to live in a place where your beliefs are beyond challenge, America is not the place to be.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    76. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      The Christian position on homosexuality is contained in Romans chapter 1, not Leviticus. However, like non-believers, Christians too are hypocrites. In fact, right after condemning homosexuality in Romans ch. 1, Paul condemns hypocrasy, and to a much greater extent. If the Christian doctrine on homosexuality came from Leviticus, though, you'd have a point.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    77. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean that. I stand corrected. I definately think you should be allowed to pick apart anyone's belief structure. Also, by "should" I meant moral acceptibility, not legal accountability. At any rate, honest debate is something we need more of. I just wish those who attacked Christianity had more educated view points on the matter.

      I stand by the rest of my point, however.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    78. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by eaolson · · Score: 1
      They are the ones who hate Christians

      Oh please, you don't know hate from hinola.

      • When the Phelps clan goes to some poor guy's funeral and loudly pickets in front of his family, holding signs and chanting "God Hates Fags," that's hate.
      • When the same people want to put up a monument in a public park celebrating the date "Matthew Shepard entered Hell," that's hate.
      • When parents kick their teenage children out of their home, as happened to more than one friend of mine, that's hate.
      • When Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson blame gays (and others) for 9/11, that's hate.
      • When Sen. Rick Santorum says that a decades-long, committed, monogamous relationship between two men is morally equivalent to a guy screwing his dog, that's hate.
      • When the Texas GOP Platform says, "We support the recriminalization of sodomy," well, whether that's hate is debatable, but it's certainly an inappropriate use of the criminal justice system.

      No one hates Christians, as you accuse. No one is accusing Christianity of being evil, as you accuse. Sure, there's lots of resentment in the gay community toward conservative groups, largely due to the horrible things they've said and done.

      Even in Jesus's time homosexuality (insofar as much as the term applies) was common, or at least not entirely unusual. Jesus healed what was most likely the gay lover of a Roman soldier, and said nothing about it. The evidence that David and Johnathan were lovers is also quite compelling.

      Much of the Biblical proscriptions against homosexuality are about ritual purity and when the Jewish community "sought to separate itself from neighbouring peoples to establish a Jewish distinctiveness." [1] They are not intended as a moral teaching; the Hebrew words for the two are different.

      Look, if you want to preach in your Church and teach your (maybe even your gay) kids that being gay, or Jewish, or divorced or whatever is evil, and will get you an eternity of unendurable torment in the fires of Hell, all thanks to God's infinite love, fine. That's your right. But don't expect the rest of us to stand by and watch while conservative Christians try to legislate their religious beliefs.

    79. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      You said:...

      Um...no I didn't.

      Scroll up, Einstein...the quote you're attributing to me was actually posted by kin_korn_karn.

      For God's sake, organize your thoughts.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    80. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Funksaw · · Score: 1

      Just because there are a bunch of rotten apples in the position of power/leadership in the Christian community does not mean the entire community (or the faith) is bad.

      When you have as many bad apples as Christianity does, it might be time to take a good hard look and wonder if maybe it's the barrel that's rotten, and it's the good apples that are the exception...

    81. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion IS bigotry, for it uses superstition to exalt humand over other humans. The only thing to be said for Bible Thumpers and Kikes is they are (nowadays) a bit less dangerous than Sand Niggers.

    82. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's assuming that the only men who molest boys are homosexual. From what I've read, that's not true.

      For what it's worth, male-on-male rape in prisons is almost always committed by heterosexuals. Homosexuals are more likely to be victims.

    83. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by drxray · · Score: 1

      "In my mind, just being a christian is endorsement of this guy"

      It is an endorsement to state you are a Christian without immediately distancing yourself from the unpleasant kind of Christian, since that is the perception of many outsiders to the religion.
      It doesn't mean you're a bad person if you go around announcing your religious beliefs in an ambiguous way, but you certainly are doing a bad thing.
      People should be precise about religion as it's a subject with a lot of strong emotions attached.

      --
      Slashdot - Mutual Assured Discussion
    84. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "...I'm letting a bunch of loudmouths and almost 30 years of living in the bible belt, where every single person I've met that describes themselves as a christian has also been a hardcore bigot, make me think that..."
      You should read more, and not just Slashdot; the internet lets you visit any community regardless of whether you're living in Hicktown, USA. In decrying those bigoted Christians, you come off rather like a bigot. Funny how that happens, huh?

      As a contrary datapoint, my wife and I are Christians in the upper midwest and have owned a house next to a gay couple for more than a decade. We know perfectly well what the Bible says about homosexuality, but we also know that a sinless person hasn't walked the planet in roughly 2,000 years; it's not our place to cast the first stone. They're our neighbors and friends, and we believe that what they do in privacy is between them and God.

      I'm sorry the so-called Christians in your area missed out on the whole "love your neighbor as yourself" command, which is a big chunk of scripture. I can see how that would leave one bitter.

      As with any other segment of humanity, a certain percentage of Christians are bigots. Or, viewed another way, the world has a lot of bigots, a percentage of who claim to be Christian. It's the bigots that are the real problem, not a shared belief in Christ.

      "Love your neighbor as yourself." Really, truly not a bad idea. Even if you're non-Christian, I think we can find some common ground in that. Right?
    85. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the fundamentalist view of homosexuality is contained in Romans 1:26, not in the Old Testament. Like a previous poster said, while Paul condemns homosexuality, he condemns hypocrites even more severly in the next few verses. So, while the Christian view of homosexuality is that it is a sin and separates you from God, it is nothing that anyone should be acted violently against for. BUT, that doesn't mean that we should change our definition of marriage (and in the process, fundamentally alter our society)to suit the (completely illegitimate) desires of a few.

      Go ahead, logically prove to me how the act of a physical homosexual relationship can be legitimate. And please state for me whether or not you are taking the position that: a) a God exists OR b) no God exists

      If you chose "a," I'd like to ask you what God you choose to believe in. I personally believe that the Judeo-Christian God exists, but I'll argue this point with you whatever your choice.

      If you chose "b," then my argument will be as follows:
      You are forced to use the theory of evolution to explain the existence of humans. Therefore homosexuality has no beneficial effect that is passed to the next generation, because... that's right... there will be no succeeding generation. Obviously, there will be some exceptions, but the fact remains that homosexuality is a trait that has no beneficial effect for its species, and should (if purely a biological trait) die out in a relatively quick manner.
      Now, concerning any arguments that you're "an athiest and believe that the rights of these people should be protected." All I have to say is.... what rights? If you believe that there is no God, then where do these rights come from? Oh, that's right, they were formulated my humans.... so, someone with the same level of authority as me or you formulated them.

    86. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks for the absolutely stupid comparison

      the Bible doesn't condone violence against those who have sinned (wronged God), in fact Jesus condemns it. however the Koran does. In fact, the Koran says that one of the ways to gain eternal life is to murder people that simply refuse to convert.

      so, why not take that zeal you seem to have so much of, and rail against what (by your own reasoning) is the more "barbaric" text ... oh wait... it's OK to badmouth Christianity, but we can't "discriminate" against anyone else's religion

    87. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      lynchin a group of oppressors is not, imho, a bad thing. Imagine if someone went out and lynched a few nazi's back in the day - would you cry for them? Imagine if someone lynched a few KKK members, would you cry for them? Hurting a group who likes to oppress people is not the same thing the group does. The group is oppressing people for nonsensical reasons - my desire to oppress them is because they are hurting innocents - thusly not being innocents themselves.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    88. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1


      For God's sake, organize your thoughts.


      Stop putting undue pressure on him. christians don't organize their thoughts, the hebrews and early christians did that for them 4000 years ago and 2000 years ago, respectively.

    89. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      Not when the neighbor isn't worthy of loving.

      Hate may breed hate, but you can't justify hate with any creed, especially one which is marketed as a path towards inner peace. The only thing churches do is teach you reasons for hating other people and pumping up your own self-esteem.

      Furthermore, the concept of "sin" is a construct created by ruling priests to induce guilt and thus obedience in followers. That's so obvious to me that I don't understand how otherwise logical people can fall for it.

      Thank you for the relatively reasoned response.

    90. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the support.

    91. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      Not at all, and here's why: 49% of us attempted to do something about him in the election. Nobody ever does anything about these religious crackpots except pay lip service to the notion that they don't represent all christians.

    92. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      I am a proud Christian, and I do not endorse this person.
      So why do you tolerate them?

      Furthermore, I have a problem with politicians who use the bible as a platform for their political agendas.
      Then please stand up to them.

      Talk is cheap.

    93. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      lynchin a group of oppressors is not, imho, a bad thing.

      Extrajudicial lynching is a bad thing, a very bad thing. That is the way of lawlessness. When society devolves into lawlessness, everybody suffers. If, on the other hand, said individuals committed a crime, are tried, found guilty and executed, then OK.

      Imagine if someone went out and lynched a few nazi's back in the day - would you cry for them?

      That would have been a war crime. See the answer above. It is a bad thing.

      Imagine if someone lynched a few KKK members, would you cry for them?

      Still a crime. See previous answers.

      Hurting a group who likes to oppress people is not the same thing the group does.

      It is exactly the same as what they are doing. You just disagree with what constitutes grounds to commit the same outrage, to take the law into your own hands.

      The group is oppressing people for nonsensical reasons - my desire to oppress them is because they are hurting innocents - thusly not being innocents themselves.

      And by going outside the law you are no longer innocent yourself. Your impulse is to travel down a very dangerous, destructive road.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    94. Re:Quote from Pastor Ken Hutcherson by guitaristx · · Score: 1

      So why do you tolerate them?

      Well, there is that whole "Thou shalt not kill" thing... But honestly, what are you getting at? I don't go to this guy's church, I don't send money to his ministry. Am I "tolerating" him by abstaining from sending hate mail?

      Then please stand up to them.

      Isn't voting for the other guy the American way of "standing up" to politicians that you don't agree with? I could even go further, and tell you how many times I've reamed out my fellow church-goers for party-line Republican voting and blindly believing that Republican == Christian. I've also scolded pastors and other church leadership for using the pulpit to pressure congregations into voting a certain way, convincing them that one candidate is "Godly" and the other is a heathen.

      Talk is cheap.

      I couldn't agree more. What, pray tell, are you doing, besides making blind accusations of pretension?

      --
      I pity the foo that isn't metasyntactic
  68. Let's be honest - you guys forced them into it. by mrRay720 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    That's right. With all of the "Bill Gates is the devil, M$ are teh EVIL" stuff they had to do something to show themselves as being more Godly.

    And any decent "All American Christian" will tell you that Gays and Lesbians are the work or Satan. MS have no choice but to be nasty to them to get you guys to like them again. THEY'RE DOING GOD'S WORK, PEOPLE!

    Look, if you don't start some serious Microsoft loving soon they're going to have to take it to the next Christian Godly level to convince you all. Don't come crying to me when Microsoft start bombing Arabs to further God's work.

    (For dim witted bible bashers out there, the above is what is known as "not really true")

    1. Re:Let's be honest - you guys forced them into it. by Swamii · · Score: 1

      (For dim witted bible bashers out there, the above is what is known as "not really true")

      It's a funny joke, har har har. Reality is, though, that's what most ignorant Slashdotters think of Christians. But secular technozealots know as much about us as hermit Pennsylvania Amish know about the innards of the Linux kernel.

      Reality is, we believers in Christ aren't all Bush loving TV evangelists out to get your money, out to smack you with our Bibles, or kill gays because it's "God's work". If that's what you see Christians as, then it's sad you've been exposed to the worst of our bunch.

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
  69. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by compro01 · · Score: 1

    Gay bashing is now a socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country.

    sadly, that is all too true it seems. i personally don't have a problem with religion itself. just the ones who follow it the wrong way (IMO). and their argument is really shakey (again IMO. not meaning to insult) as their arguement is "this book says it's wrong so it is."

    just about every religion agrees on the basics. the 10 commandment and such.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  70. Uhm...why? by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 1

    That is, why is this Microsoft's battle? They make software, they don't make laws. From my understanding, that is the resposibility of the state government. So...why is this on Slashdot?

    -d

    --
    "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
    1. Re:Uhm...why? by aduzik · · Score: 1

      Would you be upset if Microsoft backed environmental legislation? That's not really their battle either. My guess is that Microsoft sponsors legislation like this to show that, from time to time, they can be good people. Say what you will about Microsoft, but they do have a fairly progressive policy toward employees in same-sex relationships.

      I know others have written that corporations exist to serve their stockholders, and that is certainly true. But being in management requires maintaining a delicate balance between stockholders and employees. What many stockholders don't realize is that the best interests of the employee are also the best interests of the stockholder. Meaning: happy employees -> good employees -> higher profits. Sadly, investors are a fickle lot. They can pull their money out at any time, so companies usually bow to investor pressure instead of doing what's best, in the long run, for both shareholders and employees.

      By the way, does anyone know if the "radical right" boycotts IBM? They advertise the gay-friendly nature of their corporate culture in HRC's Equality newsletter all the time. They're one of the HRC's top corporate contributers, too.

      --
      If it's not one thing it's your mother.
  71. No, it's Bisexual by MondoMor · · Score: 0

    Because it goes down on everyone! LOL!

    Now give me my karma because I have made an anti-Micro$$$$$$$$oft post on $$$lashdot! LOLOLOLOL

    1. Re:No, it's Bisexual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is the "stupid" moderation option when you need it?

  72. I know.... by hcob$ · · Score: 1

    that windows is a Gay operating system. So does that mean that MS is now "neutral" on the acceptance of windows?

    --
    Cliff Claven
    K.E.G. Party Chairman
    Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
  73. Henry Ford by andrewagill · · Score: 1

    I suppose this is analogous to Henry Ford's philosophy for why he paid his workers well, in some respects, but Henry Ford didn't throw his weight behind legislation and bills for workers, did he? More like how Henry Ford started a newspaper to publish anti-semitic crap, like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

    1. Re:Henry Ford by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      More than that, Henry Ford also gave money to the eugenics movement, which was a xenophobic and racist ideology under the guise of science.

  74. Note by blueg3 · · Score: 1

    Just to point out, as some probably already have:

    Microsoft changed its position from favorable to neutral and after pressure from an outside source, true. But unless they say so it doesn't mean those two are connected. There are a lot of reasons they might have decided that they no longer want to be directly in support of the bill. It's kind of like you how can be against the Patriot Act without hating America, except that Microsoft isn't *against* this bill.

  75. Where are your facts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You state that Ken Hutcherson is a "gay-hating preacher." Where is the evidence to back your claim? According to the article, it appears that what he is opposed to is special legal rights being granted to a group based on their sexual acts. [sarcasm] I can see from the level-headed tone of your post that you, unlike Mr. Hutcherson, are interested only in a fair and truthful discussion. [/sarcasm]

    Mr. Hutchenson works through the political process to attempt to achieve the policies he supports. You suggest murder to advance yours. I think you should correct your views on achieving policy change before attempting to correct the policy views of others.

  76. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BS. When they can procreate naturally they can adopt all the kids they want.

  77. religion.....an irony by PureCreditor · · Score: 1, Informative

    Religions are supposed to be preaching love, peace, and treating everyone equally under the supreme-power's eyes (God, Allah, or whoever). But look at Christianity and Islam - they've been preaching hatred all these years using the treat of "excommunication" if their followers don't comply :

    A few hundreds back, both religions were preaching "crusade" - i.e. war - i.e. the LACK of peace

    A few decades back, both religions were preaching against women's rights - i.e. despising femminism and female pastors - i.e. the LACK of love

    Today, both religions are preaching against gay rights - i.e. discrimination on marriage, spousal benefits, and the whole 9 yards - i.e. the LACK of equality

    The religious right claims the bulk of major channels to be part of the "liberal media," when in fact, the more religion they learn from church, the more hatred propaganda they spread.

    As a gay person myself, I withdrew my religious faith 2 years back.

    1. Re:religion.....an irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are so lost.

  78. crazy people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's really scary what's happening in this country. all this wacko religion shit, what with the election, gay marriage, schiavo, the pope, janet jackson, these people are going way over the top and it's really scary to see this country going down the same road saudi arabia and iran have been on for decades. microsoft, like most politicians and the media, are probably just afraid of becoming a target so they pander to them. let's just hope the next election shows that most americans dont want the government sending them to heaven

  79. Microsoft must work for its shareholders... by tyroneking · · Score: 1

    As a publically listed company isn't Microsoft required to avoid any action that could reduce shareholder value? So really they had no choice but to cave to the religious right (if that is what they did - maybe the Bill itself was flawed in some other way).
    It is Microsoft's duty to support Bills that make life better for the US population because it is the right thing to do AND because some of their employees and customers may be helped by the Bill, but it is not their duty to put their company at risk.
    How big's the risk? Well the oft derided Bush won a recent election on a platform that included pandering to the religious right, so there must be a sizeable sector of the US public that could be whipped into an anti-MS frenzy.
    Anyway, if you guys are so bothered then a first step would be to stop making 'gay' jokes; no evil intent meant I'm sure, but they continue to make light of a sensitive area of peoples' lives.

  80. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by cowscows · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The biggest problem with that argument is that there aren't enough people (normal or otherwise) looking to adopt kids. You might not think having a gay couple as foster parents is "normal", or even good, but you'd have a hard time convincing an informed person that growing up in an orphanage is better.

    --

    One time I threw a brick at a duck.

  81. Neutral eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What makes a man turn neutral?

    Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality?

    1. Re:Neutral eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I die today, tell my wife I said... "hello."

    2. Re:Neutral eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All I know is my gut says "maybe"

  82. It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Christian-bashing was getting lonely as being the only socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country.

    1. Re:It's about time... by TechnologyX · · Score: 1

      Careful, you're posting a truth to /., you'll get modded into oblivion within seconds.

      --
      Slashdot sucks
    2. Re:It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, if we're speaking of Socially Acceptable, Christians are not alone.

      At least where I'm from (the south, unfortunately) it's socially acceptable to bash Mexicans, Asians... any foreigners really, blacks, gays...

      Anything BUT Christians, really.

      I HATE it when Christians whine about being persecuted. It's bad in America period, as virtually everyone in America identifies themselves as Christian (whether you'd call them one or not). But in the south??

      I actually fear to openly admit to being non-Christian. Discriminated against? No, not sociailly acceptable to bash or legally acceptable.

      If you're thinking of those late-night comedy routines... get a sense of humor. You aren't alone in those, either. Blacks, Mexicans, Asians, they're all made fun of on late night TV. Usually by other Blacks, Mexicans and Asians. Doesn't that tell you that it's not really discrimination, but rather a tongue-in-cheek parody of discrimination?

    3. Re:It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time to call out the whaaaaaambulance. Did someone hurt your feelings? Poor baby.

      Gays are deprived of rights that heterosexuals have. Christians ARE NOT deprived of rights that non-Christians have. See the difference?

    4. Re:It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Christians are truly persecuted. It's so unfair that they receive so little support or political representation.

      Perhaps one day we will have a Christian president. Until then it will be women, gays and blacks who dominate the political arena in the US.

      Seriously, do you really understand what discrimination entails?

    5. Re:It's about time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christian-bashing was getting lonely as being the only socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country.

      Oh for fucks sake - you people have almost total control over the government, the judicial system, and the media. And STILL you whine? How fucking pathetic can you get?

      Take your flaming martyredom complex and show it. Sideways.

  83. This is NOT a response to recent pressure by hazman · · Score: 1

    This is payback for Christian Coalition "navigating" Microsoft through anti-trust waters.

    1. Re:This is NOT a response to recent pressure by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1
      This is payback for Christian Coalition "navigating" Microsoft through anti-trust waters.

      The Christian Coalition consists solely of Ralph Reed? Gee, I guess they're not as scary as I thought....

      The fact that a former executive director of the CC also happened to be the founder of a political consulting firm hired by Microsoft does not, in and of itself, say that the CC had anything to do with this. As the Salon article in question notes, "Reed was always more of a pol than a preacher, even in his heyday at the Christian Coalition." Ralphie seems to have no problem serving both his God and Mammon at the same time.

  84. Well, of course by TuringTest · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's an action to undermine morale of Apple users.

    --
    Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
  85. Two comments from a distance by Eminence · · Score: 1
    First, this is an interesting sign of times that companies have official political positions and that it matters. After all, some gay-"rights" bill has nothing to do with Microsoft's business. Why should a company have a position about such matters at all? Shouldn't it be neutral all the time on issues such as abortion, this "rights", housing, whatever? It's supposed to be a business, not a political party.

    Second, I really don't get it why this whole issue of "rights" (read: undue privileges) for people with messed up sexual drive is considered a serious matter worth discussing and legislating about in the US. Why should it be a matter worth commenting on Slashdot? Can someone explain it in logical terms why this is important to you, preferably without name-calling and stuff like that?

    1. Re:Two comments from a distance by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      Second, I really don't get it why this whole issue of "rights" (read: undue privileges) for people with messed up sexual drive is considered a serious matter worth discussing and legislating about in the US. Why should it be a matter worth commenting on Slashdot? Can someone explain it in logical terms why this is important to you, preferably without name-calling and stuff like that?

      Because a lot of people hold negative attitudes toward gay/lesbian people---attitudes that more and more folks today are finding to have little social merit[1]---that significantly impair the latter's ability to get jobs, find housing, and attain other important "pursuit of happiness"-type things. Same basic reason that legislation got passed in the 1950s/60s to ban discrimination on the basis of race.

      Are the rights under discussion "undue privileges?" Well, employers cannot refuse to hire an employee because s/he is Jewish. Is that an undue privilege granted to Jews?

      [1] Cf. negative attitudes toward sex offenders et al.

      --
      iSKUNK!
    2. Re:Two comments from a distance by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      "without name-calling and stuff like that?"
      Given that you started the name calling I find that amusing.
      A)Anything Microsoft does is of interest to /. users. We get a least one MS article a day.
      B) that Microsoft changes a policy based on one preacher's comments is news, big news

  86. Wouldn't it be an improvement if by panurge · · Score: 1
    Corporations were required to switch their allegiance to neutral on ALL bills?

    And it would just about fix the entire US budget deficit. The saving on lobbyists, ex-generals recruited to armaments companies, pork barrel projects, interns required to read mail for congressmen - it would add up to a lot of money. And some of these people could be released into the community to do all the jobs we don't want to do and reduce the need for hardworking Mexicans to leave home. Though how good the average lobbyist would be at pool cleaning and auto valeting I do not know.

    And it would be even better if the religious right left business alone. Left to themselves to make money, how many businesses would turn down good staff because they had unusual out of work habits?

    I think there used to be something called the Constitution that had something to say on the subject before Karl and Donny and Condy told Georgie that all that human rights stuff was just so 20th century.

    Phew, flamed out.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  87. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hello, you are a bigot. Most of the homosexuals I know who would consider raising children are considerably better people than, well, than I suspect you are given what you just said about them.

    Guess what? Foster kids are like any other kids. What they need is what any other kid needs, they just need more of some things if they are older because they have been raised by people who didn't want them or weren't fit to have them. What makes homosexuals any less fit to provide that? What makes homosexuals abnormal? Answer: only your bigotry.

    Want some supporrting evidence? Straight people have kids that grow up to be gay. I'm not talking about abused children here either. But, basically your whole thought process is predicated upon the idea that there is something wrong with homosexuals, which is an inherently prejudiced concept. YOU ARE A BIGOT. YOU HAVE NO HIGH GROUND.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  88. At the risk of sounding like a Troll by cOdEgUru · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I must say this and hope that someone will answer me:

    I look at Ken Hutcherson's website. He is the pastor who supposedly pressured Microsoft in pulling support. He looks middle aged and has a Church in WA. Thats all fine, but the guy is African American.

    How can someone who has seen and experienced discrimination, who has been at the bitter end of it, turn around and support discrimination against a group of people who are different not because of the color of their skin, but because of the choices they made, or their genes (depends on who you ask).

    This is almost like Gandhi's grand son discriminating against a british kid because he is poor,white and powerless.

    Either way, it sucks and I truly wish Bill would have the balls to tell him to fuck off. Not because I resonate with gay rights, and neither because I am not religious..purely because discrimination is wrong.

    1. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Just because a group of people are given the shaft because of race/religion/creed/etc., doesn't mean they won't try to do the same thing to someone else.

      Case in point, Israel. They were nearly wiped of the face of the planet, but they're doing a great job of discriminating against the Palestinians. Disclaimer: I think both Israel and the PLO share equal responsibility in the current matter. Both are dead wrong.

      It seems to me that making other people follow your moral code is a relatively new way to make yourself feel powerful. When they outlawed slavery, Jim Crow was there to make sure that African Americans would still know who was boss. This seems to be a logical extension of those types of ideas. Since sodomy laws around the country have been struck down, the gay-bashers need to try to restrict the freedoms of the GLBT crowd as much as possible. Often times they'll use public health or some other non-issue as a reason to restrict homosexual behavior, but I can see right though that (just as segregationists used states' rights to keep segregation legal).

      Of course, I've never understood this obsession to make others live in accordance with another's morals. Perhaps someone could help me out with that one.

    2. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by CTachyon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's been this bitter rivalry in the civil rights sphere between Coretta Scott King (widow of the late Martin Luther King) and Alveda Celeste King (niece of the same). CSK is strongly pro-gay and considers her support of gay rights a continuation of her late husband's work -- which is probably an accurate assessment considering MLK's staunch support of Bayard Rustin during Strom Thurmond's smear campaign against him. (Bayard Rustin being the behind-the-scenes organizer of the 1963 March, and an openly gay black man.) ACK, on the other hand, is strongly anti-gay and also claims to be following in her uncle's footsteps. Unfortunately, it reflects a rather deep schism.

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    3. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Of course, I've never understood this obsession to make others live in accordance with another's morals. Perhaps someone could help me out with that one.

      Well, do you support the idea behind this Bill? If so, ask yourself why you support making others adhere to a code of non-discrimination against gays.

    4. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by stinerman · · Score: 1

      In the strictest sense everything is a moral issue and, logically, everything is a moral judgement.

      Of course, you knew that I meant to let people live as they choose, without any undue restrictions by the state. Of course, theft and murder are due restrictions because the crimes have victims. No people are being injured because John and James want to have sex. In short, victimless crimes shouldn't be crimes.

    5. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I generally agree with those statements, but am still missing your point.

      Are you classifying discrimination against gays as victimless, and thus shouldn't be a crime?

      On the other hand, if you classify it as not-victimless (gays being the victim), and thus should be a crime, my question to you is: Does the same apply to, say, discrimination against deadbeats?

    6. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by n0rm · · Score: 1
      Of course, I've never understood this obsession to make others live in accordance with another's morals. Perhaps someone could help me out with that one.
      I have no problem with you doing whatever you want to do, and do not want to force you to follow my moral code. A person has no say over the color of their skin and has no control over being male or female, but you can choose how you will behave. If you choose to engage in homosexual activity that is a choice only you can make. But, you cross a line when you engage in that activity, and then require me to acknowledge that behavior as normal and correct. At this point you are trying to make me responsible for your actions, when you should take responsibility for your own behavior... ie, no recognition of your relationship

      The real problem with this whole issue as I see it... The gay community views their lack of recognition as discrimination (no room for dialogue if you are oppressed). The Christian community regards the fight for gay-rights as an attack on their religious beliefs (again no room for dialog when you are under attack). Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be any middle ground that is acceptable to anyone, and the arguments and accusations go on and on...
    7. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by stinerman · · Score: 1

      you cross a line when you engage in that activity, and then require me to acknowledge that behavior as normal and correct

      I don't require you to acknowlege that that behavior is normal and correct. I require you to tolerate it.

      I am vehemently 100% anti-drug. I don't even take tylenol or drink caffeine. I do understand that others do not share my views, therefore I do not want to have all drugs banned. I do not like, but tolerate those people who wish to use pain-killers, caffeine, alcohol, cocaine, etc.

    8. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Are you classifying discrimination against gays as victimless, and thus shouldn't be a crime?

      No. I'm saying that homosexuality and homosexual activity should be unrestricted because those things do not hurt anyone else. They may offend certain people, but to be offended is a distant second to personal freedom.

      Deadbeat parents, on the other hand, can and should be discriminated against due to the fact that they are not paying child support. Non-payment of child support deprives others (the children) of food, clothing, etc. This is a place where the crime of "deadbeatery" has a victim, which is the child(ren) of the deadbeat parents.

    9. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by RatBastard · · Score: 1
      You can choose to be gay or not? Really? You should tell that to my step-father who married my mother back in 1963 in a desperate attempt to not be gay. He figured that if he married a woman he loved and had a family (and there I was five days from being born) then he could be straight and would no longer have to deal with the trauma of being gay. From all accounts he and my mother had a good marriage, happy home life, good sex life, etc... The only fly in the ointment was that no matter how hard he tried he could not stop being emotionally and sexually attracted to men. After two years they both realized it wasn't working out and they went their seperate ways.

      In my 41 years on this planet I've met a lot of homosexuals and been friends with a great number of them. I've known a few that didn't want to be gay, who fought it as hard as my step-father did. And they all failed at it. No matter what they did, no matter how hard they begged Jesus to make them straight, nothing worked. They stayed gay.

      "But what about those chicks who make out with each-other and then screw their boyfriends silly?" I hear you ask. Those girls are not lesbians. They are not even bisexual. They are straight girls engaging in a little homosexual behavior in order to spice up their sex lives with their boyfriends. They are not emotionally attratced to other girls. It's just a goof for them.

      And there lies the rub and the phalacy of your post. There is a big difference between having sex with someone of the same gender and being a homosexual. Just as there is in masturbating to a picture of a porn star and cheating on your husband/wife/partner/etc... If you can't see that then you have no idea what homosexuality really is.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    10. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by n0rm · · Score: 1

      But if you demand to be allowed gay-marriage or like benefits, then you have in fact demanded recognition of your relationship. When you demand that society change to accomodate you, then go beyond tollerance.

    11. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by n0rm · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand my post. What I was trying to get across is that nobody knows how someone's brain is wired, and whether you are born gay or not. I won't argue this point one way or another.

      My intention was to point out that the whole issue snowballs to the point where nobody will even listen to someone with an opposing view.

      I would argue that you can choose (through free will) whether or not you engage a homosexual relationship. But this is a topic for another time.

    12. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      You can no more choose to engage in a homosexual relationship than a heterosexual can chioose to engage in a heterosexual relationship. You can only choose to have a relationship or not.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    13. Re:At the risk of sounding like a Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is deeply ironic in a way beyond the word "sad" to convey that so many ethnic minorities are so prejudiced against sexual ones (I say this living in the south, so perhaps the situation is different elsewhere... sweet Lord I hope so). I suspect that to an extent it's because for many groups at the absolute bottom of the socioeconomic totem pole, religion is all there was to cling to. So you've got your staunch Baptist southern ex-slaves and ex-share-croppers and so forth, your staunch Catholic folks from central and south America, etc. all clinging to these highly retrograde social mores because along with them they're promised a mansion in the sky at the foot of God for their meek temporal status. As a consequence of that, prejudice against anything "not normal"... The most brimstone and hellfire sermons I have ever heard on the topic of morality came not from rich white preachers in huge mega-churches, but from dirt-poor black ones in little one room wooden ones in the back woods of East Texas.

  89. which do I hate more????? by izzo+nizzo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I would love to see radical christians boycott microsoft!!!!!!!
    Would they all get Macs and refer to the boycott as 'the greatest revelation in a thousand years', or would someone put out a linux disto catered to their obsession with God, or would they just stop updating their computers and get even crankier?
    yeah, the last one would suck. But that linux theory is a mind-job, isn't it?

    1. Re:which do I hate more????? by finse · · Score: 1

      Have you ever read any of the Linux source code? Something tells me the religous right would not be down with a custom catered linux distro.

      --
      Paranoid tinfoil hat crowd say Y here, everyone else say N.
  90. Funny, I don't recall the first announcement... by cfalcon · · Score: 1

    Ok, this *is* news for nerds, and is *does* matter, but when Microsoft announced that they were backing the bill, did that make /.?

    Granted, I enjoy M$ bashing too, but deciding to do *no* thing instead of the *right* thing (and you could easily make the point that this isn't something Microsoft should be involved in- I'd refute it, but you could make the point) isn't Microsoft being bad.

    But seriously, did the original announcement of them backing this bill make Slashdot, or not?

  91. Oh hay, it's gay! by truffle · · Score: 1


    I find it interesting that a story with gay/lesbian content gets press at Slashdot only when Microsoft is involved.

    Come on, 10% of the Linux kernel was written by gays! (made up stat but probably true :)

    --

    ---
    I support spreading santorum
  92. Would that make us likely to switch to windows? by Petrus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Although this is definitely a positive development, is it not very courageous just ot go to neutral. Before I'll support Windows again, I'll wait first for a complete change on number of other family rights issues.

    If this is a gay list, mod me down.

    P.S.: Number of times I realized that I would need a setup option kf "the lowest score first" ? Can we add that into the choices?

    Petrus

  93. If the facts are not good enough, change them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article does not say anything about anyone "bashing" anyone. It is about whether a group of people should be granted special legal rights based on who they have sex with. But, that is not interesting, so change it to "gay bashing." Who needs the truth anyway?

    1. Re:If the facts are not good enough, change them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about special rights, it's about equal rights. The definition of the existing rights is wrong, and so new laws have to be made to allow equal rights.

  94. The bill also redefined religion by ugmoe · · Score: 1
    http://www.leg.wa.gov/pub/billinfo/2005-06/Pdf/Bil ls/House%20Bills/1515.pdf

    Interestingly, the bill also added a non-religious definition of creed )that was not present in the original law.)

    "Creed" means a system of religious beliefs and religious expressions, including moral and ethical beliefs and expressions about right and wrong that are sincerely held with the strength of traditional religious views.

    Isn't that interesting - one day after a new Pope is chosen, Microsoft chooses to support a more traditional definition of religion.

    1. Re:The bill also redefined religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes,

      The bill added the text below:

      "Creed" means a system of religious beliefs and religious expressions, including moral and ethical beliefs and expressions about right and wrong that are sincerely held with the strength of traditional religious views.

  95. You're worrying about Microsoft ? by 88NoSoup4U88 · · Score: 1
    How about the US government ?

    Seems -they- are the one promoting it...

    1. Re:You're worrying about Microsoft ? by riptide_dot · · Score: 1

      How about the US government ? Seems -they- are the one promoting it...

      Please, please, PLEASE everyone: STOP making the distinction between "they" as the government and "we" as the people! In the United States, WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT!

      The worrisome part here is the seemingly growing number of people in our society that think that discrimination is okay, so long as they're not the ones discriminated against. Even if you're not currently affected by this type of legislation because you're not gay, if you enjoy freedom, please remember this quote:

      "First they came for the Jews and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew. Then they came for the Catholics, and I did not speak out because I was not a Catholic. Then they came for the trade unionists and I did not speak out because I was not a member of the unions. Then they came for me and, by then, there was no one left to speak out for me." (German protestant minister and World War II activist Martin Niemoller)

      Let's not let the U.S. start riding down the slippery slope that leads to facism. Have we forgotten the lessons from Nazi Germany THAT quickly?!?

      --
      I was in the park the other day wondering why frisbees get bigger and bigger the closer they get - and then it hit me.
  96. Simple politics... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is simply doing what it needs to do for its business. A large portion of the republican party and its supporters are anti-gay rights. They are also the prevailing party in US politics right now. Microsoft needs republican support now more than the gay-lesbian support for simple economic reasons: it needs the same tax loopholes that let it not pay corporate taxes, they need a favorable disposition towards Microsoft's patent agenda, they need government contracts, etc.

    Microsoft could afford to be an idealist before it lost 20% of its market cap over the past 6 months. Heck, when the Democratic party was in favor, gay-rights was pro-bottom line. The political climate has changed and Microsoft's simply bowed to economic pressure.

    I sincerely doubt that, from a business perspective, they give a rats tuchas about some self-aggrandizing and self-righteuous twit hiding behind a pulpit.

  97. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Feh... being gay is as abnormal as being left-handed.


    I wouldn't mind if my parents were left handed but I might mind if they were fucking each other in the *ASS*.

    Yes, social attitudes might change eventually and it might become acceptable (as it was in many ancient societies) but until it is the kids (probably not all) will have a difficult time. Is it right to use them as a means to social change?

  98. Let's Just Cover Everyone All At Once by JohnDeHope3 · · Score: 1

    How about a law that says nobody is protected from discrimination? That way everyone is covered equally and fairly, and nobody can complain because their particular interest group is not represented. Anything other that this is inevitably discriminatory.

  99. Rights, or gay rights? by samjam · · Score: 1

    I'm a supporter of rights, not not gay-rights or straight-rights,

    Where I live there is gay-rights, ethnic-rights, womens-rights and I think the segmentation does more harm than good.

    Gays, ethnic minorities and women don't get any more rights than anyone else, and ever growing list specific things not to discriminate against make a big joke out of the whole equal opportunitues thing:

    * sex
    * sexual-orientation
    * religion
    * ethnic-background
    * country
    * race (yes these last 3 are all different)
    * political opinion
    * social background
    * sports teams you support (yes, this is a very serious sort of discrimination in some places)
    * physique
    * disabilities (hey, disabled people can be pretty punative to their peers who take treatment to "cure" the disability)

    So when someone comes to me and wants to claim special rights under one of these categories I have to think "and whats so special about you compared with the rest of the massive long list?"

    And when they start whinging for special treatment it just annoys me.

    Gay rights bills will do more to harm and stir up hatred than just general "all happy together general rights bills" will.

    My own view is "we don't need another law", if the ones we have don't cover the issue, what is going to make the next one work?

    Sam

    1. Re:Rights, or gay rights? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      My own view is "we don't need another law", if the ones we have don't cover the issue, what is going to make the next one work?

      Maybe the fact that the new law is written to specifically cover the issue?

      The problem is that the Constitution was not written with these things in mind. Remember, the Constitution was written at a time when slavery was legal and only men could vote. So we have these things called amendments.. specifically there's the 14th amendment, but that doesn't exactly clear things up. So we turn to the courts, as specified in the Constitution. Some people don't like this method because it turns out the courts generally don't agree with their interpretation.

      The only reason we need laws to enforce these things is because some people wrongly feel that women, blacks, jews, gays, etc. are inferior and that it is correct to discriminate against them.

    2. Re:Rights, or gay rights? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And also because people unfortunately think that if something is not explicitly allowed in the Constitution, then there is no right to it.

      Sometimes I wish we'd never had the Bill of Rights in the first place - it seems to have done exactly what its' critics said it would.

    3. Re:Rights, or gay rights? by samjam · · Score: 1

      I think these specific bills are going to have the opposite effect their supporters want.

      I think such specific bills will increase resentment against the segments whose rights they are designed to favour.

      I support a general idea opposing unbased discrimination on the basis of legally acceptable behaviour.

      i.e. if what Jim does is quite legal, there is no grounds to discriminate against him in relation to anything other than his behaviour.

      e.g., if he supports the SF-49ers which is legally acceptable, I can't use that to discriminate against him in relation to employment unless he is applying for position as coach with the Dolphins.

      If a guy is gay, I can't use that fact to discriminate against him in relation to selling goods or services.

      Unless the cause can be presented as a general principle that favours all social segments equally it will appear to favour rights of particular groups above those who previously have not been enemies and this does cause resentment.

      It sounds like "we are more equal than others"

      Sam

  100. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by amliebsch · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Regardless of what is sufficient to be a normal environment, I tend to believe that "mother and father" is necessary. I can be persuaded the other way, though, by empirical evidence.

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  101. Stringy by praetorius242 · · Score: 1

    As a gay man in the I.T industry, I find this news particularly disturbing. The very fact Microsoft is now retracting it's stance on GLBT rights because of some schizo jesus freak is ludicrious! That's like telling your boss to eat shit and die, expecting to come out of it still gainfully employed. Doesn't work that way. This industry is actually very accepting of gays and lesbians. IBM, SGI, RedHat, Sun, Oracle all provide same-sex benefits and have employee support systems in place for their GLBT employees. In fact, IBM is the #1 supplier of personal computers to GLBT businesses and actively supports the Human Rights Campaign. Apple is another mover and shaker in GLBT rights and was one of the first to provide same-sex benefits (Apple is just a mover and shaker period). To really find out what the the feeling is of the industry, check out the http://www.hrc.org/Template.cfm?Section=Search_the _Database&Template=/CustomSource/WorkNet/srch.cfm& searchtypeid=1&searchSubTypeID=1HRC's equality score card . Microsoft will come ot looking like bigoted fools in this.

  102. STFU, CLOSET FAGGOT!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your priest would pull his dick out of your ass long enough for you to read any other book, you'd understand what a jackass you are.

  103. Wants to Weasle out of Contract by lilmouse · · Score: 5, Funny

    100 posts in, and you still haven't given the obvious answer to this!

    What does he have on Bill? Well, when the head of MS starts desperately following bizarre orders from Evangelicals, you realize he's gotta be looking for allies. My guess is, his contract is expiring soon, and he's looking for a loophole.

    Now, we know Satan's contracts are even tighter than MS's, so Bill's trying to get some extra-judicial help. That's all.

    --LWM

    1. Re:Wants to Weasle out of Contract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates is gay!

    2. Re:Wants to Weasle out of Contract by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Well, when the head of MS starts desperately following bizarre orders from Evangelicals, you realize he's gotta be looking for allies. My guess is, his contract is expiring soon, and he's looking for a loophole.

      Yes, but why the lunatic fringe? It's not like they have any pull upstairs.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  104. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you are a hate-monger.
    Like many in the gay community, you apparently think ad-hominem attacks are valid forms of debate.
    So two can play it that game: YOU ARE A HATE-MONGER.
    Stop your prejudice against people who think homosexuality is wrong.

  105. Missed economic opportunities here? by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Interesting
    True story:

    I was talking with my brother in law, who works in a car shop. Somehow the topic of VW came up, and he made an interesting comment:

    Him: Man, I can always tell a gay guy when he walks in the door. If He's using an Apple computer while he's waiting, and is driving a VW Beetle or Golf - especially the Beetles! - or has one of those Apple Computer logos on their car - they are a flaming homo. Not that there's anything wrong with it.

    Me (while looking up something on my Powerbook): Hm. Interesting. By the way, that's my Beetle parked outside. I'd better call my wife and tell her my secret's out.


    We had a bit of a laugh over that - finding that one big honking exception to a stereotype can usually blow someone's bubble pretty quick.

    Makes you wonder if MS doesn't realize that there's an untap market in the Gay and Lesbian community by continuing to show their support.

    I guess what strikes me odd about the whole story is that for 12 years, MS has supported the Gay and Lesbian community, even winning awards for their support. They gave their support to a bill that basically says "Just like you can't discriminate against people for their gender, religion, ethnic background, or favorite M&M, you can't discriminate if they are a guy who likes to get it on with another guy, or a girl who thinks other girls are 'teh sexy'".

    Then, one guy pops up, says "You know, God hates fags, and if you support this bill then we're going to tell the other Christian groups not to buy Microsoft."

    As a Christian myself (yeah, not a terribly deeply practicing one - you won't see me making a birthday cake to Jesus and waiting for Him to blow out the candles on Christmas), I find the actions of Mr. Ken Hutcherson of Antioch Bible Church in Redmond to be incredibly offensive, bigoted, and against everything that Christ stood for. (You know, the whole thing of "Judge not unrighteously lest ye be judged", or "I am not come to treat the well, but the sick", or "Get the hell out of my face, you damned dirty ape" - no, wait, wrong religious figure - my bad).

    MS can't have it both ways. Either they support the Gay and Lesbian community, and show that there are some things more important than money - and to be honest, how many ministers are going to rise up and start buying Apple's just because MS states publicly they don't give a damn if two guys are getting hot and heavy in the bedroom? 1% of all ministers? 10%?

    The loss of good faith, and a reputation of aligning themselves with people of bigoted views will probably do far more damage in the long run than "holding the course" and continuing their support of House Bill 1515.

    Of course, that's just my opinion, and I could be wrong. If nothing else, if MS doesn't stand up and do the right thing, then I guess I'll be looking for that copy of iWork instead of MS Office for my next office suite upgrade.
    1. Re:Missed economic opportunities here? by mike3k · · Score: 1

      There are some non-evil Christian churches that welcome gays.

  106. Slight little difference. by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

    Murderers and rapists hurt people. Who do homosexuals hurt?

    Lumping in homosexuals with murderers and rapists is obscenely lazy. It is just an excuse so you don't have to come up with anything intelligent to say about the subject. Explain why you discriminate againsts gays. And BTW, saying "because (god|the bible) says to" isn't good enough. Give an ACTUAL reason.

    1. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It hurts society. AIDS, is just one example.

    2. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Murderers and rapists hurt people. Who do homosexuals hurt?

      Society. Homosexual behavior is detrimental to a properly functioning civilization. It's not hard to see if one is actually open minded enough to put away one's extreme hatred of Christianity (since this is really why a lot of people are pro-homosexuality) to accept the possibility that maybe homosexuality is not healthy for the people engaged in it and those around them.

    3. Re:Slight little difference. by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      And yet, STILL no explanation. A vague claim that it is unhealthy to society isn't a reason either. Try explaining why it is detrimental to society.

    4. Re:Slight little difference. by JustNiz · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      wow.
      Because GOD says so isn't good enough for you?
      For all religious people its more than enough, and GOD is an ACTUAL reason.

    5. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, AIDS is not reason enough? Promoting sexual immorality? Perverting our childrens minds? Yes all of these things are hurtful. How you ask? Well, AIDS kills, sexual immorality spreads the disease, and perversion causes those to think that there is nothing wrong with the homesexual which is 90% responsible for the previous two.

    6. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention gay bowel syndrome, toxic shock and other medical problems resulting from sodomy.

    7. Re:Slight little difference. by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      Show me evidence of a god saying that, other than a collection of middle-eastern nomadic mythology

      I don't consider a book to be a guide to morality if it says that the punishment for a man raping a girl is that he has to pay money to the girl's father, then marry her. (Deuteronomy 22:28,29)

    8. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OUCH! (or is "ouch" not hurtful anymore? :)

    9. Re:Slight little difference. by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Buddy, 'God' has nothing to do with 'reason.'

      Blindly following a 2500 year old book without questioning it's clearly hateful passages makes your a good person?

      As a great person once said:

      "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forego their use"

      (PS it was some dummy named Galileo).

      I quite sure that if there were a God, he or she would be pretty pissed at you or anyone else discriminating agains any of his "children".

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    10. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a closet fag, aren't you?

    11. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask a Muslim. For some reason you people claim Christians to be the "bigots" (how is homosexuality a race again?), but in some Muslim countries, they literally KILL homosexuals. Its in the Quran, Bible and Torah. Its unnatural, perverse and goes against natural law whatever diety you worship.

    12. Re:Slight little difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to fsck my dog and marry him. Can I have special rights too!

    13. Re:Slight little difference. by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      What sexual immorality? If you are talking about promiscuity, last time I checked it wasn't limited to homosexuals. In fact, the last time I checked, homosexual couples all over the country were fighting for the right to have thier monogomous relationships recognised by the state.

    14. Re:Slight little difference. by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Actual, all 'theistic' religions are bigoted. We're not talking about Saudi Arabia, we're talking about Washington. In the USA. Where there is supposed to be separation of church and state.

      And the Grandparent was a Christian.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    15. Re:Slight little difference. by woah · · Score: 1
      ... in some Muslim countries, they literally KILL homosexuals.

      well, now I'm convinced. Racism is clearly fine as well, since Hitler killed millions of Jews.

      What the hell kind of an argument is that? Clearly, if they're willing to kill, they must be right!... Completely fucked up reasoning.

      Its in the Quran, Bible and Torah.

      So? They all contradict each other anyway, on most other counts. Why should we believe something that was written thousands of years ago, and not modern scietific and social views.

      Its unnatural, perverse and goes against natural law whatever diety you worship.

      How is it unnatural? It's beem happening to 5-10% of society for thousands, (if not millions?) of years. Everyone has got sexual identity/sexual orientation, is it so hard to believe, that in some people it's shifted in some way?

    16. Re:Slight little difference. by woah · · Score: 1
      Oh STDs are unheard of among heterosexuals... Yeah, and they never get AIDS.

      People being stupid and not wearing condoms, that's another matter.

    17. Re:Slight little difference. by alphakappa · · Score: 1

      You stupid dickhead, what GOD might have told you is just your own belief and you are welcome to it. However, when you discriminate and preach discrimination, it hurts others. So keep your views on what God likes/dislikes restricted to acts that affect only yourself. The way you talk about God's likes and dislikes, makes him sound almost human.

      --
      "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
    18. Re:Slight little difference. by woah · · Score: 1
      I really don't understand how can anyone be such a fundamentalist believer in our age. You said, you're Christian. What about people of other religions? Are you prejudiced against them as well? Are they all condemned to death in your view?

      This would be the implication, if you're following the bible this regorously. Most people in the world are not actually Christian. Do you expect the one billion Chinise to convert to Christianity? So, if you're willing to accept that people may have different religions/views, why not accept gay people? Which brings me back to my original point: I don't understand fundamentalism.

    19. Re:Slight little difference. by woah · · Score: 1
      Which can all be averted by using... condoms.

      What strikes me is how all your high morality bullshit can be brushed off by something as mundane as a condom.

      What we need is education. Apperantly too many people have never heard of safe sex.

    20. Re:Slight little difference. by DrStuff · · Score: 1

      Wow. Are you perfect and sinless? Why do you chose to pick on this particular "sin"? Even if I try to view things from your perspective, I cannot understand, from the religious viewpoint, why homosexuality gets elevated. The only reason I can see has nothing to do with theology, it has to do with money and politics. The religion industry raises funds by appealing to people's disdain for the other. By creating an enemy that is mostly external to the church (homosexuals), they can comfortably raise funds because you feel you are doing GOD's work by donating without feeling threathened. If they were to attack other sins like greed they would have a real problem because the entire economy is based upon people being greedy. How about adultery? Half of all marriages end in divorce, these are people who broke their vows to GOD, but instead the US churches have endorsed second marriages...because it's a market opportunity...gotta get that squash court in the basement of the new church. We are all imperfect. As we lead our imperfect lives, in this imperfect world, we have to make some choices. As gay people, some of the choices we have are as follows: a) pretend to be straight and marry someone. The problem is that one will never feel happiness and never provide the depth of love for the spouse. In all likelihood another life (the spouse) will have been a wasted opportunity to find true love. b)Live a life of celibacy. This leads to a life where you never fall in love,never actually learn to care for another person in a way that long-time couples do. c) Come out of the closet and try to share your life with someone. Learn to take care of someone, have them take care of you. Console them when they're down, share in their happiness and sadness. Learn about compromise and sharing. These are aspects that make us all better humans. One could consider other options, but this is the way I see it. If the roles were reversed would you be able to choose any other option?

    21. Re:Slight little difference. by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      God never said it to me. I must have been sick the day God came to school for show and tell or whatever.

      Or are you referring to what "God" said in the bible?

      Because, if you are, well - I sure hope you've never worn a cotton/poly blend shirt. After all, God (well, the bible) also says you can't do that kind of thing. Nor can you eat shellfish, touch a pig skin and a whole bunch of other things.

      I love it how people insist that God said one thing and then completely disregard the other hundred things that God supposedly also said because they're inconvenient.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  107. Talibani America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one do not welcome our bible thumping overlords.

  108. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by qwijibo · · Score: 1

    Speaking as a straight parent, my wife and I ain't any more normal than our gay friends. Do my kids need less normalcy in their lives because of genetics?

    What about individual gays, as opposed to couples? What if they're still in the closet? What if they don't know they're gay yet? Where do you draw the line?

    Foster kids shouldn't be placed in dysfunctional homes. Can we agree on that? Gay couples living in San Francisco aren't likely to be seen as all that abnormal.

    Do you know many gay couples? I've heard the same arguments made against blacks by old white guys who only know about blacks by watching cops. There's a big world out there. You don't have to like it, but if you get to tell everyone else how to live, don't complain when they start telling you how to live.

  109. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by bad_outlook · · Score: 1

    Sounds OT, but it's not. With the laws that are being thrown around it's amazing that anyone has any personal rights anymore. Then if the judiciary stands up for individuals rights, you have someone like DeLay screaming about it! Hypocracy. Anyway, if you're insterested in things like MS's move, read http://hrc.org for more info. bo

  110. MS not so bad afterall... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess there's hope for MS yet.

  111. Some things don't make sense by dlm85 · · Score: 1

    I am very confused. We live in a country that is running up a huge debt and fighting a war, but the politicians have time to push their selective religious beliefs. The entire country was mobilized for the Florida death watch, while no one cared about Sun Hudson. Sun Hudson was an infant in Texas who had his life support pulled against his mother's wishes. The "culture of life" president signed the bill that killed Sun Hudson while he was governor of Texas. I wish these politicians would read about usury and shellfish in the Bible. I am really tired of credit card companies and people who eat shellfish.

    Back to the gay thing, I thought Bush got a mandate during the last errect...err..election.

  112. Please... by screensaver400 · · Score: 1

    Laws like this are silly. Is there discrimination against GLBT persons? Sure. But the majority is based on business necessity. I guarantee you, if a GLBT person would help the company more than a straight person, they would be hired. Thats why we see so many gay males at salons and high fashion clothing stores. But to require that a man who likes to dress up like a woman be viewed no differently from a normal man or woman is asking too much. I, for one, don't want to talk to a man in a dress who works at a restaurant.

    1. Re:Please... by sagenumen · · Score: 1

      Yeah...cause you're not stereotyping at all. All gay guys are good with hair and clothing.

    2. Re:Please... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      But to require that a man who likes to dress up like a woman be viewed no differently from a normal man or woman

      What does cross-dressing have to do with homosexuality?

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    3. Re:Please... by screensaver400 · · Score: 1

      The post referred to GLBT... Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transsexual. I would assume that transsexuals tend to crossdress.

  113. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by qwijibo · · Score: 1

    I should have said "Cops" - referring to the TV show.

  114. Here's the difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "I've never understood why homosexuals require special protection beyond those already offered by existing laws. What's next, a law that protects left handed people? "

    If right-handed people start beating up and killing left-handed people because of being left-handed, then yes, that would be next. Unti then, laws get passed to cover real cases of criminality and discrimination that do take place.

  115. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well said. Well said.

  116. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

    "But, basically your whole thought process is predicated upon the idea that there is something wrong with homosexuals, which is an inherently prejudiced concept. YOU ARE A BIGOT. YOU HAVE NO HIGH GROUND."

    I wouldn't call it "inherently prejudiced", you cant ignore that there is something different about gay people, mostly that they cannot reproduce.
    Don't take me to be anti-gay, but reproduction is a large part of normal life. Just ask Darwin. You can't really claim that the idea of there being "something wrong with homosexuals" is "inherently prejudiced", rather it's a fact of biology.

    This is of course why they adopt, which is a good thing.

  117. Grossly incorrect by megalomang · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Some religions require practices that one cannot avoid telling his employer.

    Examples:
    1) Strong Catholics may come to work on Ash Wednesday with a cross on their forehead. And will need to take some time off of work to observe Holy days
    2) Indian women may dress according to religious requirments or wear the dot on their forehead or not eat meat at business functions
    3) Orthodox Jewish will require Kosher meals at business functions and wear a yamika
    4) Some Muslims need to pray to Mecca various times during the day and wear traditional clothes and turbans

    On the gay side, there are no requirements. It is your choice if you want to take off of work to attend gay day at Disney world. It is your choice if you want to take a a week to go on the gay cruise with Rosie O'Donnell and Ellen Degenerates. It is your choice if you want to take time off to go to the million gay march.

    It is also your choice to speak without a lisp and keep your sexual preference to yourself, just like the heteros do.

    1. Re:Grossly incorrect by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point of discrimination. It doesn't matter if there are certain requirements for some religiouns all members of all faiths have equal protection from discrimination based on their choice of faith. How do you think those people would feel if you told them that they had to hide thier faith in order to be not discriminated against. It's not like gay people are asking for the right to participate in gay pride events. They are asking to have their job qualification based upon their skill as an employee and not upon their sexual oreintation.

      To your last point, i have a gay friend who simply can't hide the fact that he is gay. He tries to and fails misserably and gets exteremly embarrased when people point out his flamboyant nature.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    2. Re:Grossly incorrect by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      What about being able to talk about your significant other in the workplace, just like the heteros do?

      what about if your significant other is in the hospital and you need the day off to visit him/her, just like the heteros do?

      What if your co-workers make fun of you for having a picture of your partner on your desk, just like the heteros do?

      I could go on, but I hope you get the point.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    3. Re:Grossly incorrect by megalomang · · Score: 1

      People need to maintain work conduct appropriate for the workplace. This goes equally for both sides. I keep my personal phone calls to a minimum just like I am expected to do. And if it is unavoidable, I find a conference room or take my mobile outside -- because my private life is private. In any case, there is no special rule that my company makes that allows me to call my spouse from work. Likewise I have never heard of a special rule denying people from calling their gay partner.

      As for hospital visits, it is simple to say you are visiting a close friend in the hospital. If your employer does not allow you to visit close friends in the hospital, then you need to visit your state legislation and ask them to allow gay marriage so you can visit your spouse. It would not be employer discrimination if they had a blanket policy that you were not to visit close friends hetero/homo boy/girlfriends in the hospital. If the state considered your partner as part your family, then things would be different. But as it stands, this is not discrimination in the workplace.

      As for making fun of people in the workplace... For any reason, this is extremely unprofessional behavior and not cohesive to a team environment. It is your company's responsibility to prevent sexual harrassment for any reason, and I believe this qualifies.

      Therefore, I stand by my conclusion that there is nothing particular about being gay that should require special protection from employers as there is about religions. There is enough legislation set up currently to protect people from harrassment.

    4. Re:Grossly incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "It is also your choice to speak without a lisp and keep your sexual preference to yourself, just like the heteros do."

      WFT?

      I talk with my gay friends at work about my sexual preferences all the time. If I see a hot chick walk in front of her, I generally say something.

      Yes, I am a practicing heterosexual. I believe as a het, it is my job to try to get more hets outs there. Unless of course the guy looks better than me and has a better chance of picking up the same women I would. Or that converting a lesbien chick would still result in a woman that wears trucker books and chews tabaccie. Nope, they can keep both of those.

      But how many of us heterosexuals really keep our preferences to ourselves? I don't and I don't give a damn if my homosexual friends talk about their lives as well. What? You think it means you are going to have to hear about fisting and buttfucking if they open their mouth? I don't talk about what I do with my girlfriend, and I'd expect them to keep the intimate portion of their sexlife out of the office, but past that, who the fuck cares? Does it really hurt you?

      BTW -- outside of work -- I talk about bangin' chicks and sometimes my gay friends talk about having their cocks smoked. I'm a big boy. It doesn't scare me. Kinda sickens me, but not as much as thinking about rightwing motherfuckers having antisecptic sex with the lights off, missionary style and only on the last thursday of the month. That shit REALLY scares me -- especially since they are more likely to propogate as thats what they think their sole purpose of doing the horizontal limbo is about.

      So fuck you biggot.

    5. Re:Grossly incorrect by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      As for hospital visits, it is simple to say you are visiting a close friend in the hospital.

      If you're straight there are laws protecting you from getting fired for running out the door and to the hospital if your SO is in a medical emergency. This isnt true if you're gay. What about gauranteed domestic partner benefits? right now its mandatory for busneses to give them to straight employees but voluntary for gay ones.

      I'll also point out that under current laws, gays don't necessarily have gauranteed visitition right in hospitals.

      It would not be employer discrimination if they had a blanket policy that you were not to visit close friends hetero/homo boy/girlfriends in the hospital.

      true, but most employers don't have said blanket policy.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    6. Re:Grossly incorrect by Catskul · · Score: 1

      The use of "hetero" as a noun refering to hetero sexual people sound alot like using "homo" as a noun to describe homosexual people. Just thought I might point that out.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    7. Re:Grossly incorrect by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      ::sigh::

      I was using it in response to this quote from the grandparent:
      It is also your choice to speak without a lisp and keep your sexual preference to yourself, just like the heteros do

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    8. Re:Grossly incorrect by megalomang · · Score: 1

      You completely ignored what I wrote.

      The US legislature created laws requiring employers to allow employees to visit their families in the hospital. They did NOT create laws allowing employees to visit their friends.

      And the vast majority of companies comply with the law. So... I ask again: How does this have anything to do with discrimination in the workplace?

      The one way to resolve this through the legal system is to petition the government to create legislation allowing gay marriage. As it stands, not only does a large majority of the public not want this, but many states have passed laws or are considering laws to make sure it is not allowed in their state.

    9. Re:Grossly incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, I am a practicing heterosexual. I believe as a het, it is my job to try to get more hets outs there

      You're calling him a bigot, yet you yourself are "converting" homosexuals? Man, are you out of touch. Haven't you learned you can't change a person's mind, they have to change it for themselves? Saying something about a hot chick that goes by to your homosexual friends will do it, huh?

  118. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't mind if my parents were left handed but I might mind if they were fucking each other in the *ASS*.

    There are plenty of "normal" or "straight" couples that do the same thing (i.e. man and woman). Ass screwing is not unique to same-sex relationships.

  119. You dumbass by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1
    They changed from pro to neutral after being threatened with a boycott from a single pastor.

    Just because one paranoid pro-gay publication claims that a single pastor threatened Microsoft to withdraw their position, that it MUST be true?!?! Could this possibly be the explanation?

    Just as important, since when is it the business of a software development company to be pushing legislation on a social issue?!?! Should we now attack IBM, HP, Dell, GM, Walmart, Citicorp, etc. because they are not flaming supporters of pro-gay legislation which can then later bite them in the ass with civil suits?

    I am looking at the posts, and it appears you are not alone in your retardation. Take comfort in that.

    --
    There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
  120. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not a troll post. It's on topic and insightful.
    Mods, do not abuse your priveleges just because you disagree with someone.
    (Now that I've posted, I won't get to mod this :-( )

  121. s/homosexual/christian by TuringTest · · Score: 1

    Excuse me, how does your rant about gayness differ from religion (except that same-sex attraction is NOT a choice, and I'm not that sure about religious beliefs)?

    --
    Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
  122. Will of the People by ticbot · · Score: 0

    The will of the people is not moving towards support for gay/lesbian issues. You know, political landmines... Coporations are always looking at the bottomline and support for issues which are not considered mainstream can hurt some companies and kill others. Sorry, that's just that way it is these days...

  123. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You care about how your parents have sex?! You're one sick bastard!

  124. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Kainaw · · Score: 1

    Gay bashing is now a socially acceptable form of discrimination in this country.

    How is it bashing to maintain the status quo that has existed for a few hundred years? You attempt to make it sound like gays had equal rights until Bush was elected. The fact is that gays have more rights now than they had when he was first elected. Look at the number of states finding some way to grant legal marriage rights to gay couples. Look at the laws passed to allow gay adoption. As for acceptance, is it legal in Hollywood to make a movie or television show without a gay character? OK, that's a cheap joke. I can't be serious for a whole paragraph.

    Keep your eye out for anyone on the extremes. You mention the Texas ban on gay foster parents. Gays are using a loophole in the foster parent laws to become foster parents. Some legislators in Texas want to close the loophole. By definition, a loophole is 'legal' but not 'as intended by the law'. So, the main issue is that the gays in Texas need to stop using a loophole and pass a real law allowing them to be foster parents - or complain that they are being bashed and hope someone else will come fix everything for them.

    --
    The previous comment is purposely vague and generalized, but all of the facts are completely true.
  125. Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by eno2001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This pastor is a disgrace. The people who are opposed to gay marriage are actually very disturbed people who are in denial. They can't accept that two people of the same gender can experience love and commemorate that love in marriage. Here is is folks, the plain truth:

    The love that two men or two women feel for each other is no different than the love that a heterosexual couple experiences. There is no difference at all. None. That same warm indescribably wonderful feeling that a hetero remembers (I'm straight, so I know what it feels like) feeling on their wedding day is no different from what a gay man or a lesbian woman would feel on their wedding day. But our sick society is trying to deny that love can be experienced outside of a heterosexual relationship. It makes them so uncomfortable that they cover their ears and scream loudly, "I'm not listening! I'm not listening! I'm not listening"!

    I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    1. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      The love that two men or two women feel for each other is no different than the love that a heterosexual couple experiences.


      except way, way gayer.

    2. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by lheal · · Score: 2, Interesting
      • There is no difference at all. None.

      Huh? That's absurd on its face. It may be that there ought to be no legal difference, but to claim that there is no difference at the emotional level defies logic and biology.

      Men and women are different. Men and women feel different things when they are "in love". To say that gay men and women feel the same things, and that those feelings are the same as straights feel, is a logical contradiction.

      --
      Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
    3. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am opposed to gay marriage. I am not disturbed or in denial. I am a Christian.

      The issue is the definition of marriage. It's not just a legal concept. If it were then Christians wouldn't care. I don't care if gays get a driver's license because that is just a legal concept. Marriage is an institution established by God as being between a man and a woman. That is why us Jesus-freak, Bible-thumpin' intolerants have such an issue with "gay marriage". It represents biblical principles that are sacred to us. Allowing gays to be "married" goes against those principles.

      Now...if gays want to be civilly-united so they can have all the legal, state-created rights afforded to those that are married then I say go for it. I have no problem with that because that is just a legal concept.

      Radical gays that have a political agenda are pushing this as a social deconstruction device. This country was founded on biblical principles. Anti-God types want to undo that so they have to deconstruct our current way of life so they can reconstruct it based on their way.

      Currently our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God are enumerated in our founding documents as a legal concept. That means the government can't touch them for any reason. As soon as God is removed from every aspect of our goverment and way of life then our rights will have to default to be granted to us by the government and therefore changeable.

      It's not just about homophobia (which I do not suffer from)...that is just a convenient, emotional label used when the folks with the deconstruction agenda are presented with the facts I stated above.

    4. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This pastor is a disgrace. The people who are opposed to gay marriage are actually very disturbed people who are in denial. They can't accept that two people of the same gender can experience love and commemorate that love in marriage. Here is is folks, the plain truth:

      How about I give you a different version of plain truth, claim that it is in fact you who are in denial, and we can end up no where closer to a solution, but I can feel better about myself. Here it goes:

      The relationship that you gentiles call "love" is not even a shadow of what Christians experience through God. Instead of being fixated on the partner meeting the needs of the other, Christian marriages, bound by selflessness and grace, grow into something far deeper than your average heathen could even understand. So it's no wonder why you equate the "love" that heterosexuals enjoy to that of the homosexuals--neither is really love!

      Now, I hope you don't think I was completely serious, I was just trying to show that in such subjective matters, trying to give everyone the "plain truth" is useless, because perception is greater than fact. You, for instance, seem to have enjoyed both homosexual and heterosexual marriages first hand, since you can equate them neatly.

      I think I have a better solution: let people believe what they will, and ensure that free speech protects our right to change their minds when we believe they are wrong. Leave the government out of marriage!

      I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people.

      Homophobia is rampant within the Christian community, but that doesn't mean that the proper Christian viewpoint is that homosexuality is OK. They should show homosexuals every bit of grace and love they can in spite of a different sexual orientation. The Bible claims that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God--I don't see why simply considering homosexuality to be a sin is so bigoted if it merely puts us all in the same boat!

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    5. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Reignking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do you have a problem with non-Christians, straight couples getting married, then?

      --
      One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
    6. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by hypervinetest45 · · Score: 1

      I am opposed to gay marriage. I am not disturbed or in denial. I am a Christian.
      Then you have my deepest sympathies.

    7. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The love that a man and a donkey feel for each other is no different than the love that a heterosexual couple experiences. There is no difference at all. None. That same warm indescribably wonderful feeling that a hetero remembers feeling is no different from what a man and his donkey would feel on their wedding day. But our sick society is trying to deny that love can be experienced outside of a heterospecies relationship. It makes them so uncomfortable that they cover their ears and scream loudly, "I'm not listening! I'm not listening! I'm not listening"!

    8. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by UCRowerG · · Score: 1

      And I assume you have real world experience to back that up? How many straight and gay couples in long term relationships have you surveyed to arrive at that conclusion? Love is love.

    9. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by tedshultz · · Score: 1

      People who don't understand this obvious argument tend not to be in love. A simple test would be to look at your wife or husband, and see if you say "I'm so in love with this person that it would be inhumane for other people this in love not be allowed to marry". Unfortunately some influential religions/social structures encourage marriage for the wrong reasons, such as permission to have sex or to enter into adulthood. I find it hard to believe that any person who is capable of abstract thoughts and who has experienced true love would be against gay marriage.

    10. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you believe that gays who are looking for recognition of marriage are trying to destroy society, you are just like every other paranoid freak who thinks "they are out to get me." What sort of distopian society do you think they will try to push on you? Do you think they won't let you go to church? Do you think they will make you marry a man? How, exactly does two people that are not you getting married affect you? Do us all a favor and just stop caring about what gay people want unless it affects you directly, okay? Do unto others as you'd have done unto you.

    11. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

      Unless you consider marriage under the more traditional definition, in which case it is a socioeconomic union that has little if anything to do with love. Further, the state has an interest in increasing its population because more people means more resources. Therefore laws encouraging unions that permit reproduction are beneficial to the state.

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    12. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by emilymildew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You got your religion in my government!

      You got your government in my religion!

      Seriously. When the state is "marrying" people, you don't get to dictate based on religious beliefs who is and isn't allowed to do it just because it isn't what your god intended. Sorry.

      State does civil, your churches do marrying. Make it so, otherwise, keep your mouth shut and your morals away from me.

    13. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, sticking your cock in some guys ass is so normal. Fucking faggot.

    14. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by UCRowerG · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The issue is the definition of marriage. It's not just a legal concept.

      You have hit the nail on the head there. I think the biggest confusion arises because gays are fighting for the legal word "marriage" while conservative religious groups are fighting to preserve the religious significance of "marriage." Setting aside the whole freedom of religion thing and that not every religion claims gays are wrong (this is a majority christian country after all), civil unions start to look like a promising compromise. There is only one drawback to this solution, and it's something we've seen just last century. There is no such thing as "separate but equal". Perhaps civil unions would be a best first step, but I am sure we will see problems arise just as we did when segregation was lawful. In the end either way, no church is required to hold a ceremony or recognize a gay union. That's a breach of freedom of religion. But i do strongly support a legal union of some sort available to whomever wants it.

    15. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by xiaomonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Men and women are different. Men and women feel different things when they are "in love". To say that gay men and women feel the same things, and that those feelings are the same as straights feel, is a logical contradiction.

      I'm wondering, is your point of view based on just cultural stereotypes, or do you have an evidence to back this up?

      I would argue that any two people, regardless of whether they are male or female, probably have idiosyncrasies in the way they experience love. But, the claim that there is something necessarily very different between a couple consisting of a woman and a man and couples consisting of either a man and a another man or a woman and another woman reeks of sexism.

    16. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The people who are opposed to gay marriage are actually very disturbed people who are in denial.

      I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people.

      I really hate sharing this country with such willfully ignorant people.

      They can't accept that people who happen to disagree with them might not fit into the little boxes they construct for us.

      The reason I, and as far as I know, most other Christians who are opposed to gay marriage, are opposed is not because we think that two people of the same gender cannot feel love for one another, but because the Bible quite expressly homosexual relations. Attack that if you wish. But please, don't make yourself a fool by making impossibly broad generalizations and attacking people for something that simply is not true.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    17. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      whoops typo: ...quite expressly forbids ...

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    18. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The relationship you jesus freaks call "love" is not even a shadow of what caring, normal, sane people experience through their lifelong relationships. Instead of being fixated on meeting the requirements of some invisible being, these couples, bound by selflessness and grace, grow into something far deeper than your average Christian could ever understand. So it's no wonder why you consider "love" Christians enjoy different than that of caring, normal homosexuals or heterosexuals -- it's not really love!

    19. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all why do gay people want to marry? If they want to stay together, have sex then they can have all they want, they can love each other all they want. But what is there in *marriage* that they want so desparately? -- have no sig yet

    20. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by schon · · Score: 1

      Men and women are different.

      Thank you, Captain Obvious!

      Men and women feel different things when they are "in love"

      And you know this because you've been both a man and a woman, right?

      To say that gay men and women feel the same things, and that those feelings are the same as straights feel, is a logical contradiction.

      Again, according to whom?

      Sorry, but the only "logical contradiction" is how you went "A, B, 5, Mu."

    21. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Words can have multiple definitions. And also, my rights are granted by virtue of my ability to make bombs, shot shotguns, and be an arsonist. Liberty grows out of the barrel of a gun.

      But comming back to the words:
      Marrige n. 3:Any close union
      That is from the American Heritige dictionary. So use a different word in the English Bible. Rember, Jesus spoke Hebrew, so no english word could possibly have been defined by him. In fact, English did not exist back then. So please apologize to all of the gay republicans you
      offended. Since you care about rights and chairity so much, and "render unto Ceaser what is Ceasers" then you might just consider becoming a Trotskyist . Just my $0.02

    22. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jcuffe · · Score: 1

      I think that all the religious people that say they don't want gays getting married because of the sacredness of religion are more or less afraid to say that the same applies to atheists because (omg) not believing in god isn't exactly in line with the church's perspective either.

      Maybe that's why my fellow Christians discuss me. They can't just pick a line and stick with it.

    23. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard this view, and it is somewhat reasonable. That's why I like the useage of the new term "civil marriage". The government cannot endorse Christianity (or any other religion), and it therefore cannot endorse Christian marriage. The concept of marriage is a good thing (people commit to supporting each other), so the state supports it, and provides certain laws to protect the practice. Fine, good.

      But, if you define state "civil marriage" based on your religious definition of marriage, then we have lost seperation of church and state. You cannot impose your values on me in this country. We could get rid of any legal definition of marriage, and provide "civil unions" to any two people, but I don't think anyone would like that idea. We can have "marriage/civil union" replace the word "marriage" in the laws, but that would be pretty annoying.

      So, separate the idea of religious marriage from civil marriage, if you can. Do you have any problem with homosexual couples getting equal recognition by the state?

    24. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by eno2001 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But marriage is a celebration of love and has been extended outside of Christianity. Buhddists get married. Moonies get married. Pagans get married. They all do it to celebrate their love for one another. That is the key purpose of marriage. It says to the rest of society, "Person A loves Person B and Person B loves Person A". If marriage was specifically a religious concept, then that would mean all the atheists who are married should consider their marriages null and void. Obviously this is not the case. If marriage is meant to raise up the emotion of love, then it should be extended to all people who experience romantic love. Leave religion out of it.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    25. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      What is there in *marriage* that straight people want so desperately?

    26. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jcuffe · · Score: 1

      FUCK. s/discuss/disgust. I should really preview my posts.

    27. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > First of all why do gay people want to marry?

      To get tax breaks!

    28. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Donkeys can't consent, you retarded troll.

    29. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as a donkey, I support this viewpoint. Donkeys and humans should be allowed to marry.

    30. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      So don't homosexually relate. What the fuck is so hard about that? You're not going to save the rest of us by forcing straightness on us. Start by converting, and once you've got that, you can move on to telling us which of our many behaviors make our new god cry.

    31. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Experiment+626 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This pastor is a disgrace. The people who are opposed to gay marriage are actually very disturbed people who are in denial.

      How amazingly arrogant. To categorically assume that anyone who might dare to think differently than you about a complex and controversial social topic must automatically be doing so because they are "very disturbed" and "in denial". Which side of this debate is supposed to be the closed-minded and intolerant ones again?

      The love that two men or two women feel for each other is no different than the love that a heterosexual couple experiences.

      What about the love a man feels for his seven wives, or for a goat, or for some member of his immediate family? Some people will say as long as everybody involved is okay with it, whatever floats their boats. Others might find unconventional relationships to be immoral or aberrent. Such questions can be particularly controversial when the issue of marriage is added, since it juxtaposes what is originally a religous ceremony with a lifestyle that is at odds with the teachings of the predominant religion in America. Depending upon one's values, they might find themselves on either side of such a debate, but only those too ignorant to consider others' perspectives, such as yourself, could be accused of covering their ears and screaming loudly, 'I'm not listening!'

      I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people.

      At least you admit your intolerance is based out of your hate for those who think differently than you do. But, when it comes to people who think their way is the "plain truth", that everyone else must be "very disturbed" and who "hate" such people, are they really any different from you at all?

    32. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by eno2001 · · Score: 1
      Note this from the original post:

      I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people.

      I have my own beliefs as formed by my experience growing up in a mixed Catholic/Christian home. And I would say that people who hold to the bible in a literal fashion ARE superstitious. Time to wake up from your fantasy.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    33. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am opposed to gay marriage.

      You are entitled to your opinion.

      I am not disturbed or in denial. I am a Christian.

      Wait, I thought you said you weren't disturbed?

      Marriage is an institution established by God as being between a man and a woman. It represents biblical principles that are sacred to us.

      Ahh, so you're also against Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist, (and any other non-"biblical" religions) marriage too, then.

      Because if you're not, you're a hypocrite.

      This country was founded on biblical principles.

      And so therefore anything that the non-"biblical" people don't want should be abolished. I thought that one of the principles your country was founded on was "separation of church and state"?

      My question to you is: If a church *DOES* want to allow gays to be married, why should they not be allowed to? Because it disturbs *you*?

      Sorry, if a church wants to discriminate against someone, that's their right, but to say that the *GOVERNMENT* should discriminate against them is a whole other matter completely.

      It's not just about homophobia (which I do not suffer from)

      Methinks thou dost protest too much. Don't worry, it's common for closet homosexuals to engage in homophobic behaviour.

      the facts I stated above

      You stated no facts, just some religious anti-gay diatribe.

    34. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      Men and women are different. Men and women feel different things when they are "in love". To say that gay men and women feel the same things, and that those feelings are the same as straights feel, is a logical contradiction.

      I'm bisexual. I've been with both men and women, and I've been in love with both men and women. Each relationship was different, however, there wasn't any grand differences in the emotions from gender to gender. Also, the gay couples I know aren't that different from the straight couples I kow. I'm not sure what difference you think there is, but I haven't seen it.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    35. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jd0g85 · · Score: 1

      The issue is the definition of marriage. It's not just a legal concept.

      This is exactly why I think "marriage" should be stricken from all legal documents in the US. Marriage is a religious idea and thus does not belong in our legal system. (Separation of chuch and state anyone?)

      Every legal benefit that is currently bestowed upon "marriages" should be granted to civil unions. A civil union should be a legal document entirely separate from marriage. It's perfectly reasonable that most people who choose to be married would also seek the benefits of a civil union, but unions should not be limited to what churches deem acceptable.

      --
      There is no belief, however foolish, that will not gather its faithful adherents who will defend it to the death.-Asimov
    36. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Altus · · Score: 1



      actually... real world experience would have required the grandparent poster to have actually BEEN a gay man, a straight man, a gay woman and a straight woman on their respective wedding days.

      and that would still be a small sample size.

      heres a clue for the grandparent... not even all straight men are the same... no two people regardless of sexual orientation are the same...

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    37. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      Now...if gays want to be civilly-united so they can have all the legal, state-created rights afforded to those that are married then I say go for it. I have no problem with that because that is just a legal concept.

      I trust I can expect your signature expressing support for a federal constitutional amendment that gives exactly the same rights and protections to civil unions as to married couples then, and that you'll work to overturn the various laws that have actually pre-empted the possibility of even civil unions?

      Nope, didn't think so. Deep down, you just say "civil unions are fine" and don't want actual equality to exist. Separate But Equal, and it's all true because you say it's equal.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    38. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't want your tolerance, love, forbearance, understanding, empathy, grace, witnessing, or most of all your god damned forgiveness. We want to be treated as human in the eyes of the law

      Take your bible and shove it up your ass.

    39. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by dhakbar · · Score: 1

      A good, stable environment in which to raise their genetic offspring?

    40. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by obender · · Score: 1
      What is there in *marriage* that straight people want so desperately?

      Children.

    41. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Legal equality is fine. While I don't think a constitutional amendment is required (on either side) I would support (even vote in favor of) laws that would convey the same legal rights for civil unions that legal marriage is already afforded.

      Again...for the cheap seats...legal equality is fine with me...just don't call it a marriage.

    42. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Here is the plain truth:

      Some people's morals do not blow in the wind of realativism, if something is wrong, it stays wrong, despite a pervert's attempts otherwise.

    43. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      Well, since you're fine and dandy with legal equality, I trust you won't mind while others go out and seek legal remedy to their inequality problem by pursuing marriage rights, while you and the rest of the faithful go work on a new dictionary entry that that they can refer to later on.

      Or do you really value syntax over equality and rights?

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    44. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      I know somebody that actually managed to have one of those without being married. I'm 85% sure it was some kind of miracle.

    45. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The love that two men or two women feel for each other is no different than the love that a heterosexual couple experiences."

      Right, you know this how?

      "But our sick society is trying to deny that love can be experienced outside of a heterosexual relationship. It makes them so uncomfortable that they cover their ears and scream loudly, "I'm not listening! I'm not listening! I'm not listening"!"

      Again evidence of this homosexual love would be appreciated. We're not saying that they can't love each other, we're saying they can't be married.

      "It makes them so uncomfortable that they cover their ears and scream loudly, "I'm not listening! I'm not listening! I'm not listening"!""

      Apparantly this isn't happening as many of us here are argueing against gay marriage.

    46. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The list of things has been enumerated over and over elsewhere, so I won't go over all of it. The basics are legal recognition of status at the local and federal level. Things like being able to authorize surgery for a partner, or even visit them in the hospital in some cases. Lots of issues to do with rights in child rearing: adoption issues, custody after divorce, being able to make medical decisions for the child, etc. There are a lot of good reasons.
      If you're now going to bring up the question of marriage in terms of "why marriage, why not just civil union", there's a very good reason for that too. The reason is that local, state and federal laws, as well as mountains of private regulations make specific reference to marriage, not to "civil union". There's no global search and replace for all of this to make civil union equivalent in all cases to marriage. The ideal way for this to work is if from a legal standpoint all marriages were civil unions and the term marriage just referred to a religious or secular ceremony. Maybe a constitutional amendment could be created that says civil union == marriage in all legal contexts. Realistically it's a heck of lot less complicated to just let couples of whatever sex combination get a legal marriage.

    47. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I like how you slipped "genetic" in there. But you didn't quite go far enough. Some of them have kids from previous relationships that technically qualify just as well as straight blended families, so you should throw some more arbitrary constraints on it. I recommend "the genetic offspring of not-currently-gay parents". That oughtta cover it. You've still got that gaping hole around infertile straight couples and straight couples that would just prefer to adopt, but that's okay. Thinking is for fags, anyway.

    48. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with that at all. Not sure why you ask though.

    49. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Since when is being a Christian a prerequisite for getting married? The prerequisite has always been (and was established as such) that it be between a man and a woman.

    50. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I had never thought of this before but I have to agree with you. Marriage should be a "church" thing and a civil union should be the state's equivalent where rights are bestowed and enumerated.

      Good point! Mod parent up!

    51. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by symbolic · · Score: 1



      No, just your understanding of logic and biology, which for all intents and purposes, seems fairly limited. If you can answer the question, "what is love?" I might start to take you seriously, but I dare say the chances are probably slim to none.

    52. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Being a christian is not a requirement to be married...even in a church.

      If the vows being exchanged between the man and woman aren't against what that church stands for then I doubt the church would turn them away. A man making those vows to another man (or woman to woman) goes against what Christianity believes and stands for.

      Like it or not marriage is an institution established by God...so "religion" is involved by definition and can't be left "out of it."

    53. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      The word marriage has a specific meaning. Two men cannot get married (nor two women) because a marriage is between a man and a woman.

      Syntax IS important. Apparently you think it's splitting hairs...that is because you don't accept the actual definition of marriage. You see marriage as a legal concept only and it's more than that.

      Scroll up and re-read so I don't have to repeat myself.

    54. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by An.+(Coward) · · Score: 1

      I am opposed to gay marriage. I am not disturbed or in denial. I am a Christian.

      The issue is the definition of marriage. It's not just a legal concept. If it were then Christians wouldn't care.

      Of course they care. You say (putting it paraphrastically) that you have no problem with civil unions. But just about every anti-gay-marriage bill, law, or constitutional amendment out there attempts to prohibit not only same-sex marriage, but also civil unions, and often domestic partnerships or any other method for obtaining any of legal benefits of marriage through some other means.

      It's not that the religious right simply wants to keep The Institution of Marriage under their control...they don't want gay people to have relationships, period, and do everything they can to keep them from deriving any tangible social benefit from doing so. (Presumably that's so they can keep saying how immoral gay people are because they're so promiscuous and they're incapable of having stable relationships.)

    55. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      It was not established by God unless you take the bible literally. If you do, you are insane. The bible was created by man, so marriage was also created by man. I chose to get married in a civil service with my wife and I don't see any reason why two men or two women shouldn't be allowed to do the same.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    56. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      The Bible was written by God through man. God is big enough to make sure it stays true even after translations.

      No insanity required.

      Two men or two women can be civilly united in the eyes of the state...no problem. Just don't call it a marriage. A marriage is between a man and a woman.

    57. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by dhakbar · · Score: 1

      Wow, you're pathetic.

      I'm not sure what you're blathering on about, but all I said was a simple truth: straight people often get married, planning to have children and raise a family. Those children are their genetic offspring.

      I don't know what I said that you got so hot and bothered about.

    58. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for them...all I can say is I don't have a problem with it.

      I am against homosexuality...not those who practice it.

      I am fundamentally against the agenda pushed by radical gays. Not agains the radical gays themselves...only against their ideas. Big difference.

      Some on the religious right may want what you say (I am sure they do). I am not one of those...so I guess I am to the left of them. I don't think those to the right of me will get all that they want. I can see why they would want to push for all of that if they think it will give them bargaining power in the end (ok...we'll support the civil union...). Who knows. We will find out sooner rather than later I think.

    59. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      It's not just a legal concept.
      That's all it is as far as the law is concerned.
      If it were then Christians wouldn't care.
      And if this weren't a secular state, the law might care.

      That is why us Jesus-freak, Bible-thumpin' intolerants have such an issue with "gay marriage". It represents biblical principles that are sacred to us. Allowing gays to be "married" goes against those principles.
      Well, my Bible-thumpin' principles say you should forgive all debt after 7 years and not stick your nose in other people's private lives. Since when did we start writing law using your idea of what Jesus-freak's believe and not mine?

      You can't have religious freedom without a secular state. It's logically impossible.

      Radical gays that have a political agenda are pushing this as a social deconstruction device. This country was founded on biblical principles. Anti-God types want to undo that so they have to deconstruct our current way of life so they can reconstruct it based on their way.

      So you're not a US citizen? Cause the US wasn't founded on biblical principles. It was founded on Liberal principles of a secular state. Anyone who claims otherwise is either lying to really freaking ignorant about the history of this country. I can supply quotes, analysis and documentation till pigs fly that prove this. You can't produce shit to support your assertion, trust me, I've been through this so many times over so many years, I'm really surprised people keep trying to make this claim. Also, what's with the manufactured paranoia? What part of the secular state forces someone else's beliefs on you? Unlike what you and your fanatic friends are trying to do to the rest of us. Don't you realize you've got the same agenda as Bin Laden - theocracy?

      Currently our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God are enumerated in our founding documents as a legal concept. That means the government can't touch them for any reason. As soon as God is removed from every aspect of our goverment and way of life then our rights will have to default to be granted to us by the government and therefore changeable.
      Your civil rights come from Hume's contract theory, the ancient (pre-Christian) rights of the English and Roman law, not God. There are no proclamations from God in any of our founding documents and to claim otherwise is blasphemy, the one sin Jesus doesn't forgive. You've got a poor grasp of Christian (Catholic and Protestant) theology to go with your lack of historical knowledge.

      It's not just about homophobia (which I do not suffer from)...
      Oh... but it is, and your paranoid assertions about radical gays shows that you do. No empirical evidence to support your assertions, all assumptions based on faulty knowledge and/or reasoning.
      that is just a convenient, emotional label used when the folks with the deconstruction agenda are presented with the facts I stated above.
      You might have a point if you had stated some facts, but you haven't. Come back when you've got some facts to state.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    60. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Funksaw · · Score: 1

      When the hell did God establish Marriage, and when did he say "between a man and a woman?"

      You assert it, but you never talk about it. Closest I can see when I read the bible is a Prohibition in Leviticus buried along with stonings for working on the sabbath and touching menstruating women that prohibits male-male sex but not male-male marriage. In fact, I can't even find a prohibition for female-female sex in the bible...

      ----

      Oh, also, that whole "Country was founded on biblical principals?" Not exactly. In fact, the country was founded by diests - enlightenment thinkers who used reason and science and regarded the bible as metaphor by a God who didn't meddle in daily affairs. If you're talking about the Puritans, I just want to point out that their idea of "biblical principals" were witch-burnings and scarlet letters.

      -----
      "Anti-god types want to deconstruct current ways of life?" "Social deconstruction device?"

      Mechagodzilla is a social deconstruction device.

      Look, there are no anti-god types. This whole persecution complex? No one's persecuting you. No one's stopping you from worshipping as you please. We -- who don't believe in your backwards, backwoods, God who exists mainly to make life on earth a shithole if-He-was-really-like-most-Christians-who-oppose-G ay-marriage-say-he-is -- just want to be left in peace, left alone, live life according to the rule of law not the vagaries of a talking plant.

      Civil, human rights may indeed be given by God, but his followers around the world and throughout history have sure as hell done their best to stomp out those civil rights whenever possible. Ever hear of the crusades?

      I will never understand - not if I live forever - how people could think that God wants them to do what they know in their hearts is wrong.

    61. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by necrognome · · Score: 1
      This country was founded...

      Let me put this is clear for you as I can. The founders of this country had their own little "Secular elites vs. Jesusland" conflict some 200+ years ago. Guess which side Washington, Adams, Madison, Jefferson, and Franklin were on, given that the latter two spent quite a bit of time in France? For all intents and purposes, the founders who have monuments built in their names thought that the Thumpers of their time were nutjobs and lost (intellectually) causes. The people they had the least respect for were folks who had "conversations with Jesus". These founders are all rolling in their graves now.
      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    62. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Triumph+The+Insult+C · · Score: 1

      The Bible was written by God through man. God is big enough to make sure it stays true even after translations.

      if that was the case, there would be one Bible and only one Bible. but, that's not the case

      Christianity implies believing in the teachings of Jesus Christ. please show me where Jesus said it was wrong for a "man to lie with another man as he would with a woman"

      --
      vodka, straight up, thank you!
    63. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Nopal · · Score: 1

      May I inquire as to the relevance of your question? Clearly non-Christian couples that bind their livest together permanently still meet the christian definition of marriage as expressed by the poster.

    64. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by nighthawk127127 · · Score: 1

      Homosexuals are not evil, even though they do sin, but by the same token, everyone is a sinner. The Bible says that "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," (Romans 3:23) We shouldn't hate homosexuals, rather we should hate the act of homosexuality itself. PS - Read Leviticus 18

      --
      10100111001
    65. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Radical gays that have a political agenda are pushing this as a social deconstruction dev

      Where are these "radical gays"? In the 1950's - 1970's, there was a radical movement among Blacks and all variety of other social movements. They shot ppl and blew things up. But radical gays????? *lmao* Where are the Pink Panthers? Where's the army of homos rioting in the streets, taking the fight to the man?

      Oh yeah... that's right... THERE IS NO RADICAL GAY MOVEMENT!!!!! The Last Poets are not crafting a theme song for the Gay Revolution That Will Not Be Televised. Nobody is running around in pink berets carrying shotguns blowing away ppl who beat up the gay d00ds in my neighborhood. And, last I checked, there aren't any gay ppl calling for the complete overthrow of the government, redistribution of wealth, or the establishment of a new civilization as part of some theorectical socio-economic system based on homosexuality.

      And what are aims of the Radical Gay Movement? The violent overthrow of Uranus?

    66. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Hatta · · Score: 1

      In fact, I can't even find a prohibition for female-female sex in the bible...

      Why isn't this modded up?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    67. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jayloden · · Score: 1

      So...you're saying marriage is a Christian institution, but other people have extended it outside Christianity, so now we should "leave religion out of it" and the definition of marriage is now up for grabs because other people have decided to appropriate it?

      I'm not even agreeing or disagreeing with either side of this debate, I just think that's terrible logic.

      -Jay

    68. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This country was founded on biblical principles. Anti-God types want to undo that so they have to deconstruct our current way of life so they can reconstruct it based on their way."

      I thought the United States of America was built upon freedom of religion and not on "biblical principles". I could've sworn that part was in the first amendment of the constitution.

    69. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still, the other component of marriage is raising children. How do children raised by a gay couple compare with children raised by a straight couple? Is it better, worse, or indifferent? Better still, how do we define better, worse, or indifferent with respect to raising a child? Do other socioeconomic factors come into play in this type of comparison? Should we ban gay marriages if there are negative results to these questions?

      Lots of questions. Not many answers, at least from a scientific perspective.

    70. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Marriage pre-exists Christianity. Indeed, civil marriage pre-exists religious solemnizations of marriage, which pre-exist Christianity and Judaism.

    71. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by colonslash · · Score: 1
      Just how did God establish marriage as between a man and a woman? As others have said, the Church has redefined marriage throughout the years. I found this interesting (from http://users.aol.com/stewdship/boswell.htm):

      The two forms had different scriptural bases. The heterosexual services used passages such as "Be fruitful and multiply." The same-sex services use passages such as I Corinthians 13: "... but the greatest of these is love," and Psalm 133, which speaks of the love between two brothers.

      The theological archetype for the same-sex marriage is the story of Saints Serge and Bacchus, two authorized saints of the Roman Catholic Church. Serge and Bacchus were soldiers in the Roman army, and were a couple. Theirs is a standard martyrdom story in which they were asked by the emperor to demonstrate allegiance to Roman gods above all others. They proclaimed their allegiance to him as emperor, but would not deny Christ. (There is no indication that the emperor was concerned with their homosexuality; a number of Roman emperors were married to men.) Serge and Bacchus refuse to obey, and the emperor had them publicly disgraced and then tortured to death. Bacchus dies first, and then Serge's resolution starts to slip. However, Bacchus appears to him and says to be faithful and your reward in heaven will be me.

      This story is the archetype for the same-sex marriage. the prayers say things like "... united like Serge and Bacchus."

    72. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Nopal · · Score: 1
      A very wise post overall, but I must take small issue with this line:

      There is only one drawback to this solution, and it's something we've seen just last century. There is no such thing as "separate but equal".

      The reason I take issue is that by the nature of these unions they cannot be equal. Heterosexual marriages have a very real possiblity of producing offspring and in fact it can be argued that is primary reason why the government got into the "marriage business" to begin with. Gay marriages by default cannot produce offspring. There is a marked biological and functional difference.

      In contrast, the concept of "separate but equal" as applied to racism was not based on any significant biological differences, since color is only skin deep. Further, there is no functional difference between one "race" or another.

      The concept of separation in that case was merely an excuse brought about by bigotry. This case, as you've pointed out, the concept of separation is based on some very real arguments.

      At best, a case can be made for "separate but equivalent", but the term "separate but equal" does not quite apply in this case. Having said all that, I do by and large agree with the rest of your arguments since they are very well formulated. Gay civil unions are alright in my book.

    73. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      Oh. Sorry. I assumed you had a point. "People sometimes get married to have kids." Great. Thanks. I'll make a note of that in my Big Book of Obviousness.

    74. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by snorklewacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Two men cannot get married (nor two women) because a marriage is between a man and a woman.

      San Francisco said otherwise. Uh oh, cognitive dissonance time. It's like that robot from star trek. "ILLOGICAL! ILLOGICAL! DOES NOT COMPUTE!"

      I wasn't going to get nearly this snarky until I saw that I was arguing against the same old soft-pedalled bigotry. Well I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to stand for hemming and hawing while injustice takes place. People are losing their homes because the inheritance goes to parents. People are losing their health because their partner can't insure them. And on and on, because people like YOU will gladly crush others so you can enjoy your precious definitions.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    75. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Christians don't have a monopoly on marriage. Nor do they have any business trying to use the state to impose their religious imperatives on anyone else.

      And God has nothing to do with the Constitution. Get a grip, boy.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    76. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Currently our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God are enumerated

      I find your words disturbing. Human rights are assigned by virtue of being human. A belief in a god or lack thereof neither confirms nor denies these rights.

    77. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >This country was founded on biblical principles.

      In what chapter of the Bible does it talk about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness as those rights pertain to governance?

      And when in the course of human events...

      That sort of thing.

      ???

      Anybody?

    78. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In fact, I can't even find a prohibition for female-female sex in the bible...
      Why isn't this modded up?

      The fact that he can't find doesn't mean it's not there.
      From AKJV, Romans 22-27:
      "22Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, 23And changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four footed beasts, and creeping things. 24Why God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonor their own bodies between themselves: 25Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen. 26For this cause God gave them up to vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: 27And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which was meet."
    79. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the point of all this is that, while no church is forced to hold a ceremony or recognize a gay union, it is that churches are being forced to not recognize a gay union.

    80. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were making a joke, I would laugh. Unfortunately, one can never be sure.

      However, if I were you, I would not be so eager to be judged by anyone under the law.

    81. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jcuffe · · Score: 1

      The thing is, that argument has only tradition to back it up. People try to bring the religious aspect into it, and if you're going to do that, you can't conveniently forget about atheism.

    82. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by BgJonson79 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't that also mean you have to keep your morals away from him?

      --

      There are four boxes used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order.

    83. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by destine · · Score: 1

      I'm gay and christian. I can't help the first but the latter is a choice. In the grand scheme of religion, who has the right one? Is it you or me? Honestly, we won't know until we meet the Creator. Your interpretation may be more right than mine, I don't know. But I do know God made me this way and he probably has a reason. Who am I to question it. Who are you?

    84. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The love that two men or two women feel for each
      >other is no different than the love that a
      heterosexual couple experiences

      !

      Walk.. go and think.. about all those couples who have come before you.. think about how they felt. Think about timeless love.

      Think about the natural interplay between a man and woman. Also think about birth.

      Very different.

    85. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by mav[LAG] · · Score: 1

      Maybe because he hasn't looked very hard. Romans 1 describes female-female physical relationships as unnatural.

      --
      --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
    86. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a straight atheist and wish that all christian would just shut the fuck up. I constantly get into arugments with Christians and piss them off. I blasphemize all the time when arguing with them. I can commit the only unforgivable sin (blasphemy) and still can be legally married. Am I violating the "sacredness" of marriage? Like Chris Rock once said "how the fuck is marriage sacred? Bullshhiiit... Micheal Jackson has been married! We have who wants to marry a midget on TV!"

    87. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing that more than 50% of those married couples will divorce and most likely leave tangible psychological scars on their children, I would say that marriage in no way insures a stable environment to raise children.

    88. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not just extended, it existed for centuries before Christianity even appeared.

    89. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      No. Not really. Exactly the same.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    90. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by HumanTorch · · Score: 1

      Seriously. When the state is "marrying" people, you don't get to dictate based on religious beliefs who is and isn't allowed to do it just because it isn't what your god intended. Sorry.

      When they are the democratic majority, they certainly do.
    91. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Nothing pre-exists God though.

    92. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      There is only one Bible. Can you show me another? There may be other religious books...(Koran, etc.) but there is only one Bible. If you are talking about the Catholic Bible vs. the Christian Bible then all the books that are in the Christian Bible are the same ones that are in the Catholic Bible...the difference is the Catholic one has more books that weren't canonised...but then you knew that.

      In the New Testament John says "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us."

      The Bible clearly states what you are asking about. What you want is a direct quote from Jesus himself. Jesus IS God's word in the flesh. If there is a saying in the Bible from God then it's the same as being from Jesus. I don't expect you to accept that...but just because you don't accept it doesn't nullify it's truth.

    93. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Apparently you need to clean out your ears.

      I DON'T HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THEM HAVING THOSE RIGHTS!

      They need to get the laws changed.

      Marriage IS PRECIOUS and I will defend it with the same vigor you are expressing. You would see marriage trampled for the sake of the convenience of those that want to live counter to accepted culture.

      The last election saw 11 states vote against the very thing I am talking about...so obviously I am not alone. San Fransisco can say whatever they please...truth is truth.

    94. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Marriage is an institution established by God as being between a man and a woman."

      Yup, sure.... that's why when your holy man married you to your's and my holy man married me to mine, he said "by the power vested in me by the state..."

      Reality check, your god does not have defacto control over language. Marriage is a contract defined by LAW. Without the law, the word marriage sounds like a horse got hitched to a carriage and someone made up a word.

      In other words in a fair world we would all have civil unions and you could call it anything you wanted...just like naming your penis.

      "Currently our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God are enumerated in our founding documents as a legal concept."

      Civil human rights are SELF EVIDENT, not defined by religion, and the defining document is called the constitution. If you are a citizen of the U.S.

      "That means the government can't touch them for any reason. As soon as God is removed from every aspect of our goverment and way of life then our rights will have to default to be granted to us by the government and therefore changeable."

      In our democracy the rights are defined in the constitution and the bill of rights. Nowhere does it state that marriage is a right. It is a privilege bestowed only based upon religion granted to individuals. It can be taken away, though you may still call it anything you like...just like your johnson.

    95. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I have always said that God can defend Himself...I don't need to do it for Him. If you want to blaspheme then knock yourself out.

      I am NOT going to shut the **** up though...sorry.

      Again...LEGAL marriage is not what I am talking about. You are confusing the two. Marriage is not just a legal concept. If it were we wouldn't be having this conversation.

      If there are those that want to treat marriage with disrespect then whatever...just don't force me to recognize gays as being married. United legally? Sure...whatever. It's not a marriage...period.

    96. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I haven't forgotten about Atheists. Why would an atheist care about marriage in the relgious sense? If they want to join themselves together with another person then great. If they get married (legally as defined by the state) so they get some legal protections and rights the great.

      It would seem to me that marriage, other than it's legal aspects, wouldn't matter a hill of beans to an atheist.

    97. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Brainboy · · Score: 1

      Currently our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God are enumerated in our founding documents as a legal concept. That means the government can't touch them for any reason. As soon as God is removed from every aspect of our goverment and way of life then our rights will have to default to be granted to us by the government and therefore changeable.

      Ah yes, the old myth that the Constituion was written on legal principles. The fact the you believe it shows ignorance and unwillingness to know the facts. The Constitution had NOTHING to do with religous beliefs, espcially Christian beliefs. If you REALLY had to call the Constitution anything, call a Deist document, but even that was stretching it. Our Founding Fathers were strong believers that "our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God" was false and the governments derive their power from the consent of the governed and not God at all. You sir, need to do a bit research. Hell, Google a little. You might learn something.

      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    98. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Brainboy · · Score: 1

      I'm a bad typist who doesn't preview. the old myth is that the Constitution was written on Christian principles.

      Ugh, I hate it when I do that.

      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    99. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I know a gay Christian myself...he was my roommate in college for an entire school year and we still keep in touch to this day.

      I say that to say he doesn't believe God made him gay. If God makes people gay and then, in His word, says homosexuality is an abomination, then He has contradicted himself. I don't want to serve a God that does that...it's cruel and unjust.

      God did not make you gay. You may not know why you are that way but it's not because you were created that way.

    100. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all heterosexual marriages have a possibility of producing offspring.

      Until I see people arguing for banning the marriage of infertile people, this argument bears zero weight.

    101. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I really hate sharing this country with such superstitious and frightened people."

      Really? Feel free to pack up and get out anytime!

    102. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The love between a man and a pig is no differnt than the love between two men or two women, or three men or three women, or one man and two women, or one man and one woman.

      Blah.

      You're all fucking idiots.

      We'll never know what a person thinks or feels unless we are that person, and sometimes not even then.

      The only thing we have equimnity in is our ablity to think we know what is right. Both ideas of "homosexuality is evil" and "everyone should be treated with kindness and what they do between themselves is ok." are equaly pointless and blindsighted.

    103. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by ces · · Score: 1

      Hmm ... funny I know churches such as our local Episcopalian Cathedral that will marry gay and lesbian couples. There are many other churches that will do the same.

      Careful about generalizing about Christian Churches in this country. Most 'liberal' and many mainline denominations will marry gay couples. The membership of those denominations while not as large as it used to be still represents a fairly sizable percentage of Christians in this country who claim membership in a particular church or denomination.

      Now if you'll excuse me I have a Unitarian Jihad subcommitee meeting to attend.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    104. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

      You're RIGHT. It doesn't. So who cares if the state grants marriage licenses to gay couples? Whe aren't forcing you to do anything about it. You can believe whatever you want. I don't see your problem with gay couples having the right to be legally married. No one is going to force your church to let them get married there.

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    105. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      This country was founded on biblical principles.

      Bullshit. This country was founded on the ideals of natural rights and the body of English common law. Many of the founding fathers were Deists, which is roughly equivalent to hippie tree hugger.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    106. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      Marriage IS PRECIOUS and I will defend it with the same vigor you are expressing. You would see marriage trampled for the sake of the convenience of those that want to live counter to accepted culture.

      Trampled, eh? After reading that, I can confirm for myself and for you that I don't have a problem hearing you at all.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    107. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by ces · · Score: 1

      Yea and the Bible forbids eating shrimp. Your point?

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    108. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Actually that's not funny at all. It's very contradictory. Just because a man decides he is going to do something in God's name doesn't mean God endorses it.

      Are you suggesting that because one may be Episcopalian and some Episcopalian leaders support gay marriage that all Episcopalians support gay marriage? Pretty broad assumption.

    109. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      After reading your last response I can confirm you have no argument left so you resort to nitpicking the words I use.

    110. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Um...Christians care perhaps?

      You contradict yourself. First marriage is a church thing...now its back to being just a legal idea of two people joining together. Make up your mind.

      We care because marriage is more than a legal concept. The sooner that is realized and sorted out the better. You can't have it both ways...and we don't want it both ways. If the word "marriage" is removed from all legal documents and replaced with "civil unions" then my wife and I will become civilly united to gain the benefits the law assigns to that union and be married by our church in a completely separate ceremony. If gays then want to be "civilly united" in the exact same way then GREAT! No problem.

      JUST DON'T CALL TWO MEN OR TWO WOMEN UNITING A MARRIAGE! IT'S NOT!

    111. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by jspectre · · Score: 1

      uhh guess what. christians didn't invent marriage. unions between couples existed far before christians did. you didn't patent the process so stop trying to control it. 'kthxbye!

      --

      abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

    112. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      But it didn't exist before God. God established it...not man and not the Church and not Christianity. People love to try to make the argument that certain things pre-date Christianity or Judaism. The founder of those "religions" is GOD...and nothing predates Him.

    113. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by nojomofo · · Score: 1

      What about me? I'm atheist, and I got married in a Christian church. Does that bother you?

    114. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by nojomofo · · Score: 1

      See, now you're bringing your mythology into it. I can't refute you - I don't believe what you say, and nothing that I say is going to change your mind. If we stick with actual human history, this discussion might go somewhere. As it is, you're the typical "I don't like where this discussion is going" shield that christians use: "because God said so".

      Now if we're talking about real history: marriage existed before Christianity did. That's just plain irrefutably true. Now I don't see how Christians "own" marriage. They didn't invent it. That's fact.

    115. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I took your advice and did a little googling...

      You said, "Our Founding Fathers were strong believers that "our civil, human rights that are assigned to us by God" was false and the governments derive their power from the consent of the governed and not God at all."

      Do you consider the Declaration of Independence to be a founding document of the United States of America? Because in it you will find the words, "...endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights...".

      Who is that "Creator" they are referring to? Even if they didn't mean THE God (which they did) it still shows that our rights are given to us by something outside of us...something greater than us and with the authority to do such a thing.

      The power to govern does come from the consent of the people...but our human rights come from outside of us...God. Consent to govern and possesing rights are two different things. Which did you want to discuss?

    116. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      You can call truth "mythology" if you like...it's still truth.

      I never said Christians "own" marriage. I said God established it. Christians are just defending it.

      I think you are just using the "I don't believe what you believe so your points are irrelevant" defense most people like to resort to when presented with truths they don't agree with.

      If it's really "just a word" and "just a legal concept" and "invented before Christanity existed" then why do gays have such an issue with calling their union something other than a marriage? Legal issues? Fixable pretty easily. If it's truly no big deal like you and others are suggesting then call it something else.

      The answer is that it IS a big deal...precisely why they are gunning for the idea of marriage to be cheapened to mean "the union of 2+ entities". Now that's not what they are saying now...but eventually that is what it will turn into.

    117. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Not in the least...why would it? I've said before that being a Christian is not a prerequisite to be married. The only prerequisite is that it be between one man and one woman...anything else is not a marriage.

    118. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Nopal · · Score: 1
      Not all heterosexual marriages have a possibility of producing offspring

      So what? Not all people are born with the same level of intelligence. Should we prevent people that are born with below average IQ from going to school?

      The argument is the reason why the government has a vested interest in marriage: Hetersexual marriage is the most resource-efficient and most effective way of raising the next generation. The government has a vested interest in the next generation. Can you think of a more efficient way to raise the next generation?

      Your comment that the argument bears zero weight is pure idiocy. Will you say that the purpose of cars is not transportation because some of them break down or don't work?

      Are you suggesting that in addition to awarding gay and lesbian people with special rights that we should also give the government the right to run a full battery of medical exams to all couples before granting them a marriage license?

      Let me rephrase my response in the same wacked-out logic you use so that you can understand: Not all anonymous coward comments yield valid arguments. Therefore, your argment bears zero weight.

    119. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Brainboy · · Score: 1
      Do you consider the Declaration of Independence to be a founding document of the United States of America?

      No. I believe the Constitution is the founding document.

      Who is that "Creator" they are referring to? Even if they didn't mean THE God (which they did) it still shows that our rights are given to us by something outside of us...something greater than us and with the authority to do such a thing.

      Didn't google enough eh? First off, the Declaration made one reference to a God, hardly a religous document so one wouldn't expect them to refer to God in a religous sense. Second, Jefferson definitely did not mean Creator in the way your thinking. I'll repeat, he was a Deist, and believed that God did not interfere with the affairs of men, only to judge them after this life. Third, you took the quote out of context. Let's examine the whole phrase shall we?

      WE hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness -- That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its Foundation on such Principles, and organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness (emphasis added)


      You said:
      That means the government can't touch them[our civil, human rights] for any reason. As soon as God is removed from every aspect of our goverment and way of life then our rights will have to default to be granted to us by the government and therefore changeable.

      I dunno, it appears to me that Jefferson already did that for us. He took God of politics by saying. We have these Rights, and they shouldn't be taken away because everyone deserves it, and its up to governments and not God to make sure that happens. It's pretty clear. Jefferson did all the work of arguing against you for me. I gotta thank the guy.
      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    120. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      >First off, the Declaration made one reference to a God, hardly a religous document so one wouldn't expect them to refer to God in a religous sense.

      I never said the Declaration was a religious document.

      How does one refer to God or a god in a non-religious way?

      In that time is was very common to capitalize nouns that referred to God (like in Creator).

      Yes...he was a Deist...that means he believed in God and that God created us...hence "Creator." That suggests to me that he definitely DID mean God when he used the word Creator.

      Now...the part you bolded for emphasis refers to the rights given to us by God...as Jefferson pointed out. The rest of your points rest on your assumption that Jefferson didn't mean God...I think it's obvious he did mean God. Since you don't buy that we can't really continue.

    121. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Brainboy · · Score: 1

      How does one refer to God or a god in a non-religious way?

      Quite easily. It's very possible to refer to God as a concept or metaphor.

      How many ways can I say this though. Jefferson took God out of politics. He said the governments are strictly a construct of man. Governments derive their power from man. Yes Jefferson believed in God, but not the Christian God. So even if he meant God in a religous sense, he didn't mean it in a Christian sense, and therefore its wrong for one religon to say, "Jefferson meant our God." On top of that, the Declaration of Independance did not create the United States, the Constitution did. The Declaration while very, very important is not a legal US document.

      I'm sorry, but you are wrong on many levels. There is no basis for your claim that Christian principles are part of this countries founding.

      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    122. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if Jefferson was referring to God as in the Christian God or another god of his choosing...his reference to God and that the rights being protected by the goverment are the rights granted to us by "our Creator". The U.S. Goverment is a construct of man by man for man. So what? I'm not arguing that. You can't deny the fact that English Law and United States Law is founded on the principles of the Bible...well you can deny it...but you would be wrong.

      I'm not saying Jefferson was referring to my God.

      The Declaration was a basis for creating the Constitution and the Bill of Rights was it not? The constitution and the Bill of Rights is the Legal represenation of what was said in the Declaration. It may not be a legal document you can refer to in a court but the document you can refer to was put into place because of it and to explicitly define what was said in it.

      On that note...I hear people say everyday stuff about "separation of church and state" as if it were in the constitution. When pressed...those folks admit it's not in the constitution but in a letter or two from Jefferson about how there should exist a "wall of separation" between the church and state. Would you say that it's incorrect to argue for the separation of church and state because it's not in the constituion? If not then you are picking and choosing based on what you want. The "establishment clause" is way misused in these cases. Having a nativity scene in a public park is not the government establishing a religion. (I know you didn't bring this up...just giving an example of how "non-legal" documents are used to interpret meaning in legal documents such as the constitution.)

      You can't have it both ways.

    123. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by nojomofo · · Score: 1

      You can call truth "mythology" if you like...it's still truth.

      How am I supposed to respond to this "it's my or the highway" attitude? You can say that it's truth, but that doesn't make it right. Don't you see that you're trying to impose your worldview on the way that everybody else is going to live their lives?

      They don't like calling their unions something other than marriage because they believe what the US Supreme Court has affirmed - separate but equal is NOT equal.

    124. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (had to post AC because /. won't let me post more than 25 times in 24 hours).

      Another poster suggested removing the right to "marry" people from the state altogether and leaving that solely to the church. In this case the state would instead have civil unions for all who want the rights and priviledges currently attributed to marriage as a legal concept currently. So in the eyes of the state everyone that goes through this process would be civilly united. Those that want to be married would go to a church in addition to this civil union ceremony. That would eliminate the "separate but equal" issue would it not?

      I would be all for that. Since the argument is that marriage is more than a legal concept then marriage should be removed/renamed civil union in the legal context.

    125. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by ces · · Score: 1

      No I'm not suggesting that all Episcopalians support gay marrage.

      However you are implying that no "Christian" church supports gay marrage or would choose to perform one. Therefore any that do must not really be "Christian".

      That is just as wrong as for me to imply that a good "Christian" would endorse gay marrage and any that don't aren't real "Christians".

      Only God knows what God endorses. The best we can do is to guess what that might be. I might be wrong, you might be wrong, only God knows for sure.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    126. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Brainboy · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if Jefferson was referring to God as in the Christian God or another god of his choosing...his reference to God and that the rights being protected by the goverment are the rights granted to us by "our Creator". The U.S. Goverment is a construct of man by man for man. So what? I'm not arguing that. You can't deny the fact that English Law and United States Law is founded on the principles of the Bible...well you can deny it...but you would be wrong.

      I'm not familiar with English Law, but I'd be right about United States Law. Again DEIST principles. It's a common myth to believe that it was, so I forgive you for believing it. But nothing in the Constitution or Declaration hint that it was based on principles of the Bible. One mention of God, not event the Bible or Jesus or anything like that, in the Declaration is not enough to say the whole thing is based on the Bible. Sorry.


      The Declaration was a basis for creating the Constitution and the Bill of Rights was it not?


      Not really. While created by the same people thus people with th esame beliefs, it would be incorrect to say one was based on the previous one. The Declaration was the most part simply that, a declaration, of why we Americans we're fighting against the Brits. The Constitution was created to establish a framework for government and the Bill of Rights was there to make sure protections of rights were in the Constitution.

      On that note...I hear people say everyday stuff about "separation of church and state" as if it were in the constitution. .....

      Sorry, I don't give strawman arguments the respect of me answering them.

      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    127. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "JUST DON'T CALL TWO MEN OR TWO WOMEN UNITING A MARRIAGE! IT'S NOT!"

      USING CAPS MAKES YOU LOOK STUPID! REMEMBER THAT!

      I say it is marriage. Throw your bible around all you want, I don't believe in it. So therefore I can say it's marriage if I want to. It may not be legally acknowledged, but I won't jump up and down and look like a three year old because those "other people" show more love than you do.

      And congrats, you got me off my ass to get a /. account so I can finally take on asses like yours.

    128. Re:Trip Master Monkey's Got it Right by beanlover · · Score: 1

      lol @ you...

      You get my clueless-poster-of-the-day-award.

      CAPS are for emphasis...had I typed my whole post in caps (and it made it past the lameness filter) THEN you would have a point...and no...I didn't want to use html tags to make it bold.

      Say it's a marriage if you want...you would be wrong...like it or not.

      It cracks me up when people accuse folks like myself of not "having enough love" to allow things like this (that comment is why you won the CPOTD). No factual basis...just a personal attack because you have nothing of substance to say.

  126. Gates a creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Bill & Melinda gates has given over $10 million to the Discovery Institutes, one of the major thinktanks behind "Intelligent Design". While the money was not targeted for Intelligent Design studies this is major support for a nut job organization. How much of the $10M is siphoned off (via overhead charges)for general operating expenses?

  127. Fuck You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should we try to cure these people ? If they are happy with themselves and aren't hurting anybody else then whats the problem ?

    "accomodate them".
    What the hell is this supposed to mean ? You make it sound like they need wheel chairs or seperate parking spaces. Just pass bills that give equal rights to gay and straight people... done, wow that was tough.

    It's ignorant dumb fucks like you that need help.

    1. Re:Fuck You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. If you put a whole tribe of homosexuals on an island, and come back in 100 years, what will be left?

      I think I know the answer to this one! A bunch of old homosexuals?

    2. Re:Fuck You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      3. Is homosexuality benifical to humanity as a species?

      Is drinking alcohol beneficial to humanity as a species? Going camping? Cutting your lawn? Outlaw them all!!

  128. How the hell... by Begemot · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...micro and soft becomes an expert in sexuality?

  129. Special rights by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1
    I imagine there are a lot of gay people who don't want special rights
    Can you actually name a single gay person who wants 'special' rights? And can you actually say what any of these 'special' rights are?
    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    1. Re:Special rights by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      And can you actually say what any of these 'special' rights are?

      An example would be similar to the laws of Canada, where it's okay to say that Gill Bates should be crucified for producing software I hate, but it's a criminal offense to say that Gill Bates should be crucified for being gay.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  130. I'm kinda glad that this happened. by kid_icarus75 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Who would really want thousands of Evangelical Christians switching over to Linux anyways? I don't want to use a mail client called "Creationism."

    1. Re:I'm kinda glad that this happened. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't ever happen anyway.
      All those d(a)emons in their house? nah

  131. Interesting - 1515 also defined religion by ugmoe · · Score: 1
    http://www.leg.wa.gov/pub/billinfo/2005-06/Pdf/Bil ls/House%20Bills/1515.pdf

    Interestingly, the bill also added a non-religious definition of creed )that was not present in the original law.)

    This is the changed text:

    "Creed" means a system of religious beliefs and religious expressions, including moral and ethical beliefs and expressions about right and wrong that are sincerely held with the strength of traditional religious views.

    Isn't that interesting - one day after a new Pope is chosen, Microsoft chooses to support a more traditional definition of religion.

  132. Didn't RTFA, but... by ChaosCube · · Score: 1

    Why is there a bill to add sexual practices to something that already bars discrimination? Just because somebody prefers to do members of their same gender doesn't mean they are not human and are therefore stripped of their rights. If they are citizens, they already have these rights, regardless of who they boink. If laws against discrimination are already there, what's the point?

    Go ahead and flame if you must. Since I didn't read the article, or even some of the other posts, I may be talking about something else entirely.

    --
    BDR Gear
    Outdoor gear, MREs, and more!
  133. Same Market by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    It's also the same consumer market that legalised same-sex marriage in several states and a number of nations.

    1. Re:Same Market by elmegil · · Score: 1

      For definitions of "several" that add up to "two". And one of those was court mandated, so it's unclear whether "several" ought maybe be "one".

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    2. Re:Same Market by jcuffe · · Score: 1

      More like "didn't make illegal." There's a key difference there.

    3. Re:Same Market by Rhone · · Score: 1

      It's also the same consumer market that legalised same-sex marriage in several states and a number of nations.

      "Several" states? "Consumer market"???

      There is a grand total of 1 U.S. State that allows same-sex marriages--Massachusetts. Until yesterday, Vermont was the only State allowing civil unions. The same-sex marriages in in Massachusetts and civil unions in Vermont were both the result of actions by the courts, not by any "consumer market".

      Just yesterday, Connecticut became the second State to allow same-sex civil unions. CT is the first State in which allowing civil unions was initiated by the State legislature, rather than the courts. That's an improvement over having to be forced by the courts, but it's still not quite the "consumer market".

      Now, by contrast, those previously mentioned 11 anti-gay marriage State constitutional amendments were voted on by "the people" during last year's presidential elections. More specifically, over 20 million people voted on the amendments, and those in favor of the amendments out-voted those against them by a 2-to-1 ratio. There's your "consumer market".

      Unfortunately, people really are that closed-minded, and the U.S. really is becoming increasingly conservative. I fear that the notion that "a liberal can become a conservative in 30 years without changing a single opinion" might soon be reversed.

    4. Re:Same Market by ifwm · · Score: 1

      So, for the US at least, you're counting a few politicians and judges? They're the ones who legalised it you know. The public on the other hand, soundly put it down everywher it was voted upon.

    5. Re:Same Market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Hawaii allowed it first (by court order), and then it got voted down (overwhelmingly) in a statewide referendum (Hawai is arguably the most pro-Democratic party state in the union, btw).

  134. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's well established that many creatures in the world engage in homosexual sex quite frequently. Dolphins will have sex with other male dolphins' blowholes, and many primates apparently have sex to celebrate finding large quantities of food.

    Besides, just because nothing else does it isn't really much of an excuse. Human are an aberration in many ways. I don't know many ocelots that post on slashdot, or doves that program computers. Don't use animals as any sort of excuse or explanation. Humans are different in many ways.

  135. So True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I doubt people would support half the political agenda items that they do if they weren't conditioned to hate Christianity and conservatives.

    1. Re:So True by woah · · Score: 1
      I call bullshit. I'm against prejudice and discremination of any kind. And it's all because I understand how important individual freedom is. I respect people for who they are, but what I can't take, is somene restricting my freedom of expression or imposing anything on me against my will.

      Which is why I'm completely OK with Christians (or anyone else, for that matter), as long as they are tolerant of other people's views. It's really not about being religious, it's about not being close minded.

  136. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by hotspotbloc · · Score: 1
    BTW, gay couples shouldn't be allowed to be foster parents.

    Like the current system is so great? See: Grand jury said to probe death of boy [in State foster care].

    My best friend's sister and her partner have been together for 20 years now. They're well adjusted and fincially well off, achived through a lot of hard work. Since they live in the great state of MA they are now legally married.

    There is no scientific reason not to allow them to adopt and be foster parents. Too many good homes that could really help out a difficult problem if it wasn't for a small group of christain bigots.

    I see no evidence of gay bashing on Bush's part.

    He wants to admend the US Constituion, a document that protects rights and use it to restrict them. That's bashing them in my book, just with nicer words.

    Someone please answer this question: without bringing in an unseen "high power" can you still say same sex couples should not be married? Imposing a religous doctine on a minority ("Gays are sinner and evil") is not what our Founder Father had in mind.

    Let them marry so they can see wild ride of marriage is like. IMO they'd make

    --
    "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity but they've always worked for me" - HST
  137. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    there is something different about gay people, mostly that they cannot reproduce
    Dunno what they taught you in sex ed, but my understanding was that most homosexuals have fully functioning reproductive organs. I have met several homosexual people whom have managed to become pregnant or impregnate someone else. Believe it or not.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  138. God Hates Shellfish (And Pork) by sulli · · Score: 1

    Very good point. I will listen to the fundamentalists when they follow a kosher diet. But I don't see Lou Sheldon et al. laying off the BBQ.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  139. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    I will not stop disliking bigots no matter how many times I am asked. They are people who want to control the lives of others and who think they are better than other people because those people are like them. My amazing and often useless computer knowledge doesn't make me better than someone; liking cheeseburgers doesn't make me better than someone who only likes chicken strips; However, I do believe that being able to accept people unlike you DOES make you a better person. It doesn't mean I am overall a better person than a bigot; it means that all else equal, I am. What's the difference? Why is this not hypocritical? I don't advocate treating bigots any differently than I would treat anyone else, I don't think it entitles me to anything other than feeling of smugness, and I am willing to live and let live.

    It's one thing to be homophobic. Even with my attitudes I sometimes get nervous in large groups of homosexuals, but for me it's just because I find it more awkward turning down propositions for sex from people I would never poke than people I might.

    I am not a hate monger. I don't advocate hate of bigots. On the other hand, I think we'd all be better off without them.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  140. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong. There are many examples in the animal kingdom where the animals quite frankly don't care about what the gender of the other animal is that they're having sex with.

    Additionally, some species (aquatic life, etc.) are asexual. And some *human beings* are even born with both sets of reproductive organs.

    Homosexuality has been around for thousands of years, and so has the bigotry against it, though it was less prevalent in some classical societies (Greek).

  141. Better reference material? 2001 is outdated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article gives a 2001 article for Microsoft supporting gays. Does anyone have better references?

  142. Since when do corporations decide social issues? by John+Seminal · · Score: 1
    Microsoft wants to be known as socially responsible, but faced with a reduction of revenue, their greed took precedent and they became non-political on this issue.

    Companies have no buisness lobbying for laws passed on social issues!! Since when can a software company give insightful input on matters of social law? That is something for the whole of society to decide, not big corporations.

    How many states passed referendums outlawing gay marriges? And that was not done by the politicians, but was vote on by the people. I believe in some states the measure passed by over 80%, and you NEVER get that kind of support for anything.

    America is becomming secular. That is wrong. Our stregnth is in our values.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

  143. Microsoft and gay rights?!? by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure which is more confusing, that Microsoft would champion gay rights, or that they could be pressured by a local church. Where's the connection?

  144. What I don't get.... by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What I do not get anymore is how the left seems to say they are progressive....yet whan anyone who was previously for their agenda makes and about face or a neutral stance, they are wrong. How is this being progressive??? At least by supporting civil unions of gays, the republicans tried to work with the groups in question. I do not go to extremes like the Catholic Church does. I heard the new Pope had stopped a nun from ministering to gays while he was a Cardinal. How does one expect to expand the flock and get new church members into the fold if your not willing to let the faithful witness to sinners?

    Don't get me wrong. I don't think it is right to bash gays or to discriminate against them, but why must they insist on it being a real marriage instead of a civil union?? I fail to see what a state recognized marriage gets you. The second person in a gay couple likely works too. The majority of this country happens to believe gay marriage is wrong. Are you going to tell the millions of Christians thier belief system is bubkis? I know the minority tries to do this on a daily basis. What they claim is we try to push pur belief system on them, yet in the same turn, they want ME to believe that Gay Marriages are right. Who's pushing whose beliefs on who now??

    --

    Gorkman

    1. Re:What I don't get.... by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

      If you don't want gay people, black people, jews or whoever to marry, make marriage purely a private institution. As long as marriage provides a state sanctioned protection, equal protection applies. Let religions view these marriages any way they want, but once you start enforcing *laws* regarding marriage, you must include everyone regardless of gender, creed and race.

    2. Re:What I don't get.... by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Part of this discussion hinges on the word "marriage". Most people equivocate when using it (they use state marriage and the religious ceremony to mean the same thing when they are obviously not).

      I believe Michael Badnarik's approach to the situation was dead on.

      1) There is no such thing as state sanctioned marriage. There are only civil unions.
      2) Any two people may get a civil union (excluding minors)
      3) If you care to go through a ceremony at a church due to religious beliefs, then so be it. But that, in itself, is not enough "joined", you need to have a state sanctioned civil union as well.

      This allows individual churches to decide who they will allow to marry, and allows the GLBTs to have equal rights.

    3. Re:What I don't get.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see what a state recognized marriage gets you.

      A mere thousand federal rights.

      Are you going to tell the millions of Christians thier belief system is bubkis?

      No. I'm going to spell correctly, then tell them that equal rights are simply more important than democracy.

    4. Re:What I don't get.... by blueZhift · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What I don't get is how all of these anti-gay defense of marriage laws and ammendments are supposed to make my marriage stronger. How does denying someone else's rights, defend mine? This whole wave of anti-gay legislation is just evidence of what happens when religion gets mixed up with our laws. Specifically, marriage is considered to be religious sacrament by the religions I know of, not a civil law. Unfortunately, in the minds of many in the U.S., this religious sacrament _is_ a part of the law. Truthfully, _all_ marriages are civil unions as far as the state is concerned, but not all civil unions are marriages with regard to religions. Indeed, as I understand it, the Catholic church would not recognize a marriage between Catholics that only consisted of the joining by the Justice of the Peace (or similar civil official), but not the actual marriage sacrament involving a priest. And this is fair, no one is saying that the state should force any religions to recognize and sanction unions that go counter to those religions' beliefs.

      I'm a Christian and I really don't know if the gay unions are right or not. But I do know that Jesus would not want me to mistreat gay people or diminish their human dignity. Jesus would treat gays with the same love and compassion that he showed the many outcasts he encountered during his time on Earth as recorded in scripture. Sadly, many of those pushing the current anti-gay agenda seem to be devoid of much in the way of compassion.

    5. Re:What I don't get.... by flamingweasel · · Score: 1
      I fail to see what a state recognized marriage gets you.
      My wife and I recently did our first taxes as a joint entity. We calculated what we needed to pay if we filed separately, and then calculated a joint filing. The joint filing was around $750 less than the individual filings. As students this is a considerable amount of money. Y'see how maybe this is discrimination? Maybe?
      The second person in a gay couple likely works too.
      As does more than 50% of the households in the United States. (US Census, about halfway down the page here) What is your point, exactly?
      --
      Cthulhu loves you.
    6. Re:What I don't get.... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      why must they insist on it being a real marriage instead of a civil union?

      Not knowing what you said, you said it.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    7. Re:What I don't get.... by Cyno · · Score: 0, Troll

      Are you going to tell the millions of Christians thier belief system is bubkis?

      Yes, God, Jesus and Heaven are myths. And The Holy Bible is fiction, not meant to be interpreted literally. What more do you want? :)

      Its so simple for me to see the truth. Why is it so hard for these ignorant christians? Science proved christianity wrong. Let's see, the church believed the world was flat, wrong. The church believed God created man, wrong. Is it too much to ask that they read a book, other than the only one they believe in?

      Why must christians insist their beliefs are truthful and moral?

      I know their belief system is bubkis. No need to tell them this, its a fact. I don't care what they believe, but they best keep it out of my government.

    8. Re:What I don't get.... by zerokey93 · · Score: 1

      ...but why must they insist on it being a real marriage...

      That statement in itself should be answer enough.

    9. Re:What I don't get.... by MooseGuy529 · · Score: 1

      I'll bite.

      To truly resolve this debate, we have to split the generic, somewhat loaded term "marriage" into two parts: the first part is "spiritual marriage", which is permitted or forbidden by religious institutions, and the second part is "secular/civil marriage", which is permitted or forbidden by the government.

      We will assume that any two people who want to marry will expect the same secular benefits from marriage as any other two people. Unless we wish to discriminate, we have to give them the same benefits. We will also assume that anyone is allowed to have their own religious beliefs, and that others are not allowed to force them to follow other beliefs (unless it harms the other people).

      The obvious conclusion from here is that both homosexual couples and heterosexual couples should be allowed to marry.

      The most common reply to this--the one you made--is that if gays were to be allowed marriage, it would be pushing their beliefs on others who believe gay marriage is wrong. However, because spiritual and secular marriage are two different things, the right of gays to a secular marriage does not infringe on your beliefs about spiritual marriage. In other words, their marriage does not hurt you

      First, the reason gays "insist on [their union] being a real marriage instead of a civil union" is that it is the only way to ensure they receive all the benefits of

      There are a couple of problems with this entire debate, and they are evident in what you have said. The first problem is the spiritual vs. secular definition of marriage. Whenever someone suggests that gay marriages should receive the same secular benefits--tax benefits, power of attorney, and so on--as heterosexual marriages, the reply is always that it will ruin the spiritual meaning of marriage. For this situation to be resolved, you have to split the definition. In fact, tying the sec The second problem is that of tolerance: it is perfectly okay to have your own religious beliefs, but it's not okay to push them on others. When you put these two together, the conclusion is that, while you are allowed to have your own spiritual beliefs about marriage, you must in turn permit others to have their own beliefs. If their beliefs allow marriage between two people of the same sex, then it is discrimination to deny them the secular benefits that marriage provides. But just because they receive the same secular marriage does not mean that their secular marriage is a dishonor or insult to your spiritual marriage.

      --

      Tired of free iPod sigs? Subscribe to my blacklist

  145. looks like nazism to me! by Karaman · · Score: 1


    Well, discrimation is only the first step. Isolation is the next. Gas chambers will follow shortly.

    Hail Gayts, Hail Bush :)
    Ole!

    --
    sex is better than war!
  146. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

    Well, it's obvious that having a mother and a father isn't SUFFICIENT to having a good family life. Most of us come from hetero families, and a lot of us had screwed up childhoods.

    The big difference with Gay parents is that you're pretty much guaranteed that they wanted the child in their lives in the first place. It's easy for a couple to 'accidentally' have a child, and not really be very interested, prepared or capable of raising the child. With an adoptive family, they at least do a cursory check to see that you're qualified.

  147. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You can't really claim that the idea of there being "something wrong with homosexuals" is "inherently prejudiced", rather it's a fact of biology.

    You know, most children don't actually see their parents reproduce. They see everything but the important bits, namely the act of putting the baby in, and taking the baby out. Thus, the ability to reproduce is arguably not a very important part of child-rearing. Also, many children are only children. I have two half brothers but they were both well into their childhoods when I was born, and they weren't around at until I was three or four. Thus my parents' ability to reproduce had no impact on my existence after the fact that I had been born, unless you count that my mom became [more] unbalanced emotionally after my birth. If THAT is what kids who are raised by gay parents are missing, it would be a huge boon.

    This is of course why they adopt, which is a good thing.

    So if you think that, why bother crafting such a goofy argument above? Guess what? A gay couple not being able to reproduce IS normal! What more do you want? Also, there are heterosexual couples that cannot have children for one or more of a variety of reasons. Should they not have children because they are abnormal? The whole argument is just stupid.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  148. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

    What kind of empirical evidence are you looking for? (Will this do?) What are you referring to when you say "normal environment"?

    Is being brought up by your grandmother ok with you? How about being brought up by your grandmother and her girlfriend?

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  149. Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good.

    Gay, is not ok.

  150. Blaming by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    Blaming all religious people for the actions of a hateful minority is as silly as ... say ... blaming all atheists for the actions of the Nazi party, or blaming all conservatives for the actions of the Bush government.

    Generalizing about a group from the actions of its angriest and most vitriolic members is profoundly intolerant. I'd expect a homosexual to know better, you fucking bigot.

  151. I won't be told what to think by Deputy+Doodah · · Score: 0

    How about this? If gays want to be treated as normal people, they can act like normal people.
    Otherwise, they have to accept their gayness and all the good and bad that goes along with it.

    No one...Microsoft, the government, loud-mouthed protesters, etc. should be trying to force people to embrace hommosexuality.

    I like fishing. Why not pass laws forcing everyone to like me because I fish?

    Because it's just as stupid.

    1. Re:I won't be told what to think by PenGun · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Gays etc are normal people. It's bigots like you that need to change.

      There are laws to protect you from people who hate fishing ...

      PenGun
      Yes /. is a largly fascist area now, things do become their opposite given sufficient time.

    2. Re:I won't be told what to think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to change your beliefs.

      But if you treat them as less of a person, you are blatantly disobeying the teachings of the person you call "Lord". Seeing as he preached love and tolerance for all, not just those who believe in him.

      Bigot. I hope you go to prison, get assraped, and have to deal with your closet homosexuality when you think "hmm, that wasn't as bad as I thought it would be".

    3. Re:I won't be told what to think by sagenumen · · Score: 1

      Are you joking or are you really that ignorant?

      No one's making you "embrace homosexuality." Bills like this are an attempt to curb discrimination against people based on their sexual orientation, not make you want to go out and party with them.

      Why can't Black people just embrace the fact that they're black and accept the good and bad that goes along with it? How about Asians, Latinos, and women, too? They should all just suck it up and deal with prejudice, right?

      I can't get over ignorance like this. I feel like my IQ just dropped 50 points. I guess I'm even with you, now.

    4. Re:I won't be told what to think by Deputy+Doodah · · Score: 0

      When I posted, I figured the reply would be one of the following: 1. You're a bigot 2. You're an idiot. 3. You're ignorant. 4. ....but it's genetic! Congratulations. Your predictability only scored 3 out of a high score of one. The fact is that laws like this ARE designed to force everyone to accept homosexuality. They go right along with the concept of "hate speech" that would punish me for criticizing the gay lifestyle. Still think not? What if I own my own company and have a gay employee? What if said employee demands that I pay benefits to him as if he's married? The law they want to pass would force me to finance his perverted lifestyle. Like other liberals who can't support their arguments with facts, and as someone who admittedly had your IQ fall 50 points recently, you fall back on the irrelevant old, "blacks and women" argument. Blacks were born black. Women were born with vaginas. For that matter white men are born white men and are just as prone to predjudice as any other group. Your weak argument which excludes white men is a fine example. No one is gay until they have sex with someone of their own gender. I reference the Merriam-Webster dictionary: Homosexual: of, relating to, or involving sexual intercourse between persons of the same sex. No I'm not joking. I'm stating facts. Can you handle that, or do you need therapy now?

    5. Re:I won't be told what to think by sagenumen · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you can use a dictionary. You certainly showed me.

      Last time I checked, "white men" aren't considered a minority in America. If you look at my original post, there is an obvious pattern of listing groups that are generally considered minorities in USA. Since you know how to use a dictionary, I assume you are capable of picking up on that.

      Your argument is flawed in that you assume there exists some universal set of morals. There are plenty of people that don't agree with you on what is a "perverted" lifestyle. Your implication that homosexuality is a misuse of sexual intercourse only weakens any ground you were standing on before. Sexual intercourse is a means of reproduction, but many people use contraceptives to avoid this so that they can have sex just for the pleasure. Are these people also perverts?

      I highly doubt that there are many employers who enjoy paying spousal benefits to their employees, but who are the employers to judge the employee's lifestyle? Perhaps your employees shouldn't receive a paycheck because, hey, wouldn't want that money to go towards something of which you don't approve. Whether or not this person is married is not your call to make. If their union is recognized by the state in which your company resides, you should pay the benefits as such.

      What's more, I question how much research you've done in this area. Merriam-Webster can hardly be considered the definitive source on this matter since this subject can not be summarized in one sentence. Many studies (Hamer & Copeland [1994], Bailey & Martin [1995], et. al.) have shown evidence that homosexuality is biological in nature and people can not just STOP being homosexual. While there is still no clear-cut explanation as to how homosexuality occurs, it still exists elsewhere in nature (bottlenose dolphins, bison, et. al.). As a corollary to your argument that no one is gay "until they have sex with someone of their own gender," are you not also implying that no one is straight until they have sex with someone of the opposite sex? Did you doubt your heterosexuality until you had sex with someone of the opposite sex?

      Furthermore, I don't know if you could call any argument seated in hundreds and thousands of years of history "irrelevant." Prejudice has existed since the beginning of the human race. Millions of people have died under bigotry. How can you call anything remotely related to this "irrelevant"?

      At the risk of sounding redundant: no one is asking you to embrace homosexuals....

      You like to fish. What if I was interviewing you and decided not to hire you based solely on the fact that you liked to fish? Or what if I found out after hiring you and then fired you? Replace your fondness of fishing with your race, your sexual orientation (and believe me, it's not a preference...no one 'prefers' to be the target of many religious zealots and bigots like you), your sex, your religion, or whatever else could be used against you.

      It's unfortunate that we even need to put bills like this in effect. I can not comprehend bigotry because I just don't feel the same way. If you're the right person for the job, I'm going to hire you...plain and simple.

    6. Re:I won't be told what to think by Deputy+Doodah · · Score: 0

      You throw around words like bigot and predjudice fairly easily. It seems that you are correct; you don't comprehend it, therefore you think that anything less than total acceptance of you view is bigotry. Funny. That's very close to the definition of bigot in my trusty Merriam-Webster.

      How many AIDS sufferers have died in your arms? How many former homosexuals have you listened to as they cried in regret over the life they've led?
      I've been there buddy. Its happened with my friends and in my family pal. Get some down and dirty experience with the lifestyle and then come back here and post your new experience.

      Homosexuality destroys lives. Its abnormality tears apart families and ultimately damages or kills very many of the people who participate in the lifestyle. If not by AIDS then hepatitis or the numerous other nasty sicknesses that come from constant intimate contact with feces.

      If we pretend its normal and enact laws that encourage people or make it easier for them to live that way, we're complicit in hurting these people.
      Don't you get that? It's not about religion. It's barely even about morality. There are real practical problems that exist because we tolerate this behavior. If not passing this law makes it inconvenient for some folks to be gay, then great. That's what I hope it does.

      Sure, it's easy to ignore the problem and pretend its ok; it takes no effort to do that and you can tell yourself you're "compassionate". It takes a little more courage to stand up to what's wrong and try to help these folks have a better life.

      ...and just one more thing. It appears that you have little experience hiring people. Personal life carries over into work life. Just trust me on this. It does.
      Alcoholics usually have problems getting to work on time. Tweakers usually steal from you. Homosexuals usually have personal conflicts with their co-workers, often by hitting on straight people. It's happened to me quite often. Ashamed to admit that, but it does seem I'm a poofter magnet. Must be my nice ass. ;)

      There's your lesson for Thursday April 21.
      Have a nice day.

    7. Re:I won't be told what to think by sagenumen · · Score: 1

      Some down and dirty experience? Well, I'm gay. So, I think I have some real world experience with this subject.

      I deal with people like you all the time. To still make comments like yours really shows how long we have to go in stomping out ignorance. You are a bigot, sir. There's no two ways about that.

      You seem to still think that AIDS is the "gay disease." Well, welcome to the 1980s, here's your mullet. Gay sex doesn't make you any more vulnerable to AIDS than straight sex does. If protection isn't used, that's the risk you run.

      So what if gay guys hit on you? It's not going to turn you gay. When women hit on me, I'm flattered. I'm not thinking, "Oh shit...they might turn me straight." If a conflict arises from a gay guy hitting on you, that is a problem with you, not the gay gentleman. If you aren't secure enough to handle that situation with a little couth, that's your problem.

      I don't know who the hell you think you are with these "lesson[s]".

    8. Re:I won't be told what to think by Deputy+Doodah · · Score: 0

      Point 1.
      Look up the definition of bigot before you carelessly throw it around more. Your comments fit the definition.

      Point 2.
      AIDS is not exclusively a gay disease, but (at least in the U.S.) most who have it get it by gay sex. Then it spreads from there to hurt innocent people.

      Point 3.
      Gay sex does make you more vulnerable to getting AIDS than straight sex.
      AIDS is transmitted through blood exchange. The anus was not designed for sex and is not self-lubricating like a vagina. The friction caused by anal sex causes minute tears in the skin (called rubbing raw) and blood transfer occurs.
      This bleeding also exposes the person(s) to hepatitis infection, because the nasty things in poop can now get into the bloodstream as well.
      I do not engage in anal sex with my wife because that's where her poop is and I'm not sticking my winky in poop. Exit only.

      Point 4
      I don't tolerate anyone making sexual advances at work. It's not the place for it, and can be distracting at the very least. You illustrate quite well the problems with gays in the workplace, because it seems from your comments that you have no problems with sexual advances being made at work. I wouldn't hire anyone who would do that because I don't want to spend my days with them.

      Now let me make something clear to you. You probably want to think that I hate you because you're gay. Sorry to disappoint, but I don't. In fact most people who don't like homosexuality get along well with the people who act it out. If you were in my home I'd offer you a beer. If you were at my work I would work with you. If you ever put the moves on me in either place I'd break your teeth......ok maybe not, but I'd at least ask you to leave.

      Are you starting to get it? It's the BEHAVIOR I refuse to tolerate. Not you.

      There's your lesson for Friday April 21.
      BTW, thanks for the debate.

    9. Re:I won't be told what to think by sagenumen · · Score: 1

      Point 1 : Sorry, I don't have a Merriam-Webster. Apparently, that's the only correct source. How you misconstrued my comments as bigoted leaves me saying, "Hummmmunnawhat?" I have not made any comments against any group of people whatsoever.

      Point 2: "Innocent people"? What exactly does that mean? Are you implying that gay people aren't innocent simply because they are attracted to the same sex? If so, who are these "innocent" people to whom you're referring? Surely you must mean the millions of straight people in this nation. All those "innocent" straight people having pre-marital sex and popping out babies at the age of 15. But hey, at least you know that baby wasn't a result of anal sex.

      Point 3: HIV (the virus that causes AIDS) is spread through FLUID exchange, not just blood. Having unprotected sexual intercourse with anybody who is infected makes you vulnerable. You are no more vulnerable through anal sex than you are through vaginal sex. Also, there are wonderous products on the market that take care of the lubrication factor.

      Point 4: I didn't say I condone sexual advances in the workplace. I was merely making a point on sexual advances in general. This is where you sound like a bigot. You seem to think that only gay people are the ones who would make said advances in a work environment. When you wouldn't hire an entire group of people based on whatever characteristic because you "don't want to spend [your] days" with them, you are prejudiced against that group.

      How you think I am disappointed because you don't hate me is beyond me. I have no desire to have a beer with such an ignorant person. Thanks for the offer, though. Tolerance is part of the whole prejudice issue. You may not condone the lifestyle, but you should recognize and respect the fact that it exists and there's nothing you can do about it. By saying you don't tolerate the behavior, you are implying that everything you said about giving me a beer and working with me is a bold-faced lie. Your implicative methods of argumentation are insulting. You have not made one solid point that I can not refute based on the grounds that you sound like nothing more than an ignorant ass. Your "facts" are poorly founded and unresearched, at best. I would not be surprised if you say these things merely to get a response, but you are making yourself sound like an ignoramus.

  152. I'll play Bill Clinton to your Ken Starr. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well that depends on what the meaning of wrong is, doesn't it? You presuppos that "the point" or "meaning of life" is to have your genes survive and flourish. Ah...no. In fact ideas have a much larger legacy. Even the political acts of Ghengis Khan have left a far larger legacy than his *impressive* trail of sperm. He personally forged two superpowers (that sit on the UN security council today! no less.) and indirectly destroyed another that made europe. In the case of raising children, and not having them*, ideas, which ones are important for living a good life, are the only issue. To say that gay people are incapable of providing such learning is to deny the existance of a lot of empirical evidence. There are many gay people who are quite successful by every measure our contemporary society employs, save the missgiving of a very vocal, very few who are perpetually miserable because a re-translation of a selection of 17 century old letters says they should be. When in doubt err on the side of freedom. Unless you hate God, who gave everyone free will, and obviously blowjobs. (But I've seen your wife. I wouldn't want my member anywhere near her teeth either. So maybe you're just eploying otherwise good judgement outside of the venue where it's reasonable.)

    *(Particularly those children who's prospects, if left to the devices of just the original contributors genetic material, is a tragically early death.)

  153. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Decameron81 · · Score: 1

    Everyone is entitled to making their own choices, but that doesn't mean everyone else should agree with them.

    --
    diegoT
  154. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    I can't tell if you're kidding or not. If you aren't, please let me point out that there are not only gay animals in nature, but there are also bisexual ones. animals with a preference for their own gender have been amply documented, and bonobo chimps in particular will have sex with either gender, although they fuck all the time. then again, so do humans.

    As for making you shave, find some chicks who like real men, not men who look like women. To be fair, women who look more like men have been the style for some time. This is loosely tied to economic health. In boom times the tendency is to look for slender women, who are better "play" partners because they are athletic. During a downturn, the tendency is to look for a provider figure, which means having some meat, wide hips, large breasts. I've always liked the reubenesque figure anyway, so I notice this sort of thing, and thank heaven big hoo-has are coming back into style.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  155. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check out Demonic Males by Dale Peterson. It's mostly an argument for a biological basis for male violence, but has an interesting bit about the sexual practices of bonobos. Apparently, bonobos will use homosexual sex for relaxation and bonding. (Bonobos are very closely related to chimps but exhibit a very low tendency toward violence.)

  156. The Rights of "People" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find it both ironic and sad that, in the near future, Microsoft will have more rights as a person than gays will.

  157. Catch 22 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scenario One: Microsoft lobbies the government on issues that directly affect its business (i.e. anti-trust).

    Result: The slashdot / open-source community jumps all over Microsoft for trying to "buy" or "strong-arm" politicians.

    Scenario Two: Regarding a hot political topic Microsoft (a company with a very respectable commitment to its gay / lesbian employees) changes its stance to neutral and leaves the choice up to the lawmakers.

    Results: The homosexual / civil liberties community jumps all over Microsoft for NOT attempting to "buy" or "strong-arm" any politicians.

    *sniffs* God bless America.

  158. Discrimated by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    People who have been discriminated against are often become extremely aggressive discriminators themselves. Just look at ultraradical feminists, or the way some homosexuals actively persecute bisexuals. Look at the enormous amount of hatred and intolerance that some black subcultures possess. Look at how fast the early Christians went from being Rome's whipping boys to being the oppressors of the pagans.

    This scenario plays out over and over again. Humans are fundamentally hateful and intolerant. Being gay, female, transexual, a member of a racial, cultural, or religious minority, or whatever doesn't matter -- the hate is still there. Minorities are just as monstrous as anyone else, often more so because intolerance is all they've known of life.

  159. Bullshit by donutello · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft continues to be a huge supporter of gay rights. Withdrawing support from one piece of legislation (there's no reason they should have been involved in it in the first place and they are not opposing it, they are just withdrawing from the battle) does not suddenly make them "supporters of religious conservativism". They are a business. If an activity they indulge in, which is unrelated to their business, has the potential to cause them to lose a large amount of their business, it's the responsible thing to do to not let that happen.

    I didn't see Apple or IBM or Google or any of the other companies Slashdotters love, offer any support to any gay rights legislation. Microsoft is the only one that did, and now, sadly, they are being forced to withdraw from the battle.

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
    1. Re:Bullshit by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      "If an activity they indulge in, which is unrelated to their business, has the potential to cause them to lose a large amount of their business, it's the responsible thing to do to not let that happen."

      I'm afraid I can't agree. If an activity they indulge in, which is unrelated to their business, is morally and ethically the right thing to do, it's the responsibel thing to do to let it happen and -indeed- support it to the fullest extent possible. Being a business does not give a group of people (which is what a business is...) a free pass to to anything which supports their bottom line. We've unfortunately gotten into a mindset in this country where that's often justified, but that doesn't make it so. I've heard elsewhere in this thread that Microsoft is a pro-gay-rights company and continues to do other things to help gay rights, which is a Good Thing. Withdrawing support for this bill (if the facts given in the summary and article are correct) is a Bad Thing.

      -Trillian

    2. Re:Bullshit by donutello · · Score: 1

      The individual members of the board or any employee of the company is free to do whatever they want with their own resources and time. When it comes to company assets, however, the board has a fiduciary responsibility to maintain shareholder value. Members of the board or company executives do NOT have the right to use the companies name or resources to promote their personal agendas, if that infringes upon the shareholders interests. The company does not BELONG to them. It belongs to the shareholders and if they are not acting in the shareholders interests, what they are doing is illegal.

      Most of us here believe that Bush, for example, does not have the right to use the nations resources to pursue his own personal agendas. This would be the same thing. Unless they have explicit permission from the shareholders, they do not have the right to dilute shareholder value, regardless of how noble they perceive their cause to be. In fact, shareholders could possibly sue them and win if they were to go ahead with this and if it caused them to lose significant revenue.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    3. Re:Bullshit by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

      You've given me something to think about and I'm very torn. On the one hand, you're right that the board is responsible to the shareholders. On the other, they're also responsible to (among others) their employees and customers. I don't know enough about the bill to comment but if, for example, this bill somehow protected Microsoft's gay employees more than they are right now, it could be in the board's best intrest - for the company - to promote the bill.

      I dunno. I'm torn. On the one hand, I am in favor of more legal protection for GLBT people. On the other, I do sort of agree that companies should stay the fuck out of politics...

      At the very least, you've given me something to think about.
      -Trillian

    4. Re:Bullshit by master_p · · Score: 1

      Withdrawing support from one piece of legislation

      One can not be neutral to human rights. It's either for or against. Neutrality is the polite way of saying 'we are in bed with the government, and we are gonna support their policies so they support us'.

      there's no reason they should have been involved in it in the first place

      Microsoft is one of the faces of America to the world. It is one of the most significant companies in the history of mankind. If Microsoft plays 100% the game of the government, then people are screwed, are so are human rights.

      They are a business. If an activity they indulge in, which is unrelated to their business, has the potential to cause them to lose a large amount of their business, it's the responsible thing to do to not let that happen.

      For how long will companies hide behind the 'we are a business' excuse? so what if they are a business? human rights is above business. Democracy is above business. Business interests are the interests of the owners of the business, some times in conflict with the the general social good.

      I didn't see Apple or IBM or Google or any of the other companies Slashdotters love, offer any support to any gay rights legislation.

      Shame on them, then. We must point our fingers to them, and ask them: why?

  160. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Denying rights to homosexuals is not the same as not agreeing with their choices. It's treating them like second-class citizens because of who they are and what they do. This has been institutionalized in our country, with the idea that marriage is between a woman and a man. Know where that idea came from? The Romans. That's right, the western notion of marriage descends ENTIRELY from greco-roman ceremonies, accompanied by legal documents, which were primarily concerned with the assignment of property rights. Marriage is not about togetherness or family, it's about dowry, child support, paternity, and alimony. You can be together and raise a family without being married; marriage is about financial arrangement, and people the world over (but especially the western world over) have been tricked into thinking it's about love. It's even funnier how people fall for this diamond ring shit, which was sold to them by DeBeers. Fucking sheeple.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  161. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How are they using a loophole? i.e. what is the use that was not intended, allowing gays?

  162. I'm just curious by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1

    How many people think this is an accurately researched and reported story?

    If so, have you completed a college education? What is the name of that institution that would give you a bachelor's degree?

    --
    There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
  163. Incredible. by Aeron65432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Has anyone actually RTFA?

    The guy has twisted and distorted Microsoft's position into his opinion that Microsoft hates gays.

    He is very biased, unfactual, and a blogger. I don't think you'd hear this kind of ranting from CNN or CBS.

    And slashdot accepts him and his opinion as credible news?

  164. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    first they cant have childern naturally
    Yes, yes they can. Much like heterosexuals, homosexuals tend to have reproductive organs.

    As if we didn't already have enough to worry about w.r.t. the quality of sex education in this country...
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  165. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    "Hello, you are a bigot. Most of the homosexuals I know who would consider raising children are considerably better people than, well, than I suspect you are given what you just said about them."

    And we should also support the right of gay couples to have clones!

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  166. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by unDees · · Score: 1

    How about every accredited study that's ever been done on the issue? That enough empirical evidence for you?

    --
    "I call a baby goat a 'goatse.'" -- my non-Internet-savvy 6-year-old stepdaughter
  167. high taxes in SF? by blacklungfever · · Score: 1

    Guess, that's a reaction to the high taxes in San Francisco?

  168. Teh Sun ruined my grammer by t_allardyce · · Score: 2, Funny

    Did anyone read this like a tabloid line: Microsoft abandons Bill Gates because hes pro-gay-rights?

    I think most of Europe has gay-rights discrimination laws but we're just a bunch of stoners and drunks...

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  169. Where exacly is the scientific proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do not get me wrong I do not have anything against gay people, but as far as I know the research on the "gay gene" did not showed any results, so where is this scientifically proof that you talk about?
    I know there are proven medical cases in which being gay is not a choice but that does not apply to everybody...

    1. Re:Where exacly is the scientific proof? by Fancia · · Score: 1

      That's because it's not genetic. Experiments like Simon LeVay's have determined that a major cause is physical, resulting from conditions in the mother's womb. Development of the brain depends on those conditions, and certain physiological development causes homosexual behaviour.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
  170. What a bunch of cock suckers by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

    I'm talking about Microsoft of course.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
  171. PS.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

    The Bible says all that stuff.

    It was written by a bunch of old men 2500 years ago in a desert halfway around the world. The books in it got there via a vote of 568 to 563 at the Council of Trent in 397 - those that weren't politically favourable were dropped.

    Now, if you have some actual evidence that the Bible is the word of God, by all means provide it.

    Until then it has about as much of a chance of being the word of God as the Koran, the Bhagvangita, or "The Stand" by Stephen King.

    Just in case you were wondering...

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  172. Bribery by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    It's called bribery. It also goes by the euphemism of "campaign contributions".

    There's also extortion, as in "if we're not kept happy, we may need to move our office to Mexico/India/Wherever".

  173. Unnatural? by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

    If homosexuality is so unnatural, then why is it found in nature? Homosexual behavior can be found in nearly all warm-blooded species.

    1. Re:Unnatural? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cannibalism, eating your mate, eating your young, killing your young, and having a large harem are also all found in nature. You could probably find all crimes in nature. That doesn't mean they are right or that they shouldn't be illegal.

    2. Re:Unnatural? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you plug a db15m into a db15m? That's what I meant.

    3. Re:Unnatural? by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      Yeah, caring for your young is found in nature too. Should we stop doing that because animals do it? I'm still not hearing an explanation of why homosexuality should be considered a crime.

    4. Re:Unnatural? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never said it should be a crime, just explaing why it is hurtful. Its like insulting someone, but you certianly don't put them in jail for it.

    5. Re:Unnatural? by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      I didn't hear an explanation of why it is hurtful either.

  174. Corporate social-cause policies by davidwr · · Score: 1

    While it's obvious they are caving to poltical pressure in this case, it IS reasonable for companies to have policies that guide if and how they stand on social issues. It's also reasonable to revisit these policies from time to time.

    Notwithstanding any change to its "how do we address social issues" policies, it's tacky to change horses mid-stream. If indeed MS is revisiting how it takes a stand on social policies, as opposed to just using that as an excuse, the wise thing to do would be to have a moratorium on any NEW actions until the new policy was in place, then revisit existing social policy statements and positions.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  175. Discrimination by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 5, Insightful
      1. Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically), nor is it particularly a disability.

      That's not really true. Human beings are patterned to pursue things that cause them pleasure the same as Pavlov's dogs.

    My experience, many moons ago, was that I knew that I was attracted to women long before I had experienced sexual ecstacy with a woman. Which contradicts your assertion that it is all learned.

    I presume that gays and lesbians, for the most part, have had pretty similar experiences.

    1. Re:Discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Your presumption is correct. I was gay long before I had any sexual experiences of any kind.

    2. Re:Discrimination by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Ahh, but if you, at whatever tender age you started having sex, had hooked up with a hot sexy woman and had a few crazy weekends involving lots of booze, esctacy and mind blowing sex before ever interacting sexually with another guy, you might be a very different person today.

      Try to be a little more open minded.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    3. Re:Discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was gay long before I had any sexual experiences of any kind.

      Lots of gays will say something like, "I was a sissy all my life." That doesn't mean much though: plenty of boys are "sissies" as children and don't grow up to be pole-smokers.

    4. Re:Discrimination by zoombat · · Score: 1

      About half the gay people I know were previously married to a person of the opposite sex.. they got married (and often had kids) because that's what people did, but later realized that marriage, sex, etc. never changed who they really were.

      On the flip side, I know an evangelical christian who was gay and now says God healed him of his homosexuality and he's now been happily married to a woman for about 10 years.

      All I know is that it's a whole lot more complicated than people on both sides tend to make it out to be.

    5. Re:Discrimination by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      All I know is that it's a whole lot more complicated than people on both sides tend to make it out to be.

      This at least we agree on.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    6. Re:Discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you yourself clearly won't "Try to be a little more open minded."

    7. Re:Discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open minded enough to think everyone should have the choice to make. If I'm skeptical about those who tell me that there is no choice, that hardly makes me a close minded guy.

    8. Re:Discrimination by IANAAC · · Score: 1
      I truly believe that sexuality is fluid. Much more so in some people than in others. Yet other people never would ever consider anything other than either strictly gay or strictly hetero relations.

      Kinsey had the right idea, if you ask me.

    9. Re:Discrimination by yivi · · Score: 1
      My experience, many moons ago, was that I knew that I was attracted to women long before I had experienced sexual ecstacy with a woman. Which contradicts your assertion that it is all learned.
      We may or may not learn everything that is _us_, but your silly anecdote doesn't prove or disprove anything.

      The foundations of learning aren't actual experience for the most part, but a miryad of different things. I would say that most of the time experience plays the more trivial of parts in the learning process.
  176. Finally by tbcpp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yeah! Finally Microsoft does somthing I actualy like. No this is not a troll, I just really have firmly beleive that so called "gay rights" are wrong. Sodomy should be outlawed.

    --
    Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
    1. Re:Finally by gellenburg · · Score: 1

      What about fellatio?

      Because.... you do know not all gays are into sodomy.

      What about masturbation?

      Because.... you do know not all gays are into fellatio.

      What about kissing?

      Because.... you do know not all gays are into maturbation.

      What about holding hands?

      Because.... you do know not all gays are into kissing.

      Catch my drift?

    2. Re:Finally by tbcpp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, I catch your drift. Let me be more blunt a physical relationship should be between one man and one woman under the "umbrella" of marriage, for life. No divorce, no extramarital relationships, no sex before marriage, and no "homosexuals". And I don't even like using that word because it implies that they can't help themselves (which is a lie)

      Want to know my view on marriage? Read Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy from the Bible.

      --
      Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
    3. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, a tribe of primitive misogynic nomads called. They want their ethical system back.

    4. Re:Finally by tbcpp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      At least their system is not un-ethical like many of our laws today...

      --
      Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
    5. Re:Finally by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Sometimes the truth is blunt. I couldn't agree with you more.

    6. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least you are a complete dork who believes in stupid shit

    7. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Want to know my view on marriage? Read Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy from the Bible.

      Wow.. that might mean something if the Bible wasn't a total crock of shit.

    8. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, you don't like fucking your girlfriend up the ass?

      Oh, wait, this is /., never mind, you don't have one.

    9. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed one of the most important. No marrage for the infertile and non baby making. Since the only reason for sex under religion is to make babies then only can people who are constantly having babies be married.

    10. Re:Finally by mink · · Score: 1

      Do you follow the rest of those parts of the Bible to the letter?

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  177. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    That's a whole other debate, but personally I am in favor of cloning. however, the only in/pre-utero genetic modification I think our society can handle at this point is to avoid known congenital defects.

    Actually, that just made me think of a way that homosexuality could be a desired trait in terms of a species, since clearly in itself it does not particularly lend itself to being passed on. Of course, we're still not sure if homosexuality has a genetic basis, and if it does, how to explain bisexuals or people who flip-flop at some point in life (in preference that is, not practice. The latter is easily explainable.) When you have an imbalance of gender, it might be best to have homosexuals in your population so they have something to do other than pointlessly compete with other members of the species.

    Of course, in animals rut takes over and they (generally) will breed regardless of preference. That isn't necessarily true of humans, although the less-understood aspects of human attraction can still take control there.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  178. The real reason by BigBossNerd · · Score: 0, Troll

    Microsoft has become much more aware of the threat of viruses in the last couple of years, so this is just a natural step really.

  179. (-1 Troll/Flamebait) by BeProf · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    And here I thought all this editorial trolling by the /. powers that be would end after the election. Silly me.

    To bad we can't mod the stories themselves.

    --
    You are attempting to read sigs. Cancel or Allow?
  180. Microsoft's competitors by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I wonder how many of Microsoft's competitors have taken sides on issues like this, and which sides they have taken.

    Apple is liberal. Anyone know if they take sides on legislation?

    IBM, a Linux proponent, offers domestic partnership benefits but I'm not sure if they take sides on proposed legislation.

    Anyone know about Novell/SuSE? Novell is in Utah, bastion of conservatism, but SuSE is in Germany, which is socially more liberal than the USA.

    How about Red Hat?

    SCO's irrelevant as a MS competitor, but it's also in Utah.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  181. So here's why MS stopped lobbying for gay rights by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    Since including gays in your organization is so wonderful for profits and all, they got calls from their stockholders complaining that by enforcing nondiscrimination policies on other companies, Microsoft was weakening its own competitive advantage.

    Right? Doesn't that follow from your logic?

  182. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by CTachyon · · Score: 1

    first they cant have childern naturally.

    Neither can a lot of straight couples. If a guy is impotent, does that make him unnatural and/or sinful? Should we make it legal to fire people for being infertile, or to evict them from their homes? If a marriage turns out to not produce children, and it turns out the minister knew they were infertile, should he or she be tracked down and arrested for falsely marrying the couple? (After the marriage is declared null and invalid, obviously.)

    --
    Range Voting: preference intensity matters
  183. Hot flash from the news room... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

    The demographic least likely to contract AIDS or HIV?

    Lesbians.

    So, what was that you were saying about Homosexuality being the main cause of AIDS?

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  184. Maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe that's why they changed their mind - they realized that they don't want the competition. :o)

    1. Re:Maybe... by bird603568 · · Score: 0

      your right, they stared to accept *nix on the virutialserver thing.

  185. Consequenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, this means that Bill Gates and Paul Allen have been fired?

  186. Time to move to India, I guess by melted · · Score: 0, Troll

    Time to move to India, I guess. Way too many fags 'round here.

    1. Re:Time to move to India, I guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll pay your plane fare.

  187. Gay Marriage by Botia · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Since most of the posts appear to be on gay marriage, let's discuss that. Gay marriage has been legal in the United States since this great country was founded. You are not descrimenated based on your sexual preference. A gay man and a gay woman are free to get married to each other just as a straight man and a straight woman can. A great fictional example would be on Friends when a straight man and a lesbian were married...perfectly legal.

  188. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by bird603568 · · Score: 0

    of so a man and man thats 2 sperms XY and XY. YY dies it has no X; so if some how a XX or XY forms where does it grow? for dykes, theres a place but 2 eggs wont fome together. If they did there wouldnt be any men or good drivers.

  189. The election never ends by CarrionBird · · Score: 1

    People are still busy bitching over the election and the one before it.

    --
    Free Mac Mini Yeah, it's
  190. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Atleast people are allowed to be gay in USA."

    Give it a few weeks. In a country where the majorities in 11 states enacted constitutional amendments aimed against them, I figure it's only a matter of time until a truly democratic process does exactly what you're talking about.

  191. You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help. by Mars+Ultor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Girl + Girl = good (its perfectly natural)

    See that was the part of the post where you were supposed to infer that they were joking.

    I believe that he was pointing out the irony that many times, men who speak bad about gay (guy + guy) sex are the same guys who grab a porno or penthouse featuring lesbian (girl + girl) scenes, to which they have no objection.

    Since text doesn't convey emotion or emphasis very well, I find it helpful to reread a post a few times before replying.

    If I'm wrong and the grandparent was serious, then that same line I just cited proves my point anyway.

    --
    "Nokia is not a country, it's the capital of Finland!" -Moderated "Informative". Yeesh.
  192. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, people like you are the disease.

    Go fight your holy wars and kill yourself off. The rest of humanity will be better off for it.

  193. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you look at the DSM-III, before the 4th edition, you will see homosexuality listed as a disease.

    Historically, psychology and medicine in general, has a piss poor record for determining what is and isn't a disease. This is the same discipline that pushed frontal lobotomies as a valid "treatment" right up until the 60's.

    Why is it states are passing referendums, public referendums, where homosexual marrige is outlawed by votes over 80%?

    Because the U.S. is full of prejudiced, racist, intolerant, uneducated, fuckheads.

    The republican party found one single issue they can bank on. As long as the republicans supply a candidate who is for defending marrige as defined between a man and a woman, they will keep winning elections. It is the ONLY reason bush won the last election.

    You're probably right. But just because most people are unethical and want to tell other people what is and is not morally right and wrong (as if they were some sort of authority) a few of us like to vote our consciences, even if we are a minority. You see a hundred years ago the majority of people thought black people were an inferior race. Two hundred years ago the majority of people thought women were inferior to men, weaker and less intelligent and should not be allowed to own property of their own. Four hundred years ago anyone who said the earth revolved around the sun was declared an evil heretic who had to be burned to protect society.

    The majority is not always right. The Bill of rights exists to protect the people from the government and the minorities from the majorities. Ben Franklin said, "Democracy is two wolves and a sheep trying to decide what to have for dinner." It is the reason for the limits on the government's power.

    You see just because you are a prejudiced mental reject does not mean that if some day prejudiced mental rejects are in the minority open-minded people should be able to discriminate against them in the workplace if their religion does not get in the way of their job.

  194. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by bird603568 · · Score: 0

    thats not the point a MAN and a WOMAN can have childern 2 faggots cant un less we bring in science.

  195. I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If gays, asians, blacks, latinos, and women can all sue for discrimination in the case of not getting hired for a job, can I pull the same trick and claim I was turned down for a job simply because I'm a guy with long hair?

    1. Re:I wonder... by ElyseMyers · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You could always cut your hair -- its definately not the same thing as being a minority. that you cannot change. sheesh

  196. depending on who you ask... by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Depending on who you ask, sexuality is either inborn, like eye color, or a choice, like religion.

    While eye color is not a protected status, if there had been a long and widespread pattern of unfair discrimination based on eye color, it should and probably would have special status as a protected class, like race and for some things, gender.

    Religious preference by and large is protected by law.

    The bottom line answer to your question:
    Where current laws are adequate to neutralize unfair discrimination, no new laws are needed.
    Where current laws are INadequate to neutralize unfair discrimination, and where the right to engage in unfair discrimination is not itself protected - such as in a religious setting - new laws are not unreasonable and if done correctly are A Good Thing.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  197. With friends like these... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's not Affirmitive Action or anything.


    You pretend to be progressive, but your words betray you...Affirmative Action isn't special rights. It's a meager way of addressing the inequality that people of color still toil under to this day. Perhaps you should examine your own racism first.
    1. Re:With friends like these... by Kenrod · · Score: 1

      It's a meager way of addressing the inequality

      In other words, a special right.

      And screaming "Racist!" is so 1995.
      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    2. Re:With friends like these... by saforrest · · Score: 1

      Don't leap to conclusions. I don't think he was saying he is against affirmative action.

      The basis of affirmative action is entrenching a temporary inequality to make up for a major pre-existing inequality which has a societal basis.

      That is qualitatively different from a simple anti-discrimination policy.

  198. Improper analogy by fbform · · Score: 1
    This is almost like Gandhi's grand son discriminating against a british kid because he is poor,white and powerless.

    Nope, that would be an African American preacher being bigoted against white people. This is more like Gandhi's descendants being bigoted against a completely different group, like Japanese saxophonists or Venezuelan college professors.

    That said, the larger point you were making is well taken.

    --
    Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
  199. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by PureCreditor · · Score: 1

    who dumped the foster kids? straight couples.

    who has 50% divorce rate in USA? straight couples.

    before you talk about how gays are inappropriate to be foster parents, fix the problems of straight couples.

    by the way, if YOU'RE married yourself, goodluck, you have a 50% chance of getting a divorce statistically.

  200. This just in! Gay Linux users Boycott Microsoft by jspectre · · Score: 1

    ho-hum..

    no queer penguins for bgates.

    if all it takes is one uppety priest to get MS to change their views on something why didn't someone send one years ago and tell microsoft they were going to hell for their business practices???

    --

    abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

  201. Oh, great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cue the "Who cares, fags use Macs already anyway" troll posts in 3... 2... 1...

  202. Good. by pyth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I thought we were supposed to be against companies lobbying the government to have their way? Then this is good!

    1. Re:Good. by jaytek13 · · Score: 1

      Lobbying and buying off votes is a natural part of the American government. At least MS was doing something that could have actually helped something in this country besides their profits, unlike the oil, auto, or electical industries.

    2. Re:Good. by pyth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's exactly what conservative wackos say when a billionaire decides to stand up for "family values" and such.

      If we accept that the likes of Bill Gates may use their influence in politics, then we cannot honestly use the abuse-of-power rhetoric against the conservative rich guys.

      If we are to be fair, then there are two exclusive modes we can pick on this specific issue: 1) Freedom, or 2) Regulation.

      Critics say that political freedom circumvents democracy by weighing votes with wealth, and brings us closer to a plutocracy.

      There are problems with regulation, too.

      But far more dangerous than either choice is if we decide to regulate political actions based on their content.

      Historical experience tells us that this is how democracies turn into dictatorships. It is probably a symptom of bad things to come, rather than a cause.

      You may recall that the Nazi party was elected partly because the average Joe was afraid of having his job stolen (out-sourced) by the evil rich people. [In their case, it was percieved that rich = Jew].

      In light of that, possibly the best thing we can do is to have people stop feeling strongly about the rich. No jealousy, no hatred.

  203. I have no problem with FAGS or DYKES. Really! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But why do you have to throw it in my face when you do stuff it in the exit hole or rub twats together?

    Why should I care if you're a peter puffer or a lawn mower?

    Last I checked Gays and Lesbians - as well as - GASP - HETEREOSEXUALS!!!! - were all covered under the same protection as the constitution. If you're dumb enough to think an employee wont hire you if you're gay, or if you're scared, go work somewhere else! Stop robbing my great country of its money for your liberal, diseased and perverted sexual deviancies!

    Note: The above is and always will be PROTECTED FREE SPEECH under the constitution. If you have a problem with what I typed, then respond to it in kind. But please, don't discriminate against me because I'm a hetereosexual. :)

  204. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

    One way that a gay man can reproduce is by inserting his penis into a woman's vagina.

    Similarly, one way that a lesbian woman can become pregnant is by having sex with a man.

    Sorry if that's too confusing.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  205. seperate that state and church by SiggyRadiation · · Score: 3, Informative

    In Holland a minister is not allowed to wed a couple in church before that couple has been to their city-hall where a government-official weds them solely for the law.

    This means that any wedding must be before the civil cervant and people can choose wether or not also wed in their church. The churches can choose wether or not to allow a marriage, based on their own criteria but the state must wed gays and straights alike.

    This cuts the civil responsibilities from the ministers and pastors (who should not even want them) and it cuts the religious discussion from the state's duties and the rights that state grants to married people.

    As a religious person you can call a gay married couple anything you like. For example: "a-gay-couple-that-thinks-they-are-married-but-the y-are not" but the state and the judiciary are going to have to treat them as a married couple.

    I see this as a very good thing.

    Siggy.

    --
    This unique sig is intended to make this user more recognisable.
    1. Re:seperate that state and church by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I agree with you and with the poster above that made the same point. :)

  206. What is M$ afraid of? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I mean, it's not like the Evangelical Church is going to suddenly switch to FreeBSD, what with it's Devil mascot and all!

  207. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    Actually, homosexuality has only barely been "illegal" for thousands of years; the romans were the ones who started to put a stop to it (plenty of buggery in rome though) as the greeks, who immediately preceded them, were quite "into it". Thus it's been what, 2400 years since it was common practice? Meanwhile Athens is the only direct democracy in the history of mankind and greece is the birthplace of philosophy.

    I know this a troll; I know you don't feed trolls; I'm making this comment for posterity. And JS' posterior.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  208. God nO by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    God no, not my curtains!

    Keep fighting the good fight, man.

  209. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it wrong? Because gays hurt you?

    Oh and FYI it's "pervert". Please either learn how to spell or learn how to utilize a spell check software.

  210. child and animals by davidwr · · Score: 1

    As a society, we have a responsibility to protect those who cannot protect themselves, and a lesser responsibility to protect animals. This is why most states in the USA regulate or prohibit sex between mentally competent adults and, among others, children, mentally incompetent adults, intoxicated/drunk adults, and animals; as well as between doctors and patients, police and inmates, and others where one party is presumed to be in a vulnerable position.

    In some societies, sex with underage children is acceptable
    If another society in another country sees things differently that's their business. I can disagree with their laws and viewpoints but they are a sovereign nation and I have no say-so in their internal affairs.

    By the way, different states in the USA look at sex with minor children differently - there's a world of difference between an 18 year old and a 14 year old vs a 48 year old and a 14 year old vs an 18 year old and a 4 year old. Many state laws recognize these differences. In some parts of the USA, 18 and 14 is actually legal.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  211. a few questions by Heisenbug · · Score: 1

    The following are honest questions. I'd be grateful if you took the time to answer.

    Keep in mind that the goal is civil marriage, rather than religious marriage. No religious figure will ever be forced to perform any marriage they don't choose to, or recognize any marriage as being legitimate in the eyes of their god. Civil marriage will simply grant gays the same thousands of rights and responsibilities under the law that straight couples have -- do you feel this pushes their beliefs on you?

    Here's another question: Christians believe that a marriage should be a lifelong commitment to a single partner, for the purpose of raising children. Despite this, it is completely legal for two infertile people to get a civil marriage, have casual sex with strangers, and get a divorce a week later. Do you feel that other people's beliefs are forced on you when this happens?

    Finally, since the definition of a civil union is simply a civil marriage that two men or two women may enter, under a different name, I'd like to turn your question around on you: why insist that it must be a civil union instead of a civil marriage? What is the benefit to you of calling it one instead of the other?

    The only reason I can think of is to deny rights to a unioned gay couple that are granted to a married straight couple -- and that probably explains why so many gay people are looking for legal marriages rather than civil unions.

  212. *Democracy* at work by gnuman99 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Would that be the same consumer market that passed anti-gay marriage laws in 11 different states last November?

    Hey, that's what you get by having majorities imposing laws on minorities. Never worked and never will.

    In Canada there is the Charter of Rights And Freedoms. Especially look at #15.

    15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.

    (2) Subsection (1) does not preclude any law, program or activity that has as its object the amelioration of conditions of disadvantaged individuals or groups including those that are disadvantaged because of race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.

    In Canada, the Supreme Court rules that the current marriage act discriminates against gay/lesbians on this basis (ie. don't have the same rights under the law). http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2004/12/09 /scoc-gaymarriage041209.html

    Gay marriage is already law in many provinces now, but it is be voted federally soon.

    1. Re:*Democracy* at work by ifwm · · Score: 0

      So here's the question I always ask, and never get a decent answer for. When does it turn from protecting the minority to submitting to them?

    2. Re:*Democracy* at work by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      All laws are the majority impsoing on minorities. The majority dosen't like pedophilla, and we impose our will on the minority of people who think it's just fine. Again the majority find cannabalism delporeable, and we impose this on the minority that does not.

    3. Re:*Democracy* at work by rtb144 · · Score: 1

      Maybe I forgot how to read English, but I don't see sexual orientation in your protected status clauses.
      This charter is very similar to the protections afforded US citizens.
      Just because discrimination based on certain criteria are forbidden does not extend those same protections to all distinctions.
      We are also talking about constitutional amendments that supercede most other laws.
      The US Supreme Court has not ruled that sexual orientation is protected from discrimination.
      I might also add that by definition a democracy is majority rule and yes majorities impose laws on minorities. I can name numerous catagories of minorities whos activities are discriminated against: serial murderers, pediphiles, persons who rip tags off of unsold mattresses. Your whole post smacks of an uneducated self-rightous rant. Thanks for the obviously Canadian post.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
    4. Re:*Democracy* at work by asoko · · Score: 0
      Anything that is intended to "protect" minorities is submitting to them. Minorities should only be protected exactly as everyone is protected, and majorities should have no rights above minorities.

      So basically, you can't be "protecting" one group specially without taking freedoms away from another. That's just the way it is. Try to think of a situation where that doesn't apply.

    5. Re:*Democracy* at work by NamShubCMX · · Score: 1

      how does gay marriage takes my freedom away?

      --
      We've always been at war with Eurasia.
    6. Re:*Democracy* at work by ifwm · · Score: 0

      The majority decided against it. If it is allowed against the will of the majority, it takes their freedom of self-detemination (THE most important freedom you have) away.

      You, in this case, are a memeber of the so called "protected" minority. It has nothing to do with who you fuck, only your opinion on the issues.

      Or did you not think that far ahead?

    7. Re:*Democracy* at work by larkost · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How exactly is granting groups the same rights as others "submitting to them"? The original story is about a law that just prevents discrimination in things like hiring on the basis of sexual preference. No matter how I twist it, I can't come up with a reasonable viewpoint where that is a minority dominating the majority.

      Now on a broader view there have been a number of arguments that movement like the ones to have homosexual civil unions or marriages are infringing on the beliefs of others who want to keep marriage "sacred". I have a hard time understanding this as in no case I am aware of are heterosexual unions being discouraged or altered in any way, they are just loosing their status as "the only".

      On the other hand, the (inheritors of the) Christian Coalition is definitely trying to push their views that only heterosexual relationships are OK, and they are trying to do so through the law. Now I don't feel I have any legal right to challenge what is taught in churches, the same way that I don't feel that there is any legal right out there for people to challenge what goes on in people's bedrooms (murder, abuse, etc... not included).

      On the specific subject of marrige, I have yet to hear a reasoned argument about why a homosexual couple should not be allowed to marry that does not base itself on one of three grounds:
      [list]
      [*]religious grounds (God said so... and it says so in only this one sentence of this translation of the Bible).
      [*]tradition (this is more often than not really the first one in disguise)
      [*]it would encourage the "homosexual lifestyle": promiscuity, sexual orgies, drugs, and usually vague other bad things (clearly unmarried heterosexuals don't do that... and wouldn't marriage/commitment tend to settle people down, even assuming that this was a valid stereotype in the fist place?... oh, and another disguise for the first one)
      [/list]

      I have never seen a homosexual activist try and force someone into becoming a homosexual, but the reverse is commonly not true.... So... whom is trampling on who's rights?

      Is that a decent answer?

      PS... you have no legal rights to try and force the general culture to change, or not to change. The whole idea of the bill of rights was to keep this majority culture from crushing other opinions. A group is currently trying to use the law system to keep the culture from changing. We saw this same exact scenario when black and white people started marrying... with the exact same arguments and process (first it went bad, then it slowly got better).

    8. Re:*Democracy* at work by larkost · · Score: 1

      *dooh*... wrong markup... *sigh*

    9. Re:*Democracy* at work by asoko · · Score: 1
      If the state forces religions (mainly the Catholic Church) to recognize gay marriage, then the freedoms of religion of Catholics is limited.

      The problem with marriage is that it is very closely tied to both religion and state. I am against religions being forced to recognize gay marriage, but the state should not deny gay couples the advantages it gives married couples

      "Gay marriage" takes people's freedom away if and only if you mean "gay marriage" as defined by religion, but the problem is that can't be separated from the state's definition

      Actually, I'm against any kind of government/tax benefits for anything, because I think government is way too big in the first place. But that's beside the point.

    10. Re:*Democracy* at work by flyingsquid · · Score: 4, Funny
      Gay marriage is already law in many provinces now, but it is be voted federally soon.

      And just look at what's happened to Canada! Total chaos! Two dollar coins, people speaking in French, and decriminalized marijuana! I hear there are even places where polar bears roam the streets at will- is THAT the kind of cesspool of degeneracy we want America to become? Tastefully decorated, perhaps, but at the cost of being overrun by polar bears and stoned French separatists?

    11. Re:*Democracy* at work by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If it is allowed against the will of the majority, it takes their freedom of self-detemination

      Perhaps you should look up the word "self-determination". It has nothing to do with whether or not some other person has the right to get legally married.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    12. Re:*Democracy* at work by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      I might also add that by definition a democracy is majority rule and yes majorities impose laws on minorities. I can name numerous catagories of minorities whos activities are discriminated against: serial murderers, pediphiles, persons who rip tags off of unsold mattresses. Your whole post smacks of an uneducated self-rightous rant.

      The difference between a homosexual couple and a serial killer (and therefore the flaw in the analogy) is obvious: (1) consent, (2) it doesn't harm anyone else.

    13. Re:*Democracy* at work by larkost · · Score: 1

      Your post was in response to a posting about Canada's constitution preventing the "discriminates against gay/lesbians", and was in a thread all about bin in Washington state about discrimination against the same group. Your post clearly implied that you felt that either of these could border on "turn[ing] from protecting the minority to submitting to them". Thus my reasoned reply.

      Notice that I gave my reasons for my thinking, and that I did not resort to calling people names. Neither of which did you observe. My tone also was not ranting... but yours definitely is.

      You asked a "REAL" question, I gave you a real reply, and you responded with a personal attack. Want to try that again?

      PS... "party propaganda"? That one was funny....

    14. Re:*Democracy* at work by snol · · Score: 1

      Nobody has EVER advocated forcing churches to perform/recognize gay marriages. Why would you even bring that up except as a ridiculous straw man?

      Saying that the religious and state definitions of marriage can't be separated is ridiculous. It's completely up to every religious group where they wish to draw the line.

    15. Re:*Democracy* at work by snol · · Score: 1

      Either you have a limited grasp of what a constitutional democracy is (which is where these things we call "rights" come from), or you are conveniently ignoring the details for the sake of this argument. The constitution puts limits on what a majority is allowed to put into law exactly for cases such as this. Self-determination is indeed the most important freedom one has, and hence one portion of the population can't be allowed to take away the self-determination of another portion.

      Also, assuming that everyone who advocates for gay rights must be gay just reveals your ignorance.

    16. Re:*Democracy* at work by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "Also, assuming that everyone who advocates for gay rights must be gay just reveals your ignorance"

      I didn't assume that. I inferred FROM HIS POST that he was pro gay marriage. That puts him in the... wait for it...

      MINORITY!

      Funny how you tried to chastise me for assuming, but I didn't and you did. Ha! Funny right?

    17. Re:*Democracy* at work by snol · · Score: 0, Troll

      You said the PROTECTED minority. Nobody's fighting for protections for pro-gay-marriage people, but for actual gays.

    18. Re:*Democracy* at work by ifwm · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "Nobody's fighting for protections for pro-gay-marriage people, but for actual gays"

      You weren't reading the thread, or you're a retard.

      The ACLU does. I'm a member, so I know.

      More importantly, the ENTIRE POINT of the thread was minority "protections". That was ALL we talked about, and the context is crystal clear to anyone. Not gays, but MINORITY PROTECTIONS.

      Nice try though. You fucked up, got caught, and tried to sneak one by. Silly boy, just admit you blew it and we'll both laugh it off.

      Because you did fuck up. And we all saw it.

    19. Re:*Democracy* at work by snol · · Score: 1

      Maybe you meant it that way or maybe you didn't, but read it again and tell me the "protected minority" you were talking about up to that point wasn't gays.

      In any case, I just wanted you to think about whether or not your ideas make any sense.

    20. Re:*Democracy* at work by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Nice try, but BS. You crossed one of my lines.

      DO NOT EVER ASSUME YOU KNOW WHAT I THINK. EVER.

      I asked a RIGHTS queston. Nothing more. You attempted to attribute a position to me, and then knocked it down. What logical fallacy is that again?

      You deserve a personal attack. You deserve several for attempting to engage in such intellectual dishonesty.

    21. Re:*Democracy* at work by snol · · Score: 1

      There's a certain style of argument that without explicitly stating your support for a position, leads people to assume that you support that position. It is an effective tactic for petty arguments to do this and then attack people in capital letters for assuming they understood your position. However this will never lead people to actually understand your position. The higher road is to post what you actually believe without playing argumentative tricks.

    22. Re:*Democracy* at work by PeteQC · · Score: 1

      Gay marriage is already law in many provinces now, but it is be voted federally soon.

      We're gonna be in elections soon, Conservatives will enter by the grand door because I doubt that the Liberals will get something out of the next elections after the current Scandal that is really going out of proportion now.

      And I'm damn sure that Harper will vote a law against gay marriage. (I don't approve it, I'm just saying that it is what's going to happen.)

      --
      Montreal - Best city to live in!
    23. Re:*Democracy* at work by catalyst · · Score: 1

      easy: all compromises are a form of submission (that's what "respect" means, at it's heart). all legislation is a compromise, and both legislation and compromise are, for the foreeable future, mandatory. you're submitting to a minority every time you let somebody merge on a freeway, numbnuts, and when we debate public policy, what we're debating is just which acts of submission we feel are most justifiable.

    24. Re:*Democracy* at work by starm_ · · Score: 1

      The topics of the conversations were clearly set in the parent posts, there were no assumptions. He just Read The Fucken Parent Posts.

    25. Re:*Democracy* at work by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 1

      The majority decided against it. If it is allowed against the will of the majority, it takes their freedom of self-detemination (THE most important freedom you have) away.

      What about the minority's self-determination! And how does giving this right at all affect the SELF-determination (determining what one's SELF does) of anybody else.

      Let me say that again...
      How does allowing it at all affect the majority's ability to determine thier own path through life?

      The sun will still rise, ordinary marriages will still go on, everything will be completely normal, except that now some people who were denied rights and privileges through no fault of thier own will have them restored.

      What is wrong with giving people rights and privileges that they have been denied because of the way they were made?

      You have to ask yourself if you support the notion of equal rights for blacks, and how this issue is any different - gays are denied rights and privileges available to straights, why should that be tolerated?

      NB: I'm straight, and live in New Zealand. Thankfully the religious right does not rule this land.

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    26. Re:*Democracy* at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      [*]religious grounds (God said so... and it says so in only this one sentence of this translation of the Bible).
      Try five. Homosexuality is among the only things in the Bible with complete and total consistency -- all five times homosexuality is mentioned it is condemned.

    27. Re:*Democracy* at work by gnuman99 · · Score: 1

      If there is a vote, it will pass. The Liberals will vote for it, so will the NDP. The Bloc will as well (at least that's what they said). The so called conservatives are alone on this issue.

    28. Re:*Democracy* at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      larkhost wrote:
      On the specific subject of marrige, I have yet to hear a reasoned argument about why a homosexual couple should not be allowed to marry that does not base itself on one of three grounds:
      [list]
      [*]religious grounds (God said so... and it says so in only this one sentence of this translation of the Bible).
      [*]tradition (this is more often than not really the first one in disguise)
      [*]it would encourage the "homosexual lifestyle": promiscuity, sexual orgies, drugs, and usually vague other bad things (clearly unmarried heterosexuals don't do that... and wouldn't marriage/commitment tend to settle people down, even assuming that this was a valid stereotype in the fist place?... oh, and another disguise for the first one)
      [/list]

      You could use the same argument for bestiality. How about civil unions between a man and a sheep? I mean its really not hurting anyone as long as its consensual, right.

    29. Re:*Democracy* at work by Chrax · · Score: 1, Informative

      Interestingly, early Christians didn't seem to think so. It wasn't until the Crusades that homosexuality began being persecuted along with Jews, Muslims, and to a greater extent than before, pagans. Even if homosexuality was not promoted, it was tolerated and accepted as something that could not be avoided. At least until the Church decided to take control of its adherents on a more personal level.

    30. Re:*Democracy* at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have yet to hear a reasoned argument about why a homosexual couple should not be allowed to marry


      Here's my argument. I think that one of the primary purposes of having an institution like marriage in the first place should be to provide security and stability for the purpose of raising children. In this sense, marriage can be a kind of bedrock for society as it would help to produce stable, contributing members of society.

      So if I were king for a day, here's how I would set it up. Anybody can get married and all gender permutations are allowed.

      Here's the catch - there would be several tiers of marriage. At the lowest tier, anyone can be married and enjoy some of the government honored benefits of marriage. At the highest tier, only couples who can demonstrate the most stable of relationships can join, and consequently receive the greatest government honored benefits such as all the benefits now given to married couples as well as a few extras like greater per-child tax deductions, etc.

      Marriages of the lowest tier would have easy no-fuss divorces. Divorce would be much more difficult for marriages of the highest tier because, remember, the goal is to promote stable marriages. If you want the greatest benefits, you need to make the greatest commitments.

      As for marriages without children, it should be easier to enter into a top-tier marriage because these laws would really be aimed at helping out children. But, as soon as a marriage adds children to the equation, then the tougher rules apply.

      How would a couple demonstrate stability? By specialized education. As king I would expand universities to offer special two and four year degrees in marriage and parenting - couples with degrees can be in the highest tier. Such degrees would be 100% paid for by the state. If you want to stay in the highest tier, you have to take brush-up courses from time to time and continually demonstrate that you can walk the walk. For marriages of the highest tiers, counseling services would be available - again 100% free.

      So, in response the parent's statement, in a perfect world couples (whether straight or gay) would be denied some of the benefits of marriage if they cannot demonstrate an ability to maintain a stable marriage. This should be especially true if you have children.

    31. Re:*Democracy* at work by Copid · · Score: 1
      If the state forces religions (mainly the Catholic Church) to recognize gay marriage, then the freedoms of religion of Catholics is limited.

      The Catholic Church whouldn't be forced to recognize gay marriages. IIRC, the Catholic Church doesn't recognize marriages from other churches now, and they didn't need a constitutional amendment banning non-Catholic marriages to do it. What's ridiculous is the Catholic Church preventing the government from performing and recognizing civil marriages.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    32. Re:*Democracy* at work by skeptictank · · Score: 2

      A marriage is not a union of two people. It is a union of two families. The purpose of marriage is not to provide you or anyone else with companionship, it's to provide as many resources as possible to raise children. You can get compansionship and love without getting married. Marriage is about having and raising children, that's it. If you don't want to have and raise children there is no point in getting married. It exist because it almost always takes the resources of two families to successfully teach and raise kids over the course of 20 years to be adult human beings. As such marriage, has and should continue to have a special legal status in any society that wants to still exits in several generation.

    33. Re:*Democracy* at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it would encourage the "homosexual lifestyle": [... snip snip snip ...] the fist place?

      Ahem. Freudian slut? ;-).

    34. Re:*Democracy* at work by rtb144 · · Score: 1

      I never said the serial murder had no consent. Even if he had consent, it is still illegal.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
    35. Re:*Democracy* at work by cwgmpls · · Score: 0
      If you don't want to have and raise children there is no point in getting married.

      So why is nobody suggesting that we ban marriage between people who refuse to raise children and permit marriage to any couple, straight or gay, who agrees to raise children through reproduction, assisted reproduction, adoption, raising nephews and nieces, foster families, or any other way that children are born and raised in our society?

      Banning gay marriage is not about raising kids. Straights who refuse to raise kids get married all the time. It is about denying legal recognition to couples, even couples willing and able to raise children, simply because they are gay

  213. Chirality by Onan · · Score: 1

    Left-handedness is actually a great analogy. Somewhat similar percentage of the populace (roughly one in eight), somewhat similar effect on one's ability to perform most jobs (none), and somewhat similar moral implications (none). And it lacks the strong feelings associated with sexuality, so it can be discussed more clearly.

    So to answer your question, I'd say that if there was a frequent occurrence of people being denied employment or treated differently in the workplace because of their left-handedness, then yes, I'd be in favor of legislation making that mistreatment illegal. So far as I know, that's not the case, so chirality-equality laws are not needed.

    I suppose the question that comes to my mind is how you see this as being different from the illegality of some other forms of discrimination. Do you also feel that since black people need only the same rights and protections as white people, racial discrimination laws are unecessary?

  214. non sequitur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You truly are a dissembling clown.

    "no pictures of gay lovers" cannot apply to all persons, gay or straight, by definition - it applies only to gay persons.

    Oh never mind, get back to thumping your bible.

  215. Look at PoliSci and CompSci for the answer... by noblethrasher · · Score: 1

    The real issue with the homosexuality debate to me concerns what classes the government should recognize. After all, you must recognize a class before you can discriminate it. So the first question is whether or not the government should recognize sexual orientation as a class. In the (admittedly tortured) parlance of computer languages: is sexual orientation a first class... class? The problem is one of vagueness. Clearly sex (gender) and age (juvenile/adult) are first class categories. Even though they are recognized as such I'm not sure that economic status, physical ability, and race (and I'm a non-white btw) should be. On the absurd end of the spectrum I'm pretty certain that eye color and hair length, sir name, left/right-hand dexterity, etc should not be considered first class categories. Sexual orientation falls in there somewhere that continuum. To further torture the computer science analogy, to me it seems that a good government is like a good OS. The kernel (central government) should contain the bare minimum needed to run. It should recognize only natural categories and leave local governments (state, city, trade unions, etc) to sort out the rest. That's what makes for a stable government. We give the central government purview over those things that are based on sound, immutable principle and let subordinate governments handle the rest. That way if one of the lesser governments gets something very wrong, it doesn't bring down the entire system (hence true federalism is good). So, if it is the case that sexual orientation is not a first class category then we're done with the federal level. On the other hand, if it is the case that sexual orientation is a natural class, then we still have to recognize and wrestle with the fact that heterosexual and homosexual relationships are materially different. Even though we say that they can both "have sex", it is a fact of biology that only one can allow for copulation. Hence one is necessary for the continuance of society (which generally wants to persist in its existence) and the other is superfluous. For someone like me who thinks that government (at least the central one) should do the bare minimum to maintain a civil society, I can find no justification for artificially imposing any kind of parity on sexual orientation or even recognizing it at all.

  216. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

    I repeat:

    read

    --
    Sig removed because it was obnoxious
  217. No, eno2001 has got it right. by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

    This totally off the wall.

    You know I went with my friend to pick up his marriage license today and I saw no religious symbols in the office. It was all about judges, clerks and other arms of the federal, state and local governments. The contract is between the state, the bride and groom and that is it.

    So, why don't we tell these pastors to butt out of secular affairs?

  218. I say by ifwm · · Score: 1

    Good for them.

  219. 10 years ago it was the same by davidwr · · Score: 1

    10 years ago, gay sex was a felony in some states. Granted, these weren't age of consent laws, but they were laws nonetheless.

    It wasn't until a few years ago when the Supreme Court said sex between adults was pretty much a right that those laws became invalid.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  220. Knowing congress... by kesuki · · Score: 1

    They probably added something rediculous to the bill, so that if it passed it would allow employers to 'protect' themselves if they inquired as to the sexual status of an employee shortly before they were mysteriously terminated from their position.

    Congress sucks. M$ft sucks too, but they probably had good reason to go to 'neutral' status on this..

  221. Re:Companies are private organizations by smorpheus · · Score: 1

    If you're going to blantantly show-off your ignorance to the wilds of the inter-web and start throwing around accusations of perversions, you really need to learn how to spell it first.

  222. To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

    1. I am not a homophobe.

    You are mistaking an objective view on the subject as being anti homosexual.

    Religion is protected by the constitution, I left it up to the reader to drum up support and remove it from the constitution. You can do something about this to equalize it, the best bet is to remove all choice based rights from the spectrum. This country was based on the fact as Religion being a fundemental choice that everyone would be expected to make, and stick with in some capacity or another. So it is protected. If you would like that protected status removed from religion, let me reiterate, you can drum up support in the United States and get it removed, or if it is also in your country (not US) you can simply drum up support through whatever processes are available to you to get it removed from there.

    Until then, I am going to have to work from the premise that this is the only exception to rule that you do not allow a fundemental external choice to be discriminated against.

    As to your beleif that homosexuality is not a choice.

    1. you need to fundementally prove this. You cannot just state it to be so and then have it be true.

    In the sense of skin color, gender, etc... Nothing you fundementally do will change those aspects about you, except through hiding it.

    In the aspect of homosexuality you can easily say "I am gay" and then you would be a protected class. The mere assertion of it, places you in the protected class. When it comes to religion, even religions are not protected class when the religious invdividual makes a habitual nuicance of themselves, so it is not completely protected in the way that someone who has say... lost a leg is protected.

    If you are asking for Homosexuality, a choice, to be protected the same as Religion, again I leave it as an excersize to the reader to do this, enjoy your uphill battle and know that you leave it open for any choice based activity to become a protected class.

    Once you enter the realm of allowing a choice about something to make the determing factor of protection, you really have to worry about where that could possibly head.

    NOTE:
    Also, again the research issue, I do know about the twin studies done, but if you look at the research and how it was conducted, it was not conducted in a manner where the sample sizes were metered very well, and the sample pool was pulled from those pre-disposed to meet the criteria for proof of genetics in homosexuality.

    For example, there has been no study where twins were asked to join, and then asked "are you gay" from all twins of a large subset, but were asked for twin pairs from magazines that would likely find groups of homosexuals reading them. Again, I do not say I am against these things, but even in that focused group where there were guarenteed matches (not scientific) the precentage was still relatively low. And to make the percentages higher, you REALLY have to play with the numbers a lot.

    If you read the studies and the people that try to prove them, it becomes harder than trying to track the number of times our president has changed his reasons for tracking Iraq.

    --
    If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    1. Re:To Reply To All Of You by AviLazar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1. you need to fundementally prove this. You cannot just state it to be so and then have it be true.

      How can I prove something that is not there? Prove to me that it is a choice. For me it is not a choice. Yes I could force myself to go to a guy, kiss him and try and have sex with him...then again, I could also take a knife and stab my hand with it, then take the knife and poke my eye out. So since my sexuality is not a choice, (the same of my friends/acquaintences), then it is a logical assumption that it is not about a choice - it is how you feel.

      As for protection - if there is supposed to be this separation of church and state - how is the church getting the state to pass anti-gay laws. Same as usual - state is run by people, people have beliefs, people vote and lobby on these beliefs. I do not think religious rights should be removed (Thats insane) but I think sexuality rights should be on the same level as religious rights.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    2. Re:To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      Ok, then I should just take your word on it and move on?

      I am sorry, I cannot do that from an objective point of view.

      As I said, I leave it as an excersize to the reader to do what you fundementally beleive needs to be done to bring equality.

      I would hold that most people do not feel that the choice to be homosexual is in the same realm as an ingrained religious beleif that you learned as a child. Though both may have been something because of how a person was raised. Again, the other way to create equality in choice based situations would be to remove Religion as a protected class.

      Your question "How can I prove something that is not there" is a pretty big deal. In fact, it is the entire cusp of the issue. With blacks, women, age, etc... you can easily and fundementally prove an assertion. For me to say "I am white" it is easy to look at my skin and make that judgement. If Colon Powell were to assert that he was white would be obvious that it were not so, etc...

      If I were to assert "I am Gay" there would be no way to prove or disprove the claim. You could not take a genetic test and prove it. You could not look at my actions and prove it (unless you use stereotypes of homosexuality and that only works with bigots).

      So you have your conundrum, you want your choice to be true to the extent you feel this is a civil rights issue and that your rights are being denied. It simply is not true. I do not know how you came to the choice, and for you it may not have SEEMED like a choice, but whether by environment or finding someone in life that you truly loved who happened to be male, you became a homosexual. Remember, choice does not necessarrilly have to be PERSONAL choice, the choice can be made for you through environment.

      I had no choice in being raised as a Christian, for example, though it is unlikely I will ever denounce Christianity at this point, though I consider it a choice of the environment I was raised in.

      Some people may feel that they have no choice to commit other acts, or to have attractions for children. If there were genetic markers to determine these things, we could essentially stop pedophilia. There are not genetic markers for sexuality, it is not something you are born with, and I think that that throws it right out of the realm of being a rights issue.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    3. Re:To Reply To All Of You by AviLazar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Though both may have been something because of how a person was raised.

      Two brothers, roughly born the same time. One is gay one is straight. I guess mom had a greater influence on the gay one right? Prove that its nurture and not nature? What about the rough and tough dad who raises his son to be a ladies-man, only to find out one day that his son is gay? What about the gay parents who raise a straight child?

      For me to say "I am white" it is easy to look at my skin and make that judgement

      I had a friend in HS. I thought he was white. His skin was white, he had blue eyes, brown hair, a white persons facial features - did not look african american. His mom and dad are black. People look at me and say I am white...I am middle eastern which is Asian. Physical appearance is not a needed qualifier of what you are.

      So you have your conundrum, you want your choice to be true to the extent you feel this is a civil rights issue and that your rights are being denied

      Can two men go to any court townhouse in this country and say "I want to marry my lover, who is also a man."? Nope. They cannot - it's a civil rights issue. A person does not have to prove they are gay by some genetic testing, they just have to live the life and that is proof enough. A straight guy is not going to have sex with men unless he is gay (or bi-sexual)

      Christianity at this point, though I consider it a choice of the environment I was raised in.

      That is called being raised by "nurture".

      You are obviously not going to listen to what I have to say. Keep believing that a person chooses to be gay, keep believing that there is no civil rights issues - that gay people are treated just the same as everyone else. It is really a shame though that you think that. It does not matter if oyu think it is a persons choice or not a persons choice - if a person is gay they have less rights then if they were straight. There cannot be an argument about that - and if you choose to do so then you are very very very blind to what is going on in our country and the world.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    4. Re:To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      "if a person is gay they have less rights then if they were straight"

      no they dont have less rights. You have not fundementally proved that they have less rights, merely that they do not have other rights that heterosexuals do not have.

      Two heterosexual men cannot get married, neither can two heterosexual women.

      Your argument is based solely on that you feel that your choice to be homosexual seperates you into a different group with its own needs and rights as everyone else.

      I do not.

      Pedophiles for example may truly and honestly feel that their sexuality is as obvious to them as you feel your sexuality is obvious to you. Should we give them a wide birth and rights because of the choice or "not choice" as you feel?

      No, of course not, I am not saying that you are on the same level of pedophiles, I am saying you are on the same level as heterosexuals and that sexual desire in this case is flat, all on the same level of perceived desire for each other.

      The rules apply the same accross this flat landscape. A man can marry a women and vice versa, but a man cannot marry a man and a women cannot marry a women.

      This has nothing to do with homophobia, there just seems to be little reason to change the rule other than demands for it to be changed.

      In the UNited States (of which I assume you are a citizen) there is a process that can be taken to alter the constitution, or change the laws regarding these things. Those actions have been taken, and they failed utterlly. Most recently they failed in Kansas, which even went a step further in equality and removed heterosexual common law unions from being recognized, which means there is no contradiction now with homosexual common law unions.

      The attempt to circumvent the process by trying to create a protected class around choice is heinous. Voting, and laws, are the proper direction for this. If you want homosexuals to be a protected class, all you simply have to do is convince enough people that it is true, and place it on a ballot and get it voted on.

      If you feel that this is infeasible, you will note that many things that people want to be law are rejected constantly, and have nothing to do with rights issues either.

      To reiterate, there is a process here, and it can be followed. If you are not able to get laws passed to protect based on your choice, then it is a failure of your groups skills at lobbying and not a civil rights failure.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    5. Re:To Reply To All Of You by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      no they dont have less rights. You have not fundementally proved that they have less rights, merely that they do not have other rights that heterosexuals do not have.

      You just proved it for me. Thanks.

      In the UNited States (of which I assume you are a citizen) there is a process that can be taken to alter the constitution, or change the laws regarding these things.

      Where in the constitution does it say a man cannot marry a man?


      I just realized, you are either a troll (though I doubt this), a bigot, or just really ignorant to society. I am hoping for the latter.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    6. Re:To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      I proved it by stating that they do not have more rights than heterosexuals?

      The constitution does not say that you cannot marry, the laws do. I merely gave you 2 alternatives, you chose to focus on 1 of them.

      One, is to change the constitution to give you protected status.

      OR (note the OR)

      That you can lobby and change the laws of the United States to fundementally alter marriage.

      Going through the court system to have them re-define the meaning of the constitution without putting it to a vote of the American people seems terribly... illegitimate.

      Also, there are several states that have constitutional ammendmants specifically defining marriage as one man and one woman. Which means that they are excesizing their rights under ammendmant 10 (i beleive) of the constitution to make laws and ammendmants not covered in the constitution.

      Black people were able to get a constitutional ammendmant, if you feel your case is strong enough you can get one for homosexuals. There is nothing to stop you other than public support, and I leave that up to you and other homosexuals to drum up.

      The civil rights movement, for example, was to get the laws in line with the ammendmant that was passed ensuring that everyone was equal. The problem here is that homosexuals are equal, and have the same rights, they are just angry that those rights are not expanded so that they can what they wish to do.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    7. Re:To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      One other note

      [quote]
      Article XIV.

      Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
      [/quote]

      All laws are being equally applied here. There is no conflict with the constitution.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    8. Re:To Reply To All Of You by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      And you still did not answer my question. But given this tidbit of information - well obviously there can be no civil liberties broken - ever. I mean the whole Martin L King movement must have been a hoax - minorities never did lose rights - they were making it up. Dude sorry, i normally do not resort to this but you are really blinded or insane.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    9. Re:To Reply To All Of You by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

      I did answer your question, I made two posts as you can see in your reply list. It is not my fault or on my concience that you only read one of the posts.

      I did indeed address the issue of their being no ammendmant broken.

      As to your jab concerning Martin Luther King, there was indeed an ammendmant being broken. Do you claim that not allowing homosexuals to marry violates the congresses right to make laws regulating inter-state commerce? If so, all you have to do is convince the supreme court that this is indeed the case, and then the Congress will then take a look into it and decide if it wants to add a deeper focus on the issue with an ammendmant.

      Considering that there are 17 seats held by democrats coming up for re-election soon, and the Republicans do not seem to have any chance of losing any, I would certainly wait to make this argument after the Republican controlled senate has passed.

      Your argument also fails, heterosexuals or homosexuals are not a part of an ethnic minority. Blacks are part of an ethnic minority. Homosexuals can be of any race, color, or other metric. So linking yourself with a minority group based on ethnicity instead of choice is indeed an incredibly far reach.

      I would like to see how you can support the logical link between ethnic minorities and a choice minority.

      --
      If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
  223. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by merpal · · Score: 1

    Since you hate people who hate people, and I hate people who hate people who hate people, I took the liberty to sign you up for lots of Nazi/KKK mailing lists.

    Enjoy. :D

  224. MOD PARENT UP by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

    Damn I wish I had mod points.... you are spot on. Karma be damned.

    --
    -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
  225. It varies by state by benhocking · · Score: 1
    • In Arkansas, it must first pass both houses by a simple majority in order for the general public to be given a chance to vote on it. It must pass the general public by a simple majority.
    • In Georgia and Mississippi, it must first pass both houses by a 2/3 vote in order for the general public to be given a chance to vote on it. It must pass the general public by a simple majority.
    • In Kentucky, it must first pass both houses by a 3/5 vote, and then a simple majority in the general public.
    • In Montana, it can be put in front of the general public by either passing both houses with a 2/3 vote OR a petition of 10% of the registered voters. From there, a simple majority is all that's required.
    The point being is that, it varies by state. I have simplified the process somewhat (and might have inadvertently left off alternative scenarios), so for more information see Cornell's web-site on all things legal.
    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  226. This is fine with me by acoustix · · Score: 1, Troll

    Like all Christians who believe that the Bible is the truth, I think that the act of being gay/lesbian is a sin. I would oppose any legistlation that gave special recognition to gays and lesbians.

    That being said, I don't think that gays and lesbians are more sinful than myself. Hate the sin, love the sinner.

    -Nick

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:This is fine with me by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think this is very true. As much as a disagree with the lifestyle all sin is equal in God's eyes.

      You Sir, have very skillfully said what I had been stumbling for words for.

    2. Re:This is fine with me by RichardX · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What part of "equal rights" don't you understand?
      It's not about special recognition, it's about equal rights. The right to marriage, for example.

      A married couple pays a damn site less tax than an unmarried couple. Therefore gay couples are forced to pay far more in taxes than an equivalent hetero couple, and as a result have less disposable income.
      Seeking to fix issues like that is hardly asking for special recognition.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    3. Re:This is fine with me by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How do you reconcile that our current marriage laws give special treatment to heterosexual couples over gay couples? Aren't heterosexual couples just as sinful as homosexual couples, why are they given special treatment by state endorsement?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    4. Re:This is fine with me by callipygian-showsyst · · Score: 1
      Can you show me where in your "Bible" there's anything against lesbianism?

      I, too, am a religious person. But any follower of an Abrahamic religion who makes up things that aren't in the bible as given to Moses is violation at least two of the "10 Commandments" (and several more of the entire 613 commandments), and is sure to face the consequences when its time for you to meet your Creator.

    5. Re:This is fine with me by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 2, Informative

      I do not live under the Law of Moses - I am saved by the grace of Jesus Christ. Therefore, my guidelines for living are outlined in the New Testament:

      "Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God." (1 Co 6:9-10)

      "For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature." (Ro 1:26)

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    6. Re:This is fine with me by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1

      Gays have the same right to marry as heterosexuals - they can marry someone of the opposite sex. Marrying someone of the same sex is a special right.

      Until President Bush did away with the so-called Marriage Penalty, married couples paid more in tax than they do now. I'd talk with some Democratic leaders and ask why they didn't abolish the marriage penalty when they had the chance.

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    7. Re:This is fine with me by acoustix · · Score: 1
      " What part of "equal rights" don't you understand? It's not about special recognition, it's about equal rights. The right to marriage, for example."

      Apparently you didn't understand my first post. By my believing that homosexuality is a sin, I don't want homosexuals to have the right to marry. I believe that marriage is sacred.

      -Nick

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    8. Re:This is fine with me by acoustix · · Score: 1
      " How do you reconcile that our current marriage laws give special treatment to heterosexual couples over gay couples? Aren't heterosexual couples just as sinful as homosexual couples, why are they given special treatment by state endorsement?"

      Yes, heterosexuals are just as sinful as homosexuals. Does that mean that we should keep sinning on purpose? No. My faith and beliefs won't allow me to say that homosexual marriage is OK.

      -Nick

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    9. Re:This is fine with me by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Gays have the same right to marry as heterosexuals - they can marry someone of the opposite sex. Marrying someone of the same sex is a special right.

      Not at all. Straight people would have the same right - they'd be allowed to marry people of the same sex too. See? Everyone's happy!

      Your point is basically "Gays have the right to be treated equally simply by being heterosexual"
      A gay couple does not have the same rights in their gay relationship that a hetereosexual couple has in their hetereosexual relationship.
      In other words, a gay relationship is seen as less than a straight relationship. That is called inequality.

      And for what it's worth, I'm straight, but hell, I'd like the freedom to marry a man if I chose to.

      How's that rapture of yours coming along, btw? Anyone been beamed up yet?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    10. Re:This is fine with me by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I am saved by the grace of Jesus Christ. Therefore, my guidelines for living are outlined in the New Testament:

      "Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God." (1 Co 6:9-10)

      Well, that's what one particular translation into English says. The King James edition says:

      Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, Nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God

      The English Standard Version translation says:

      Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.

      That word that the KJ edition translates as effeminate, and that your ediition gives as homosexuals, and that the ESV gives as "men who practice homosexuality" is the greek word malakos, which refers to boys who served as live-in prostitutes for wealthy men (who usually had wives). Basically, boys kept purely for sexual purposes. The word your edition has translated as sodomite actually meant a male temple prostitute.

      In other words, saying that 1 Cor 9 condemns homosexuality is about as ridiculous as saying that it condemns hererosexuality because it condemns adultry. All it actually condems is homosexuality in the context of certain kinds of prostitution.

      Question: if you actually believe the Bible, why don't you think it is important enough to actually read in the original language? It always puzzles me that people can believe that this book records the actual will of God, but not care enough to want to discover what it says.

    11. Re:This is fine with me by radja · · Score: 1

      apparently, you want special recognition of your religion. You want the rules of your religion to be the law.

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    12. Re:This is fine with me by acoustix · · Score: 1
      " apparently, you want special recognition of your religion. You want the rules of your religion to be the law."

      The rules of the Bible are the laws that I try to live by.

      -Nick

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    13. Re:This is fine with me by callipygian-showsyst · · Score: 1
      In other words, saying that 1 Cor 9 condemns homosexuality is about as ridiculous as saying that it condemns hererosexuality because it condemns adultry. All it actually condems is homosexuality in the context of certain kinds of prostitution.

      And not only that, he still evaded my first question! Where in the "Bible" (either the one given to Moses on Mt. Sinai or the xtian one) does it say ANYTHING about LESBIANS? That was what this poster had claimed. Even a literal interpretation of the Greek for the so-called "New Testament" shows only male homosexuals.

    14. Re:This is fine with me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But according to the First Amendment, it is illegal to make that law. Go read it sometime and then quit being a bigot. Private bigotry is one thing - putting bigotry into our laws is immoral, from a governmental standpoint.

    15. Re:This is fine with me by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Then how about you and those Christians who feel similarly let us exercise our god-given free will and decide whether or not we want to live by those laws instead of trying to make god's rules into law, thereby essentially stripping of us free will?

    16. Re:This is fine with me by Discoflamingo13 · · Score: 1

      This was the same logic used to forbid interracial marriage ("black people have the same rights as white people - to marry a member of their own race"). Laws for the "separate but equal" treatment of individual gruops has not withstood scrutiny by SCOTUS.

    17. Re:This is fine with me by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1

      "Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God." (1 Co 6:9-10)

      Dictionary.com has the word "homosexual" as "Of, relating to, or having a sexual orientation to persons of the same sex" and "a homosexual person; a gay man or a lesbian."

      I think you're drawing straws.

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    18. Re:This is fine with me by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Since when did your faith and beliefs override mine?
      Since when did your faith and beliefs override anyone else's?

      If I am not allowed to force my faith and beliefs on you, then why should you be able to force them on me?

      Isn't this America? Don't I have just as much liberty of conscience as you? No one is saying you have to marry someone of the same sex. No one is saying your church has to recognize such a marriage. Just like your church is not forced to marry Buddhists or Hindus, you're church will never be required to have any opinion on same-sex marriage. Your church is not the state. The state has NO religious or moral OPINION. None. If it did, we wouldn't have religious freedom.

      If you believe same-sex marriage is a sin or morally wrong, then don't participate. No one forces your participation by applying the principle of equality under the law. Apparently you think your views are above that principle.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  227. Re:Companies are private organizations by anagama · · Score: 1

    AMEN brother!

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  228. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some Indian rules are really stupid just as some politicians. For example, these politicans wanted some movie title names to be in Indian language rather than in English. They do not care anything regarding the contents of the film. Even if it is a porn movie, it is fine. But, movie titles should be in Indian languages. When a lesbian issue comes up, most of the political parties commit act of violence, bribe judges to give stupid judgements like these... all kinds of crap.

  229. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by bird603568 · · Score: 0

    i was explaining it in terms of the chromosmes. so how do 2 gay dude or 2 dykes have a conceive a child?

  230. Animal consent, another non-absolute... by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 1

    and that animals aren't able to consent to sex with humans at all

    Welll.... There WAS this one Internet video I saw passed around... with a male donkey and this very large human woman bent over... and it sure looked like the donkey was just consenting away, and could get away at any time...

  231. active participation != consent by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Well, not in the legal sense of the word.

    As another poster pointed out, consent has to be informed, something a dog cannot give.

    It's not relevant to dogs, but to count legally consent also has to be voluntary:

    If a rapist's parter-in-crime kidnaps your children and I say "have sex with me or he'll shoot your kids" you may "consent" but that's under duress and doesn't count, it's still rape.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  232. "activist judges" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Gosh there's plenty of other "activist judge" decisions that should be overturned as well, like anti-miscegenation laws, desegregation decrees, discrimination suits...

    Heck, let's just turn the clock back to the 1950s (or 1850s)!

    1. Re:"activist judges" by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      I agree and disagree with you. There are good things that have been done by activist judges, but I would argue that it is a question of weither the ends justifty the means. If we cannot uphold our laws in the most tense of situations why should we uphold them at all?

  233. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by satat · · Score: 1

    You know just because there are two people in a apparently 'strait' relationship does not by that merit make a 'normal' couple. Whose definition of normal are we using here anyway, and who is to say that particular definition is the correct one.

    I'm in a marriage that consists of a man that is somewhat a transvestite and a female that is bisexual. We originally got married because we were under the impression that marriage was what two people who loved each other and wanted to spend their lives together did. Damn we were made to look quite the fools though.

    Through all this recent discussion of marriage going on as of the late we've found out that marriage's sole purpose is for making babies! How dumb we must feel having taken notable measures NOT to have children.

    Opinions on zero population growth aside, I believe adoption to be much more of a viable option for dealing with the need to nurture a human child ( I'll stick to cats myself ). At least with adoption your giving those that are all ready here a chance to have a decent life. More people should be adopting in my opinion.

    by the parents thinking who's to say that I can have an adopted child because I've satisfied some arbitrary rule of being in a 'heterosexual' relationship? I've broken all the others by being gay and thus a non 'normal' right?

    If a bisexual and a transvestite that happen to be the opposite sex are ok to raise children and start a family then I think by that merit a transvestite and a bisexual of the same sex should be awarded the same right universally.

  234. Eureka! by TamMan2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But you see, the very act of gay sex is considered harmful to both parties. That's why your argument is flawed.

    Yes! I've got it now... You are oh so right.

    Things that are harmful should be illegal... I don't know why I didn't see it that way before.

    Lets outlaw fatty foods, and smoking, and drinking too, those are all harmful to the parties partaking of them.

    --
    "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    1. Re:Eureka! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just made my non sequitur detector blow up. Thanks a lot.

  235. Whoa! Einstein by donutello · · Score: 1

    So what you're saying is that to pay the Christian Coalition for its support rendered back in 2000, Microsoft first supported a bill backing Gay Rights and then withdrew support from it as payback?

    Wouldn't a better way to pay it back be to not get involved in the first place - like every other company out there?

    At least they tried to get a Gay Rights bill passed - which is more than we can say for most other companies.

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
  236. Gah by CTachyon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the perks of being a programmer is that, normally, coding is a refuge from thinking about this kind of crap. GCC doesn't give a fliegende kinderscheisse that I'm gay.

    For a while I couldn't read the newspaper without getting a knot in my stomach, and just looking at the Opinion section can give me a headache these days without even reading it. Between what my own state is up to and the creepy backlash building up at the national level, I've decided that sticking it out in the U.S. just isn't worth it and I'm currently saving up to move to Vancouver.

    Now, though, the insanity is even making its way onto the Slashdot front page. Tech companies being gay-friendly has always just been a given in the back of my mind. The fact that the biggest of them all is backing off due to outside pressure has me worried even more. I can't shake the feeling that there's something big and scary happening here in the U.S. right now, and the backlash against gay rights is only the tip of it.

    --
    Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    1. Re:Gah by tbradshaw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As a fellow Kansan, I just want to apologize.

      It's not that it's my fault, but I'm absolutely ashamed that something this obviously wrong made it into our state constitution. But it was easy to have rose-colored glasses here at Kansas State University where I had the pleasure of honking for Vote NO protests as I left campus, and I was more than happy to spend two weeks of my weekly libertarian talk radio show (Freedom to Choose, KSDB Manhattan) talking about just how assinine this ammendment was. I just couldn't convince myself that something so obviously *wrong* could end up passing.

      I don't blame you for leaving. I'm a libertarian heterosexual white male in Kansas (read: "unthreatened"), and even I am uncomfortable with the change in political climate in Kansas and other "conservative" states.

      After I'm finished here at Kansas State, I'll be leaving too. I've always been proud to be a Kansan, because I've had a great life and everyone that I'm around here in Kansas is phenominal. But first Fred Phelps, and now this.

      I'll be happy to leave. Geeks are a remarkedly tolerant people. I hope Kansas gets the "brain drain" it deserves.

  237. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "They should be whipped and tortured for being so sick."

    Now tell me again about "letting every freak fetish become acceptable"?

  238. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Novous · · Score: 1

    >What makes homosexuals any less fit to provide that?

    While I agree that discrimination for pretty much any reason is horrible and just plain stupid:

    Children learn how to act from the parent of the same-sex. They learn how to interact with the opposite sex from the parent of the opposite sex. While this isn't a reason to ban homosexuals from raising children (at least SOMEONE cares enough to raise them, right?), it certainly makes it harder to raise them correctly.

  239. snicker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And in many people's minds space aliens are REAL and LIVING AMONG US. I think you're one of them!

  240. Who cares? by DM9290 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft can't even vote.

    Should anyone care whether or not a corporation "supports" a bill? (especially a publically traded corporation).

    Isn't it more important to know what the citizens support?

    Corporations (especially publically traded ones) will "support" whatever appears to benefit their bottom line. What does that say about a law's merit?

    Corporations dont even care about the economy in general.

    If a law was to increase the GDP by an additional 2% (beyond its expected growth under the status quo) but result in an additional 20% re-distribution of all wealth more equally you can bet most corporations would oppose it (especially the largest ones).

    --
    No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
  241. How do you recommend they resolve conflicts? by benhocking · · Score: 1

    Or vagueness? Many laws (if not most) have a fair amount of vagueness in them (some by design), and sometimes two laws conflict with each other. Now, sometimes the ambiguity can be resolved by looking at the intent of the law, to the degree that such a thing exists. (Most people will agree that there's a "spirit" and a "letter" of the law. Where the "letter" is inexact, the "spirit" can help.) However, sometimes a case arises that even the best intentioned (and/or most conservative) judge cannot resolve simply by looking at past precedence, the spirit of the law, etc. In these cases, what is the proper avenue for this judge? Is it better to look at how other countries have resolved this situation and learn from their successes AND failures (i.e., if their resolution resulted in chaos, perhaps a different resolution should be considered), or should the judge rely on the toss of a coin? Or, better yet, perhaps he should ask his favorite political party for an opinion?

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:How do you recommend they resolve conflicts? by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      There are at least two alternatives that are better:

      1. Decline to hear the case at all, until a more amenable factual situation arises (only an option for the SCOTUS.)

      2. Invalidate the law for being unconstitutionally vague. If the court can't figure it out, how can anybody who is supposed to follow the law?

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  242. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let me guess, you think blacks, jews, and mexicans shouldn't be foster parent's either.

  243. An embarrassing day for /. by rufusdufus · · Score: 1

    Why did so many slashdotters fall for this obvious hoax? This story right here, for everyone who believed it for even a second should be a wakeup call to how disconnected from reality they have become. How many other bogus misrepresentations about Microsoft or other entities have you been suckered into believing?

  244. Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by hypervinetest45 · · Score: 1

    Do you @ssholes even read the bible anymore?

    Christians are encouraged to promote and share their faith with others. Too often do we see Christian figureheads trying to enforce it upon others whom do not share their beliefs. Belief in a 'god' should not be enforced. That's a fascistic line you're crossing.

    Like it or not, as Americans we all have the freedom of free speech thing going for us - you have every right to speak your mind and shout "Gay marriage is wrong!" until you're blue in the face. BUT you do NOT have the right to bar gay couples from marriage. You argue that marriage is sacred to you? Yippee for you, but who is to say that marriage is any less sacred to a gay or lesbian couple?!

    The 'Christian right' need to put down their torches and focus on parenting their children. Christians (are supposed to) believe that judgment is reserved for their god alone.

    Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

    1. Re:Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1
      Did you read my post? Do you understand my position? Maybe I haven't made myself clear enough...

      I think I'm going to have to make this clear--I don't think marriage is any business of the federal government.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    2. Re:Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you hate it when you're arguing with someone, only to discover that you're on the same side?

      I must say, though, that you seem like a good Christian. Keep up the faith, it's sad to see so many prominent people who call themselves devout Christians, but don't follow any of Jesus' teachings. The few good souls who actually follow the teachings are a pleasant reminder of the way it should be.

      - an atheist

    3. Re:Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, I really hate that. One of the big problems with online discussion. Tone and body language are key :)

      I must say, though, that you seem like a good Christian.

      To be theologically accure, no one gets to be a good Christian. We actually all suck at it pretty hardcore.

      - an atheist

      -an ex-atheist

    4. Re:Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by ABaumann · · Score: 1

      Do you @ssholes even read the bible anymore?

      Okay, I'll bite, mostly cause I actually read the Bible, and appearently you haven't.

      Most people refer to Paul's letter to the Romans when talking about homosexuality:

      For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error.And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper.

      Romans 1:26-28 (NASB)


      Paul used this as an example of a community that was without God. Paul viewed homosexuality as a controllable sin, something you wouldn't do if you had a relationship with God. When Jesus accepted the adulterous woman, he finished by telling her, "Go, and sin no more." The reasons that we, as Christians, are so against homosexual marriage, is because we're against these signs that we are no longer a country without God. When the framers of the Constitution created the Bill of Rights, separation of Church and state was there to protect the Churches from the Government. Now, as our society has gone towards accepting things like homosexuality, atheists have championed separation of Church and state to protect their beliefs.

      I don't support gay marriage and believe that our country shouldn't either. Appearently I'm in the majority, seeing as eleven states actually passed laws against gay marriage during the last election. As a Christian, I realize that we're all sinners, but we were never told that we should support sinful practices. We're told to forgive, not to encourage.

    5. Re:Hear ye, intolerant bast@rds by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1
      For the most part, I agree, but I don't think that our founding fathers were the sparking Super-Christians that we are lead to believe. Many of them were deists, many were even atheists.

      Even though I also think homosexuality is a sin, I simply think the government has no place defining marriage (this kind of controversy sparked separation of Church and State to begin with). Well, I take that back. It's kind of necessary at the local level.

      I don't think that changing the laws would have much of an effect on the hearts of Americans (neither would Paul--Galatians comes to mind). If they do, in fact, need Jesus, then the Evangelicals ought to get to work on...evangelism.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  245. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    i was explaining it in terms of the chromosmes. so how do 2 gay dude or 2 dykes have a conceive a child?
    The same way two straight dudes and two straight women would conceive children, you inveterate moron.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  246. So what *does* the law say... by lpangelrob2 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    For the record, I consider myself an evangelical Christian, but I'm puzzled at times by the divisive attitude of some pastors in the evangelical church. (I'm more puzzled that the media often doesn't report the full story of what those pastors say, choosing to linger on inciting charges of anti-gay bashing) Face it, homosexuality was widespread in the culture at the time of the New Testament. It isn't new.

    If you're a believer, you're expected to remain sexually pure... to not have a hint of sexual immorality. It really is that black and white.

    If you're a government, the Bible says *nothing* about it.

    I've heard arguments about how allowing gays to marry would induce the fall of society, and I just don't buy into that substructure-type view of society. Gay people will get married, life goes on.

    Furthermore, this country was built on equality, and as the child of immigrants seeking freedom, I respect that view.

    Anyways, there's always a lot of un-Christ-like flaming when this subject comes up... I'd rather just put it behind us and get back to love, because it's pretty clear that discrimination and flaming isn't making things any clearer.

  247. Death to religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What needs to happen here is a systematic elimination of all religion(s), and all who believe in them with blind devotion. I vote that we use the most painful methods possible to exact this plan. Religion is an idea that's gone well past the need for it, and as such, needs to be abolished.

    1. Re:Death to religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as you include all the anti-religious zealots in your painful systematic elimination, sounds like a plan.

    2. Re:Death to religion by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, just don't expect me to tolerate your belifs either.

  248. good point if way off-topic - what is a minor? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    This is getting way off the original MS-backs-down-from-gay-rights topic, but it does bother me that 14-17 year olds are being treated as adults in the courts but they cannot vote or marry without parental consent. 14-17 year olds are in that "between time" between young adolescence and full-fledged, mature adulthood. We should treat them accordingly - giving them some of the rights of adulthood such as restricted driver's licenses, limited banking privilages, etc., and making them take on the responsibility for criminal acts in porportion to the rights they enjoy, for example, 5-10 instead of 10-20 for a 14 year old bank robber. As far as sex goes, if a 14 year old has an 18 year old boyfriend or a 17 year old has a 27 year old boyfriend and the minor's parents agree and the minor is fully versed on pregnancy, STDs, etc., that may be unwise but it shouldn't be a sex-offense felony for the boyfriend. Now a 14 year old minor going to bed with a 27 year old boyfriend, that's another matter entirely. Book 'em Danno.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:good point if way off-topic - what is a minor? by Random832 · · Score: 1

      As far as sex goes, if a 14 year old has an 18 year old boyfriend or a 17 year old has a 27 year old boyfriend and the minor's parents agree and the minor is fully versed on pregnancy, STDs, etc., that may be unwise but it shouldn't be a sex-offense felony for the boyfriend. Now a 14 year old minor going to bed with a 27 year old boyfriend, that's another matter entirely. Book 'em Danno.

      14 and 18 = ok
      17 and 27 = ok
      14 and 27 = no

      fine... now apply your "rule" to these:
      18 and 27
      17 and 28
      14 and 19
      14 and 20
      17 and 34

      how about 28 and 90?

      all of the above, including your own examples, with the girlfriend as the older party (your use of the word "boyfriend" above did not go unnoticed)

      all of the above as lesbian relationships, and if it was not your original intent, as male homosexual relationships [if that was your original intent, as heterosexual relationships with the girlfriend as the younger party]

      any absolute rule, whether based on an absolute difference, a ratio, or some other arbitrary curve, will fail on borderlines.

      draw a graph showing the entire shape of the region in which it is "ok", and clearly defining the border of this region, and don't be surprised when each and every feature of the curve you choose is pointed at and questioned "why?"

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
  249. OBFamily Guy by schon · · Score: 1

    Dolphins will have sex with other male dolphins' blowholes

    Chris: Dad, what's a blowhole for?

    Peter: Well, I'll tell you what it's not for, son, and then you'll understand why we can never go back to Seaworld.

  250. The Left does this all the time. by Infinite+Entropy · · Score: 1

    If you don't agree 100% with their position you get branded with all sorts of horrible lables, cheifly among them 'bigot' or 'racist'. Of course the Right does it too, only they prefer 'traitor'.

    1. Re:The Left does this all the time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right curtails freedom to stop "immorality" while the left does it to promote "fairness" (generally speaking).

      Take your pick. I'm a libertarian who votes for democrats because I see the former as being worse than the latter.

  251. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mmm-hmmmm. So you want to tell 80% of the people to go fuck themselves?

    If they're wrong I'll gladly tell 99% of the population. Numbers don't make you any more right. Especially when that large percentage is trying to tell me what to do regarding my personal life or doing anything that is not their concern. I'm not gay, but I should go fuck a guy just to piss you self-righteous wankers off. You don't know what is right and what is wrong and the christian bible tells you so (if you happen to be christian, just an educated guess). Look to your own actions and leave others to theirs.

    It is not going to happen. It is going to make for more violence.

    Hopefully whomever initiates the violence is prepared for the consequences. You see in some places being christian is enough to get you murdered. Some day that may be the case in the U.S. In the U.S. currently the law forbids discriminating against christians, don't worry once the Bill of rights is tossed out, nothing will protect you from being fired for your beliefs either, or even for just being the wrong sect of christian (whichever ones don't win). I hope you enjoy it.

    Black is not a choice. Homosexuality is.

    Homosexuality is as much of a choice as choosing to believe that the earth revolves around the sun.

    It is no different than people who want to have sex with children, or people who want to have sex with animals.

    Children and animals cannot consent in an informed way. It is a completely separate issue and in no way analogous.

    I'm sorry you can't deal with your own homosexual feelings and believe in some superstitions that make you think you will be punished for it. Maybe you should turn of the nice man on the 700 club and actually think for your own self. Please don't reproduce.

  252. Discrimination? by IrishWonder · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Looks like there's too much buzz going on about different minorities rights. If you sum up all those minorities they will probably constitute more than the so-called "majority", the poor people who just happen not to fall under any of those "minority" categories. As a result, those minority rights are very often used by the members of such "minorities" to get the benefits they wouldn't have otherwise got. Tell a black/homosexual/whatever other minority member his performance is poor, only referring to his professional level, and very often they'd use their "minority" rights as a cover up. (Please don't get me wrong, I am not accusing every "minority" person of abusing the laws protecting their rights but it's a fact that these things happen a lot) Heck, I'm starting a group for white heterosexual rights protection! I do realize saying things like this can get me lynched on here but this is what I think and it's my right to voice it.

    1. Re:Discrimination? by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Tell a black/homosexual/whatever other minority member his performance is poor, only referring to his professional level, and very often they'd use their "minority" rights as a cover up.

      What do you mean - do you mean they'll say "Yeah, it's because I'm black, and like everyone knows, blacks are not as hard working"? I am at a loss to understand what you mean.

      In what way do they use minority rights as a cover up, in your view?

    2. Re:Discrimination? by IrishWonder · · Score: 1
      You tell them something about their actual work not being done properly and the first thing they reply is, "Do you have a problme with me being black/homosexual/whatever? Are you a racist and should I take you to court over it?" - something along these lines.

      Also, how often does a white non-minority person face a problem of not getting a job cause of the company having quotas to employ x blacks/hispanics/homosexuals/whatever other minority and even though this non-minority candidate is better in the terms of his professional qualities the company cannot employ him cause of the quotas they have to fill in? Who's discriminated in this case?

    3. Re:Discrimination? by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Quotas are not how affirmative action is supposed to work, and I bet you cannot cite even a single case of a company (not a political party, a company) which really does have such quotas.

  253. this is crap by hyperstation · · Score: 1

    since when is there a gay or straight box to check on any employment form, housing application, or loan form? never.

    no one will know you're gay unless you flame it all over the place. stop seeking attention. i personally have no problem with it at all, but you're already equal to the rest of us, just like women and blacks are equal under the law.

    if i were an employer, i think i should have every right to not hire someone who comes to an interview and deliberately goes over the top with their gayness just to prove a point.

    moral: no one cares (or should care) what you do in your bedroom. just dont let everyone know about it. i sure don't.

    1. Re:this is crap by jjohnson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you're already equal to the rest of us, just like women and blacks

      Not knowing what you said, you said it.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    2. Re:this is crap by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      i know what you're getting at, and it's not right. i'm in a hurry today, so i'll rephrase just that part:

      everyone is equal under the law, as human beings. there are gay women, gay blacks, gay hispanics, gay indians, and gay men.

      all ethnic groups and genders are protected from discrimination.

    3. Re:this is crap by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      And yet some groups face more discrimination, and less effective protection under the law, by weight of culture and dominant practice. Like women. Like blacks.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    4. Re:this is crap by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      you're being an apologist. both of those groups of people are protected by numerous state, federal, and local anti-discrimination laws. minorities are even given an unfair push with affirmative action. what's next, special government provisions to force people to hire gays?

    5. Re:this is crap by mike3k · · Score: 1

      In other words it's OK for straight people to talk about their girlfriend and have pictures of their family around their desk. Straight people flaunt their sexuality every day, but if a gay person did the same, it's wrong.

    6. Re:this is crap by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      Aren't women and blacks in a better position today than they were 50 or 100 years ago, as a result of those laws?

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    7. Re:this is crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a gay man who works in the software industry. You would never know that I was unless I told you and yet still I have heard terrible stories of people who I have known being beaten up, disowned, and fired for simply being gay. I grew up in a conservative christian home and tried fro years not to be gay. I pray for years, and even tried to torture myself with scolding water when I had gay thoughts, but nothing worked. I have come to realize, through years of personal struggle, that sexual orientation is NOT A CHOICE AND CAN NOT BE CHANGED. I do not understand, in any event, why the Christian right was so opposed to a CIVIL RIGHTS bill, not a gay marriage or even cicl unions bill. Why do they hate me so much that they want to deny me a job or a place to live? I do not care what they teach in there churches, why can't they leave us alone?
      Things are becoming so bad in our country right now that I often think of suicide. After all, I would rather do that with my own hand then let some member of the Christian Inquision which is now running this country execute me 10 or 15 years from now, when Bush will probably be thought of as a liberal who was "soft on sin".

    8. Re:this is crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

    9. Re:this is crap by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      yes, they are, but not due to affirmative action laws. anyhow, that's an entirely different discussion. i disagree with those laws because it fights racial preference by reversing it in favor of a minority, which is just as wrong as the opposite.

      the civil rights act made everyone equal, legally. years of social change since then have incorporated those legal changes into our societal consciousness. things dont change overnight.

      don't make me out to be a bigot, because i am not; i'm a realist. i can't believe in a utopia world where passing a silly law "forbidding" anyone to discriminate regardless of how someone disrupts their workplace is suppose to be the final answer to peoples hang-ups.

    10. Re:this is crap by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      don't make me out to be a bigot, because i am not; i'm a realist.

      Not knowing what you said, you said it.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    11. Re:this is crap by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      nice of you to omit the rest of that paragraph. what is it that you assume a realist is?

    12. Re:this is crap by jjohnson · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      In your case, a bigot.

      In my experience, people who have qualify what they say with what it isn't, tend to be exactly what they're denying.

      Remember, you're the one who started all this with the strawman about gay employees wanting legal protection to be swishy in the office.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    13. Re:this is crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to kill yourself (which, as a fellow gay man, I hope that you won't and I feel your pain deeply), do us a huge favour and take out a bunch of those Dominionist Christian fundamentalist fucktards before you do so. I'm tempted to go out hunting Christians myself.

  254. Family stability the key, not sexual orientation by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
    BTW, gay couples shouldn't be allowed to be foster parents. Foster kids need normalcy in their lives. Sorry, gay parents aren't normal.

    I think you meant stability?

    There are always morons that think you can "teach" children to be gay or straight!! This is usually the basis of what parent poster said.

    And about being unnatural, well, there are gay animals all over. For example, a lot of elk have homosexual tendencies in non-mating-season. Gay penguins all over the place (like some zoo got 3 pairs of penguins and then wandered about their poor ofspring production!!). You can even read old Nature from 1800s where you will see priests talking about "animals exhibiting non-christian behaviour".

    What is unnatural is cloning kids but with current medicine the human gene pool is already crap (ie. natural selection stopped a few generations ago). So, cloning can't screw it up anymore.... (read: no natural selection => our genetic future is in our own hands, for better or worse)

  255. Shunning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of Christian sects and other religious groups have a mechanism for "shunning", in which a member is removed from the group and other members of the group are interdicted from communicating or cooperating with that former member to some degree. Amish communities spring to mind. So do the Mormons. I think scientologists call it a "disconnect" or something like that. Excommunicating is just another term for it.

  256. Marriage is a crap ideal nowadays anyhow by phorm · · Score: 1

    Seeing as though my parents recently seperated, I have a fairly fresh take on this.

    Nowadays there is very little reason to stay married and/or faithful, unless you were rich to start with (and didn't have a pre--nup) then you stand little to lose by walking out. You can meet somebody new, take your half of the shared ownings, and left your spouse in the cold. Between that and the other person's half of his/her life you can start fresh with very little loss.

    I'm a little bitter yes, but in the end it seems that most of the marriages I know that have held together were religious ones, with state weddings meaning too little and being too easily broken.

  257. I can't believe we're making a deal out of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To paraphrase one of my great favorites, Lewis Black,

    After 9/11, it's inconceivable to me that we're making a big deal out of gay marriage. On the list of problems after 9/11, gay marriage is on, like, page six. It's right after, "As a people, are we eating too much garlic?"

    But seriously, like it isn't hard enough to be gay already. It's easier than it has been historically, but now that Pandora's box is open, you hear a lot more of it. In my (fairly small) town, a guy was murdered about a month ago because a guy who hardly knew him just didn't like the fact that he was gay. See for yourself: http://www.kwwl.com/Global/story.asp?s=3078837 It's heterosexist rhetoric that fuels these kinds of violence, and it has to stop.

    It's crap like I'm reading here that makes me just want to stay in bed some days. It's not only depressing, it makes me fear for my life. And we all slap on some armor before heading out into the world, but it's exhausting.

  258. So would youinclude Justice Scalia? by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When the rest of the court decided to condemn the Texas anti-sodomy law as an invasion of privacy, he voted to keep it because he just plain didn't like letting queers sodomize each other.

    Would that be activism, bunky?

    1. Re:So would youinclude Justice Scalia? by ifwm · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yup. What were you hoping for an inconsistency? Judges rule on matters of LAW. In this case, calling him an activist judge is perfectly appropriate.

    2. Re:So would youinclude Justice Scalia? by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      Send me a link to the text of his actual dissent, rather than your "interpretation" of it and I'll decide.

      Knowing almost nothing about that case, and being for state's rights, and knowing that the word "sodomy" does not appear in the US Constitution, then I would say no, Scalia is not an activist in this case.

      --
      moo
    3. Re:So would youinclude Justice Scalia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      knowing that the word "sodomy" does not appear in the US Constitution, then I would say no, Scalia is not an activist in this case

      How exactly would you know anything about this case based on whether that one word appears in the United States Constitution or not? I really can't follow your reasoning here. Please kindly explain.

      It's funny, but I can't find the word marriage anywhere in the United States Constitution.

    4. Re:So would youinclude Justice Scalia? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      When the rest of the court decided to condemn the Texas anti-sodomy law as an invasion of privacy, he voted to keep it because he just plain didn't like letting queers sodomize each other.

      First of all, it wasn't the rest of the court; Rehnquist and Thomas also dissented. Second, their position was not that the Texas law is a just or wise law, but that it is not unconstitutional at the state level. That's obviously a debatable position and it gets into the intricacies of the 9th, 10th, and 14th Amendments, but it's not unreasonable on its face. In fact, Thomas in a separate dissent specifically noted that the law was stupid and that he would vote to repeal it if he were a Texas legislator, but that the Supreme Court had no basis to overturn it.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  259. The Gay Tax by rewinn · · Score: 1

    What legitimate interest is it for the state to say that a woman and another woman or a man and a man cannot marry?

    Money, d'uh!

    If a gay couple cannot file taxes as "married" when it is to their advantage to do so, they pay more in taxes.

    Likewise, if a gay couple cannot rely upon intestacy provisions to handle property distribution when one dies, they have to hire a lawyer to draft a will. Those lawyers pay income tax of the fees gays have to pay to get the same inheritance rights we straights get automatically with the marriage licenses.

    There are dozens of ways in which a simple marriage license provides financial advantages, over simply living together. The state has an interest in imposing a "gay tax" as it has for decades, in order to help stimulate the economy and reduce the deficit!

    Let's just be glad the state doesn't tax heterosexuality too!

    1. Re:The Gay Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought married people paid more in taxes. Isn't there a marriage penalty?

      Is it a marriage penalty? Or a Gay tax?

    2. Re:The Gay Tax by rewinn · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a marriage penalty?

      That's a good question and the answer is slightly complex. For some couples there is a marriage penalty, for some couples there is a marriage bonus (that no-one ever complains about).

      Because the USA has (in theory) a "progressive" tax structure, in which (in theory) people who earn more $$ pay a greater % of their income in taxes, you will always have a problem when marriage allows you to combine income for tax purposes. Because if one spouse earns $zero and the other $MUCH, the result is that suddenly the combination pays a lot less taxes when filing "married".>

      OTOH, if both spouses earn about the same about of $$$, and then combine their income filing "married" they can bump themselves into a higher bracket... that's the conventional version of the "marriage penalty".

      So the issue stands: gay couples as well as straight can cut their taxes by filing "married" when one earns significantly less than the other .... except that in the USA gays can't file "married" and therefore pay more. That's part of the "Gay Tax".>

      There are other aspects to the "Gay Tax" ... basically services that married couples recieve for free but gay couples have to pay for. Is it really necessary at this late date to enumerate them?

  260. Stop insulting behaviorists by association! by benhocking · · Score: 1

    Applied behavioral analysis has many uses (e.g., in the treatment of autism) and is a perfectly valid technique. Furthermore, Walden Two is an excellent book! And, Skinner made many valid points.

    Whether or not you agree with any of behaviorism, do not associate it with the GP post! This is like associating Jon Stewart wtih Michael Moore, just because they're both liberal - it's just rude!

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  261. no, they are not by davidwr · · Score: 1

    in our sex-conscious society most 12-year-olds of either sex are quite capable of informed consent. No?

    NO. They may be informed of the biology of sex, of STDs, etc. but in almost all cases their brains are not fully developed. As such, they cannot have a full understanding of the emotional and other consequences of sexual activity. In particular, they cannot fully understand how it can bring two people closer together and that a breakup after sex is much more likely to be emotionally painful than one absent sexual activity.

    I haven't been able to verify it, but I heard on TV that 2/3rds of teen girls who have sex before age 18 regret it.

    Having said all of that, do I think someone should go to jail if two 12 year old lovebirds or even a 12 and 14 year old have sex? No. The kids should be counseled and encouraged to delay further sexual activity, but nobody should go to jail assuming there was no rape, coersion, or other criminal activity going on.

    Even at 18, a good number of people aren't "all grown up" yet - that is, they will make unwise decisions - but you have to draw the line somewhere, and if you are old enough to vote, you are old enough to control your own body.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:no, they are not by Seraphim1982 · · Score: 1

      Even at 18, a good number of people aren't "all grown up" yet - that is, they will make unwise decisions - but you have to draw the line somewhere, and if you are old enough to vote, you are old enough to control your own body.

      But not old enough to go buy a beer. Go figure.

    2. Re:no, they are not by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      I enlisted in the Army at 17. I was old enough to train for war, old enough to buy beer at the base PX, but not old enough to buy beer off-base or even to vote.

      Go figure *that*.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
  262. Fuck the Church and Its Moral Values by $criptah · · Score: 0, Troll

    I was quite pleased the Pope passed away; he truly deserved that. Fuck him and other bigots who preach love and happiness unless it does not involve gay people or whoever does not believe in god. Perhaps clergy needs to have a history lesson. Did they miss the part that this is the 21st century? We have things like voting, women's rights and freedom of religion. From where I stand, everybody is equal. Black, white, hispanic, asian -- all of us are in the same shit. By discriminating against each other we only make matters worse. This country/world is screwed in so many ways that I do not know where to start.

    We can have violence on TV, but not some skin. You know, naked ladies are dangerous for kids, unlike guns and explosives. Rush L. can blast about kids having oral sex, but Howard Stern gets beeped everytime he says "poo"... What the hell is wrong with us, Americans? We say that families are foundations of societies but at the same time we deny a union if it involves two loving people of the same sex. Apparently, heterosexual marriages are always perfect; even if a woman gets a beating from her husband! We came up to the point where pharmacists can choose not to sell birth control pills to women. WTF? What's next? Mandatory bible readings in school? Why can't we let people live and be happy. Is it that hard to do? Instead of celebrating unity, we always find a way to separate people into "us" and "them". Is religion really worth it? If so, I hope I burn in hell. So far, I noticed that "sinners" are much cooler than god-fearing men. I'd rather spend my time in hell, but in a good company as opposed to a life in heaven (if there is such thing) with a bunch of morons.

    The land of the free and the home of the brave looks like the land of the retarded religious slaves...

    1. Re:Fuck the Church and Its Moral Values by nsayer · · Score: 2, Funny
      I was quite pleased the Pope passed away; he truly deserved that.

      Deserved what? To live to a ripe old age and die of natural causes and be mourned by a quarter of the planet's population when he was gone? Hell, I'll take a helping of that too, please.

    2. Re:Fuck the Church and Its Moral Values by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell is wrong with us, Americans?

      Here is what the hell is wrong with us. We are hairless apes. Most of us are just fucking ignorant. That's why so many believe in stupid god nonsense that was invented thousands of years ago.

  263. Facts are stupid things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    large GOP majority in both houses of the US Congress

    55% of the Senate and 53% of the House is hardly a "large majority".

    1. Re:Facts are stupid things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      55% of the Senate and 53% of the House is hardly a "large majority".

      It effectively is now that they've managed to rewrite most of the rules such that the minority party has virutally no power (and what little power they have left is being violently attacked as we speak).

  264. Marriage based on Religion? How about...... by Timtimes · · Score: 1

    "Marriage in the United States shall consist of a union between one man and one or more women". (Gen 29:17-28; II Sam 3:2-5), they should also strive to require by law that : A. Marriage shall not impede a man's right to take concubines in addition to his wife or wives. (II Sam 5:13; I Kings 11:3; II Chron 11:21) B. A marriage shall be considered valid only if the wife is a virgin. If the wife is not a virgin, she shall be executed. (Deut 22:13-21) C. Marriage of a believer and a non-believer shall be forbidden. (Gen 24:3; Num 25:1-9; Ezra 9:12; Neh 10:30) D. Since marriage is for life, neither this Constitution nor the constitution of any State, nor any state or federal law, shall be construed to permit divorce. (Deut 22:19; Mark 10:9) E. If a married man dies without children, his brother shall marry the widow. If he refuses to marry his brother's widow or deliberately does not give her children, he shall pay a fine of one shoe and be otherwise punished in a manner to be determined by law. (Gen. 38:6-10; Deut 25:5-10)

    --
    This ain't no upwardly mobile freeway This is the road to hell
  265. grok - good word! mod up! by davidwr · · Score: 1

    You said in 1 word what took me several paragraphs to say.

    Very slashdottish too!

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  266. Only a problem when it's your ox, I imagine by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    I DO have a problem with federal courts arbitrarily reading their own values into the Constitution and overriding the decisions of even state supermajorities.

    See, there's this pesky document called the federal constitution, which overrides state constitutions, even when those state constitutions have been written by supermajorities. It prevents states from doing obnoxious things such as, oh, re-implementing slavery.

    Now let me guess. If the federal constitution were amended to define marriage as between man and woman only, do you think states should be able to override that to allow gay marriage? And if so, would other states then be required (as the federal constitution says) to recognize those marriages as legal?

    If at any point you want states to be able to override the federal constitution, then what's the point of a federal constitution?

    1. Re:Only a problem when it's your ox, I imagine by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      If at any point you want states to be able to override the federal constitution, then what's the point of a federal constitution?

      Where did I ever say that? I absolutely agree the US Constitution is the supreme law of the land. That said - where it is silent, that silence should NOT be presumed to be space for federal judges to fill up with their own concepts of good and bad policy. For example, the Constitution states nowhere that prisoners must be over the age of 18 to be eligbile for execution. But *bing*! Like magic, that's suddenly mandated by the Constitution, because a majority of the SCOTUS thinks that it's a good idea. THAT, I disagree with.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    2. Re:Only a problem when it's your ox, I imagine by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      So are you saying that the constitution is a lieing down the maxumum rights taht are protected and anything not covered explicietly is up to the law makers?

      The founding fathers were afraid of that view, and some of them did not want to have the Bill of Rights at all for fear that people would think like that (that is why they are ammendments and not art of the main body of the document).

      I would imagine that a reasonable person could legitamatly interpret the liberty and the persuit of happiness to mean being able to wed the way our heart takes you.

      I personaly think that legaly marriage should be degraded to a civil union and anybody can do it, and those that need to be "married" can get a private institution to do it if they are willing, but as a someone with no religious leanings I could be underestimating the importance of the government recognizing "marriage".

      The federal judges will not *bing* change the law; nine of the best legel minds in the world will argue about for a very long time before deciding if the right to mary for love no matter what the gender is part of the idea that all people are equal and weather marriage is an in-alienable right.

      Do you truly think that the state governments should be alloud to legislate what (harmless) sex acts consenting married adults can participate in? Because there were anti-sodemy laws in some states that had no exceptions under any circumstances, thankfully the "activists" decided that maybe that wasn't quite a reasonable thing to do.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    3. Re:Only a problem when it's your ox, I imagine by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      So are you saying that the constitution is a lieing down the maxumum rights taht are protected and anything not covered explicietly is up to the law makers?

      No, the Constitution lays down minimum rights that must be protected.

      The founding fathers were afraid of that view, and some of them did not want to have the Bill of Rights at all for fear that people would think like that (that is why they are ammendments and not art of the main body of the document).

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

      I would imagine that a reasonable person could legitamatly interpret the liberty and the persuit of happiness to mean being able to wed the way our heart takes you.

      Well isn't that special. Please locate the phrase "pursuit of happiness" in the US Constitution.

      I personaly think that legaly marriage should be degraded to a civil union and anybody can do it, and those that need to be "married" can get a private institution to do it if they are willing, but as a someone with no religious leanings I could be underestimating the importance of the government recognizing "marriage".

      Great, your solution is to abolish marriage. Why should everybody else agree to this?

      The federal judges will not *bing* change the law; nine of the best legel minds in the world will argue about for a very long time before deciding if the right to mary for love no matter what the gender is part of the idea that all people are equal and weather marriage is an in-alienable right.

      HAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! *pause* HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! First of all, judges are not the best legal minds in the world. Second, please locate "all people are created equal" and "in-alienable" right in the Constitution. Third, even if they were in there, judges should simply fill up these general terms with whatever concepts they think they ought to mean. They ought to be bound by the meanings of those words as society understood them when they were adopted. To do otherwise violates the social contract.

      Do you truly think that the state governments should be alloud to legislate what (harmless) sex acts consenting married adults can participate in?

      You don't get it, do you? It doesn't matter what I "think!" It only matters what the laws say! The meaning of the Constitution should not, can not, must not, bend and change just to fit my own personal preferences!

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  267. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, tell us... what test will you adminster to determine whether a couple is "normal" or not? Who gets to decide?

    God.

    But I'm sure that's not good enough. So how about the past 50,000 years of human history, or however long it's been.

    Homosexuality is a perversion of Natural Law and should not be tolerated.

  268. sex in this aspect is neither love nor orientation by phorm · · Score: 1

    What you are describing is at the most an induced fetish, and more likely simply a physical response to a given stimulus. Yes, a gay man can have sex with a women (provided that he can get it up), physically he would probably even enjoy it to some extent.

    You might even have sex with a 300LB woman and physically enjoy it, you might enjoy a donkey or a sheep or just a magazine and a tub of vasaline.

    But loving somebody, being attracted to a person, and enjoying physical sensation is something entirely different. What you describe could just as easily be used to have a person associate something non-sexual. Perhaps you could associate the sound of a bell with having to pee... if you held your bladder constantly and only let it go when a bell rang.

    We're not talking about sex here though. Sexual orientation is misleading as a term, though that part perhaps deals with the more visible interactions between those individuals. We are talking about deeper feelings between two individuals, which - though I myself don't share such an attraction - I can understand their desire and even need to persue.

  269. This comes with responsibilities as well. by Timmy+D+Programmer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are Responsibilities as well.

    Responsibility for your spouses debts accrued during the marriage.
    Responsibility for their medical expenses.
    Substantially Higher Income Taxes
    Breaking up becomes incredibly expensive



    Also relating to the previous remark:

    There is no such thing as "Familys Only" neighborhoods in the US. That is already illegal.

    And most things like Joint Loans, and Health clubs, are typically available to unmarried couples anyhow (Bad business to do otherwise)

    I do agree with the idea, but don't exaggurate the reasons, the legit reasons are plety good enough.

    --


    (If at first you don't succeed, do it different next time!)
    1. Re:This comes with responsibilities as well. by Rei · · Score: 1

      No, that is not illegal - don't accuse someone of exaggerating when you don't know what you're talking about. Cities have great leverage in zoning laws. The city you live in probably is mostly zoned with something similar to "RS-8", "RS-12", etc: Residential Single-family (the number after it is density). Only one family is allowed to live in a house in such a zone. In fact, the zone I live in is RS-8. Technically, my partner and I count as two families, and could be fined (thankfully, my city is GLBT-friendly).

      And as somebody who *is* in a same-sex relationship, I can assure you that *most* joint loans and health clubs are not available to unmarried couples at the same rates (some are, but not most), at least in our experience. It can be an advantage at times (for example, when we bought a house, my partner (who is unemployed) wasn't listed), but it is generally a burden. Oftentimes, you don't know whether it is allowed or not (the form may say "list your spouse", or leave a blank for husband and wife), and worry that if you list yourself, you might be later accused of fraud. It's not a nice situation.

      --
      "It felt almost as good as stealing cars from grandma." -- Margaret Thatcher, probably.
  270. NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by alizard · · Score: 2, Interesting
    We're not talking about the entire US population, we're talking about the subset of computer owners. (about 1/3 of the population doesn't use computers)

    The gay/lesbian market is a hell of a lot more computer literate than the zombies in the Religious Right. A typical fundie told to boycott MS? Does this person even own a computer? If yes... do you see him switching to Apple? REALLY? It isn't like he's going to be able to depend on his fellow church members for local support.

    Gays and lesbians have a lot more disposable income, i.e. they've got the money to buy Macs and they've got to be tired of dealing with Microcrap. Why should they give their money to a political enemy?

    Talk this up to your lesbian and gay and Deomcratic activist friends. Every one who switches out of MS is a kick in the balls to Bill Gates. The only question about is... "Did Microsoft shoot itself in the foot or the head?"

    Let's do what we can to make sure it's a head shot.

    Too bad that Linux isn't really ready for the home user, (only zealots think so - I'm writing this from a Fedora Core box) because this would be the biggest Open Source opportunity in the US ever seen if it was.

    1. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The gay/lesbian market is a hell of a lot more computer literate than the zombies in the Religious Right. A typical fundie told to boycott MS? Does this person even own a computer? If yes... do you see him switching to Apple? REALLY? It isn't like he's going to be able to depend on his fellow church members for local support.

      What sort of bubble do you live in? And who call's people FUNDIES?
    2. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by ifwm · · Score: 4, Funny

      "The gay/lesbian market is a hell of a lot more computer literate than the zombies in the Religious Right" Proof? Of course not.

    3. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by flyingsquid · · Score: 1, Funny
      A typical fundie told to boycott MS? Does this person even own a computer? If yes... do you see him switching to Apple?

      Well, lets see... (1) Apple Computer had a rainbow striped logo for years, (2) they are based just outside of San Francisco, (3) they have suspiciously good taste, almost as if the OS and every piece of hardware was designed by interior decorators.

      Something tells me that if the Christian fundamentalists get up in arms about Teletubbies and Spongebob being in cahoots with the homosexual conspiracy, they might have a little trouble accepting Apple. Plus, the company name is an allusion to Eve and the serpent, so they're obviously in league with Satan as well.

    4. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      You forgot to mention that their OS is called "Darwin", and it's symbol is a platypus - wait for it - dressed up as the devil! I could go on, but it's easier to just point you here. Scroll about halfway down. Laugh your ass off. Then try to figure out whether or not it's actually a joke (sadly, I don't think it is).

    5. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The gay and lesbian market tends to have more money (fewer kids to spend it on), and thus tends to be more computer literate due to increased exposure and opportunity. Ever heard of the "pink dollar"?

    6. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by Huge+Pi+Removal · · Score: 1

      Don't forget Darwin either. (3rd story down)

      --
      - Oliver

      The right to bear arms is only slightly less stupid than the right to arm bears...
    7. Re:NO, IT IS NOT THE SAME MARKET by ifwm · · Score: 1

      So you offer your unsubstantiated opinion as proof? Exactly what I expect from you people.

      AND NO I'M NOT A FUCKING REPUBLICAN SO DON'T TRY TO RESPOND WITH SOME IDIOTIC ANTI-REPUBLICAN TRIPE.

      I'll probably agree with it.

  271. breeding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So infertile people should be banned from marrying as well! I'm really looking forward to the forthcoming new fundamentalist theocracy.

  272. Simple Solution by Tony · · Score: 1

    Since there's currently no litmus test for what constitutes a committed gay relationship (ie marriage)...

    That's your solution then. Allow gay marriage. Problem solved.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Simple Solution by uncqual · · Score: 1

      Similarly, a parent should be able to marry their offspring and siblings should be allowed to marry each other. Although, there may be a legitimate state interest in making procreation illegal in some of these cases on the theory that the chances of producing a child with birth defects is irresponsibly high.

      It seems to me that marriage, as far as the state is concerned, should be a contract issue and not a moral issue. Any two people who jointly agree to share the "prepackaged contract" that laws provide for married partners (medical decisions, inheritance, etc) should be able to do so.

      Indeed, laws against polygamy seem inappropriate, although if polygamy were to become legal, it would complicate or confound interpretation of many existing laws far more than same sex marriages would (for example, if three identical triplet females get married to each other simultaneously with all being "equals" and one of the three ends up on life support and one of the remaining spouses wants to pull the plug and the other one does not, I suspect the current laws would not suffice).

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    2. Re:Simple Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, yes, you're quite right. Never thought about that one. And since we need to prohibit marriages between siblings and marriages between offspring and parents, we should prohibit other marriages with genetically dangerous effects - like marriages between white people and negroes (after all, think of the damage to those children's genomes, having negro genese!), and marriages between Catholics and Jews (again, having children with Jewish genes!), and between a man and a woman over the age of 35 (risk of Down's Syndrome) . . .

      Idiot. Marriage is a civil contract between two adult humans with informed consent, acting without any compulsion, which may also be solemnized by a religious authority if the conditions of the marriage do not contradict the requirements of that religion (as e.g. marriages between divorced individuals contradict the requirements of marriage in the Catholic Church - which is why, even today, a Catholic priest won't marry someone who is divorced unless they obtain that wild fiction an "ecclesiastical annulment").

  273. Hypocrits by any other name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft: We'd like to support this bill which affects our interests.
    Kneejerks: Oh my god! Microsoft is trying to rig the system! That's so unfair! Corporations should stay out of politics, and leave the voting to people!

    Microsoft: After ten years of support, it is our regret that we must now reconsider whether or not to continue our activism in the field of gay rights. We will be re-examining our criteria and methods for supporting social laws.
    Kneejerks: WTF!? Microsoft should be supporting this! How dare they! They obviously hate fags and just want them to burn! This is so unfair!

  274. Dear idiots by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 1

    People are people, no matter what colour they are, who they fuck or what they jerk off to. If no one gets hurt by it then who gives a fuck what people do? Get the fuck over yourself and get it into your head that NO ONE GIVES A FUCK about what you think. We're tired of fighting pro-gay/anti whatever bullshit. You fuck off and look after yourself and we fuck off and look after ourselvs and no one has a problem any more.

    --
    I like muppets.
  275. Is it just me by suitepotato · · Score: 2, Insightful

    or is everything on this site a segue waiting to happen to bash Microsoft?

    1. Microsoft is not the government, they are a private civilian business.
    2. Gays are not being discriminated against and persecuted nearly as much as some claim, I know, a number of my family and friends are gay and they're not suffering any of these things in the states they live in across the USA. In fact, most have found being gay is considered cool more often than not which they also find creepy and wish you straights would leave them the hell alone.
    3. It's the height of hypcrisy to lambaste MS for everything under the sun, then expect them to go to the mat for your pet politics and socialism.

    This battle is not going to play out one way or another based on Microsoft. Why don't we just blame them retroactively for the Holocaust because Bill hasn't invented a time machine to send Homeland Security agents back to assassinate Hitler, or blame Bill Gates for proton decay?

    --
    If my grammar and spelling are off, I am [distracted/tired/careless] (take your pick)
  276. you forgot ANIMALS, bigot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or their pet goat?

  277. Not the only one by MsWillow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Where I used to work, there were laws that protected against being fired because you're gay ... but no such laws over being TS. I tried to skate, and just let everybody think I must have been gay, but eventually caved and came out as a tryke (transsexual dyke, the proverbial lesbian woman trapped in a male body). That's when heads of *other* departments started fabricating complaints, trying to fake a "reason" to fire me.

    Eventually, after being given nothing to do in months, yet being written up for not doing anything, I was graciously "asked" to resign. That was so transparent that I was even allowed to collect unemployment.

    Laws won't change people.

    --

    Lemon curry?
    1. Re:Not the only one by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      You can sue for quite alot of money.

      That is definitely non frivilious big time and if people can backup your claim then you have a major lawsuit.

    2. Re:Not the only one by MsWillow · · Score: 1

      Proof would be very hard. The company that bought them, moved everybody to a new location, and let most of the employees go, years ago. I ended up filing for disability, after living on the streets for about a year, watching what I now know to be seconary progressive multiple sclerosis get quickly worse.

      I'm doing ok now. Finally slowed MS down, have an apartment, cats, and just enough money to actually enjoy life as a middle-aged woman. I'll let sleeping dogs lie, rather than get all stressed out again.

      Thanks for the suggestion, tho.

      --

      Lemon curry?
  278. Let me rephrase that by UrgleHoth · · Score: 1

    An activist judge is one who rules in favor of decisions which which you disagree more often than rules in favor of decisions with which you agree.

    --

    Dogma - "let's just say we'd like to avoid any empirical entanglements."
  279. And you know why... by The+Woodworker · · Score: 2, Funny

    If you're queer, you buy a Mac. It's all about color coordination.

    --
    Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day. Teach him to fish and he'll wipe out the species.
  280. interracial marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Likewise, telling someone you can't marry a person of a different race is not discrimination if you tell EVERYONE that.

  281. problems in future life by davidwr · · Score: 1

    In my many years, I've known several people who were molested as children.

    Some were "damaged goods." Others, while changed by the experience, were not damaged by it.

    From what I've read statistically, sex is quite likely to cause damage, particularly if it's by a parent or caretaker, if the child is of preschool or elementary-school age - i.e. old enough to remember but not yet full of hormones, if the act is physically painful, or if the child perceives he can't say no and mean it.
    After she discloses molestation, the actions of others can make a big difference in the outcome:
    If the child tells, do people beleive her and take her seriously and take steps to protect her?
    If she feels guilty, is she assured that it's not her fault?
    etc.

    To point out two extremes, a 14 year old boy who seeks out a hooker is much less likely to be "damaged" than an 8 year old brutally and repeatedly raped by her father. Assuming nobody makes him feel guilty about it and that he didn't catch any diseases, the boy is likely to not feel bad about the sex at all, although if he's got any sense of shame he'll regret participating in the "sex trade."

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  282. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    there are lies, damned lies, and statistics. Just because a population has a certain percentage chance of an event does not mean every sub population has the same percentage chance.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  283. Marriage by iamthewalrus00 · · Score: 1

    The fundamental concept of marriage is that it's a partnership entered into voluntarily by two consenting adults. Marriage is a legal contract -- if you're unclear about this, read the list of legal rights below that are conferred upon married people.
    Now to address to address some misconceptions:

    1) Animals don't have rights. When's the last time a walrus entered into a legal contract? Therefore, allowing same-sex marriage does not allow marriage between a man and a dog.

    2) polygamy: central to the concept of marriage is partnership and equality. Polygamy is illegal because inherent in a union between one man and many women is inequality. There is no way for one of several women in a union to be equal to the single man in that union.

    3) Marriage of minors: again, this is about a legal partnership entered into by two, sound-minded, consenting adults. You cannot have a marriage between a 50 year old and a 12 year old, for example, because of the inherent inequality in their positions, and because legally, minors are not capable of entering into long-term, legal contracst.

    Based on this legal definition of marriage, it's absurd that the US does not allow same-sex marriage. There are no secular, rational arguments against it, only religious ones. It's amazing that we would have one group's religious laws applying to people of all religions and no religion. It's as if we were living in Iran.

    1. Re:Marriage by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

      2) polygamy: central to the concept of marriage is partnership and equality. Polygamy is illegal because inherent in a union between one man and many women is inequality. There is no way for one of several women in a union to be equal to the single man in that union.

      That makes no sense. First of all, there's no reason that 5 women and 1 man (or 5 men and 1 woman) can't each have 1/6 of decision-making power in such a marriage. Second of all, the Government makes no requirements that the two married people need be equal. Both people are allowed to be equal, certainly, as part of the benefits of being married, but there's no reason such equality couldn't be given to more than two people.

      Polygamy is illegal because the government thinks it's immoral, just like gay marriage.

      --
      Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
    2. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your polygamy argument is pretty lame. If all the partners are in agreement, then you could base a strong case for legally sanctioning it. A man with multiple woman is no crazier than a gay relationship between two men. And from a historical standpoint, polygamy is more common and previlant than homosexuality. Just give it time before the polygamists organize and we will go through this same argument again. When does it end?

    3. Re:Marriage by mink · · Score: 1

      And from a historical standpoint, polygamy is more common and previlant than homosexuality.

      Explain this please, as recorded history seems to show both happening all over from the start.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  284. M$ Protitutes Itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on. We all know that Microsoft would support pedophilia if it sold more Windows software.

  285. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    homophobic motherfucker

  286. 1960's America by davidwr · · Score: 1

    you also forgot to mentions that in some societies, it is unlawful for people of differing ethnic/racial backgrounds to be married.

    You mean like in some parts of the USA as late as the 1960s or early 1970s?

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  287. Basic Rights by aerozeppl · · Score: 1

    I just dont get all the jesus freaks out there. These bills arent asking for anything that straight people take for granted every day. So because im not gay I get more benefits than my gay friends. Insanity in 2005. This is not 1154.

  288. This is a bad bill anyway by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    pun intended.

    Seriously, I don't support being harmful to anyone but it is legally irresponsible to add gay and lesbian people to the civil rights codes for a very simple reason. Civil rights laws should not include behaviors.

    Right now civil rights codes boil down to this.

    Don't discriminate because what people believe.
    Don't discriminate because of what people look like (your sex being a physical trait as well).

    It makes no sense to say "don't discriminate because of how people behave".

    People are responsible for their choices and their actions if they are not then we no longer have any need for law whatsoever. (After all why punish or reward someone for an action they are not responsible for?) Now here comes all the people saying homosexuals can't help what they are? I can tell you without a doubt they CAN help what they do.

    There is significantly MORE evidence the alcoholism is inherited TENDANCY then there is the homosexuality is an inherited TENDANCY. Should we make it illegal not to hire Alcoholics because of what they do, after all they can't help it?

    As has been stated many times there is no way to tell a person who has homosexual feelings from a strait person ... unless it is because of something they SAY or DO.
    It is what they SAY and DO that makes them fit the category of being homosexuals.

    Just because somebody always wants to steal something a TENDANCEY doesn't mean they ever will It is only after they repeatedly give into that urge that they become thieves. We call this kleptomania and last time I checked no one was considering adding those people to the civil rights laws either. How is this giving oneself over to strong TENDANCY in kleptomania any different they giving oneself over to the TENDANCY of alcoholism or the TENDANCY of homosexuality? It isn't the only difference is moral and physical effects of disease the person suffers from.

    Civil rights laws dictate hiring practices. Every employer should have the freedom to not hire people who are doing things that are immoral according the EMPLOYERS judgment. They should have the right not to associate themselves and force their customers to associate with people whom they believe have a poor moral character.

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
  289. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Tony · · Score: 1

    I figure it's only a matter of time until a truly democratic process does exactly what you're talking about.

    The US isn't a domocracy, it a representational republic, with leanings to fascism.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  290. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    So if you think that, why bother crafting such a goofy argument above? Guess what? A gay couple not being able to reproduce IS normal! What more do you want? Also, there are heterosexual couples that cannot have children for one or more of a variety of reasons. Should they not have children because they are abnormal? The whole argument is just stupid.

    Im not sure im following your logic here. I think being gay is just fine, but I dont see how this would work out when it comes to reproducing. If everyone was gay, we would not be reproducing. How is not being able to reproduce normal? You can do so by artificial means, but Im not sure how that would impact our society of everyone started to reproduce in this fashion on a large scale.

    *Please check yourself internally, before responding to this post. Let go of any mental position you have that has created a emotional barrier to being able to talk civilly about this important topic. I and will try to do the same*

  291. Maybe but... by phorm · · Score: 1

    I had enough teasing being a geek and/or because my mom was somewhat classified as a MILF by other students. I'd hate to see what things would have been like if my mom were also a dad...

    Maybe if I were a foster kid I would appreciate any family better than none... depends on the rest of the environment around me. Am I a bigot when I consider such an environment hostile for a child? Schools can be a pretty harsh place, and sometimes I'm surprised I survived through some of the stuff I dealt with in them. Remember, your kids might be able to deal with the alternate sexuality of same-gender parents, but how well will they deal with playground beatings and/or when their friend Billy's dad won't let him stay over for a sleepover?

    There is still a lot of your so-called bigots in the world today. I think that the overall attitude in regards to homosexuality is definately becoming more tolerant, but I'm not sure we've whittled down the bigot population enough that I'd support raising kids in a same-sex environment.

    1. Re:Maybe but... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I had enough teasing being a geek and/or because my mom was somewhat classified as a MILF by other students. I'd hate to see what things would have been like if my mom were also a dad...

      I had a pretty hurtful childhood myself, for other reasons unrelated to my parents, but the only way to SOLVE that problem is to live it. If more people were raised by homosexuals, it would lose some of its stigma; Those people would grow up and raise their children to be accepting, and even other people would grow up and realize that the people raised by "them darned queers" [or what have you] were just people, and raise their children accordingly. Instead, homosexuals have to hide in the dark and live life as second-class citizens because we punish them for being who they are.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  292. False by jonhuang · · Score: 1

    That's actually not true. The only US-born babies that are not adopted usually have mental or health problems. As a matter of fact, couples hoping to adopt often have to pass strict screenings and sit on waitlists for years. "In the United States, for example, adoptions of U.S.-born children satisfy between one-half and two-thirds of the total demand for nonbiological children."

    http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20031101faessay826 11 -p10/ethan-b-kapstein/the-baby-trade.html

  293. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually thats how probability and percentages work stupid. Adding numbers from a subpopulation form the numbers for the population. so if 50 out of 100 marriages break ... there is a very good chance that one out of given two marriages will break. ofcourse every case is specific but that is why we have probability and percentages.

  294. Re:Companies are private organizations by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

    The majority is not always right, and neither is the minority. Just like you I vote my conscience, and my conscience says that homosexuality is a sin, there are certain non-negotiable things, and for many religious americans this may be one of them.

  295. Corporate power by Kenrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just yesterday I was reading on Slashdot about how evil corporations were, about how they should not be allowed involvement in government or political campaigns.

    But today many of the same people (I'm sure) are bitching about Microsoft's decision to stay out of this gay rights legislative battle.

    Lesson learned: Corporate power is OK as long as they're fighting on my side.

    Hypocrites.

    --
    Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    1. Re:Corporate power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      But today many of the same people (I'm sure) are bitching about Microsoft's decision to stay out of this gay rights legislative battle.

      Lesson learned: Corporate power is OK as long as they're fighting on my side.

      Hypocrites.


      Actually, all I see are the same people who call everyone hypocrites running around making posts calling everyone hypocrites without actually having any proof.

      But that's okay, it makes you look smart.

    2. Re:Corporate power by handslikesnakes · · Score: 1
      But today many of the same people (I'm sure)
      Well! Good thing you verified it then, rather than just basing it on "sureness".
    3. Re:Corporate power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Religious Right is an enemy, Microsoft is an enemy of the religious right.

      The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

      In more loose, sci-fi terms. It's like that episode of Voyager where the Borg discovered Species 8435, fought them, and realized they were a threat to the entire quadrant, so they temporarily teamed up with the Enterprise.

      You can't fault us for needing powerful allies against powerful enemies, we're being pragmatic. Do you really think the Allies could've beaten Germany without the Soviet Union?

    4. Re:Corporate power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the Enterprise wasn't on Voyager, but I'm hoping you knew that and just made a stupid error.

    5. Re:Corporate power by Scroatzilla · · Score: 1

      Ideally, corporations and special interests certainly should not be the ones influencing elections; but the reality is that they do, to an uncomfortably high degree. That is why this particular issue is worth saying something about.

      The crux of anti-corporate sentiment is that the bottom line should not be championed over humanity. In this case, the bottom line is definitely being championed over humanity since by making discrimination against gays explicitly illegal, the camel's nose is under the tent for opening up benefits and who knows what else to same-sex couples.

      So in this case, the Slashdotter anti-M$ sentiment is clearly not hypocrisy. M$'s giving in to the religious right sets a precident for other corporations. That precident is, among other things, that riding this current tide of nationality and pandering to Christian morality is what's best for business; to hell with humanity. Surely any other large company that does this deserves the same level of scrutiny.

    6. Re:Corporate power by rpillala · · Score: 1

      Ugh

      Most often, people are opposed to corporate influence over legislation because usually those corporations are acting in their own interest and to the detriment of a large group of people.

      This is a not the same thing at all.

      --
      When the axe came to the forest, the trees said, "Look out - the handle was once one of us."
  296. Microsoft is Pro GLBTQ by brontus3927 · · Score: 1
    While we all have problems with thier monopoly and how they interact with everyone who doesn't work for them, they trat their employees very well.

    Microsoft is generally considered the most gay-friendly corporation in the world. The Gay Union at my college has received grant money from Microsoft twice in the last 10 years. And this is just a 30 person group at a D3 school in NJ

  297. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 1

    Oh my god, what IS normal?

    My dad never took me to any sporting events growing up, nor did he ever play sports with me, nor encourage me into sports. Somehow, this is about the gayest non-gay thing you can do to a boy. Yet I turned out "normal" anyway (per your definition). Not athletic, nor interested in sports... but sure loves me some vagina.

    I don't think having gay foster parents would have any influence on whether a foster kid is gay or not. In fact, due to the rejection of parental norms phase in the teens, the kid is most likely going to be pushed the OPPOSITE way.

  298. Special Legislation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Section 1 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution states: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Why do we need special legislation to protect those who choose unconventional lifestyles? They're already protected.

  299. After years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of giving it to their customers up the ass, it comes as a shock when they don't support other sodomites.

    Well, they were clearly a top.

  300. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Your "if everyone was gay" comment demonstrates that you have not let go of your mental baggage. Or at least, suggests it. Everyone's not going to be gay. On the other hand, free from the prejudiced influences of our forebears, I suspect that most people would end up being bisexual, or perhaps as some say "trysexual - I'll try anything once". In such a world it might be acceptable to love anyone you want.

    As for the societal impact of only reproducing artificially, that day may come eventually regardless of homosexuality or lack thereof. Eventually medical science will progress to the point where we are able to do the job better than ma nature. Sex will lose some of the unnecessary emotional overhead when it is no longer necessary for procreation.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  301. Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    parent makes a good point

  302. Look this up first by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 1

    It would behoove anyone who hasn't read up on the topic yet to google the wide variety of sexual behavior observed in the animal kingdom before coming to any conclusions about the "naturalness" of same-sex proclivities.

    -a straight shooter

    1. Re:Look this up first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      those animals are being controlled by the devil, or possibly demons. yes my beliefs were invented by ignorant primitive nomads, thanks for asking. oh yeah we think sacrificing animals will make god not mad at you if he gets mad at your for something you did.

  303. They use PHP! LOL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anything, Microsoft is bowing down to a PHP using church! LOL! Too funny.

    Less funny is that whole seperation of church and state. Homosexuals, gays, lesbians etc. all fall under the "life, liberty and pursuit of happiness."
    Trust me, I like my sex partners with mammory glands, I mean they help me truly appreciate being a mammal. However, I respect freedom for more people than just me. I think that its OK to be a Jew, Muslim, Scientologist, or even Mormon! I choose the latter and I can't wait until polygamy is OK'd again! Wahooo!

  304. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    here here for big hoo-has!

  305. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, keep telling yourself that. The majority of the people in this country voted for a born-again president and a majority of born-again folks in the House of Representatives. The Senate, while perhaps not as democratic as the other chamber of Congress and the White House, are all still elected directly by the people.

    It might be nice to pin this all on "The Man," but "The Man" was put there by the people, including you and everybody around you. This is the nature of democracy, just ask anybody from Aristotle to Tocqueville.

    </BITTER CYNICISM>

  306. Your second point has merit by benhocking · · Score: 1

    But I don't like the first one. Declining to hear the case is making a decision - a decision to let the lower court's ruling stand. Perhaps this is their intent, but I suspect your rationale might be the more common one. I truly have no idea.

    As for your second point, for some laws this makes sense, but I'm not sure if it does for all laws. Take the Schiavo case - once the feeding tube was out some type of decision must be made, and made quickly. In this particular case I agree that the correct decision is to leave the case to the local/state courts. However, this case highlights the fact that we don't always have the luxury of letting the legislation clean up the law.

    As an aside, I read an excellent comment somewhere about why (some) laws should not be written like software design specifications should be written. If the laws try to be too exact, they end up spelling out exactly where the loop-holes are. An interesting idea, although I'm not entirely sure I agree with it.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:Your second point has merit by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      If the laws try to be too exact, they end up spelling out exactly where the loop-holes are. An interesting idea, although I'm not entirely sure I agree with it.

      Precise laws with loopholes are far better than vague laws that nobody knows how to comply with. "Love your neighbor", for example, forms the basis of Christian faith, but would be a terrible civil law despite not having any loopholes.

    2. Re:Your second point has merit by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Perhaps this is their intent, but I suspect your rationale might be the more common one. I truly have no idea.

      This is never their intent. Trust me. Federal courts will flame you brutally if you attempt to suggest that the SCOTUS approves of a lower court ruling simply because they declined to take a case that challenged it. Denial of certiori means nothing.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    3. Re:Your second point has merit by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      I also meant to reply, that my answer is somewhat of a cop-out because of course the vaguest laws that the courts have to deal with are the Constitutional provisions - the very ones they cannot invalidate. In this case, I would argue that the text of the document should be considered first; then, the clear intent of the original writers of the provision. And that's it. If it still cannot be resolved, then the court should probably defer to the legislature and allow the challenged law to stand.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  307. distortion is in the eye of the beholder by davidwr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I consider a federal judge who ... distorts the language away from it's original meaning when it was written, to be an activist judge.

    Original meaning is not always clear, and distortion is in the eye of the beholder.

    Remember, in Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court said the Civil-War ammendments of the US Constition did not require integrated schools.

    Half a century later, in Brown v. Topeka, they reversed themselves.

    Historically speaking, Plessy was probably closer to the original meaning of these ammendments. Was the mid-20th-century Court an activist court? Possibly, but in this particular case I think it's a good thing.

    A very practical definition of an activist judge is any judge that interprets the Constitution in a way the complainer doesn't like.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  308. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by amliebsch · · Score: 1
    The APA study is interesting, though there were things that gave me pause; for example, the finding that children raised by lesbian households tend to adopt more feminine characteristics. I guess I want to be convinced that being raised by a gay couple is substantially preferrable to being raised by a single parent/guardian.

    Am I wrong to wonder about socialization?

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  309. OBscure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's "perVECT", you Klahd!

  310. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    what your vast intellect fails to understand is that the population of all heterosexual marriages in the united states is VASTLY Heterogeneous. there are people with 10+ divorces and couples married for 60 years. you cannot assign the population statistics to any given member of the population unless it is a homogeneous population

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  311. Same sex child raising by TamMan2000 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Is it a natural for a child to have same sex parents.

    If you define parents as adults who raise a child, then yes, it is...

    There are many cultures where entire villages raise children collectivly, the women are all "mother" to all of the children.

    You could say that it isn't normal in western culture for children to be raised by two parents of the same gender, but there is no evidence that it is harmful.

    Additionally there is a practical question to be answered. Is it better to be raised by two people who care for each other and you, or by a long string of different foster parents?

    Kids are going unadopted, is that preferable to adoption by a gay couple? Surely not...

    --
    "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    1. Re:Same sex child raising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "troll" mod metamodded unfair

  312. Microsoft What? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    I read that as: "Microsoft Abandons Gay Bill"

    And I thought, "Didn't they do that years ago when Monkey Ballmer became the CEO?"

  313. This bothers me quite a bit. Not because of the gay rights issue (at this point, I don't really care one way or another), but because people are getting upset that Microsoft, a privately held corporation, is not acting out on a support of a law.

    Microsoft is a company. It makes software and some hardware. What does Microsoft have in any way, shape or form to do with social politics? The only error Microsoft made was to get involved with this in the first place.

    What's next, a story on Slashdot about how Cisco systems doesn't contribute money to cancer research? Should we see hundreds of posts about how Cisco is a heartless corporation and that it must hate cancer victims?

    And I'd wish all those religion bashers would realize that most religious people are more or less nice, decent people who care about all of mankind. To lump your average Christian in with outspoken zealots and shout off insane statements like "religion is ruining our country" is stupid.

    Get your head out of your asses, you closed minded bigots. You're just as bad as the fundies.

    --
    The Internet is generally stupid
  314. Think of lawsuit prevention by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    This is why they are now agaisnt the bill.

    It serves Microsoft's own corporate interest to protect themselves if any gay or lesbian employee files a suit agaisnt there company.

    Believe it or not the Americans with dissabilities act and non discrimination laws are being used in almost any lawsuit dealing with job termination.

    Many employers now prefer not to hire anyone with a dissability or member of a minority race for that reason. Its gone out of control.

    1. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      mod parent -1, brain dead

      MS has a non-discrimination policy, internally. They're not afraid of the government instituting one.

      And that reactionary drivel about such laws making employers afraid to hire minorities is fucking absurd.

    2. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I am not anti gay but let me tell you a story?

      My brother works for a fortune 500 company which will remain nameless. This company opened a call center in Orlando for customer ordering and customer service calls.

      The call center manager found a new job and gave the 2 week notice that he was quiting. The director chose his secretary to replace him?? Not only was she not qualified to be a secretary but she got the position from banging the director on the side.

      Eventually the VP of HR found out about this and written up the call center director and threatened to fire him and he also fired the secretary who was promoted to manager.

      The secretary then sued because she was hispanic and discriminated agaisnt. She won 1.3 million dollars!

      Now tell me how frivilious lawsuits agaisnt wrongfull termination are not out of control?

      I am not saying gays and lesbians should not have equal rights. I am only saying the more laws try to help the more lawyers will use them to hurt the people they are supposed to help.

      For example I have aspergers which is a mild form of autism. Many employers wont hire me because I could sue the company for wrongfull termination. In other words the Americans with dissabilities act helps me in alot of ways but hurts me in the liability obbsessed corporate world.

      I could see a lesbian or gay employee rightfully terminated but using a bs case like the one stated above to try to sue Microsoft. If you have a good lawyer more than likely you will win.

      Just because they have a policy to protect gay and lesbian workers does not mean they can not be sued friviously.

    3. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by multiplexo · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I am not anti gay but let me tell you a story?

      Anyone who starts a sentence with a disclaimer such as "I am not anti gay", "I'm not a racist, but" probably is whatever they are disclaiming.

      My brother works for a fortune 500 company which will remain nameless. This company opened a call center in Orlando for customer ordering and customer service calls.

      Dude. I heard this story about this family that hired this babysitter, and she was on acid, and she ended up microwaving the baby. It's totally true.

      The call center manager found a new job and gave the 2 week notice that he was quiting. The director chose his secretary to replace him?? Not only was she not qualified to be a secretary but she got the position from banging the director on the side.

      Dude, what the fuck is it with you and question marks?

      Eventually the VP of HR found out about this and written up the call center director and threatened to fire him and he also fired the secretary who was promoted to manager.

      The secretary then sued because she was hispanic and discriminated agaisnt. She won 1.3 million dollars!

      Now tell me how frivilious lawsuits agaisnt wrongfull termination are not out of control?

      OK, I'll tell you, frivolous lawsuits against wrongful termination are not out of control. You give us a bullshit story which you probably heard off of a right wing talk radio show. You won't even name the name of the company, which is strange because if this secretary did exist, and she did sue the company and she did win 1.3 million dollars then it would be a matter of public record, hardly something that we'd have to shamefully whisper about on /. Save your anecdotes, give us statistics or fuck off.

      I am not saying gays and lesbians should not have equal rights. I am only saying the more laws try to help the more lawyers will use them to hurt the people they are supposed to help.

      So we should get rid of those laws against robbery and other crimes because unscrupulous lawyers will just use them to hurt the victims of robbery and assault. OK, that makes sense, if you're a paranoid schizophrenic with a penchant for chewing on lead based paint and drinking Nyquil, that is. So if we don't have laws that say that discriminating against someone because of their race, creed, color, sexual orientation or disability is illegal then exactly how do we reach this wonderful nirvana where everyone loves one another? Sure, some people are enlightened and won't need an anti-discrimination law to prevent them from firing someone just because they're a queer, or a nigger, or a spic, or a kike or a cripple but others will need to be bitch-slapped right up against the side of the head to dissuade them from such behavior.

      For example I have aspergers which is a mild form of autism. Many employers wont hire me because I could sue the company for wrongfull termination.

      Is that why you can't spell? Is that why you don't know what a question mark is for? Tell me, how the fuck is an employer going to know if you have Asperger's syndrome? Do you walk into interviews and say "Oh, BTW, I have a mild form of autism called Asperger's syndrome, that's why I'm such a spaz"? Inquiring minds want to know. I think that many employers won't hire you because you're an idiot.

      Now, I am missing my left leg below the knee as a result of a motorcycle accident. If I'm not wearing my prostheses it's pretty obvious that I'm different from regular people because I'm on crutches and well, because, well because I don't have a fucking left foot any more! This isn't like Asperger's, it's right out there and the only way you could miss it is if you were blind. It's not like people are sitting there and saying "Gee, there's something a little bit different about that guy".

      Now, I've interviewed for four jobs since my accident and I did three of those interviews on crutches and without a prostheses becau

      --
      cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    4. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1
      Say, that wasnt the "Peoples Republic of China" was it?

      I did hear something about that going down when I was there.

    5. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Now tell me how frivilious lawsuits agaisnt wrongfull termination are not out of control?

      They are not out of control because you told a rambling and pointless anecdote.

      I rather doubt that anyone could get $1.3M from a Fortune 500 legal department simply for being hispanic. Either there was substantial evidence of discrimination, or (more likely) this chick had some very good dirt on someone up high.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    6. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The director himself resigned after the incident and claimed the workplace was too hostile. Of course the chick had dirt from someone high up because the director was this chicks boyfriend.

      My guess is the director backed up every allegation so he could get some of the settlement. F*ckin prick.

      But yes the story is %100 true and the name of the company is FedEx.

      They are appealing the case and because the director gave nothing but high performance reviews for the secretary so it showed there was no evidence to fire her. It must be because she was hispanic right? .. rolls eyes.

      But lawsuits are very common in any corporation and yes they are out of control. Walmart has something like 250+ lawsuits agaisnt it at the moment and most of them deal with labor issues from inside the company.

      I have seen workers who were fired outright for poor performance and not showing up for work only to complain to HR for sexual harrasment so they get rehired. Sadly it works.

      I work at Busch Gardens right now in the traffic department and I see lawsuits occur almost on a weekly basis for all sorts of silly things. For example someone crosses the street outside the park and ignores the signs for the park entrance and gets hit by a car. Its the parks fault pay me a million dollars. Or someone hits another car in the parking lot. Oh, its not the drivers fault who happens to be using a cell phone and drinking a beer while leaving. Its the parks fault because someone needs to be in each parking lane observing and controlling traffic. That prick won the case too and cut our whole budget and we had to fire... you guessed... traffic controllers so the park is now less safe. Pay me money. Funny I do not see trafic controllers at the local grocery store lot soley to prevent collisions? Why here?

      I mean where does it end?

      Even if a lawsuit is not likely most hope for a chance for another chance at the job or hope for a settlement.

    7. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by lisaparratt · · Score: 1

      Tell the person forced away from the hospital bedside mere moments before their lover passes away that it's all in the name of lawsuit prevention.

      I'm sure that'll brighten their spirits in no time.

    8. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here's one of many links to the actual story:

      http://www.eeoc.gov/press/12-22-04.html

      According to that, some of the details that you gave aren't quite right, but the gist is consistent with what you've said.

      Take that!!--all you disbelievers!

    9. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even from the scanty details provided, it sounds like a legitimate case. The secretary did not do anything illegal by "banging the director on the side"; immoral, perhaps, but we don't even know that because you didn't say whether either party was married.

      So then the boss finds out, and, instead of disciplining the director for having a relationship with a subordinate or for nepotism, he fires the secretary?!

      If I'd been on that trial, I would have sided with her too. Why should she pay the price for a consensual relationship when the other side was not punished in any way? What a double standard!

      As far as your aspergers causing you not to be hired "because [you] could sue the company for wrongfull[sic] termination", what a crock of shit! If employers didn't hire anyone who could sue them, they would never have employees. And what does your aspergers have to do with it? Newsflash, anyone can sue for wrongful termination.

      I have AS, and I've never had any problems getting work...but then, I don't talk about it to a potential employer. It's irrelevant; I impress them with my ability to do the job, and don't dwell on my personal issues.

      And finally, are you seriously saying we should not pass laws because a person might misuse that law? Gee, I guess we should repeal the Civil Rights Act because a single black person might misuse it.

    10. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grocery stores don't let you drink alcohol on their premises. That's the price your company pays for selling a consciousness altering substance. I expect the budget you have would be much smaller without the -OH sales.

    11. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Walmart has 250+ lawsuits because they are complete fucking assholes, and routinely break all labor laws. They have workers perform work off the clock, they hire illegal workers, they discriminate against just about everyone except white good ol' boys, and they illegally prevent their workers from joining unions. These are not isolated, individual cases; these happen all over the country in multiple stores.

      But, I guess you're right. There's no good cause for any legal protection for the worker. Let's go back to the good ol' feudal days, when we were bound to the land.

    12. Re:Think of lawsuit prevention by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      The link is biased. Its by the equal opportunity commission.

      This person was a secretary who was not qualified to be a senior manager. Nothing too it.

      I admit I am biased too because I side with my brother who works for the company.

      But I would be furious and angry too if I were an HR director and found out about this. Either find someone with managerial experience or get your degree first. The company has a right to demote someone unqualified to a previous position. She was not disciplined like the article looked but just told "We made a mistake" go back to what you were doing.

      But it is illegal to cut people's pay in most states so in my opinion I would fire the director who hired her in the first place.

  315. more John Adams quotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    John Adams 1735-1826, 2nd President of the United States:

    "The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion."

    "This would be the best of all possible worlds, if there were no religion in it." [ in a letter to Thomas Jefferson]

    "Let the human mind loose. It must be loose. It will be loose. Superstition and dogmatism cannot confine it."

    "But how has it happened that millions of fables, tales, legends, have been blended with both Jewish and Christian revelation that have made them the most bloody religion that ever existed."

    "Have you considered that system of holy lies and pious frauds that has raged and triumphed for 1500 years."

    "The question before the human race is, whether the God of nature shall govern the world by his own laws, or whether priests and kings shall rule it by fictitious miracles."

  316. Oh, fer... by Tony · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You've *got* to be kidding. Christians are one of the least-discriminated-against groups in this country. At the moment, the most-bashed group is the liberals. Fundamentalist Christians also get slammed, but *not* Christians, as a general rule.

    With the fundamentalists, it isn't so much their religion that gets slammed, but the willful ignorance that goes along with it. "Intelligent design" is *not* science, no matter how many times you say them in the same sentence. Getting upset at gay couples for wanting the same recognition as non-gay couples is not socially fair, no matter how much anal sex or cunnilingus upsets your delicate sensibilities. And unfortunately, fundamentalists are one of the groups to do the most discriminating.

    That's the difference. There are many Christians I hold in great esteem, and would not dare (or even want) to impugn their beliefs. I don't even believe fundamentalists are real Christians; I believe they are a cult.

    But that's perhaps a kneejerk reaction to those fundamentalists who believe Mormonism, Catholicism, and Unitarianism are "just" cults.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Oh, fer... by Timothy+Chu · · Score: 1

      > Christians are one of the least-discriminated-against groups in this country

      You wouldn't be able to tell that from all the anti-Christian posts that have been modded up.

    2. Re:Oh, fer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they have a point.

    3. Re:Oh, fer... by seriesrover · · Score: 1

      I know...

  317. Amendment IX: A presumption of liberty by tepples · · Score: 4, Informative

    Knowing almost nothing about that case, and being for state's rights, and knowing that the word "sodomy" does not appear in the US Constitution

    Look at Amendment IX: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." Many would argue that "others retained by the people" include the right to perform consensual gay sex acts on private property.

    1. Re:Amendment IX: A presumption of liberty by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      That merely states that the constitution itself does not deny rights. It does not imply that state's can not choose to deny rights that are not covered by the constitution. At least, that's how I read it.

      --
      moo
    2. Re:Amendment IX: A presumption of liberty by General+Wesc · · Score: 1
      But then we get to #10, which is the real kicker:
      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

      (At which point Republicans tend to say, 'Ah! See: the states can restrict these things'. But that's because they always stop reading too soon. We fought a big war about this stuff, and came up with some new amendments, notably, number fourteen. They hate that one, and I know those down south where I live [North Carolina] like to predent it doesn' t exist.)

    3. Re:Amendment IX: A presumption of liberty by DanAnderson26 · · Score: 1

      TO argue this point you would have to prove that there was an existing "right" to perform sodomy. I don't think you will find that this "right" existed after the fall of Rome.

  318. What's odd? by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    "Odd, given their previous accolades from the GLBT community, and their prior public support for the bill."

    What's odd about it? The far right is controlling our government right now and they are controlled by a few religious fanatics. Microsoft wants to continue whoring political favors so that they can gain unfair advantages through legislation. It's only natural that they wouldn't want to support anything that would anger these religious zealots.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  319. If everyone were gay.... by Tony · · Score: 1

    If everyone was gay, we would not be reproducing.

    And if everyone were lawyers, we would have sued each other out of existence by now. What's your point? My point is, we are *all* different, choose different paths, make different decisions. That is a *good* thing.

    You cannot argue something is bad simply because it does not allow reproduction. There are many species that rely on non-reproducing members. Bees, for instance. Ants. It is not a biological imperetive to reproduce.

    Social issues should not be determined by the ability or willingness to reproduce. Fuck, there are too many people reproducing as it is. As population pressures increase, I hope there are more gays. We should be encouraging people to be gay, fer christs sake.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:If everyone were gay.... by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your input, im not saying its bad, im just questioning where our species would be in the future if natural reproduction didnt happen.

      You make a good point about over population though. Maybe it was built into our species to slow down reproduction? or over population?

    2. Re:If everyone were gay.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is not a biological imperetive to reproduce."

      What a load of crap.

      I don't give a fuck about other species - we are talking here about humans.

      Do you realize the fact that the whole reason sex is pleasurable is because it helps preserve continuation of human species ?

      We can argue that we as humans are sufficiently intelligent to recognize that basic instincts should be used as a moral backbone of our social systems, but to claim that biologically homosexuals are equal to heterosexuals is insane.

    3. Re:If everyone were gay.... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It IS a biological imperative to reproduce. However, as humans we are supposed to be above our hormones and pheromones and capable of making rational decisions even when our endocrine system is urging us otherwise.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  320. Re:sex in this aspect is neither love nor orientat by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    If you're talking about things like love, respect, caring, friendship, bonding, etc, then I personally don't think sex or sexual orientation have anything to do with it. That's just my opinion though.

    I've formed loving relationships with lots of people of both sexes. I love some of my old buddies from high school more than most of the girlfriends I've had, and some of the women I love most in the world I have never and will never have a sexual relationship with because we're not attracted to each other. Those feelings don't have anything to do with my sexual orientation.

    I think of sexual orientation and attraction as a barrier. It's a filter that says "Of all these people that I see at the bar, I will pursue a sexual relationship with only those. Of all the people that I love, I will consider a marriage with only these."

    I think at the end of the day the link between love and sex in the individual is about as strong as the link between the sound of a bell and having to pee. Which is to say, as strong as their decisions and experiences have caused it to be; and from what I can see in most people out there that's not very strong at all. Color me cynical.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  321. why unfair by maxwells_deamon · · Score: 1

    Please also realize that that we do not really know what the terms MAN and WOMAN mean.

    Most people think a baby is born and the doctor looks at him/her and says its a boy/girl and that is written on the birth certificate. And we are done.

    Some people get sex change operations and then though some legal process, get (I guess) a new birth certificate.

    Well that is usually the case however there are some execeptions.

    In one case in 10,000 the doctor goes "Ummmm" or "WTF!" It is not clear what the sex of the child is.

    What generally happened (especially before 1980) was the doctor would do a little surgury and ASSIGN a sex of female(because it was easiest) and the child was started on female hormones (if needed) at a future date. In many cases the child was not told about this and only discovered the truth after the child was married and went to the doctor to find out if/why they could not have children.

    We can now do a DNA test and determine the sex of these folks in most cases. (I believe that slightly more than 1/2 of them are eventually discovered to be male)

    How should the law treat these people????

    They can not marry ever? They adopt children and CPS must take them away when they are found out? Military service? This gets to a a very nasty road...

    Now to make things really nasty there are people from a genetic standpoint who are not female and also not male. XXY and such, also there Chimeras:
    brie.medlabscience.med.ualberta.ca/de/genetics/70g en-term.html

    Thanks for keeping an open mind. One question back to you. If we limit marriage to two people of any sex, What damage to my traditional marrige of over 20+ years can even be concidered to occur? I have never seen a real attempt to answer this question.

    1. Re:why unfair by Warpedcow · · Score: 1

      For starters, you make very good points in your description of the "in between" sex people due to birth defects. I really don't know how to deal with that.


      One question back to you. If we limit marriage to two people of any sex, What damage to my traditional marrige of over 20+ years can even be concidered to occur? I have never seen a real attempt to answer this question.


      Literal reading of your suggestion implies that siblings would be allowed to marry, and kids would be allowed to marry their parents, etc. There are other many other concerns, some of which are as simple as not wanting to change "societal norms".

      --
      moo
  322. What is happening? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    For fucks sake, is this really so important to be on the front page of Slashdot? I will probably be modded down for this, but anyway...

    While Slashdot thinks it is important to post news about Microsoft backing away from a gay bill with a source of from a random blog, there has been GCC 4 released, Apple has been paying tech editors to praise iPod, they managed to put 200 Gbits on a holographic disk and ton more of real news that matters.

  323. Chew on this one by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 1

    1) Explain the fact that somehow, you never consciously decided to like the opposite sex (since it is jarringly obvious that this is the only thing you ever conceived), yet somehow ALL homosexuals DID consciously decide to like the SAME sex, AND put up with all the shit that goes along with that. Explain that one to me. Gay sex must feel good something FIERCE, for these people to have to WANT to go through this shit. See the flaw in your logic? It pretty much HAS to be something you're born with, or at least, something you never "decided" to like.

    2) It is "undermine", not "undermind".

    3) Use of the phrase "sexual deviant" should be reserved for when someone is harmed, such as child abuse- not two consenting adults.

    4) I have no idea when the fuck Apple became some sort of lightning-rod for computer-using fags, but it is really starting to piss me off. I loves me some pussy and I also use a G5 at home, and wish I didn't have to use Windows at work. I just have more of an open mind than about everyone I run into.

    1. Re:Chew on this one by zardo · · Score: 1
      1. I am not explaining you, you're the one tasked with that responsibility. Burden of proof is on you.

      But you want to talk about flaws in logic. You just came to some belief that gays are born gay based on your crazy fear of ridicule.

      My best friend growing up was in love with my sister, asked her out all the time and she rejected him all the time, now he's gay. Explain that.

      3. You're wrong. Deviance is a term used often in sociology for someone who goes against the norms. It's not even a derogatory term. It would also help you understand #1, check it out at wikipedia or something.

    2. Re:Chew on this one by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

      4) I have no idea when the fuck Apple became some sort of lightning-rod for computer-using fags, but it is really starting to piss me off. I loves me some pussy and I also use a G5 at home, and wish I didn't have to use Windows at work. I just have more of an open mind than about everyone I run into.

      When Apple became fabulously stylish.

      --
      Nice Marmot
  324. Thought crimes? by thelen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the law isn't taking assault seriously enough, then we should change that - not cook up extra "thought crime" statutes to tack on. And the use of the phrase "thought crime" here is completely apt - we're talking about a law that criminalises the thought behind the crime, rather than the act itself. This is a very very very bad precedent,

    Courts routinely take into account the reasoning and motivations of the accused in determining what sort of charge to levy and the severity of the penalty. What is the difference between manslaughter and first degree murder if not the difference of the killer's mental state? Hate crimes are a natural extension of the well established precedent that some actions can be made worse when combined with a dispicable motive.

  325. let's be equal - don't recognize any marraiges by davidwr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The ultimate in marraige equality is to not have any government recognition of them at all.

    If a religious groups wants to marry a couple, fine, but nobody else has to recognize it.

    If a couple want the "benefits" of marraige, have their lawyers draft a 50-page "financial merger and caretaking of minor children and durable power of attorney" agreement and file it at the courthouse.

    As for social security survivor's benefits, sorry, no marraige, no widow's benefits. As for private pension survivor's benefits, that's up to the company doing the pension. Remaining 401(k) balances would be covered by beneficiary clauses or go to the estate.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:let's be equal - don't recognize any marraiges by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      "If a couple want the "benefits" of marraige, have their lawyers draft a 50-page "financial merger and caretaking of minor children and durable power of attorney" agreement and file it at the courthouse."

      And thus only the well-off can get the benefits of marriage?

  326. Oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they realized how bigoted their anti-bigotry bill was?

  327. Wrong wrong wrong by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    They specifically ruled, not because of personal likes and dislikes, but because the constitution says no cruel and unusual punishments. It may or may not be cruel, but it has been getting more and more unusual as the years have gone by. What are they supposed to do, interpret "cruel" and "unusual" by 1780 standards?

    Whether or not you think it cruel or unusual is irrelevant unless you are one of the nine. If you don't like it, tough. They didn't just decide arbitrarily, they based it on logic and reasoning. To slur them because you disagree is just as bad as being an activist judge.

    1. Re:Wrong wrong wrong by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      but it has been getting more and more unusual as the years have gone by.

      Except for the inconvenient fact that this isn't true. Between 1990 and 2003, 123 of 3,599 death sentences, or 3.4%, were given to individuals who committed crimes before reaching age 18. By contrast, only 2.1% of those sentenced to death between 1982 and 1988 committed the crimes when they were under 18. As for actual executions of under-18 offenders, they constituted 2.4% of the total executions since 1973. Thus, the numbers of under-18 offenders subjected to the death penalty, though low compared with adults, have either held steady or slightly increased. Furthermore, additional states have explicitly allowed for such punishment in recent years.

      The court has previously held that in determining the meaning of "unusual," that this determination should be based on whether or not there exists a "national consensus" on the matter, as determined by "objective indicia that reflect the public attitude toward a given sanction"-namely, "statutes passed by society's elected representatives." How can the view of less than a simple majority of the states that permit capital punishment be a national consensus? How are the views of foreign governments relevant to this question?

      Don't presume that because I disagree with the court, that I don't know what I'm talking about.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  328. Re:Companies are private organizations by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    The republican party found one single issue they can bank on. As long as the republicans supply a candidate who is for defending marrige as defined between a man and a woman, they will keep winning elections. It is the ONLY reason bush won the last election.

    You're probably right. But just because most people are unethical and want to tell other people what is and is not morally right and wrong (as if they were some sort of authority) a few of us like to vote our consciences, even if we are a minority. You see a hundred years ago the majority of people thought black people were an inferior race. Two hundred years ago the majority of people thought women were inferior to men, weaker and less intelligent and should not be allowed to own property of their own. Four hundred years ago anyone who said the earth revolved around the sun was declared an evil heretic who had to be burned to protect society.


    Actually I think you are complicating the issue. Marriage is a term that applies to a union between a man and a women. If two homosexual people would like to get together, Why not just call it something else? I know it would be difficult to get all the rights of a married couple but its better then trying to get the term marriage to include homosexual unions? I could be out of the loop but this seams to make sense?

  329. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That cartoon should have the roles reversed, and the gay person calls the Christian "homophobic" and "full of hate".

  330. No. It only seems like that sometimes. by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In theory, the roll of public companies in society isn't just to make money for a few people. Most corporations have a mission statement that spells out why they should be granted these special "personhood" rights. In that statement is often more than just money making. There is almost always a fuzzy "Values" section where they say what good they will bring to the world in exchange for these rights. Wouldn't it be a better world if more companies attempted to live up to there own values?

  331. The bill just died in the WA senate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    25-24.

    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/aplocal_stor y. asp?category=6420&slug=WA%20XGR%20Gay%20Rights

    The advantage of having a huge company and a near monopoly is the ability to do whatever you choose. Want to put out a low quality product? Sure go for it! Want to support a social cause? Sure go for it! Want to drop said cause like a hot potato? Sure go for it. The consequences are all the same.

    None.

  332. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    No I dont think i have any baggage about this toppic but maybe i could have said it better. Im tring to understand this topic better, thank you for your comment you have a good point. Im not saying being gay is wrong. I just dont know what impact it would have if natural reproduction didnt happen.

  333. Eleven states by daveo0331 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those eleven states were specifically chosen by the people supporting those laws as the most likely states to pass such a thing. Let's take a look at the list:

    Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Utah, Arkansas, Ohio, Michigan, and Oregon

    All but the last two are red states. Some on the list are among the reddest states in the country. Getting an anti-gay-marriage initiative passed in Oklahoma or Georgia is a lot different from getting one passed in Massachusetts or California. By choosing those eleven states, they are now able to go around saying "Look, 11 of 11 states voted to ban gay marriage!" They're hoping they can build momentum based on people not thinking about this.

    --
    Remember the days when Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility?
  334. on placing children in foster and adoptive homes by davidwr · · Score: 1

    When placing foster and adoptive children, the agency should consider 2 things:

    1) is the prospective parent or couple BETTER than where the child is now?
    2) is the prospective parent or couple AS GOOD AS any other prospective parent or couple that's likely to be available SOON?

    Even if you are correct when you say "gay couples shouldn't be allowed to be foster parents," and I don't think you are, MANY foster kids are in group homes or other situations that are WORSE OFF than a less-than-ideal foster or adoptive parent.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  335. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    The APA study is interesting, though there were things that gave me pause; for example, the finding that children raised by lesbian households tend to adopt more feminine characteristics.
    /me pauses.

    So?
    I guess I want to be convinced that being raised by a gay couple is substantially preferrable to being raised by a single parent/guardian.
    I can guarantee you without doing any empirical research at all that being raised by certain single guardians is worse than being raised by certain gay couples, and likewise that being raised by certain gay couples is worse than being raised by certain single guardians. So, what bearing should this have on legal policy?
    Am I wrong to wonder about socialization?
    No, you are not wrong to wonder about socialization. You are wrong to prevent good people from doing good things.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  336. 1200 comments in 2 1/2 hours by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    8 comments a minute.

    How many of those 1200 comments mentioned Microsoft?

  337. Christians singled out for legal discrimination! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, there are numerous laws that single out Christians for discrimination!
    It's true - if a Christian comes "out of the closet" at work, they can be fired - legally!
    And then there's those laws against Christians marrying, adopting kids, having sexual relations with each other, etc.

    It's really a darn shame.

  338. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    so your saying that 2 people from the same sex cant have concievechildern(which is true) or they have sex and a child is born(dosent work). BTW your a faggot arent you?
    Dunno how that relates to my original counterpoint, where I contradicted your assertion that gay people are abnormal because "first they cant have childern naturally."

    They can and do have children naturally. Rather often.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  339. The Bill Just Lost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bill just lost by a single vote. It's hard to argue that Microsoft withdrawing its support didn't make the difference.

    More here:
    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/20 02248670_webgayrights21.html

  340. bigotry... by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Why is it states are passing referendums, public referendums, where homosexual marrige is outlawed by votes over 80%??"

    Oh come on now. Certain southern states recently put up referendums to repeal laws banning interracial marriage . Guess what? A significant percentage of the population voted to keep the bans

    So when BS like discrimination against homosexuals or jews or muslims come up, I no longer wonder why. The answer is that a disturbingly large percentage of the american population are bigoted fucktards. There's millions of real-life archie bunkers out there, chewing away on their fat cigars and whining about queers and blacks and jews.

    Go ahead and mod me down. The truth hurts, but modding down doesnt make the truth go away.

  341. good by j1mmy · · Score: 1

    No corporation should lobby for any legislation under any circumstance, no matter how good the cause. It's good to see Microsoft not interfering with government for once.

  342. Iraq??? by Sparcler · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I was wondering if this could have anything to do with Iraq? We know Bush is anti-gay and Microsoft is or was pro-gay. So Bush gets Microsoft to drop the pro-gay thing in exchange for some special right to selling software in Iraq as the Iraqi market begins to open up. I would like to know what other People think.

  343. Re:Marriage based on Religion? How about...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do NOT, good sir, restrict my RIGHT to PICK and CHOOSE what parts of the bible I want to believe in. thanks, homos are icky; jebus don't like mens whut kisses other mens.

  344. Hipocrisy as Work by mirio · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Anyone notice the rampant hypocrisy here with folks being upset by this?

    Since when are Slashdot readers fans of multinational corporations influencing government legislation? Oh, I guess when the bill they're pushing coincides with your personal beliefs, huh?

    1. Re:Hipocrisy as Work by StandardDeviant · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nah, I'm just as pissed that Microsoft
      has their fingers so deeply in the legislative
      process that a threatened product boycott could
      stall legislation as I am at the cryptofascist
      Neanderthals from the Religious Wrong having so much
      clout. :( Jesus wept.

    2. Re:Hipocrisy as Work by Yosho · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, of course. I like it when corporations promote things that I like. I don't like it when they promote things that I don't like. What's hypcritical about that?

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
  345. human right? by _newwave_ · · Score: 1

    What about the human right to employ whom I please?

    1. Re:human right? by kalidasa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What about the human right to employ whom I please?

      You mean the human right to only employe whites, because you do not please to hire blacks, Asians, Hispanics, or South Asians? No, that's not a human right.

    2. Re:human right? by flyingsquid · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      What about the human right to employ whom I please?

      Well, let's turn that argument around. You say, "it's OK to fire people just because they're gay". You do a great job and don't bother anyone at work, but I'm your employer, and I feel that this is insensitive, insufficiently liberal and politically incorrect. Plus, I hear that you have been doing things in your off time which are causing the moral breakdown of Western Civilization- like voting Republican. So I fire your heartless conservative ass. Or maybe I'm at Microsoft and I hear you express support for open source software and feel that this is a menace which must be purged at all costs.

      Still want to argue that companies should be able to hire and fire for any reason whatsoever?

    3. Re:human right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Certainly. If you're stupid enough to fire me for my skin color/views/whatever, you're stupid enough to get your ass kicked in the marketplace when my product beats yours. Freedom sometimes means you have the freedom to be an idiot, be my guest.

    4. Re:human right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're stupid enough to get your ass kicked in the marketplace when my product beats yours.

      Ahahaha

      Right, because the Religious Right Family Values team can crank out superior code with 40 hour workweeks and weekends off (can't skip Church now, and Jim over there in GUI development needs to get home to little Timmy to take him to his T-Ball game). Given that the Business Right Managers have failed to show any sign of understanding how to manage a software project reasonably, I don't see it working for you now when your only goal is to "show those commie computer geeks who's the boss"

      All I can say is "go for it". Especially in the games market. I'd pay $5 for a game where I play as Jesus, turn rocks into bread, command all the kingdoms of the world, and throw myself off buildings.

    5. Re:human right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh and I forgot, you've probably got a non-compete signed for over the next year. You wouldn't happen to be one of those Hypocritical Republicans who are all for government keeping out of people's lives... except when the government could be helping you, right? You wouldn't be crying to those "activist" judges right about now trying to get yourself out of your employment contracts?

    6. Re:human right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it is.

    7. Re:human right? by arodland · · Score: 1

      Um, sure it is. It's freedom from having someone tell you "hire some of them minority folks or I'll take your money, and if you don't like that, I'll haul you off to jail, and if you don't like that, I'll shoot you." Sure, hiring fairly is a good policy, but tell me why not hiring someone is such a gross violation of their basic rights that it requires legal action?

    8. Re:human right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I believe that he is referring to the right to hire someone competent and qualified for the position. I have witnessed job interviews for positions that require higher math that were not able to test their math skill because the company was sued for discrimination.

      I have also witnessed unqualified people get hired over qualified ones because the company had a federeally mandated quota to fulfill.

      To sound politically incorrect, in my generation if anything I have seen discrimination against whites. It is perfectly alright to have a BET channel but if someone was to create a White Entertainment Network and declare they were only going to hire whites, they would be sued out of existance. There is Black Miss America, Hispanic Miss America, etc, but if someone would create a White Miss America they would be declared satan themselves. It is praised when a black, hispanic, asian man starts a business and only hires their race, but a white man does it and they are evil.

      I want equality and I can not stand discrimination, but I have seen a whole lot of discrimination coming from the other side of things that no one seems to want to look at.

      I think I am done ranting now.

    9. Re:human right? by Anonamused+Cow-herd · · Score: 1

      I disagree -- it is your right. However, it is a right that our culture sees fit to impinge upon, and rightly so, according to me. I think that you should be able (in general) to spend YOUR money however you want to spend it. However, some freedoms damage overall freedom of the society.

      --
      -----[0_o]-----
      We are not amused.
    10. Re:human right? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Still want to argue that companies should be able to hire and fire for any reason whatsoever?"

      Uh, yeah. People with principles don't discard them when they're inconvenient.

      I happen to think it would be unprincipled to discriminate in my hiring practices. I believe that would be a) silly and b) immoral. However, I think quotas/affirmative action/the politically correct flavor of the week is MORE unprincipled.

      I want a color blind society. You can't get one of those by making distinctions based on color.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    11. Re:human right? by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      So I have a great idea and start a company. I work 16 hour days for ten years, barely pulling in minimum wage, but after all that labor I'm successful enough to hire an assistent.

      Now, after all MY work, you are telling me that I have no rights in the hiring process? I must hand the hiring process over to government bureaucrats who've not lifted a finger to help me build my company. And what claim does the "blacks, Asians, Hispanics, or South Asians" have to a position at the company I built.

      You, sir, have a very strange view of 'rights'.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    12. Re:human right? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Positive discrimination is a dubious area that I think is probably a bad thing for the ethnic groups that it's supposed to benefit. It's essentially a statement that people of that race require special favours, as if they can't get by on merit.

      This is different to preventing negative discrimination however.

      tell me why not hiring someone is such a gross violation of their basic rights that it requires legal action?

      I believe that someone's ethnic group is not a factor in someone's capabilities. Therefore a society that makes decisions based on this is hamstringing itself. Illustration: There could be a black Einstein out there trying to get tenure and failing due to discrimination. But a less prejudiced society will be making maximum use of its members.

      Moving to a more personal level, everyone should be given a fair chance and assessed on what they can actually do. This is fair and fair is good. Imagine walking into a company where everyone was of a different ethnic group than you and being told they didn't want you because of your skin colour. I'm not being rhetorical - really imagine it. You would be wanting (justifiably) to address this challenge.

      Implementing laws that support this are difficult and sometimes counter-productive (see some of the efforts at positive discrimination), but there must be some attempt to address this as a society, because it is wrong.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    13. Re:human right? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      I want a color blind society. You can't get one of those by making distinctions based on color.

      Amen! Racism is out of date and it's long overdue we moved on as a society.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  346. Good news for Apple? by SirBruce · · Score: 2, Funny

    Maybe millions of GLBT and GLBT-friendly computer users will boycott Microsoft and start buying Macs?

    Bruce

    1. Re:Good news for Apple? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too late, they're already the only people who buy Macs...

  347. Their real reasoning is..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was too much reverse engineering going on.

  348. hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "don't ask don't tell" also applies to all that icky hetereosexual stuff in offices, like smiling pictures of m/f couples on desks... oh and all those wedding bands are going to have to be removed before work too!

  349. Cut the Bush v. Gore crap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The real decision was 5-2-2-0. Five said "you fucked up, stop now", two said "it's fucked up, yes, but try again", two more said "ain't our job, Art II of the Constitution says FL legislature's job".

    Not one US Supreme Court justice came down on the side of Gore. The 5-4 malarky you hear is just a lot of hot air - Gore was on really thin ice legally.

    SCOTUS played nice with SCOFLA. The US Supreme court could have gone all the way to Article II of the US Consitution that says that electors are selected "as the legislature directs".

    Not the Governor of the state. And certianly not a judge or a court. The legislature, and only the legislature.

    And SCOTUS held that power as plenary - or not subject to any review by anyone - back in 1890 or so. That means that if the FL legislature had voted that FLs electors had to vote for Donald Duck, the only thing FL or anyone else could do would be to vote the legislators out of office - the Electoral College voters they selected would still be FLs reps to the Electoral College.

    But if SCOTUS had done that, they would have had to use the Constitution directly to smack SCOFLA over the head.

    Apparently, that's not the way SCOTUS likes to do things. They used the weakest law necessary to get to the place where a reading of the Consitution demanded they had to go. Just because SCOTUS didn't break out the baseball bat and bash SCOFLA with it doesn't mean it wasn't ready to be used, or that there weren't much stronger arguments to be made for the SCOTUS decision in Bush v. Gore.

    1. Re:Cut the Bush v. Gore crap. by Guuge · · Score: 1

      Not one US Supreme Court justice came down on the side of Gore. The 5-4 malarky you hear is just a lot of hot air - Gore was on really thin ice legally.

      Since the Florida supreme court came to the opposite conclusion, it would appear that you are the one with the balderdash.

      Naturally, the court you agree with is the correct one and the court you disagree with is activist. That fact remains that the highest court with authority to interpret Florida law ruled in Gore's favor.

      SCOTUS played nice with SCOFLA. The US Supreme court could have gone all the way to Article II of the US Consitution that says that electors are selected "as the legislature directs".

      According to Justice Scalia, "the only issue was whether we should put an end to it, after three weeks of looking like a fool in the eyes of the world." (reference) His opinion is therefore based on foreign standards, not US law. I'm sure you could rationalize the decision until you're blue in the face, but let's agree on the facts:

      - it was a 5-4 decision
      - it could easily have gone in Gore's favor if the court were composed differently

    2. Re:Cut the Bush v. Gore crap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the Florida supreme court came to the opposite conclusion, it would appear that you are the one with the balderdash.

      The SCOFLA came to their decision based upon FL constitution and FL case law about voting rights.

      None of which are applicable in a Presidential election because of the wording of Art II of the Constitution: "as the legislature may direct".

      Call it whatever you want. Put wings on it and call it Mabel. But whatever you call it, the decision of SCOFLA in Bush v. Gore was not "as the legislature directed".

      Naturally, the court you agree with is the correct one and the court you disagree with is activist. That fact remains that the highest court with authority to interpret Florida law ruled in Gore's favor.

      BZZZT!!!

      Wrong!!!

      NOT Florida law. FL law is utterly irrelevant - it's "as the legislature directs". That's it. Not FL constitution. Not FL law - except as enacted by the FL legislature. Not Judge Sauls (IIRC). Not SCOFLA. Get it through your thick skull: FL LEGISLATURE

      And the reason for that is clear - selection of a President is a political process and it is entirely in the hands of state legislatures and the US House of Representatives. Not executive or judicial branches, but the most political branches of the US federal system. That's no accident, either. Such a method combined with the Electoral College makes it damn near impossible to buy a Presidential election (at least in the direct "buy votes" sense), or to lawyer one's way to the Presidency. (at least until SCOFLA decided to jump in with Gore and toss out FL election law - ironic, because if they hadn't done that Gore would probably have gotten a true recount...)

      But even then if SCOFLA's decision had held up, the FL legislature would have voted to send electors for Bush. And that'd be "GAME OVER".

      Balderdash indeed. You spew it well.

    3. Re:Cut the Bush v. Gore crap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's well-known the court ignored precedent to arrive at its 5-4 ruling in favor of Bush (who brought the first lawsuit over the outcome of the election back in Florida). The slim majority's opinion was so convoluted they said no one should ever rely on it as precedent in the future as well. Talk about shaky (partisan) ground.

      The US Supreme court could have gone all the way to Article II of the US Consitution that says that electors are selected "as the legislature directs".

      No, they couldn't have. The ruling to halt the counting of people's votes at Bush's request kept electors from even entering the equation. Maybe you should attend law school before making legal pronouncements.

    4. Re:Cut the Bush v. Gore crap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly what parts of the SCOFLA way to handle Bush v. Gore were "as the legislature directs"?

      And the reason the recounts were halted was because US law gives special "protected" status to Presidential electors selected before a certain date (it was Dec 18, 2000, maybe?). The FL legislature had crafted the disputed election process with that date in mind. The SCOFLA decision totally ignored that date as the ordered recounts could not be completed by then.

      And while the stated reasoning for halting the recounts by the 5 that voted to do so was indeed thin, I think that was because SCOTUS did not want to bring in the Art II hammer.

      Because the recounts as directed by SCOFLA were certainly not "as the legislature directed". Or are you arguing that they were?

      And BTW, Roe v. Wade was 5-4. As was Brown v. Board of Education.

  350. Yer both wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    And both right, but being Slashdot, I thought I'd put the "Wrong" right up there in big black text on the title.

    It's true there are huge hoops to run through and "ideal" children rank high on the adoption meat market (white, no mental or physical health problems, young, and relatively free of "strings" such as living parents who may sue for them in the future) There are even web sites splashing these kids' smiling faces all over, you can shop for them almost like a new car.

    But if we count a kid as a kid, there are countless hordes of "less-than-perfects" that mommy-and-daddy-to-be wouldn't even think of tarnishing their utopian fantasies with, and they need homes and parents.

    My foster brother finally succeeded in adopting one (also an alternative-type adopter -- he was single when he started the process -- single and male rank about as low for a parent as "15 year old mentally retarded with antisocial personality disorder" does for a kid).

    My point is my foster brother finally had to hire an attorney and prepare to sue the state to be able to adopt any child, no matter how "undesireable". They caught a hint and finally stopped various delaying tactics (their latest was to use the state's law which allowed them to ask clarification on any issue in the application. This allows them a 30 day delay and it's limitless. They sent him the same question, over, and over, and over, and over. He gave the same answer, over, and over, and over... It was some question having nothing to do with anything, not a hot-point or anything.

    The social workers are like little gods and have arbitrary power over the lives of the kids (and to some extent, their would be or real parents).

    When he finally got the kid, the kid had been basically locked in a bedroom with a bunch of other kids, and owned only two changes of clothing. They had insane rules and had actually forbidden the child to TALK TO ANYONE EVER except the social workers -- they were utterly controlling even the child's speaking life.

    Every disobidience led them to believe that he was poorer behaved and led to stricter (insane) rules.

    Anyway, the kids fine now has a normal 14 year old life. My foster brother later got married and inherited her two kids, so there's three now.

    The adoption system in this country works, in effect, to keep kids from parents and parents from kids. If you have ANY problem in your life at ALL, ANYTHING, ANYTHING (you must be ideal, either an ideal kid or an idea parent. As parents, you MUST be -- married, similiar in age, the same color (yes, this is true -- some places will only put a kid with a parents who are the same COLOR as they are -- so if you are two different colors, no kids for you), and have what they consider a valid reason for adopting kids. Such as (the only acceptable reason) -- you are infertile, you've tried EVERYTHING, but it didn't work. On rare occasions they might accept a single FEMALE, but never a male.

    If you don't happen to slide right into their stereotypical world, don't worry, you can always sue them. For $10,000 or so.

    As a kid, you must be: Very young (if you're 10 or over, forget it), white (or at least the same color as both potential parents), no strings attached (better if both your parents are dead and all four of your grandparents as well), no physical, mental, or emotional problems, period. If you did happen to (amazingly) make it through foster care, the death of all your relatives, or whatever, without any emotional or mental disorders, and feel out from the rest of the kids, don't worry, the nice psychologist will assign you one of your very own. Arbitrarily.

    And on and on it goes.

    The plight of these kids and their would-be-parents goes on and on. But unlike the mass of lonely single people who can't find each other, from a lack of the heart to try, the problem here is external, not internal. It's called the foster care and adoption system. And it's fucked up more lives than alchoholic parents or divorces, or whathave you ever could have.

    1. Re:Yer both wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      white (or at least the same color as both potential parents),

      Which means if you're an interracial couple, or intersectarian, you're screwed.

      Great posting.

  351. this is good news & I appauld Microsoft's deci by SpecialAgentXXX · · Score: 1

    It's such nonsense that because a person likes to do disgusting things with other men that they both somehow deserve "special treatment." The only "special treatment" they should get is a visit to the psychiatric ward for their disorders. Before you whine and complain, this is the viewpoint of the MAJORITY of Americans who helped elect Bush to his second term. What helped the Bush victory was all of this gay "rights" crap being advertised nonstop by the liberals. That angered us conservatives so much and forced us to not sit down but to go out and vote. So keep it up, liberals. Keep advertising your rainbows flags and men kissing other men. That only adds more conservative votes come election time. If you don't like it, there are plenty of gay-friendly countries like Canada, Australia, and France.

  352. I love the /. comment system (Yes, it is on topic) by bill_kress · · Score: 1

    It's almost a social commentary & evaluation system!

    I keep my comment level set at 2: for the most part. I'm reading through here and realizing that I had trouble finding ANY anti-gay comments.

    If you think about it, it makes perfect, beautiful sense. The /. mod system, by randomly choosing moderators and giving them limited power, has almost completely eliminated the always-present Very Vocal and Very Incorrect minority--giving them the volume they deserve.

    If the minority was correct (or even had anything new to say), some moderators would find the comments thought-provoking (even if they didn't agree) and they would bubble to the top.

    On top of that, If I am actually in a mood where I can enjoy reading and replying to the hate filled ranting of a bunch of parrots and trolls, I can reset my comment level lower and have at it--so there is nothing really lost.

    This would make a nice model for public voting.

  353. You just did it again. by Run4yourlives · · Score: 1

    "there are gay women, gay blacks, gay hispanics, gay indians, and gay men"

    Apparently only white folk register to you as "men" or "women".

    1. Re:You just did it again. by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      Apparently only white folk register to you as "men" or "women".

      apparently you're trying to put words in my mouth. my point is simple: if the law is an "everyone is equal" blanket, why do certain groups feel that they need special protections? these laws do nothing but give people the idea that if you're gay, you're special and need special treatment. it's simply not true. i work with people of all sorts of races, gay and straight, and we all get along just fine.

      why is this even an issue in the tech world? aren't we the casual, easygoing field where everyone is accepted for what they know and learn?

    2. Re:You just did it again. by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      if the law is an "everyone is equal" blanket, why do certain groups feel that they need special protections?

      Because passing laws saying 'everyone is equal' hasn't been sufficient--not when it's the sheriff who's the grand wizard of the local chapter of the Klan, not when corporations can make excuses about the cost of employing women who'll take maternity leave, not when Steve's pictures of Adam on his desk cause him to be fired or just not promoted.

      i work with people of all sorts of races, gay and straight, and we all get along just fine.

      I sincerely doubt that.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    3. Re:You just did it again. by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      Because passing laws saying 'everyone is equal' hasn't been sufficient--not when it's the sheriff who's the grand wizard of the local chapter of the Klan, not when corporations can make excuses about the cost of employing women who'll take maternity leave, not when Steve's pictures of Adam on his desk cause him to be fired or just not promoted.

      so because of the very inappropriate actions of a few companies (and local sheriffs), we should disenfranchise those who aren't a minority, gay, or female?

      there will always be intolerance. you can't legislate it away. if i were gay, and i got the clear feeling that my company was passing me over for a promotion because of that fact, i don't think i'd want to work there at all. would you?

      I sincerely doubt that.

      doubt all you want, but i know who i work with. everyone has their work drama, but not every company is rife with discrimination.

    4. Re:You just did it again. by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      so because of the very inappropriate actions of a few companies (and local sheriffs), we should disenfranchise those who aren't a minority, gay, or female?

      It's not just "a few". The current definition of marriage in the US clearly gives certain benefits to married people that are otherwise unavailable to anyone else. These have been discussed verbatim elsewhere in the wider discussion here but suffice to say that if Adam and Eve have a right given to them by the State then there is no reason why Adam and Steve shouldn't be given that same right too - when the government is the biggest discriminator, you can't talk about it just being "a few".

      Besides, only "a few" people in the South took part in lynchings. Does that mean that the US government was wrong when it sought to stamp out such actions in general?

      The bottom line is this: people should be treated equally regardless of who they are or what they are as long as they aren't breaking the law. And if they're not being treated equally then it is only responsible to afford them some level of protection, so that they do receive that equal treatment. In this regard, I'd say that gays getting specific legal protection from discrimination is no different to black students being allowed to go to the colleges of their choice in the 1960s and receiving the protection of federal troops so that they could enjoy that right without getting a brick in their faces for daring to do so.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  354. Terrans vs. Non-Terrans by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

    Lets say 200 years down the road, we dicover another intelligent Humanoid species circling another star system.

    Will the church say that a Male Terran cannot cannot marry a female Non-Terran because Jesus Christ died on the cross for the Terrans inhabiting Earth?

    1. Re:Terrans vs. Non-Terrans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one welcome our new Non-Terran overlords!

  355. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by amliebsch · · Score: 1

    This is a policy discussion. Obviously, in saying that I am looking at "empirical" evidence, I am considering aggregates, not anecdotes. Thus, I care not about "certain" single parents or "certain" gay couples. I care about better vs. worse. I am not prepared to allow most children be poorly socialized so that good people can feel good about themselves.

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  356. The Other Side by Khomar · · Score: 2, Informative
    Homosexuality is neither a choice (that's long ago been proven scientifically)

    There have been studies that seem to indicate this, however the methods and sample populations used make their conclusions dubious at best (a high number of known criminals, for example)

    Furthermore, as it's entirely unrelated to capacity to perform most any given job or what have you, there is no reason that discrimination on the basis of sexual preference should be permissable.

    Here you come to the real crux of the matter. It is entirely related to the job of a pastor. Think about it. Most Christian churches in this country teach that homosexuality is a sin akin to drunkenness, marital infidelity, and stealing. Just as you would not want to hire a pastor who was a drunk because he would be a bad example to the congregation, so you would not want to hire someone whose lifestyle exhibits what the church teaches as a moral wrong. This law would make it impossible for churches to reject candidates whose lifestyles are those of a homosexual despite the fact that it is opposition to their religious teachings (protected by the constitution) and really common sense. Do you want to hire someone who actively stands for something your organization is expressly against? To put it another way, would you want to hire a development manager that encouraged their developers to write slow, unmanagable code?

    The Bible expressly teaches that elders (pastors are considered elders in most churches) of a church should lead lives that are "beyond reproach". This means that whether the candidate's lifestyle is characterized by being a habitual liar, glutton, drunk, adulterer, or homosexual, they are disqualified from service in the church.

    On another note, it should be added that homosexuals can qualify as elders if they do not practice homosexuality. I have listed many other sins to make the point that we all are flawed and tempted to what the Bible teaches as wrong, but just because you are tempted to behave in such a way does not mean that you must behave as such. The proclamations in the Bible are not any stronger against homosexuality than any other sin. There is no room for "homo-phobia" in Christianity. The expectations for those tempted toward homosexuality are no different than those who are tempted to cheat or steal. Both are expected to live lives of repentance and obedience to scripture if they are to seek a pastorate or elder.

    --

    I believe in de-evolution. God made the world perfect, man fell, and its been going downhill ever since!

    1. Re:The Other Side by Fancia · · Score: 1
      There have been studies that seem to indicate this, however the methods and sample populations used make their conclusions dubious at best (a high number of known criminals, for example)
      The studies I was talking about were conducted with animals, not humans.
      This law would make it impossible for churches to reject candidates whose lifestyles are those of a homosexual despite the fact that it is opposition to their religious teachings (protected by the constitution) and really common sense.
      I fairly doubt it, since discrimination laws only restrict hiring decisions where the *sole factor* for denying employment or whatnot is the thing being discriminated against, not the person's ability to perform the job. If the job is for a pastor in a church whose teachings are that homosexuality is sinful, then the person is not being rejected on the basis of homosexuality, per se, but because the person would not be able to perform the job properly. Similarly, declining to hire a Christian with strong views against pornography for a job, e.g., directing pornographic videos is not discriminating against the applicant's Christianity but a judgement based on the applicant's ability to perform the job in question.
      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    2. Re:The Other Side by Khomar · · Score: 1

      I think we would both agree that what you said should be the case, but the question is whether once this law is in place, will it actually perform this way in the real world? If homosexuality is the only reason that a candidate is being refused for a pastorate (because they are not fit for the job), will this be considered discrimination? This is probably the biggest concern behind the fight against this law. Is it justified? IANAL, so I cannot really say for sure, but it is a legitimate concern that should be considered. Once a law falls into the hands of lawyers, there is no end to the places they can take it if there is even a little bit of wiggle room.

      --

      I believe in de-evolution. God made the world perfect, man fell, and its been going downhill ever since!

    3. Re:The Other Side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      First off, kudos to Grandparent for making excellent points in a very factual manner. If only I were as eloquent.

      The studies I was talking about were conducted with animals, not humans.

      ...And you think that will increase their relevance? Have you ever watched a dog eat vomit? They pretty much all do, if you watch them long enough. There have been studies that demonstrated monkeys would steal things if shown a tangible value associated with them. And what about territorial fights to the death? That happens all over the animal kingdom.

      If the job is for a pastor in a church whose teachings are that homosexuality is sinful, then the person is not being rejected on the basis of homosexuality, per se, but because the person would not be able to perform the job properly.

      Ye-e-e-ah. And do you honestly think that there wouldn't be tons of rejected applicants suing with the claim that it was actually because they were a practicing homosexual?

      Oh yeah, and I'm still waiting on a link to the 'proven long ago' fact that homosexuality is in-born. In it's absence, I submit that it has been long ago proven that homosexuality is a choice.

    4. Re:The Other Side by Fancia · · Score: 1
      ...And you think that will increase their relevance? Have you ever watched a dog eat vomit? They pretty much all do, if you watch them long enough. There have been studies that demonstrated monkeys would steal things if shown a tangible value associated with them. And what about territorial fights to the death? That happens all over the animal kingdom.
      So you reject the evidence not on the basis of its factuality, but because some animals do things that people don't do? That's entirely unrelated.

      This research (Simon LeVay was one of the originators - look him up), incidentally, originated in rats and focused not on the behaviour itself so much as the *cause* for the behaviour. It was later confirmed through looking at human examples, who exhibited the same physiological difference; that difference also originated under the same circumstances, conditions in the mother's womb. Your example might be related if humans *did* eat their own vomit and we wanted to determine whether or not they did it due to an inborn mechanism or whether it was acquired, but that's not so.

      Ye-e-e-ah. And do you honestly think that there wouldn't be tons of rejected applicants suing with the claim that it was actually because they were a practicing homosexual?
      That doesn't change the fact that there is a genuine need for the legislation. A few abuse current anti-discrimination laws, but in general they work.
      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    5. Re:The Other Side by Fancia · · Score: 1

      I would assume that the anti-discrimination law would be written in precisely the same manner as current anti-discrimination laws about race and religion, which would neatly take care of your concerns in more ways than one. Aside from taking into account what I mentioned above, they basically invariably have an exception for religious organizations, which are given freedom in their beliefs even where they are racist, sexist, or discriminatory of other religions or homosexuals. You'll note that current anti-discrimination laws have not forced the Catholic church to ordain women, for instance.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    6. Re:The Other Side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you reject the evidence not on the basis of its factuality, but because some animals do things that people don't do? That's entirely unrelated.

      Actually, that was half the point. Just because an animal has a characteristic, doesn't mean that it's necessarily a human one. I never said the study wasn't factual, I was saying it wasn't relevant.

      Your example might be related if humans *did* eat their own vomit

      This is the second half of my point. Do humans steal from each other? Do they kill each other over territory? Are these things that they should be free and encouraged to do?

      This research (Simon LeVay was one of the originators - look him up)

      Hooray! Some kind of reference! I still think the burden of proof really falls on the person who asserted evidence exists though. I'm holding out for a link or a bibliography.

  357. Presumptions by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't presume that because I disagree with the court, that I don't know what I'm talking about.

    Don't presume that because you disagree with the court, that you are right. You aren't the legal scholar. If they defined "unusual" once, they can define it again. If they defined "national consensus", they can redefine it. They allowed segregation once, they disallowed it later. If you don't like it, tough. You aren't the legal scholar.

    1. Re:Presumptions by amliebsch · · Score: 0

      I'm not presuming that I'm right, I'm basing it off of my argument, which I note you did not address. The majority has not persuaded me that their reading of the Eighth Amendment is legitimate. As for your statements; the Court is not granted the authority to define those things as they see fit, nor to allow or disallow anything as they see fit. They are granted the authority only to apply the Constitution, as it exists.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  358. Re:Companies are private organizations by Phyvo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But just because most people are unethical and want to tell other people what is and is not morally right and wrong (as if they were some sort of authority) In case you didn't notice, your statement is telling people it is morally wrong to say what is and isn't morally wrong. Therefore, by your own definition, your statement is unethical. You must realize that there is freedom of speech in this country. Sure, people will abuse it, preachers and protesters of every kind might do nothing more then hurl insults at each other. But, I, like you, are entitled to at least an opinion, and am entitled to speak that opinion.

  359. No it most certainly would not. by Run4yourlives · · Score: 1

    It's called the tyranny of the majority, and it's been a catalyst for oppression for hundreds of years.

    It's why you - the US - and many countries with like values wrote something called the Constitution.

    I suggest you perhaps study it sometime.

    As far as making for a more enjoyable browsing experience; I have to give you that! Let's not take things too far however, lest you find yourself in that minority one day.

    1. Re:No it most certainly would not. by bill_kress · · Score: 1

      That's what we have now in states, for the most part a democracy. That's how prop 13 was passed in California, etc.

      The /. mod system is different because people are forced to vote on comments, not issues, and therefore people are forced to point out insightful, informative, or funny points of the issue in order for the issue to get votes.

      If someone tries to stack the system by posting a bunch of spam and having others vote on it then it will not help your cause.

      It's not perfect, but our current government chosen by monkeys pushing buttons is obviously not working either.

  360. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Decameron81 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Denying rights? And who gets to decide that it is a right for gay people to get married? You alone?

    We live in a democracy here, and I am sure glad it is so. If you don't like the definition that the majority have given to the term, then you are free to go to the far east that you apparently admire so much. It will also save you the hassle of watching those DeBeers ads.

    --
    diegoT
  361. It's a state law... by Run4yourlives · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bush wouldn't really give a damn about it.

  362. Can I quote you? by AlphaSys · · Score: 1

    [blokequote]lack of money should not be a reason not to have children.[/blokequote]

    Not having money to support them is the best excuse ever not to have kids next to just being two complete dolts who should not propagate like you and anything that ever looked at you. This is not a troll, see I have a real SlashID. Since when is not having the resources to support offspring a poor excuse from refraining to procreate?

    Where you said

    "my parents who were not particularly [something] had five kids"

    I'm assuming [something] is "intelligent". QED.

    --
    Can I bum a sig? I left mine at the office.
  363. Gay and tired of hearing it by f-f-f-f-fuuubar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Again and again, the "special rights" argument. It is empty, without substance, existing only to provide seemingly-reasonable talking points for the unthinking.

    To borrow from a post I and another gay man made on another website earlier this year:

    Let's take one example of the "protected class" status that you claim I have. Say you and I work for the same employer, one who provides some level of health insurance coverage to employees. Is it acceptable with you if I am, in effect, forced indirectly to subsidize the insurance plan of your spouse and children because you have a "normal" family, while I am denied the opportunity to add my partner/lover or the child of my partner to my policy? Remember, you're getting your extra piece of the pie; the money to pay your family premium has to come from somewhere. Should you divorce your wife and marry another woman with children, I would indirectly contribute to their coverage as well.

    When you and I retire, your wife at the time (let's say wife #4 by now, a younger woman) would likely share your retirement benefits. If you precede her in death, the benefits to her will most likely continue. My non-sharable, non-transferable benefits, however, will cease entirely upon my death, even while your widow's checks may continue for several more decades -- just another piece of the pie that she deserves, obviously, for loving a person of the opposite sex. In some cases, more than one of your ex-wives could also draw certain benefits based upon your employment record and retirement plans.

    And if, before your death, you needed government assistance for nursing home care, your wife would not lose her home. If I needed the same care, however, I would be forced to liquidate my assets, including the home I may have shared with a same-sex partner for 50 years. Even if the house is in both names, I could be forced to sell my portion, effectively throwing him out on the street unless he was able to buy the house again, this time at its appreciated value. (Although it would not happen in my own family, legal wrangling by a deceased partner's biological family sometimes bankrupts the surviving partner, regardless of the safeguards they had in place.)

    The notion that to be gay means that gay marriage is automatically supported is reductionist...but unsurprising.

    My partner and I don't care about "marriage." What we want is to not be treated as though our ten-year committment is somehow going to ruin society if it's recognized in any way.

    We just want to not be treated differently. Whether you call it marriage is up to you. Activists insisting on same-gender "marriage" vs. calling it something else are missing the point. Acting as though any progress towards equality is insufficient if the label doesn't come along is not only childish, it's unrealistic and counterproductive. Society is not going to evolve because you throw a tantrum. You have only to look at the history of the civil rights movement to learn.

    It's grimly amusing to reflect on the notion that the anti-gay-marriage crowd isn't worried about the ever-increasing divorce rate. But that is the classic tactic of the demagogue: conflate the issues, muddy the waters with emotionally loaded terminology, and go after the more vulnerable.

    Personally, I'm tired of having to beg for crumbs from society's table and endure the abuse. Antigay prejudice (yes, PREJUDICE) is pretty much the last respectable prejudice in America (though there's still some room for anti-immigrant sentiment). And the "pro-gay-marriage" activists play right into the hands of the bigots.

    Cracker Barrel got away with firing people for being gay for over a decade before they decided the adverse publicity had become too much. Several wrongful termination lawsuits got tossed out; the employees had no recourse other than to go get another job and hope that their potential new employers weren't bigoted.
    - "Why did you leave your last job?"
    - "Well, sir, I was fired for

    --
    A sig is a waste of bits.
    1. Re:Gay and tired of hearing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rights? You define your existence by your defiance of God's law and yet you moan about your "rights?" Be glad that they're not putting sodomites to death, as is commanded in Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13.

      Luckily for you, the Lord sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to suffer and die on the cross for your sins. Even you are not beyond His redemption; all you have to do is repent, put your life in His hands and accept Him as your Saviour, and you will be rewarded with everlasting life in the company of the Lord on the day of judgement. Don't delay, repent today!

    2. Re:Gay and tired of hearing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      suck your bible up your ass you jesus-humper

  364. Lets stop bickering about Microsofts motives by ylikone · · Score: 1
    and just all start using Linux already!

    Really, who cares what the megacorp is doing, Linux is free for anybody to use and to support, whether they be "good" or "evil".

    --
    Meh.
  365. Re:Companies are private organizations by EtherealStrife · · Score: 0

    I don't think people have a problem with you considering it a sin. It's when christian fanatics (who, in my experience, have quickly become the majority of christians over the last couple years) try and impose their religious beliefs on others (in this case, homosexuals) that things get out of hand. And that is precisely what you are condoning.

    BTW: I am a religious Californian myself, but you don't see me trying to ban christianity because it conflicts with my views of the natural / metaphysical world, as well as my conscience. And believe me, in california it would stand a chance of passing (at state level), with sufficient anti-Jesus campaigning. :)

  366. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    This is a policy discussion. Obviously, in saying that I am looking at "empirical" evidence, I am considering aggregates, not anecdotes.
    Which is why I linked you that APA research review. I don't see what your problem is.
    Thus, I care not about "certain" single parents or "certain" gay couples.
    That's funny, current policy cares about "certain" potential parents w.r.t. adoption. Candidates are compared on their individual merits as parents. What's wrong with that?
    I care about better vs. worse. I am not prepared to allow most children be poorly socialized so that good people can feel good about themselves.
    Glad we're all on the same page.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  367. Doesn't hold water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What were the boycotters going to do -- switch to open source?

    We've seen the governments of entire cities, states, and even countries switching to open source. Why would M$ care about some few evangelicals?

  368. branch of government by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    When did Microsoft become a branch of the government?

    1. Re:branch of government by cranos · · Score: 1

      You've got the question round the wrong way, when did the government become a branch of Microsoft?

  369. A rose by any other name... by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

    Marriage is a WORD. Get the hell over it. If there was a civil union that established ALL of the same legal protections as marriage, that wouldn't bother you, but if it was called marriage it would? Excuse me? And you know what? The bible does NOT say that marriage is between one man and one woman. It says that marriage is between one man and one (or more) women. There is no sacrement of marriage in the bible. All the discussion of marriage in the bible concernes something that is assumed to exist, and how one should behave in marriage. God does not, in the bible, great the sacred bond of marriage. He creates man and woman and marriage seems to just come naturally from that. He then condemns adultery.

    The obsession with marriage as some sort of perfect union is a very new thing among evangelicals. Christians have traditionally (since Augustine) viewed marriage as a necessary evil, not as the apotheosis of christian living.

    --
    Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    1. Re:A rose by any other name... by beanlover · · Score: 1

      Can you supply references? I doubt it...because you are wrong.

    2. Re:A rose by any other name... by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

      Can you? Where is the sacrement of marriage in the bible? Point it out to me. Martin Luther himself insisted that the "sacrement" of marriage was an invention of the Catholic church and not based in the bible.

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    3. Re:A rose by any other name... by beanlover · · Score: 1

      I asked you first.

      Seriously...what I will provide to you will be based from the Bible which, I am sure, you will probably toss aside with a comment like, "I don't view the Bible as authoritative" or something like that...so what's the point?

      Here is a good one if you really care:

      Warning, PDF

      BTW, there is a difference between the "sanctity" of marriage and marriage as a "sacriment." I am not Catholic.

  370. What does The goverment have to do with religion?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Im my view The govertment should COMPLETLY stay out of religious affairs. Including marrage. If you want to get married, GO TO A CHURCH!

    Govertment should recognize contracts and partnerships. So you should be able to make a contract or partnership that is equivelent to our current marrage system.

    With that simple change.. Well, the problem would be gone.

  371. This is great news! by tdaxp · · Score: 1

    Microsoft abandons homosexualism on the same day that Texas will ban homosexualist foster families, and the same day that a homosexualist pride rally at school backfired. Homosexualism is a leading cause of AIDS. With Senator Clinton opposing special rights for homosexualists, we are living in good days!

    1. Re:This is great news! by jwind · · Score: 1

      If your a close minded bigot... It's a smart PR move but beyond that it's bogus. If George W. (and other politicians) can take that stand and triumph whose to convince others it won't work for them. These frivouls dwellings on "gay rights" are sad... Above all I'm dissapointed in my fellow Americans - and I'm straight!

  372. Don't confuse criticism with discrimination by Mr.+Mikey · · Score: 2

    When people disagree with you, that's not automatically discrimination. When you can't codify your whole religion into the law of the land, that isn't persecution.

    Christians are in the majority. A minority of that majority want to turn the US into a theocracy. The rest of us object... but don't confuse that objection with either discrimination or persecution.

    Acceptable to bash Christians? You wish...

    --
    wants to be the first monkey to touch the monolith
  373. another way to look at it by moltar77 · · Score: 1

    I see... so if my mom divorces my dad, and my mom and I decide that we love each other romantically and want to get married, shouldn't the state allow that by your definition? Where does it stop? If you say "Oh, but incest is illegal," well why is it? By whose standards? By whose morals? Yes there are biological reasons, but what of a son and father? Mother and daughter? There is a point where there is a moral basis for many of our laws.

    Let me first say that Christians are in sin if they treat someone poorly for being gay. Jesus said, "let him without sin cast the first stone." He also said not to get the speck out of your neighbor's eye until you get the log out of your own eye. In all ways He walked in love toward everyone around Him.

    Yes, the Bible says that homosexuality is a sin. People say that I am intolerant of gays because I am Christian, but that is not true at all. I have friends who are gay, but I will never say that it is not a sin. At the same time I will not condemn someone for it, but I try to give them the truth that I have found--

    People who say it is genetic do not understand the change that a person makes when he makes Jesus the lord of his life. This is something the world doesn't understand. The desire to obey God and be more like Him overcomes any desire of my flesh.

  374. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Kainaw · · Score: 1

    How are they using a loophole?

    When the law was written, the term "common law marriage" was considered too common place to be a legal term, so "legal union" was used. Any married couple or couple in a legal union is allowed to be a foster parent in Texas. Many years later, gay couples began forming legal unions. So, they fit the letter of the law even though the authors of the law did not intend for legal union to cover same-sex unions. This is a loophole because it is not illegal, but it is not what the authors of the law intended. So, the current stink in Texas is about redefining "legal union" in the foster child laws to specifically be between a man and a woman, as implied when it was written. It is not as though the law initially said "gays can be foster parents too!" and now they want to remove that.

    To a greater extent, this is important because it redefines "legal union" in Texas. It is important for gay couples to be allowed to have legal unions for legal reasons. For instance, a gay spouse is not allowed to make decisions on their partners behalf in a hospital. A gay spouse is not entitled to ANY of a partner's estate upon death. A gay spouse cannot sue for any support upon 'divorce'. I'm rather surprised that this hasn't proceeded quickly because along with the good benefits comes the bad: creditors and tax collectors coming after the gay spouse when the partner gets behind on payments. You'd think Visa/Mastercard and the IRS would be shoving gay partnership right through the Supreme Court.

    --
    The previous comment is purposely vague and generalized, but all of the facts are completely true.
  375. It doesn't matter anyways by jaytek13 · · Score: 1

    Any bill of this nature would never have passed regardless of MS support. The right would never vote for it, and the left would never vote for it either fearing backlash from middle america who would never have voted for them anyways. Who said it? I didn't abandon the democratic party, they abondoned me.

  376. Identity Group Warfare by ShagratTheTitleless · · Score: 0
    1 point to microsoft. Every time an identity group is granted a "special right" the general public in effect has a right revoked. The fools are casting away equality of rights and freedom of association. The law should not tell you who you must hire any more than it should tell you who your friends may be. I reserve my right to discriminate. Yes, it could be abused. I could be hatefull or petty or serve any number of prejudices but that is my perogative or I have lost freedom.

    Just a step beyond present foolishness lies the "Basement-dwelling, poor, ugly-men" Identity group. Guess what "right" they want ladies. Nothing less than freedom from discrimination in dating. Slashdot might even collectively score.

    --
    Sometimes at night I imagine the darkness is filled with horrible things with too many teeth, like Julia Roberts.
    1. Re:Identity Group Warfare by soloha · · Score: 1

      Kind of like having the freedom to yell fire in a theater right? It should be totally legal - afterall we have free speech in this country. Yes, it could be abused, but thats my pergoative...

    2. Re:Identity Group Warfare by ShagratTheTitleless · · Score: 0

      Looking elsewhere for work or being insulted are not akin to being crushed to death in a stampede due to someone yelling "Fire!". Let me demonstrate: "You are an idiot! Yes you, and furthermore I don't like your kind". I suspect you are still breathing and will survive the day.

      --
      Sometimes at night I imagine the darkness is filled with horrible things with too many teeth, like Julia Roberts.
  377. while Google is probably not your friend... by alizard · · Score: 0, Troll
    I'm sure that in a few weeks, a story about Apple's sales rising steeply will show up on slashdot and the article will attributed this to MS's decision to blow off a big chunk of their market.

    If Google was your friend and you understood the meaning of words like "demographics"... never mind, if you got that gays and lesbians have more disposable income than Religious Right types like you, (broad hint: NO KIDS), you wouldn't have posted your whine.

    If you really believe, why don't you put your life savings into Microsoft right now?

    Of course, selling your SCO holdings to get your money out so you can do this might be sort of difficult.

    1. Re:while Google is probably not your friend... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Come back with some proof.

      I'm an atheist. I'm also the unfortunate beneficiary of a large insurance settlement. I have had a vasectomy because I have no desire to have children.

      In short, you were completely wrong with your knee jerk reaction.

      You on the other hand are a pathetic little person who resorts to name calling and lying to browbeat others into agreeing with you.

      And the proof of that is right there on the screen for everyone to see.

  378. Sad but true by atomico · · Score: 1

    Man, if I only had some mod points...

    My awful memory does not allow me to remember such details as the author, but I think I've heard a very similar quote from a Roman writer from the classical times.

    1. Re:Sad but true by Surazal · · Score: 1

      I disagree with you. If I had mod points I would mod this down, not up.

      Folks, *someone* had to write the rules. I thank God that it was done by a group of people that had as much foresight as the founding fathers did.

      These attempts at "tearing down society" sicken me, since folks who do this do this in the name of "preserving culture" with complete disregard to actuall doing any preserving of culture. The folks who are waving their arms up and down are the new liberals... "whine until you get your way" is the new mantra.

      Ah well... it's time for me to have a drink and to toast our downfall into the second dark age.

      --
      --- Journals are boring; Go to my web page instead
    2. Re:Sad but true by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      So, who is tearing down society? The people for the bill, against the bill? Were you being sarcastic? I can't tell!

      Perhaps it's just nationalistic pride, but I am really proud the the job our Founding Fathers did constructing our nation. They might have been composed primarily of wealthy landowners, but they decided not to maximize their quality of life, but the maximize the collective quality of life for all the people of the country. Specifically, they hated the idea of nobility and dictatorship and thus built a system that would withstand individual extremists and tyrants. The benevolent dictator works well until the dictator stops being benevolent or dies. Our system works less well, but is MUCH more stable. And it really was NOT in the absolute best interests of those that developed our government to make it such.

      On the other hand, some things have to change. Social norms change independently of legislation, and so the system needs to adapt. It's important we make changes as they become necessary, like the obvious example of ensuring women and black people have the same rights as everyone else.

      Basically, we still depend on having our wealthy and powerful be intelligent, rational, and benevolent like our founding fathers. But it's harder for just one malevolent (or just selfish) wealthy powerful guy to make too many waves - it takes a whole conspiracy!

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
  379. Microsoft is rewarding a pol by mhollis · · Score: 1

    According to the New York Times (today, 04-21-2005) the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation donated $100,000 in 2003 to the Delay Foundation, which runs an orphanage and is a means by which friends of the Majority Leader may get lucrative contracts for friends of him that are involved in construction.

    If you were to ask Mr. Delay, I think he'd be not all that eager to support gay and lesbian issues, including same sex partnership rights, marriage, adoption and all sorts of issues that are important to gay and lesbian taxpayers. I'm also certain Mr. Delay is perfectly happy to limit life and living options available to these taxpayers all the while accepting their tax dollars and spending them as if they were regular tax dollars based on some notion that comes out of a rather obscure story in the Old Testament.

    What is really indicated in this gift from one non-profit to another is a measure of political support, because the Republicans, if you will recall, stopped the breakup of Microsoft and prevented the US Department of Justice from pressing for any real remedy for the Microsoft monopolistic practices.

    Of course, this calls to question the political support given by Bill and Melinda, along with Microsoft to Mr. Delay for his campaigns as well as his trips abroad, his campaign to jerrymander Texas so that it is always Republican and his other political interests. One doesn't tend to care about Mr. Delay's charity unless one is doing business with him.

    --
    Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
  380. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the U.S. is full of prejudiced, racist, intolerant, uneducated, fuckheads.


    A bold assertion, to be true. Make your choice and defend it: are gay marriages good for society as a whole or bad? Be precise in your definitions and show evidence one way or the other to demonstrate your assertions.
  381. Mod parent up. by Other+Than+That... · · Score: 0, Troll

    I am glad some people out there realize that it's not a case of lack of equal rights. People who define themselves by their sexual urges have no different rights than those who don't. Calling yourself gay doesn't change your legal status one bit.

  382. Dropping Linux by TheMonoxide · · Score: 1

    I hear theres a couple of faggots working on Linux, so I am converting my office of 10 back to Microsoft Windows. A good step in the right direction Bill!

    1. Re:Dropping Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See alternative definition of "faggot" below. Once you do, come to realize that all people are faggots in the sense we are a collection of many societial/cultural/environmental/personal aspects and choices that inevitably make up who we are. Being a faggot is nothing to be ashamed of...it's only natural.

      As for Homosexuals, well they're gay. And another definition of gay, which people are slowly forgetting, is to be "cheerfulness and lighthearted excitement; merry" -- again, nothing to be ashamed of.

      Please, I urge you to cease violating the sacred nature of language and, instead, appreciate your fellow Human for just that...being a person deserving of respect and responsible for respecting you in kind.

      fagot also faggot Audio pronunciation of "faggot" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (fgt)
      n.

      1. A bundle of twigs, sticks, or branches bound together.
      2. A bundle of pieces of iron or steel to be welded or hammered into bars.

      tr.v. fagoted, also faggoted fagoting, faggoting fagots, faggots

      1. To bind into a fagot; bundle.
      2. To decorate with fagoting.

    2. Re:Dropping Linux by TheMonoxide · · Score: 1

      Words meanings change, I hope you understand that. And I have nothing against happy people - male on male happyness is not happyness, it is delusion.

  383. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
    Ok when was the last time a man impregnated another man, and a healthy child was produced from that? I would say never. If you say other wise youve been brainwashed.
    Dunno what your problem is. I've been perfectly clear about this from the start. Homosexuals can reproduce naturally by having sex with members of the opposite sex, just like heterosexuals. This refutes your point that gay people are abnormal because "first they cant have childern naturally." They can, and do.

    For those of you browsing at +2 w/karma bonuses (doubtful in a 1300 post story), I apologize for keeping my karma bonus on so long into this idiotic thread.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  384. The whole 'anti gay == closet homophobia' thing. by Col.+Bloodnok · · Score: 1

    Methinks thou dost protest too much. Don't worry, it's common for closet homosexuals to engage in homophobic behaviour.

    I do detest that flippant argument. It always seems to surface in these sort of discussions. How can 'you don't agree with me so you must be secretly gay' amount to anything more than childish name calling?

    As to homophobia, I believe there's a certain natural 'background radiation' of it. Humans generally find the 'atypical' scary until they learn that it's not threatening.

  385. human rights arguments aside... by alizard · · Score: 1
    We have a great opportunity to help Microsoft fuck themselves up here. This is true even for Fundamentalist Christians who don't like Microsoft, if such people exist.

    BTW, the gay rights bill failed by one vote and Microsoft is going to get blamed.

    You know gays, lesbians, and people in the moderate to left political range who have been bitching about Windows? Point out to them that $499 Macs "just work" and give them a Macmini URL.

    If you know any propeller-heads that fit this description and have been thinking about moving to Linux, tell 'em it's time.

    Financial opportunities: This hasn't shown up in MS's stock prices... people with gambling money might want to take short positions.

  386. They too could have those benefits by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    If they were married! Find me 10 homosexuals who are in a lifetime commitment to a member of the opposite sex and you can post that trash.

    Marriage is a relationship to jointly support children. Not a toy.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
    1. Re:They too could have those benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Marriage is a relationship to jointly support children."

      That is the most reasonable reason to prohibit gay marriage I've heard; unfortunately, it fails for two reasons. First, infertile people are allowed to marry. This includes women over 60 and men with vasectomies. No children can result, therefore, under this line of reasoning their marriage must also be banned. Second, a lesbian couple can have children courtesy of the local sperm bank. Therefore, they must be allowed to marry under this line of reasoning.

      The other two reasons for marriage I keep hearing is that 1) Marriage is between a man, a woman, and their God. In this case, the State has no business regulating marriage at all. 2) Marriage is a mutual support system between two people, and the State benefits by not being the default safety net. In this case, there is no reason to deny marriage to any pair (Or for that matter, any tuple) of consenting adults.

      Once we (as in society as a whole) decide what the modern purpose of marriage really is, the solution will quickly follow. It's the transition that's noisy.

    2. Re:They too could have those benefits by shawnywany · · Score: 1

      [Marriage is] not a toy.

      Then please, would you be so kind as to explain to me why there are so many shotgun weddings, 48-hour trysts (ala Miss Britney Spears) and individuals with ten divorces under their belts?

    3. Re:They too could have those benefits by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      Talk to their children, I'll assure you they aren't having fun yet.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    4. Re:They too could have those benefits by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1
      Once we (as in society as a whole) decide what the modern purpose of marriage really is, the solution will quickly follow. It's the transition that's noisy


      With an issue that is so argued over, the problem is everyone has a say in how a marriage should be defined. I think it should be defined in terms of the children because they are the ones who dont get any of the decisions, and always get the brunt of the problems.
      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
  387. Short answer by TR0GD0RtheBURNiNAT0R · · Score: 1

    Surely not - shouldn't the real point be why does a human rights bill need the financial backing of a big company to get passed? That's the issue as far as I'm concerned. Has the US ideals of democracy sunk so low that this is just a given now and not worthy of comment? Short answer: Yes As sad as it is, this is absolutly true. The truly sad thing is that most people don't give a damn.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  388. I can't believe it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is only one GNAA comment

  389. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by Theobon · · Score: 1

    Well as stupid as it is, even if the OP was joking, girl on girl is, according to christianity, completely fine.
    In reality it isn't guy-guy relationships that are the problem it is sodomy. Anal-sex and blowjobs are the evil sins, doesn't matter if it is guy-guy or guy-girl. If 2 guys are going to have a sexual relationship then one of these is required.

    The sarcastic comment of the hypocrasy of the religious caste could shown properly with the male infatuation with BJs while yelling about how wrong gay couples are.

  390. Not only is US more concervative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but speling has worcened as well!

  391. yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "sexual preference" is an obsolete commonplace phrase that's more typically replaced with "sexual orientation" for exactly this reason. HTH, loser.

  392. you missed something by alizard · · Score: 1
    we all know that conservative christians are the least likely to be MS customers

    However, the ones who do use computers are both least likely know of alternatives and least likely to change.

    That's the very meaning of the word "conservative".

  393. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Why is it states are passing referendums, public referendums, where homosexual marrige is outlawed by votes over 80%?? It is because the people don't want homosexuals in their community. It is like alcoholics or any other disease which is a choice.

    Or obesety.

  394. What Would Happen? by YoDave · · Score: 1

    I'm curious. What would happen if I were a homosexual manager and fired one of my heterosexual subordinates because I disagreed with their lifestyle? Would they be in some way legally protected or would they be just as screwed as a fired homosexual?

    1. Re:What Would Happen? by aduzik · · Score: 1

      Legally? Just as screwed. But there would sure as hell be fallout. That employee could easily assemble an army of anti-gay fanatics. That's one thing that lots of gay rights activists point out: that although gay managers are rare, they still have the right to fire anyone, deny housing or banking to anyone, or deny any other damn fool thing to anyone they please on the basis of their sexual orientation.

      --
      If it's not one thing it's your mother.
  395. I meant 'anti gay == closet homosexual' by Col.+Bloodnok · · Score: 1

    Well '!=' I suppose...

  396. That wouldn't matter... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    In general, the majority of people are afraid of same-sex marriage. I'm not sure why, I'm not sure if they're just spiteful or stupid (it's either one, the other or both), but you'll find that more than 66% of any state's population for most states (with a few exceptions) will vote to deny the rights of same-sex couples to have easy access to over one-thousand legal rights and benefits despite the fact that it causes no harm to anyone.

    1. Re:That wouldn't matter... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In live in Ohio, and work with people that fought for the amendment. At least in their case, the reasoning was that allowing same-sex marriage is an afront to God, and would cause God allow more attacks like Sept. 11 to happen.

      Here's the kicker, though - these people all have degrees in engineering. They are not stupid, and they don't believe they are being spiteful. It is just that they are convinced that they must protect the country. There really are a significant number of people that believe USA is God's choosen country, and that accepting things they believe the Bible forbids will lead to the destruction of our society.

      I realize that these people only account for part of the supermajority that passed the amendment, but those are the people that will constantly turn out to vote.

    2. Re:That wouldn't matter... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Don't get yourself confused. It's not a right.


    3. Re:That wouldn't matter... by mink · · Score: 1

      As a person who lives in Ohio who voted against that stupidity (as it was worded) because it allows domestic violence loopholes (among other bad things), please tell us who these fuckers are and what business they work for as I wish to avoid doing any business with fucktards like that if at all possible.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  397. A new low for Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's difficult to gauge which is worse: the blatantly inflammatory nature of this post, or the anti-gay V anti-Christian flamewar that has ensued.

    This article truly seems to have brought out the worst elements of the Slashdot community.

  398. There's just something not right here! by xander2032 · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who fiends it VERY disturbing that a software company would have any sway in social issues?? That's just not right! What is this country coming to eh! They already control our desktops, now they want to control our lives as well? Yeah... Something wrong there eh!

    Oh! and does this mean Bill and Steve Jobs have broken up? I know Bill's been a bit miffed about that whole OSX thing, and then that MacMini stuff. I'd hate to see them break up over something like that.

  399. an athiest... by alizard · · Score: 0, Troll
    who goes berserk at the thought of gay marriage. I saw a few other of your posts on this topic, and for an "atheist", you sound a whole lot like a slavering, drooling Christian fundamentalist wingnut.

    My guess is that you're simply pretending to be an atheist in the faint hope of boosting your credibility here. I suggest you read your Bible and see what awful fate lies in store for Christians who deny Jesue.

    Oh, and THANK YOU FOR NOT BREEDING.

    I'm tard-whacking because it's one of things I do to entertain myself and others.

    With respect to MS... I'm gloating.

    Now go take that insurance settlement and go buy some Microsoft stock with it.

    1. Re:an athiest... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Well just yesterday I told someone the Bible is a book of lies. It is. But because you said it, I must be christian.

      No reason or logic, just lies and name calling. Did a priest touch your no-no when you were in church? Is that why the wittle baby is so pouty-wouty?

      Sad, pathetic thing. You're a liar and a coward, and we see it. Every time you post you back it up. If you had looked like you claim to, you'd see very clearly that you were wrong. But you won't. Because you're only interested in adding to others' misery to make you temporarily forget your pathetic, go nowwhere do nothing life.

      And I got in to MS early and quintupled my money. Eat it browneye.

    2. Re:an athiest... by starm_ · · Score: 1

      oh my god give it up. You're just making an ass of yourself.

    3. Re:an athiest... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      I'm making an ass of myself?

      How so? By name calling? Well YOU did it too, so what does that make you, ASS?

      How do people like you get so stupid?

      I imagine someone of your limited intellect has personal experience with "making an ass of yourself"

      Now shut up and let the big boys chat.

    4. Re:an athiest... by starm_ · · Score: 1

      Earlier you jumped on some guy because you said _he assumed_ something you said. Now you are doing the same thing by assuming I was referring to name calling. (When I was not) You have as much coherence as a seventies psychedelic movie. My grandmother had a better grasp of argumentation and logic than you when she was 6 years old.

      Get a life

  400. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by the-build-chicken · · Score: 1

    well I guess the programmers who work for www.gaypornnow.com are pretty safe in their jobs then

  401. I'm amazed by jessecurry · · Score: 1

    Why all this Microsoft news...where's my Apple news?

    --
    Those who know, do not speak. Those who speak, do not know. ~Lao Tzu
    1. Re:I'm amazed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worry not -- Apple is still pretty gay.

  402. Isn't it sad... by alizard · · Score: 0, Redundant

    when mod points are handed out to Christian crazies?

  403. Hi, wingnut... by alizard · · Score: 1

    thought I'd say hello to the people who find attacks on people both Christian and insane so offensive that you have to burn mod points on them.

  404. It's all question of backdoors! by fighting+the+wind · · Score: 1

    They just don't want to be refered to as a company supporting the use of a back door.

  405. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they're wrong I'll gladly tell 99% of the population

    So, right and wrong eh? It exists? And how do you determine it? By thinking about it long enough? And if that's the case, who's to say that the 99% didn't think about it? Assuming that people who think like you are the only ones capable of determining right and wrong is very prejudiced and close-minded.

    Homosexuality is as much of a choice as choosing to believe that the earth revolves around the sun.

    You have got to be kidding me. Logically that doesn't demonstrate anything. But I bet it sounded cool in you head, right?

    Children and animals cannot consent in an informed way. It is a completely separate issue and in no way analogous.

    In no way? What it comes down to is that homosexuality, beastiality and pedophilia all come down to having sex with something that is not natural (yup, I said it!). The difference is that with homosexuality, informed consent is possible. People also consent to be shot in the head and fed poison from time to time too.

    I'm sorry you can't deal with your own homosexual feelings

    Heh. Yeah, sure, that's why they wrote that. It's of course, impossible that he could actually earnestly believe that it is wrong. That's just silly. I need to keep reminding myself that you are right and just about everyone else is wrong. Man, that must be nice. You should start a religion.

  406. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by assassinator42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't see where you get the idea Christians think girl/girl is better than guy/guy. I doubt you'll find many, if any, Christians that would condemn guy/guy and not girl/girl.

  407. And now we see the Quo by 6 · · Score: 1

    The Bush administration let Microsoft off the hook on anti-trust issues.
    Now Bill suddenly is doing something that the judgementalists like politically.

    In the world of politics and power everything comes at a price.

  408. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    nice flame, kid, but if you think that it's appropriate to make people second class citizens, then you're no one I want to talk to. Denying homosexuals marriage is the same thing as denying african-americans the right to vote.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  409. Microsoft Is The Best by bgatesjr · · Score: 1

    I know all of you linux freaks hate bill gates and microsoft but try and tell me that Internet Explorer and WordPad...and hell, MS Paint aren't the some of the best apps offered today!! You all should be so lucky that a man such as Bill has come along to bring us the joy that is Microsoft! Microsoft is the best company around and your just jealous you aren't doing as well as Microsoft or Bill. Get Windows XP, the best OS EVER! http://www.microsoft.com Your Pal, Bill Gates Jr. bgatesjr@gmail.com

  410. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Children and animals cannot consent in an informed
    >way. It is a completely separate issue and in no
    >way analogous

    You are (deliberately?) missing the point.

  411. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >But, basically your whole thought process is predicated upon the idea that there is something wrong with homosexuals, which is an inherently prejudiced >concept. YOU ARE A BIGOT. YOU HAVE NO HIGH GROUND.

    simply that it's NOT as good as hetero. Not as natural.

  412. dog bites man by alizard · · Score: 1
    is rarely news.

    High-tech companies generally take the lead on gay/lesbian rights issues for reasons that should be obvious.

    High-tech companies that need the best and brightest can't afford to use sexuality as a basis on which to discriminate, and prefer to be seen as friendly to minority rights, because they want the people who have the ability to add to their market share to apply with them regardless of who they sleep with.

    I think that the anger I see around here directed against anyone who might be seen as favoring gay/lesbian rights is from lus3rs who got rejected by all of the high-tech companies they applied to and want to blame "affirmative action" or "ANTI-CHRISTIAN" discrimination rather than their lack of discernable technology skills and zero to negative IQs.

    Granted, I enjoy M$ bashing too, but deciding to do *no* thing instead of the *right* thing (and you could easily make the point that this isn't something Microsoft should be involved in- I'd refute it, but you could make the point) isn't Microsoft being bad.

    Pulling their political support in mid-stream has to be considered action, not non-action. The time for them to decide not to get involved was before they started lobbying, NOT because they were threatened with a boycott with a roughly zero change of effectiveness by a Religious Right crazy.

    The bill lost by one vote. Is it possible that the word getting around that MS was pulling the support made a one-vote difference?

    MS changing sides at the worst possible time can be seen as "Man bites dog". THAT is news.

  413. Always look to the money by smchris · · Score: 1

    Obviously, they have their eye on the contract of 2010 ala:

    http://www.ibmandtheholocaust.com/excerpts.php

  414. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No harder to raise than the boy whose father beats the shit out of his wife. Wife still loves husband, boy learns that it's ok to beat women.

  415. Re:You already have! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF? Atheism is a religion, agnosticism is not. By default if someone says that they are not religious, I assume that they are agnostic (which automatically puts their estimate of the probability of any one religion being correct to a very small figure, as there are so damn many of them and almost all of them are logically incompatible).

  416. Another reason by deejer · · Score: 1

    Here is another reason for homosexual couples not to marry: evolution.

    If you believe in evolution then there is no way gay genes would make it to the next generation. (Except if they acted against their nature and had intercourse with the opposite sex.) So, it is a learned behavior or a mutation in the current generation. If it is a learned behavior or a mutation then why as a species would you encourage this behavior?

    I know you won't like that reason, but it is one that is valid.

    1. Re:Another reason by haelduksf · · Score: 1

      I don't understand what you're trying to say.

      Even if gay people aren't allowed to marry, that doesn't mean there will be fewer of them, just that they won't have the basic rights granted to all other couples. If homosexuality has survived 2000 years of criminalization, withholding the right to marriage for another few years/decades won't have any effect.

      Also, homosexuality _is_ the end product of many millions of years of evolution. If it seems like there's no reason for it to exist, you need to reconsider your basic assumptions either about homosexuality or about usefulness.

    2. Re:Another reason by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here are three reasons...
      1. What the hell does marriage have to do with evolution?! Do you honestly believe that the only way people can breed is if they get married? Answer me this, Bill and Bob get married, how, in your mind, does this magically enable them to pass thier genes on - does one of them suddenly grow a uterous?!

      2. Explain homosexuality in any of the other species that exhibit it. You know your argument that evolution says that homosexuality cannot exist in nature? Well, I just contradticted it.

      3. Who the hell are you to tell somebody else, who you have never met, who will probably never meet you, who will have zero impact on you, who they may or may not become legally bound to with all the rights and privileges associated with that.

      Look, sexuality is not a genetic thing, it's not a learned thing, it's just a specific setting on a scale for each individual.

      Some of us are heavily pegged towards the hetero end, some of us towards the homo end, most of us are on the hetero side of the center, a few more on the homo side of the center and a handful of us are smack bang in the middle.

      It's not something to be changed, it's just diversity in action.

      I don't think anybody can seriously say that that are 100% hetero or 100% homo, our species is not built that way - we need human contact and at the end of the day it doesn't matter which gender.

      As for the marriage debate - GET RID OF THE RELIGION and everything becomes simple, gay people and straight people deserve to have the same legal rights, privileges and processes available to them, marriage included.

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    3. Re:Another reason by deejer · · Score: 1, Insightful
      1. What the hell does marriage have to do with evolution?! Do you honestly believe that the only way people can breed is if they get married? Answer me this, Bill and Bob get married, how, in your mind, does this magically enable them to pass thier genes on - does one of them suddenly grow a uterous?!
      If you believe in evolution then marriage had to have roots in evolution. Or, where else would that idea have come from originally? There are animals that mate for life. This allows their offspring to be more successful because a team is helping the newborn. The offspring of married people probably had a better survival rate because 2 are better than one. So over time natural selection favored people that tend to want to marry. Obviously you can't pass genes on or have a human race if you don't have oposite sexes. So that is where evolution comes in, in my opinion. I am entitled to my own opinion, right?
      2. Explain homosexuality in any of the other species that exhibit it. You know your argument that evolution says that homosexuality cannot exist in nature? Well, I just contradticted it.
      I didn't say it couldn't happen, I just said that the theory of evolution wouldn't allow it to pass onto the next generation unless it was a homosexual having sex with the opposite sex for the purpose of having offspring.
      3. Who the hell are you to tell somebody else, who you have never met, who will probably never meet you, who will have zero impact on you, who they may or may not become legally bound to with all the rights and privileges associated with that.
      I wasn't telling anybody anything. I was just bringing forth an argument because the parent thread said they had only heard of 3 or something. Well, I have heard this argument!
      Look, sexuality is not a genetic thing, it's not a learned thing, it's just a specific setting on a scale for each individual.
      Sexuality is a genetic thing. Ever heard of the X and Y chromozones?
    4. Re:Another reason by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 1

      There are animals that mate for life.

      Yes, but this is a different thing to marriage as it is being discussed.

      Marriage for the sake of this argument consists of two facets

      1. The religious aspect of a "union under god".
      2. The legal aspect of the rights and privileges granted to "recognized" couples.

      neither of which is in any way related to evolution, not that "evolution" is a valid "argument" against gay marriage anyway.

      If we break apart those two facets, as I firmly believe we should, and evaluate only the second (the first is not the job of the government, nor anybody not a member of the particular religion), then surely it is clear that gay couples should have equal access to getting these legal rights and privileges? How can you argue against it?

      Sexuality is a genetic thing. Ever heard of the X and Y chromozones?

      Slip of the tongue, I meant, as you know I did, sexual preference.

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    5. Re:Another reason by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      Isn't this one reason to allow them to marry? I mean WTF? If you think they are a genetic mistake, then allow them to marry. Their genes will not pass on and problem solved, right?

      Just search google for "Gay Aminals" to see that being gay has little to do with evolution. Here, third link is here http://www.zoofur.com/gayanimals.html. Seeing is believing, eh?

      And here is an article about gay animals being parents http://rainbowallianceopenfaith.homestead.com/Scie nce3.html

    6. Re:Another reason by ElleyKitten · · Score: 1

      If it is a learned behavior or a mutation then why as a species would you encourage this behavior?

      Overpopulation.

      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    7. Re:Another reason by cwgmpls · · Score: 0
      If it is a learned behavior or a mutation then why as a species would you encourage this behavior?

      Because having a few adults around who don't have kids of their own helps the family to survive. These adults can work and contribute to the welfare of the extended family without the added burden of children of their own. Families with a few productive adults around who don't have their own kids have a greater chance of survival than families where all the adults have children.

      Simply put, gays may not pass on their own (gay) genes directly, but their gay genes get passed on through their nephews and nieces, who have a greater chance of survival than other children whose straight uncles are too busy with their own kids to help out.

      Having a few gays in a population makes that population stronger in evolutionary terms, not weaker.

  417. Supporting something by PepeGSay · · Score: 1

    Does not mean you support every little nuance of the agenda and every little bill that comes along.

  418. Frankly... by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

    I wish corporations would stay completely out of politics at all times.

    HP holds seminars and hands out panphlets that tell every one of their emplyees exactly how they should for "For the good of the company". It's utterly disgusting.

    Corporations have no buisness (NPI) advocating for or against any legislature whatsoever. In fact, I'd like to see legislation that made it illegal for them to do so.

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    1. Re:Frankly... by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

      How they should vote for the good of the company that is.

      Guh.

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
  419. Opening a can of worms. by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

    Playing the Devil's Advocate here, I'm not -1 fucked up and by no means am I advocating incest or eugenics.

    The main logical reason that siblings/close family members are prohibited from marrying and even having sex is that any offspring resulting from such a union would be more than likely to be unfit. Close inbreeding tends to diminish genetic diversity and increase homogenisity. That is, they would have a higher than average probability of having a rare genetic disorder. Hemophilia in the royal families of Europe is one example. The royal families of Europe have been interbreeding with each other for centuries, and there are not a whole lot of royal families. Since everyone has a common ancestor if you trace far enough back, some amount of mating with relatives has to be acceptable. I also add that cousins are allowed to marry in some states.

    As for moral reasons, these unfit offspring are a burden upon society and the family. It is also a burden upon the resultant offspring.

    Now, if the reason that we prohibit close family members from having sex is to protect the health of resultant offspring, and people are okay with this, than logically we should be able to prohibit a pair of carriers for some nasty disease, (hemophilia, tay sachs, etc...) from reproducing as it would produce unfit children.

    Since homosexual relationships would not result in offspring, the aforementioned logical and moral reasons against incestual relations would not apply.

    In truth, I think that a large portion of the incest taboo stems from the ewwww factor, an innate biological drive to not mate with siblings, but that's theorectical. In support, I offer the observation that in many (most?) mammalian herd/pack species, the male leaves the group it was born in and overtakes or joins another, whereas the females tend to remain in the group they were born into. This bioligical drive would reduce incest and unfit offspring. The ewwww factor is enough for me to not consider incest.

    In contrast, there are many known cases of royal siblings marrying and producing offspring. One notable example is that of king Mausollos of Caria and his sister/wife Artemesia. They built the famous Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, one of the seven wonders of the world. The royal families of Europe is another example of incestual marriages, though they were more often cousins than siblings.

    --
    Nice Marmot
  420. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree that being black is not a choice but being homosexual is. If it isn't a choice, then it must be a mutation in the current generation, because it wouldn't get passed on!

  421. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by northcat · · Score: 3, Informative

    Nice troll. Tell the full fucking story. The Supreme Court of India actually sent a notice to the Central government and the Delhi state government questioning the constitutionality of a law that punishes homosexuality. It's almost the opposite of what you say. Here's a source.

  422. Too late by WhiskerBiscuit · · Score: 1
    I submitted this story to Slashdot early yesterday, when AMERICAblog broke the story -- before the vote, when there was still time to spread the word, contact public officials (including people at Microsoft), and do something positive to change the situation.

    The story was rejected.

    Just venting, but -- to the moderator who decided that the story was newsworthy only after it was too late to do anything about it -- thanks for nothing! Judging from the comments above, it seems likely that the Slashdot community would have liked to know about this YESTERDAY.

  423. I'm proud of my fellow geeks by spludge · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I read through this thread, and although I see many flames and trolls I also see a lot of geeks reasoning this issue in a logical way and not accepting the standard anti-gay marriage arguments. In general this is one of the huge strengths of geeks. We think for ourselves and we are not willing to accept what the majority might think.

    Myself, I think that gay marriage rights make a lot of sense. I think that if you sit down and think about this issue and put aside your prejudices then it is difficult to come to any other conclusion. I leave it to the rest of this thread and to the sites out there to help you convince yourself of this.

    I am proud of my fellow geeks.

  424. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by _merlin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You've never actually read the Bible, or you'd realise that it isn't oral and anal sex that's condemned, but homosexuality, be it guy-guy or girl-girl. (Islam does actually explicitly teach that anal sex is sinful.)

  425. Died by one vote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bill itself died to day. It died by one vote...

    http://www.salon.com/news/wire/2005/04/21/civil_ ri ghts/index.html

    Of course it's been offered in one form or another for almost thirty years. Next year it might pass; MS or no MS. Then the people we have heard from on this thread saying they aren't really discriminating won't legally be allowed to do their dot really discriminating stuff, at least in the marketplace at least in Washington state.

  426. Wrong! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...but let me qualify that. (-:

    GirlOnGirl might be fine by some extant implementations of Christianity, however the manual says...
    or this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature, and likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet. - Romans 1:26-27, KJV
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allow me to comment on just a few things.

      First, your translation (KJV) although popular and common does not exactly carry much weight when it comes to translation or interpretation. Seeing as though it was commissioned by a homosexual adds to the irony. I suggest you attempt a newer, more accurate (according to a vast majority of scholars) translation...Few scholars, liberal and conservative, touch KJV anymore. I prefer the New Revised Standard Version, but there are plenty of others around there...The NIV tends to be quite popular.

      I'd suggest you look at a few things before throwing Romans at people.

      2 Peter 3:15-17 (New International Version)

      15Bear in mind that our Lord's patience means salvation, just as our dear brother Paul also wrote you with the wisdom that God gave him. 16He writes the same way in all his letters, speaking in them of these matters. His letters contain some things that are hard to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort, as they do the other Scriptures, to their own destruction.

      17Therefore, dear friends, since you already know this, be on your guard so that you may not be carried away by the error of lawless men and fall from your secure position.

      Ignorant and unstable people distort as they do other scriptures? Hmm...

      Bear in mind the hermeneutics you're using when interpreting scripture, or your ignorance will shine brighter than whatever faith you have.If you're gonna take the whole thing literally, then do it. You have every right. Don't call it a MANUAL unless you're going to follow all the instructions. Unless, of course, you've got a better clarified hermeneutic (method of interpretaion of scripture) that I am missing?

      Microsoft should be less concerned with the rantings of an ignorant megachurch and moreso with the golden rule of all the world's major faiths. Essentially, "You will love your neighbor as yourself."

  427. Such a terrible injustice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    White middle-class christians, the forgotten minority...

  428. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2, Interesting
    You've never actually read the Bible, or you'd realise that it isn't oral and anal sex that's condemned, but homosexuality, be it guy-guy or girl-girl. (Islam does actually explicitly teach that anal sex is sinful.)
    The bible is boring, so no, never read the whole thing, but typically the only support folks can come up with for their homophobia is one passage in Leviticus that says, "Do not lie with a man as one lies with a woman; that is an abomination". Why they pay so much attention to that, but ignore all 613 of the Mitzvahs, I'll never quite understand. I've never heard a similar quotation regarding lesbianism.
    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  429. _I_ think the bill was too specific by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Funny

    Microsoft is a bit of a passion fingers. Maybe they want a bill which endorses anal rape between non-consenting (and often underage) companies? With whips, broken glass and upside down in a tub.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  430. Logic... by leonbrooks · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...is a neat tool for going wrong with confidence.

    Thank you for the QED, but also thank you for pointing out the inanity in the grandparent post. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  431. Re:You already have! by Combinare · · Score: 1

    On the contrary: at no point in my post did I state anything about my religious affiliation or beliefs. It would seem it was YOU who "arrogantly assumed" that I had no religion.

  432. Short Answer by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
    Why should I care

    It's not my ass!

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  433. With Rehtoric Like this... by basking2 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This from the great unbiased blog (thx Slashdot crack reporting staff for vetting this one...):

    "And now, suddenly, because ONE ANTI-GAY ACTIVIST COMPLAINED, they've suddenly changed their minds ON A CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUE."

    News Flash: Being homosexual is not an unchangeable physical characteristic. It is a desire and a way of thinking which may or may not be linked to genetics. We do not know conclusively yet. Linking this with the Civil rights movment cheapens the real threat and loss of life in that movement and drives away the person looking for serious dialog. Also, unlike race and color, you have to get to know someone to realize they are gay.

    Perhaps second in importance (behind this offensive cheaping of the Civil Rights Movement) is that your sexuality, hetero or homo has zero place at work. Zero. None. If you walk in the office and show, "Strait Pride," or "Gays Represent," you are harassing others around you and can be charged with intimidation and threatening and, depending on how good your lawer is, sexual harassment.

    I have no problem with people who are homosexual but I do have a problem when they insist on being celebrated by others. I think it's a "sin" (oh no, Bible word, turn off critical reading part of brain) and I refuse to submit to any part of the "Homosexual Adgenda" which I find nothing short of trying to normalize a behavior that we all should tolerate but most of us do not approve of. Let me say that again, a behaviour. You can't see homosexuality. Next thing you know we will be sueing for Civil Rights for Mets fans because of hate crimes in the Bronx by the Yankee Fans.

    Now, having spoken apart from herd, treat me like you do all dissenters. You know the drill, you tollerant, thinking folks. Tolerance for every view but mine. :)

    --
    Sam
    1. Re:With Rehtoric Like this... by Kesh · · Score: 1

      I never wanted to be celebrated. I just don't want to be treated like a demon.

    2. Re:With Rehtoric Like this... by Discoflamingo13 · · Score: 1
      Being homosexual is not an unchangeable physical characteristic. It is a desire and a way of thinking which may or may not be linked to genetics. We do not know conclusively yet.

      So in the abscence of conclusive evidence, which may never be available, you have chosen to treat homosexuality as a lifestyle choice. What happens if your decision is wrong? What is your stance if incontrovertible evidence is provided that homosexuality is an immutable characteristic of a person's psyche?

      Also, unlike race and color, you have to get to know someone to realize they are gay.

      There are many people who can "pass" for white. This does not mean they do not identify as black, hispanic, asian, or another race based on their ancestry. People do not walk around with a copy of their family tree on their foreheads.

      Perhaps second in importance (behind this offensive cheaping of the Civil Rights Movement) is that your sexuality, hetero or homo has zero place at work. Zero. None. If you walk in the office and show, "Strait Pride," or "Gays Represent," you are harassing others around you and can be charged with intimidation and threatening and, depending on how good your lawer is, sexual harassment.

      In a perfect world, that would absolutely be the case - because people should not be having conversations about these matters at work. If there was an employee who was constantly flaunting their sexuality at work (straight or gay, because either is distasteful), that would be grounds for termination. There should be nothing wrong with a simple right to tastefully express your sexuality at work - many straight employees have pictures of their husbands/wives/families at work, and there should be no reason for a homosexual employee to have a picture of their significant other. This is similar to the reasoning why Christians should be allowed to have a Bible at work, as Muslims should be allowed to have a copy of the Qu'ran. Religion, race, gender, disability, and national origin have nothing to do with your work either, but we have chosen to legally protect people based on these characteristics because they can be used to unjustly discriminate between employees based on the way they live their lives. They have no place in a work environment, but I have yet to observe a perfect work environment where everybody is treated and interacted with based solely on the content of their work performance. Some people who believe that a coworker is gay (with or without evidence, with or without a conversation) will treat that coworker differently. You are still allowed to discriminate against hiring or promoting somebody because they are always late, have substandard workplace performance, or do not adhere to the ethical standards of your company - that is your right. When you make decisions because you "know" gay people are your moral inferiors and a health insurance risk, it is no different in not promoting an hispanic worker because "you know" they are lazy.

  434. They're kind of accustomed to it now by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Kind of like the people who still work 9-5 even after a serious lottery win.

    "I need to treat people fairly... let me see... how can we do this so our competitors get no advantage out of it by hiring only straights... I know, we'll get a law passed which forces everyone to hire a quota of bent people, even marriage counselling firms."

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  435. I'm not a catholic... by lordofthechia · · Score: 1

    though I was raised one and I go to a catholic church (I still think the ideal of christianity in it's purest form is good). What gets me is catholics that so ardently attack things that are an affront to God, yet are very selective of the things that they speak against.

    So Catholics (and other religions too, lets not just pick on em) want to preserve the sanctity of marriage... Wait, doesn't the Catholic church prohibit divorces? Yet an ungodly (no pun intended) amount of marriages end in divorce? So which is a greater threat to "marriage", homosexuals that want the same rights as us and don't want to be treated as second class citizens OR the free availablity of divorce?

    So if the churches want to impose the laws of their God on all of the god fearing (and non-god fearing) populance then where will it end? Will they outlaw civil marriages? (I'm civily married but the catholic church doesn't recognize that either - can't take communion since I'm still a sinner for getting married out side the church). Will the church(es) move to outlaw divorces? Will the church move to remove civil unions? After all it is a threat to the institution of marriage to allow people to get married outside the grace of God...

    I know this sounds like a logical fallacy (Slippery slope) but I'm trying to bring out a point. Religious folk are so offended by the behaviour of a few of their fellow citizens that they are willing to push through laws to prevent them their civil liberties granted by a country founded on the ideal of tolerance, however if they are so ardent about their religion why are they allowing much bigger threats go through?

    I'll leave you with my first question to all the ardent catholics. What kind of birth control do you practice? :P

    Ok... Bring on the flames....

    --
    Georgia Tech, the leader in Chia(tm) technology.
    1. Re:I'm not a catholic... by bushidocoder · · Score: 1
      No flames - honest questions.

      If you look at morality like a numbers game, the obscene number of divorces is the graver threat to marriage (for the record, the Church fought the divorce laws back in their day as well, they just lost). Issues of morality and faith aren't about numbers, though - things that are wrong are wrong, whether committed by ten people or ten million.

      In the Catholic version of moral law, divorce is forbidden - I for one will never get divorced, and should it be civilly thrown upon me, I won't ever remarry. That's the choice I make when I give my vowes to my future wife (I'm unmarried now, but I am engaged). Although that is the choice Catholics choose to live by (and the choice, I believe, is the right one), there are other major religions that don't have the same restrictions on remarrying. Just as I want the freedom to practice my faith as I believe, I don't want anyone's definition of anything to overwrite everyone else's (particularly since Catholic's aren't the majority).

      Marriage is a horrible intersection of the several different religious and one secular worlds - its a ruined idea from the start, because no one is going to agree on what it is and what its responsibilities should be, and most of the parties have centuries (or in the case of Judaism, millenia) old definitions that they believe are right. I believe that a substantial reason why divorce is at such an ungodly rate (pun intended) is because the secular definition of marriage has overwritten the religious definition in many supposively faithful people. Its certainly not the government's job to make it easier for a religion to propogate its teachings, but to poach and rewrite a core doctrine that, although varied, is present in dozens of ancient religions is an attempt to rewrite our beliefs and culture with a secular version. No one would accept if the fed renamed high school graduation "Mitzvah", borrowed most of the ceremony and imagery, but then dropped the important spiritual parts.

      That is why I would prefer that we split the idea into two - a religious marriage, and a secular "Foo". Let the Congress of the United States decide what Foo should require and entail, what genders and how many people should be allowed - For me, my Lord and Saviour decided what marriage is. If an individual religion's definition of marriage mostly overlaps with Foo, fine, if it doesn't, who cares. If I'm mormon and want three wives, fine, I can take three wives but only one FemFoo. I don't want to force my beliefs down your throat, and I won't, because although I believe that's the path to salvation that type of evangelism doesn't work and you have freedoms that no one in my faith disagrees with. At the same time, I'd prefer if governments didn't try to overwrite my doctrines and redefine my words.

      There will always be people at that point who try to use their own religious rules to change the definition of Foo, but then its much easier for society to say "No, this is our invention, stay out of it and in return we'll stay out of your churches."

      As for the birth control question - Honestly, back in college, whatever was available. I lost my faith in my teens and slowly have restored it, but not before committing quite a list of sins. The Catholic Church in America does a very poor job of keeping its members Catholic, and teaching them what it means to truly be Catholic, and its only been in the past couple of years that I restored enough of my faith to learn and slowly (and painfully) change myself. I'm no Saint and certainly not one qualified to try and debate moral law, but I suspect those who are qualified to represent the Church don't spend much time on slashdot.

  436. Now I understand Clippy! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    "I see you are writing homophobic material. Would you like me to help you make it more perversion-neutral?"

    Yes, yes, I was kidding. Mostly. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  437. Re:Companies are private organizations by accessdeniednsp · · Score: 1

    Because the U.S. is full of prejudiced, racist, intolerant, uneducated, fuckheads.

    You misspelled "redneck". "Southern redneck" at that.

    I hate this place. When can I move to Mars?

  438. Re:You already have! by Combinare · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The more I read this, the more I wonder what in the world you read, because it certainly wasn't what I wrote. I never said anything about anything being superior to anything else. I said I wouldn't dream of walking up to an individual leaving a church and volunteering my opinion of his religion. There are a great many religious people who believe--as the individual I replied to does--that somehow he has the "right" to share his beliefs about his idea of my "lifestyle."

  439. You already have the benefits of marraige. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to enjoy the benefits of marraige, you have every opportunity to marry someone of the opposite sex. We all share those same rights. If you want to live a gay lifestyle then by all means your welcome to do so; But don't expect the rest of us to subsidize that gay lifestyle.

  440. Gay penguins? by Colonel+Cholling · · Score: 3, Funny

    At the aquarium where I work we have a gay domestic couple of penguins.

    Which is the real reason Microsoft withdrew their support for gay rights.

    --

    I am Sartre of the Borg. Existence is futile.
  441. Precisely! GAY PEOPLE DON'T EXIST! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right, the grandparent forgot one important argument: the heads-in-the-sand "gay people don't exist" argument.

    Dude, if gay people don't exist, then why are you worried about them getting married?

  442. Re:The whole 'anti gay == closet homophobia' thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do detest that flippant argument.

    OK, it was a cheap shot, I admit.

    How can 'you don't agree with me so you must be secretly gay' amount to anything more than childish name calling?

    well, actually, it was more like "why do you keep bringing that topic up if you don't want to discuss it?"

  443. Re:Since when do corporations decide social issues by SmallOak · · Score: 1

    You are right America should go back to its religious roots, that is, North American Native Paganism.
    sorry I could not resist.
    By the way Lynching was done by the people as well, does that make it right? Killing of the Jews in Germany was done by the people as well. Slavery was done by the people and was well within the law, does that make it OK?

  444. Full faith and credit by tepples · · Score: 1

    It does not imply that state's can not choose to deny rights that are not covered by the constitution.

    States that deny a given right to their citizens must still give "full faith and credit" to those states that do grant such a right.

  445. Why should MS have a position on that, anyway? by Minstrel+Boy · · Score: 1
    What's with the political activism on the part of corporations? Is this just another adjunct of the "corporations are legal entities" fallout?

    I saw the AMA posting a position on something or other that was none of their damned concern either. I don't get it - I assume this is PR posturing to align the company with whatever demographics it finds advantageous, but it strikes me as ridiculous whenever I see it. They should, literally, mind their own business.

    KeS

  446. No, evolution proves the opposite by taharvey · · Score: 1

    Your argument for evolution is unfortunately wrong.

    Sexual variation, both physical and psycho-physiological, are the most common variations in humans. The reason? Because sexual variations are of the few physical variations that aren't life threatening. (ie. you could live without a liver, but could live as a gay person or hermaphrodite just fine).

    Because they are not unadaptive to life, there is no reason to evolution throw them out of the genetic code. In fact, many hypothesis' have very adaptive explanations for such outcomes.

    The sole evolutionary reason for a single persons existence is not to "replenish the earth", that is a uninformed, simplistic view influencd by modern Christian dogma (itself a simplistic view of the bible)

  447. RE: penguins by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    A while back, I also recall reading a story in a local paper about penguins being the first (only?) animal besides humans observed to engage in prostitution.

    Supposedly, the penguins collected up rocks in order to build shelters for themselves - and they found a penguin accepting stones from another penguin in return for sex.

  448. Wow.. by I_redwolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know.. it's clear to me that America truly isn't a place of freedom anymore. It's more free than other places but this country is looking more oligarchy everyday. Wonder how long it can last until some fresh blood needs to be spilled.

    I'm Christian, i'm male, i'm straight, i'm black, i'm American. I don't give a shit if two males or two females want to marry. Not my business and if god has a problem with it. Let god do the judging, i'm too busy trying to survive.

    What really gets me is that regardless of religion. If you can't follow the simple commandments and rationalize them on the basis of your own ideology. How fucking faithful and true to your religion are you? "Love thy neighbhor? Yeah.. only if they aren't gay."

    You fucking hypocrites, the same book you live by talks about people like you. The same book talks about praising false idols (ie: the pope). I mean, even before the new ones burial plot could sink people are already over their mourning and cheering a new pope and for what?! Religious leadership? You need a leader to talk to your god, to steer you to holiness?

    You "religious" people disgust me. Stop walking around in the dark or you'll be left in the dark. How about you all take a minute and re-read the bible? Any bible, any religion. You don't have to get far to see the message.

    Treat people the way you want to be treated, love thy neighbor.. You don't need a church, wherever two or more gather. I'll be there.

    I mean jesus christ.. seriously.. JESUS CHRIST.. help these people.

    1. Re:Wow.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What really gets me is that regardless of religion. If you can't follow the simple commandments and rationalize them on the basis of your own ideology. How fucking faithful and true to your religion are you? "Love thy neighbhor? Yeah.. only if they aren't gay."

      Your stupid fucking book also instructs its followers to kill gays. The fact that you are so willing to ignore all of its contradictions and proclaim yourself to be a believer is proof positive that you are a complete and utter fucking moron.

    2. Re:Wow.. by I_redwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not a traditional "Christian" and I don't follow the Bible literally. That would make me a fool. I do believe in god, I do believe in several simple messages from every bible. Those messages are the ones I've said above.

      I don't care about all the other "lessons" or stories, morals, etc. They are entirely irrelevant to live what I believe is virtuous and righteous lifestyle.

      Contradiction would be believing in what I believe and fleeing from that belief when it becomes tested. I'm not one of those people. The bible may be a stupid fucking book but my faith isn't in a book.

      That is the whole point.

  449. Good idea. Let's start with the jews or dotheads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NOW

  450. Microsoft known for discrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know at least six people who have been discriminated against by Microsoft because of their sexual orientation. For me this is just another reason among many others to use Linux.

  451. Sometime back in the early 60s... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I'll bet someone made an argument much like this....

    They are preventing themselves from marrying, legally or otherwise, by choosing partners who, by nature of their race, have made their relationships incapable of constituting marriages. No, they have to find somebody of the same race, just like everybody else does.

    1. Re:Sometime back in the early 60s... by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Striking down the ban on interracial marriage affirmed marriage by saying any man has a right to marry any woman.

      Same-sex "marriage" attempts to redefine marriage.

    2. Re:Sometime back in the early 60s... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say gay marriage is redefinition, I say it affirms marriage. You say interracial marriage affirmed marriage, most people in the 60s said it redefined marriage. People were so against interracial marriage then that some states had laws including jail time for interracial couples who got married by going to another state. While there's many people today who don't want gay marriages recognized, I don't think there's many who would go as far as say that gay couples who marry should go to jail.

  452. Re:You already have! by AmoHongos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Atheism is not a religion.

    The word "atheism" itself tells you that.

    "A" means "without," and "theism" means a belief in a higher power.

  453. Re: penguins by Dr.+GeneMachine · · Score: 2, Funny
    So, let me summarize:
    a) microsoft retracts its support for an antidiscrimination bill regarding homosexuals
    b)penguins, on the other hand have TEH GAY and, as if this wasn't enough, are whoring and pimping sons-of-a-bitches.

    Now, folks, the penguin is a common symbol, not to say heraldic animal for what? That's right, folks, we're talking bout linux here.
    Am I the only one seeing the potential for new, unprecedented trolling and flaming? Ahhh, how I love the smell of napalm in the morning....

    --
    This comment does not exist.
  454. Biological Exuberance : Animal Homosexuality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try to answer them? Sure. All of them.

    A book has already been written on the subject:

    Bruce Bagemihl's
    Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity

    As it turns out, there's a lot more to homosexuality
    and nature than it seems you think there is.

    Here's the link to the book on Amazon.com if you want to take a look:

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/03 12 25377X/qid=1114141718/sr=8-1/ref=pd_csp_1/002-5350 268-9309628?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

    The main point though is that you seem to have a lacking in a basic understanding of genetics and diversity in general. While yes, it is difficult to understand, the social constructs which come forth as a result of a certain percentage of homosexual individuals in any given animal community do in fact contribute positively to the group.

    And by the way... what happens when you put 100 straight men on an island and see how long they live? hmm. Unrealistic, hypothetical situations such of these do not accurately depict how nature works, sorry.

    Thank you for your logic, however, it was better than most on here!

  455. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by j14ast · · Score: 1

    Iwafk(I was a foster kid)
    and let me tell you the straight couples who could have kids but take in foster kids arn't normal(not nessisarily in a bad way but not nessiarily in a good one). Not beaing allowed to go out with friends at 14 is not normal(I mean at all) having bi-weekly meetings with various social agentices is not normal. Finaly, having your parrents toss you out on your ass at a very young age isn't genraly considered normal.
    If there are no foster homes, you end up in whats called a residential(in MA). A residential is the bastard child of a threesome of a mental ward, a jail and a commune. If gay couples can take the kids out the system (say through guardian ship) while yess gay parrents is not normal it would be a fuck of a lot better than staying in the system.

    --
    Damn the man!
  456. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    Actually, I'd far rather they have clones than adopt... Its the only decent reason I can think of for reproductive cloning.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  457. *giggle* by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

    How's that old Heinlein quote go? "It takes about twenty years for a liberal to become a conservative, without changing a single belief?"

    (Maybe more than twenty years in this case, but you get the idea... :-)

    --
    iSKUNK!
  458. Who gives a shit? by ksemlerK · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What do I care if MS supports a bunch of faggots anyway? I could care less if they all just dropped off of the face of the earth to never return. Homosexuality goes against the very purpose of why mankind was created, (or evolved), with a penis and vagina anyhow. Given the natural course of events, if it is a "natual and genetic" occurance, the homosexual population will eventually die off anyway due to lack of procreation. If on the other hand, it is caused by environement or choice, then all of the arguments of the homosexual group will be proven invalid over a period of 20 years anyway. Genetic material cannot be recreated without procreation, but environmental circumstances can. We shall see in 20 years whom is correct. Homosexuality is in direct confilict with both the evolutionary and creationist theorys unless contaminants have been intoduced that create a non-benificial mutatation have been introduced to corrupt the DNA.

    Go ahead, mod me down. I could really give 2 shits less about whether this is PC or aggreant with the homosexual agenda anyway. Mod points have no relevance in real life anyhow, and clue to Sherlock: SLASHDOT IS NOT REAL LIFE, OR RELEVANT TO IT IN ANY MANENER!

    1. Re:Who gives a shit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comments sound as though Homosexuality suddenly existed within the last few generations, hence their existance today as a movement. Your statement is flawed in countless ways, the most important of which is that Homosexuals have existed since recorded history began. Their continued existance, therefore, cannot be attributed to any fluke of DNA that you can justify; in fact the only basis for your claim would be a recessive gene(s) that randomly show up on some unknown ratio of new born children. It's continued prevelence, however, only indicates that despite your hatred, Nature has not yet seen any real cause to eliminate such a potential gene which it would do if, in fact, it had no survival benefit whatsoever, only a dead-end existance.

      Naturally our entire population, or majority thereof, couldn't be homosexual or, otherwise, artificial means would be required to maintain a stable population (though it would solve the population crisis were numbers to decrease). Nevertheless, this is not the case and homosexuals pose absolutely no threat, whatsoever, to society. Morality is in danger, you say? Prove it. Quite frankly I find your hatred to be more subversive to society than anything two people do in their bedroom (unless it's an abusive relationship which is automatically covered not only by law but good conscience of caring people).

      You know... Love your neighbors is just as much scripture as Leviticus, if not more so since it was God's Son who said it and not some historical account of Moses in the land of Egypt long after its passing. If you're interested in the religious course, I do hope you will solve what appears to be a fundamental paradox in your persecution of homosexuals. Let he who has not sinned cast the first stone, after all.

  459. NO Marraige should be government approved. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seperation of Church and State specifically was intended that the government not interfere with organized religion. It CLEARLY was not the other way around as most of founding fathers of this great nation not only were Christian, but there actions in government were heavily laden with influence of Church. This goes from starting congressional sessions with prayer to meaning behind the consitution.

    Had the settlers in this country been _true_ Christians, the witch hunts would have never happened. What moron calls themselves a Christian and then..not only JUDGES others...but MURDERS them. WTF??!!

    My opinion is that the US Government SHOULD BAN GAY MARRAIGE. The us government should also STOP ISSUING marraige licenses for heterosexuals.

    If you truly believe in seperation of Church and State...then the government should stay COMPLETELY OUT of 'marraige'. They can deal with civil unions...but 'marraige' is a COVANENTAL relationship. Without God, it is just a JP creating a civil Union between 2 other people.

    Oh, and 'Religion is for those stoopid'..
    I am a devout Christian.
    I have an IQ well over 150, textbook contributor, degrees and taught at Universities (computer science).

    I also am well-rounded enough to have a gained good reputation in each of the areas of martial arts instruction, retail, manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, reverse logistics in entertainment gaming industry, and others (don't want too much info out there).

    By anyone's standard, I am far from stoopid.
    What do you believe in?
    Even atheists believe in something...even if it is that they believe there is no God.

    1. Re:NO Marraige should be government approved. by tokabola · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It CLEARLY was not the other way around as most of founding fathers of this great nation not only were Christian,

      Which country do you live in? It can't be the US, because most of it's founders were Deists, not Christians. Religious morals should not be laws, sins should not be crimes. Obviously actions harmful to another, like murder, rape, theft, etc should be illegal. But there are many laws in this country that are purely Christian in origin. The anti sodomy laws, for instance. Why should it be illegal in 48 states for one consenting adult to perform oral sex on another?

      I agree that the government has no business regulating marriage. They should neither ban marriage, nor enforce it. Churches should not be prevented from marrying two or more gay people, not should they force churches to marry two (or more) gay people.

      The government shouldn't even be preventing bigamy. This doesn't mean I condone the practice of coercing women to marry the way some hard-line Mormons do. But marriage, and sexuality, are personal choices and what two (or more) freely consenting adults do is not the governments business.

      I think I like your idea of getting the government out of the marriage business entirely. But I think you are very wrong about the separation of church and state being only one way. That leaves too much room for one religion to force it's beliefs on others. It allows an attitude of "You can whatever god you want but you have to follow my god's rules", and that's not true freedom of religion.

      Don't tell me I'm a victim if a girl gives me a BJ, because I certainly don't think I'm a victim (I think I'm damn lucky). Without a victim there should be no crime.

      Tommy
      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
    2. Re:NO Marraige should be government approved. by Elranzer · · Score: 1

      Considering you're on Slashdot, I'd say you'd REALLY be lucky...

    3. Re:NO Marraige should be government approved. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marrige is a legal construct. In religious societies, it's also typically folded into the religion, as local religions are important community institutions.

      I might observe that a smart person would know this, and would also be cognizant that an IQ test is a measure of test taking ability and a very rough approximation of intelligence. But I'm more polite that a person who actually would observe that. However, a real ass would get off on telling you that Ted Kacyznski had an IQ better than 150 and somehow fell short of being a rolemodel. Though, I don't know anyone like that.

      How about you get behind a ban on letting gays marry in your church. Because really, if your religion doesn't endorse such unions, no one should be forcing your church to marry people in contrivention to it's imporant principles.

    4. Re:NO Marraige should be government approved. by tokabola · · Score: 1

      Who are we kidding. "Dreaming" is more likely.

      --
      Open Source for Open Minds
  460. I'd rather see... by darkvizier · · Score: 1

    Gay Bill Abandons Microsoft Rights

  461. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Absolutely! It's called the tyranny of the majority. Just because the majority thinks certain basic rights are immoral doesn't enable them to make a knee-jerk law against it. The Constitution was supposed to protect us from this crap, but the founding fathers couldn't have known everything that was going to happen in the future.

    Not to thump a different bible, but Ayn Rand said it really well: "when the statutes are written, not to protect you from the [immoral majority], but to protect them from you, you may know that your society is doomed" (or something close to that).

    People harp too much on "democracy", and the Ben Franklin quotation is perfect. The founding fathers advocated capitalism, whose political component embodies a Darwinian idea of survival of the fittest ideas, unfettered by irrationality/religion.

    And to the alleged majority who thinks that being gay is immoral, well, you're wrong. I usually see two sides, but in this case: no. To discriminate based on a person's sexual orientation (or race, or religion, or sex, or age, etc.) is to deny that person's essence. And their essence is the life that they've made for themselves. That includes their skills, experience, virtues, talents, capabilities.

    To write someone off like that, to openly reject a person on the basis of some trifling fact of their background is a sin, in the truest sense of the word. It's a sin against that person, certainly, but it's a greater violation of the sinner. You see, by rejecting any person out-of-hand, you forfeit your confidence in any virtues that person may embody. To do so is to reject reason, and that is the greatest sin of all.

  462. Blame Canada! by rve · · Score: 1

    With all their beady little eyes
    And flappin' heads so full of lies !

  463. simple? by Flamesplash · · Score: 1

    I seriously doubt it's that simple. Just because some article says it doesn't me it's true, or that it's the whole truth. 80 pastors could have approached him, but maybe the one is the only one of note.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
  464. Disappointed to see so much homophobia on /. by flyingsquid · · Score: 1

    You'd think more people would recall that the founder of modern computer science was not only a homosexual (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing), but that prosecution and persecution for his sexuality eventually led him to take his own life.

  465. the people who upmodded you by alizard · · Score: 1

    as "Funny" were laughing at you, not with you.

  466. You know, I submitted this story 24 hours ago... by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

    and this one looks almost the same. Hm...

  467. Time to move to Linux. And Buddhism apparently. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why am I surprised by how comforting they're not? As if I needed MORE incentive to move away from Microsoft. They're just so..... 20th Century. To heck with them and the proprietary horse they rode in on. I've already moved my office to Linux machines.

    Not that I had an REAL expectations that they'd act honorably when the chips were down or anything, but still. D I mean, did you think this would go over real well in Seattle where not long ago a gay man was brutally attacked by three Evangelicals who sliced up his BACK (ever-so-courageous and "manly") with broken bottles so badly, that the officer who found him said his back looked "like a piece of sliced flank steak" and so deeply that doctors said his ribcage was exposed by the gouges? [ http://thestranger.com/2005-03-31/feature.html ]

    That is the kind of thing this preacher's hate-mongering leads to.

    And someone needs to tell that idiot VP Smith that gays actually know how to USE computers, whereas these religious wingnuts can't even pronounce the word properly.

    The fact that a company that literally relies on science and materialism to even exist, would bow to people still trying to keep the world flat and manageable just makes the mind wobble. And somebody needs to tell the "good" Reverend it is no more holy to preach hate from the Christian pulpit, than the mullahs have to spew it from a minarette in Saudi Arabia. I've come to the inevitable conclusion that the injury which ended Rev. Hutcherson's football career was one to the HEAD, not the knee.

    I read things like this or blithering from the "intelligent design" movement trying to banish science from the science classroom, and I am truly struck by how fragile and vulnerable an entire age is to attack -- the Age of Enlightenment.

    I think the best way to approach this issue is to use the church's contacts page [ http://www.abchurch.org/contact/ ] to make a "prayer request" that "Rev. Hutcherson's heart is opened by the loving spirit of Christ, that he will be encouraged by the Lord to be less of a narrowminded, fearful, judgmental prick, and that he leads his flock to more tolerant pastures." Where did all the Big "C" Christians go? Sad that some of our churches are being led astray from Christ's grace and mercy like this.

    As for Microsoft, thanks for the stock split guys. I will now be splitting myself. Not only will I no longer be buying your crap product with its security nightmares, I'll also be selling my stock. Last straw. Corbis on the other hand, will be serving all of my business' stock photography needs. Their CEO is apparently in possession of a SPINE.

    Nobody had to call for my boycott. You earned it all on your own, by dimwitted moves like this one.

  468. It's not a choice by elucido · · Score: 1

    The military and many scientists have developed chemicals which can make anyone gay. It's not a choice at all, fruitflies have been made gay, its a gene of some sort which can be turned on and off somehow. If it were a choice then no one would ever choose to be gay, theres no advantage to being gay.

  469. Too bad by elucido · · Score: 1


    Well thats too bad. No one forces you to bring your personal life to your job.

  470. No it doesnt by elucido · · Score: 1

    It also applies to inter-racial couples.

  471. Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I wouldn't dream of telling any religious person, whatever their religion or denomination, what I think of their religion. Why should you be held to a different standard?

    Because the topic is not religion here. What makes it so right for you to ask for special privileges here? Assuming you are over 18, you already have all the rights, privileges and responsibilities corresponding to your age group. Get over it.

  472. In Today's New York Times by Darth+Cow · · Score: 1
    Take a look

    I don't think the short article adds much new information, but it certainly lends a further extent of legitimacy to the issue.

  473. Idolatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you're in church, take a look at the carving of the bloke nailed up there.

    That there is an idol.

    Are you worshipping it?

    Not attacking Christianity, just the odd inconsistencies "the word of God" has. Personally, even if there is a God who communicated and the original bible was the transcript, there was originally transcription of the words, then rertansltion. Prove that there haven't been complete rewrites of it? Can't. So you don't know that the bible is the *literal* word of God.

    1. Re:Idolatory by glaucopis · · Score: 1

      No, an idol is by definition any god that isn't God (the one whose name appears in little capitalized letters in every Bible). The golden calf was an idol, but so were Baal and Asherah (the god and goddess of two other local religions). So even if we were literally worshipping all crucifixes, that wouldn't be idol worship, since they're representations of the "correct" god. If we were to declare that one particular crucifix was unique and especially holy, though, and started to worship it rather than what it represented, that would be elevating it to the level of a (new) god and would be idol worship.

      And if you read what I wrote previously, I think you'd realize that I do not believe every word of the Bible to be literal truth. I agree that it's been changed over history, and that even just reading different translations can give you a completely different understanding as to what's an abomination and what isn't. I was simply arguing based on the assumption that it all is truth, though, because that's what conservative Christians do. Saying "the Bible is inconsistent and irrelevant" is easy for them to dismiss, but using it to support one's own views might get them thinking. But perhaps I'm just overly optimistic.

  474. You don't understand Evolution. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 2, Informative

    It doesn't work on individuals, it works on populations. Worker bees dobnt breed but the genes still exist in bee species, because its god for the species as a whole to have them. Same with homosexuals who are smarter and more creative than general polulation. They are just more specialized humans.

    --
    US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  475. Re:You already have! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where in the word religion do you see a mandated requirement for the presumption of a god?

    You seem to be inserting your personal religious beliefs into your definitions of words that have independent meaning.

  476. sour grapes by lampajoo · · Score: 1

    Bill's boyfriend must have broken up with him.

  477. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Decameron81 · · Score: 1

    No it's not. It's all a matter of definition, which is the point you are missing here.

    I am not saying gay people shouldn't be able to unite and live together. Even have certain advantages like families do. But these two SHOULD be different cathegories. You just can't take the rules from one case and apply it to the other one. New rules have to be defined for such an union.

    Likewise, while I can accept such an union between gay people, I honestly don't see a reason why they should be able to adopt kids. A kid should have a paternal and a maternal figure at home. I am sure gay people can teach lots of things to kids. But they can't teach some things that would take a person from the opposite sex to do so.

    Now should the same rules that apply to a marriage between a man and a woman apply to a gay couple? No, because it's plainly not the same case.

    Do I respect gay people? As far as I am concerned I always did. Do I think their situation should be promoted as a state of complete normality? No, but then again people can disagree with me.

    Btw, I am not making someone a second class citizen by making a distinction where a distincion exists. And most importantly I have never had anything to say to the gay people I know.

    --
    diegoT
  478. Excuse Me by tilleyrw · · Score: 1

    This should be a non-issue.

    People are people. If an individual has full rights (as a homosexual individual does), rights cannot be removed because of grouping, as in a couple.

    Homosexual relationships need to be recognized as valid, and until then the US will simple have people emmigrating and traveling to places where their relationship is recognized by the Gov't.

    --
    This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
  479. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by PureCreditor · · Score: 1

    According to your theory, we can NEVER assign any statistics, since each of the 290 million people who live in USA are different.

    If everyone thinks like you, nothing can be statistically forecasted.

    In the real world, nothing is truly homogeneous. But we can make assumptions of common attributes between individuals among a population such that statistics can be drawn meaningfully.

    In the credit card industry, banks spend millions to run analyses on millions of cardholders because statistically there's a predictive pattern of customer behavior, even though each cardholder has a unique financial situation as well as financial self-discipline.

  480. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    The majority is not always right, and neither is the minority. Just like you I vote my conscience, and my conscience says that homosexuality is a sin

    OK, so their are at least two possibilities. One, homosexuality is "wrong" for some reason and two homosexuality is not "wrong." If you are right, great, don't have sex with people of the same sex and you're just fine. Why do you need to pass a law to force others to follow your religious beliefs? OK, now assume you are wrong (you are not perfect you know, you could be wrong right?) In that case you are trying to pass a law to enforce your preference in behaviors upon everyone else. we're talking about behaviors that do not affect you in any way. It would be like a powerful religious lobby passing a law that says women must wear shoes at all times, even in private. It is zealots making religious choices for individuals. You do realize several parts of the biblical teachings of Jesus specifically tell you not to try and keep others from sinning right?

    So basically you are defying your own religion to try to force others to follow one of its precepts. Hello hypocrite.

  481. Re:Companies are private organizations by GORby_ · · Score: 1

    Just like you I vote my conscience, and my conscience says that homosexuality is a sin

    Well let's see... if you really want to be so short-sighted, here are some more things for you to preach:

    1. 'You shall have no other gods before Me.'
    Let's just start discriminating people with different beliefs, or force them to become christians, pretending to have the one and only divine answer.

    2. '...Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above...'
    Isn't Jesus supposed to be at his Father's side in heaven? Then why do we see statues and crosses all over the place in every church? Isn't that a conflict with the 2nd commandment?

    3. 'You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain.'
    I guess most of us can adhere to that one

    4. 'Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.'
    You see quite a lot of christians, a lot of those who are so much against those 'sinful gays', who don't seem to mind this one.

    5. 'Honor your father and your mother.'
    Seems easy enough, but still I see a lot of elderly people who are being put into homes, and neglected by their nice, church-going children.

    6. 'You shall not murder.'
    no comment on this one...

    7. 'You shall not commit adultery.'
    I still haven't seen any mention of gay people until now, but quite a lot of people cheat on their partners, while still claiming to be christians.

    8. 'You shall not steal.'
    obvious enough...

    9. 'You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.'
    It would be a very nice world if there would never be a false accusation, but hey, it's not like that's a reality

    10. 'You shall not covet your neighbour's house; you shall not covet your neighbour's wife, nor his male servant, nor his female servant, nor his ox, nor his donkey, nor anything that is your neighbour's.'
    In this one, a male/female servant is even put on the same level as his wife, when it comes to how bad it is...

    As far as I remember these 10 commandmends are very important in christianity, and yet people don't make too much fuss about most of them. Homosexuality on the other hand, scares them, and therefor they hate it so much.

    I rather let everybody make their own decisions. If someone discovers (or decides, for those of you who don't believe they just ARE gay) that they are gay, they won't start harrassing straight men/women, but instead find other people in the same situation, so you can stop being afraid, and remove the plate from the back of your pants :-)

    My wife and I know a gay man, but why would I feel uncomfortable shaking his hand or talking to him? He's a nice person...
    I guess they aren't more likely to try and seduce you, than that you are likely to try and seduce a lesbian...
    Hmm, maybe this comparison isn't that great ;-)

  482. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Marriage is a term that applies to a union between a man and a women.

    To me marriage means "two things joining to become one." That is its original meaning and is still used in other contexts. I find the concept of marriage to be unethical. It forces people who do not want to be together to be together for convenience and often leads to people taking each other for granted or believing they no longer have to put any effort into a relationship.

    Within the Judeo-christian tradition it was originally a property transfer as the woman belonged to her father and was transferred to a husband. This is horribly degrading and something most people would prefer to forget about the practice.

    All of that, however, is immaterial to the issue. In the U.S. on both a federal and and state level the word marriage is a legally defined term. Thousands of laws have been written that rely upon that legal term. For example, if you die, the law says in absence of a will your property transfers to the person to whom you are married. The fight is about same sex couples being given all the same legal protections as mixed gender couples without having to pass thousands of laws on both a federal and state level all around the country.

    Although it may offend your sensibilities you have to remember that marriage is a legal entity in this country, performed by the state and does not necessarily involve a religion at all. If you did not want it to be a legal concept and wanted it to remain solely a religious term you should not have passed laws regarding and including it. The U.S. government is bound to treat all religions equitably. If some say gays can marry, passing laws to stop it is very much a violation of that equality.

    This is a fight over legal rights and the term "marriage" is necessary to acquire those rights. The argument you use is one that has been put forth by people that know this, but want to muddy the issue and deny rights to people out of spite, religious indignation, puritanical interventionism, and hate. Please stop buying into that argument.

  483. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    In case you didn't notice, your statement is telling people it is morally wrong to say what is and isn't morally wrong. Therefore, by your own definition, your statement is unethical.

    First, look up moral and ethical in a dictionary so that you are clear on the definitions. Next, you are right. I mis-phrased my statement. What I meant was "But just because most people are unethical and want to force other people to do what they think is morally right (as if they were some sort of authority) instead of allowing them to make their own judgements."

    I agree completely that they should be able to say anything they damn well please, just not pass laws forcing people to abide by their beliefs about what is right and wrong. Sorry for the confusion.

  484. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Make your choice and defend it: are gay marriages good for society as a whole or bad? Be precise in your definitions and show evidence one way or the other to demonstrate your assertions.

    That is an irrelevant point. Is drinking good or bad for society? Are cheeseburgers good or bad for society? Is the jewish faith good or bad for society?

    Answer: everyone must decide for themselves and legislators had better have overwhelming and compelling reasons to pass law banning homosexuality or any of the above. I'm pro-choice about nearly everything simply because I'm willing to take personal responsibility for my decisions. I'll decide what is right and wrong and good and bad for society and myself. Excess laws are welcomed by people who want someone else to decide for them, or want to decide for everyone else. That is damnably unamerican.

    Genetically speaking homosexuality is an advantage in harsh environments with strong familial units and in overpopulated environments. They are an advantage in the first because (assuming homosexuality is a recessive genetic predisposition) it brings two extra able adults to protect and care for children, while still passing on the trait through the recessives in the homosexual person's siblings. In an overpopulated society (like the one we live in now) anything that reduces the population growth benefits society.

  485. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    You are (deliberately?) missing the point.

    The previous poster had a point? I thought they just wanted to force me and everyone else to adhere to particular precepts of their religion while completely violating others themselves.

  486. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    I agree that being black is not a choice but being homosexual is. If it isn't a choice, then it must be a mutation in the current generation, because it wouldn't get passed on!

    Have you ever actually talked to a gay person about being gay? Try it some time. They are real people. Now just for shit and grins, why don't you try to choose not be attracted to people of the opposite sex? Genetically speaking homosexuality provides an advantage in adverse conditions with strong familial bonds. It provides two extra adults to raise, protect, and provide for children (usually children of siblings who have ~25% of the same genetic make-up possibly including any recessives that make one predisposed to being homosexual.

  487. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by nojomofo · · Score: 1

    Do you eat shrimp? According to the bible, that's http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/dt/14.html forbidden

  488. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Assuming that people who think like you are the only ones capable of determining right and wrong is very prejudiced and close-minded.

    Except that while I might be right or wrong, I'm not trying to force anyone to do anything because of my beliefs, while people who want to pass legislation against homosexuality are trying to do just that, make moral decisions for others (something you may have notices Jesus specifically mentions a few times as an immoral thing.)

    You have got to be kidding me. Logically that doesn't demonstrate anything. But I bet it sounded cool in you head, right?

    Well cooler than "cool in you head." Not go read the previous threads so that you can understand what I was talking about.

    homosexuality, beastiality and pedophilia all come down to having sex with something that is not natural

    Try reading sometime. You will quickly learn that animals have homosexual relations in many different species. It sounds pretty "natural" to me.

    People also consent to be shot in the head and fed poison from time to time too.

    If someone wants to shoot themselves in the head, or have a friend do it, or eat poison, who are you to force them not to? Are you god to tell others what is right and wrong? No. You're not. So butt out any worry about your own actions.

    he could actually earnestly believe that it is wrong

    What makes you think these two things are mutually exclusive? Lots of gay people think that homosexuality is wrong. Statistically, most become catholics and continue to have sex with members of the same sex and feel guilty about it.

    I need to keep reminding myself that you are right and just about everyone else is wrong.

    No just remind yourself that you don't know what is right and wrong and that you are fallible. Then leave everyone else alone to do what they think is right.

  489. 11 states is nothing by cwgmpls · · Score: 0
    Would that be the same consumer market that passed anti-gay marriage laws in 11 different states last November?

    11 states is nothing. In 1967, 16 states still banned interracial marriage when the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated those bans. Remember, in the U.S., civil rights are not enforced by the "consumer market" or even by popular vote. Civil rights are enforced by an independent judiciary. And there is a very good reason why we do things that way.

  490. Re:You already have! by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

    There are a great many religious people who believe--as the individual I replied to does--that somehow he has the "right" to share his beliefs about his idea of my "lifestyle."

    They do have the right to share their beliefs with you... so long as you mean "speak of". It's one of those freedoms that the constitution grants us.

    However, I agree that people should be able to impose their religious beliefs on you. Because that's another freedom we have: the freedom to choose our beliefs, and not have them unjustifiably oppressed. (Which is something our bible-banging government seems intent on doing).

    As far as my opinion of the whole matter goes: "Gay is cool, just don't hit on me".

  491. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    It doesn't make any sense to have a different kind of union for same-gendered couples. In fact I think we should destroy "marriage licenses" and replace them with domestic partnership licenses. Your ceremony is the marriage. You can get married without a license, and in terms of our state-sanctioned idea of marriage, everyone important has been appeased; the two people involved, and God. (I am not religious, mind you.)

    Do I respect gay people? As far as I am concerned I always did. Do I think their situation should be promoted as a state of complete normality? No, but then again people can disagree with me.

    "Do I respect black people? As far as I am concerned I always did." Just replace the class of people we're talking about with another oppressed group and you can see how bigoted your statement is.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  492. Yeah, but non-christians resent you... by geekpuppySEA · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'll pick apart your belief structures when they mean discrimination with impunity towards me and everyone I know. Not to mention social license to beat the shit out of me and my friends.

    Fuck that and fuck everyone you're making cowardly excuses for.

    --
    Intelligent Design: because MATH is HARD.
    1. Re:Yeah, but non-christians resent you... by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      I'll pick apart your belief structures when they mean discrimination with impunity towards me and everyone I know. Not to mention social license to beat the shit out of me and my friends.

      My beliefs mean neither. What are you talking about? If anyone did that they should be thrown in jail.

      I'm simply trying to point out that when people use Christianity as a defense to exercise bona fide discrimination they're not getting that from the Bible. If they were also using their faith to excuse randomly attacking groups of non-believers physically, they would be equally wrong. That just sounds absurd.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  493. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Decameron81 · · Score: 1
    "Do I respect black people? As far as I am concerned I always did." Just replace the class of people we're talking about with another oppressed group and you can see how bigoted your statement is.


    Problem for you is I am not talking about black people. Try to stick to this discussion without "replacing" words in what I write. It sure is easy to replace words here and there to extend the discussion in ways in which it was not meant to be extended.

    If you think it is wrong to actually point out that there are differences between different situations, then you are basically being negligent about accepting those differences. Grow up and learn to "deal" with those differences rather than pretend they don't exist in the first place.

    We are not supposed to be all the same, which basically means that we are also not supposed to treat all situations the same way.

    --
    diegoT
  494. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.familyresearchinst.org/FRR_02_11.html

  495. Re:Gay bashing has been legitizimized in Bush's US by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Your bit about "grow up and learn to deal with those differences" only underscores your bigotry. Why don't you grow up, and learn to accept those differences?

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  496. This Makes Perfect Sense by DanAnderson26 · · Score: 1

    Why would a public company spend their money on pushing a bill that would tend to piss off half their customers when the outcome doesn't matter to them as a company?

    TO me their getting messed up in this debate is a lose-lose situation:
    1. They wasted $37M
    2. They pissed off half their customers by wasting this $37M
    3. They backed down
    4. They pissed off the other half of their customers by backing down from a loser position

    So...All of their customers are pissed off, and they are out $37M, good corporate governance!

    This makes about as much sense as Sprint coming off anti-gun a few years back...

    Advice to companies, stay out of politics unless the bill in question will affect your bottom line.

    Dan

  497. Re:You already have! by ZeroZen · · Score: 1

    Atheists believe that there is NOTHING. which is a belief in itself.

    Agnostics don't believe anything. Be it that there's a god or no god.

    So true, it's not a religion. But it is a belief system.

  498. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Because the U.S. is full of prejudiced, racist, intolerant, uneducated, fuckheads.

    The U.S. didn't become the world's sole superpower with uneducated citizens.

    And there are more racists in Europe.

    As for 'prejudice', your statement will speak for itself.

    Get fucked and die.

  499. Who modded this informative? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit, lots of women are into m/m.

    Just search the web for "kirk/spock slash" for one. Okay, one better -- "Harry/Draco" or "HP/SS" (ewww).

    Here's another one--who was watching that awful "Master and Commander" movie?

    Who's watching "Queer as Folk"? (Hint: the No. 1 demographic is NOT gay men.)

    The answer is women! Women! Women!

  500. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    The U.S. didn't become the world's sole superpower with uneducated citizens.

    Yes, now how did that happen?

    And there are more racists in Europe.

    Err, glad to hear it?

    As for 'prejudice', your statement will speak for itself.

    I live in the U.S. so it is judgment, not prejudgement.

    Get fucked and die.

    Thanks I plan to do both, in my own time.

  501. I'm a gay atheist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I feel your pain, man. Actually it's easier to be out as gay at work than out as an atheist.

    If you're gay, you're gay. Some people will give you a hard time, but seriously, it's as futile as trying to change your skin color.

    But if you're an atheist? Let loose the hounds of war! They think they can "change" you, and you get lots of shit about how you're so "unreasonable". Some take your very being an atheist to be a spiritual attack.

    And God Forbid you ever criticise religion at work. One place we had prayers said during public meetings and all we could do was look the other way. A Jewish coworker said to me "at least they don't do the prayers with Jeeeesus Jeeeesus in it any more" (!)

  502. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I live in the U.S. so it is judgment, not prejudgement.

    No, it is prejudgement, as you are incapable of quantifying your assertion.

  503. Re:Companies are private organizations by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    No, it is prejudgement, as you are incapable of quantifying your assertion.

    Not true U.S. citizens average 1.3 kiloprejudi whilst Canadians only average .22 kiloprejudi. Europeans all together average only .37 kiloprejudi. I think the statistics are pretty clear.

    P.S. you're an idiot.

  504. Disregard the other post by me... by ben_fucking_franklin · · Score: 1

    ...hit submit too soon. Here's the post more nicely formatted:

    In my experience, there is the power of choice. There will always be different choices based on morality, ethics and society. Once one amasses enough choices, one gains a world view - and thereby, a world in which to live.

    To me the issue of gay marriage is a non-issue. I am religious, despite the lingual terror of my /.name. To me, the words and ideas surrounding marriage, especially the word itself, involve a man and a woman and a blessed form of covenant.

    To those of you who claim that marriage was first a civil union, let me ask a historical question: Did e.g. the Saxons, or the vikings have marriages between men? Did their society award any particular status and word to same-sex promises of that kind?

    The reason I ask is because the word 'marriage' is, among other things, a concept. I will never consider two men or two women to be married, to be in wedlock or to have been joined in holy matrimony. All of this is because the concepts are both defined by and tied into religions that mean exactly one thing by it, and one thing only.

    I fail to see how slapping the word 'marriage' onto same-sex unions can benefit anyone. It's a mostly religious term, and, as a matter of simple linguistic household, shouldn't be redefined willy-nilly. I don't run around redefining words such as strong, courageous, friend, priest, bigot, nature, nurture, science, coward, cowboy, soldier, or king based on whether or not I want those words to apply to me.

    If homosexuals are particularly in vogue one day, I don't claim to be a homosexual, because that term doesn't apply to me (cue all the comments on homophobia being a sign of latent homosexuality).

    If we are at all to have a common language - and one that can be used by us all, we can't be idly permissive about the meanings of words. I do not consider the unions of men nor of women to be religious in nature, and therein lies the problem: A religious term is being usurped by those who clearly not fall under it. It is being used to describe a relationship inherently forbidden by the same religions whence the term sprang.

    This may be scandalous of me, but I just don't mind any of the benefits bestowed upon married couples to be bestowed upon gay couples also. I would have wished that the more vocal people among the gay would have the courage to choose their own words - to stand for what they so staunchly believe is right, if they believe Christianity to be so wrong.

    1. Re:Disregard the other post by me... by glaucopis · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how slapping the word 'marriage' onto same-sex unions can benefit anyone. It's a mostly religious term, and, as a matter of simple linguistic household, shouldn't be redefined willy-nilly. I don't run around redefining words such as strong, courageous, friend, priest, bigot, nature, nurture, science, coward, cowboy, soldier, or king based on whether or not I want those words to apply to me.

      No one is proposing to redefine marriage along the lines you suggest. To use one of your examples, we're not saying "listen, everyone, now 'cowboy' is a verb meaning 'to arrange festive floral bouquets," we're saying "let's expand the definition of 'cowboy' to also include women who herd cows and men and women who herd water buffalo, llamas, and other large meat-producing grazing animals." Languages aren't static; this type of shift happens all of the time, even if an interested group isn't pushing for the change. As numerous other posts have mentioned, 'marriage' at various times has meant a legal and/or religious bond between a white man and a white woman, a legal and/or religious bond between a man and a woman of the same race, and a legal and/or religious bond between a man and a woman of any race. Proposing that the concept be expanded to include a legal and/or religious bond between two adults of any race or sex isn't that much of a stretch. And humans are rather clever creatures who adapt to small changes like this very easily; expanding the definition of words isn't going to make us suddenly unable to communicate.

      I would have wished that the more vocal people among the gay would have the courage to choose their own words...

      The problem with this suggestion is that marriage isn't just a religious institution, but a legal and social one. Telling someone "I'm married" communicates a commitment to one partner, a status as a responsible adult within the wider community, a recognition by the government, and possibly a recognition by a religion. Telling someone "I'm unionized" or whatever would communicate only governmental recognition; the social recognition conferred by the word "marriage" would be entirely lacking. Religion doesn't have a monopoly on marriage and won't as long as people can be married without religious blessing in governmental offices. But note that no one is stating that your particular religion must include gays in its marriage ceremonies. We're just asking that your particular religion's understanding of marriage doesn't dictate either the government's or other religions' understanding of it.

    2. Re:Disregard the other post by me... by ben_fucking_franklin · · Score: 1
      Languages aren't static; this type of shift happens all of the time, even if an interested group isn't pushing for the change. As numerous other posts have mentioned, 'marriage' at various times has meant a legal and/or religious bond between a white man and a white woman, a legal and/or religious bond between a man and a woman of the same race, and a legal and/or religious bond between a man and a woman of any race.

      I most humbly disagree. The religious term 'marriage' has meant the same thing throughout those changes you mention. It is not the institution of marriage that has progressed w.r.t. to those changes you have mentioned, but rather society's acknowledgement of all peoples as equals in in humanity.

      In retrospect, this may seem an artificial distinction to make, but I assure you that people didn't sit down and say: "Whites, blacks, and the lot of them should be able to get married!" I'd imagine somebody rather saw the inherent unfairness in having a supposed egalitarian society where one kind of people was treated as inherently inferior.

      Telling someone "I'm married" communicates a commitment to one partner, a status as a responsible adult within the wider community, a recognition by the government, and possibly a recognition by a religion.

      Well, if I am to recognize gay marriage to be quite as 'responsible' (God, I hate that word being thrown all over the place these days.), I'd imagine the consequences should have to be as dire if the whole thing falls over. This is the one place where "Think about the children!" actually applies. That two people promise themselves to each other is, indeed, wonderful. Yet I don't want to have to nod and think, "yes, those are responsible members of society" about two people entering into a commitment where nothing but emotions and joint possessions are at stake.

      To use one of your examples, we're not saying "listen, everyone, now 'cowboy' is a verb meaning 'to arrange festive floral bouquets," we're saying "let's expand the definition of 'cowboy' to also include women who herd cows and men and women who herd water buffalo, llamas, and other large meat-producing grazing animals."

      The point is that somebody saying "Let's expand the definition!" is, in itself, artificial. I'm sure that the majority of English-speakers would agree with me that the correct word would be "rancher" for anybody on horseback herding large grazing animals, with "cowboy" being more of an iconic concept.

      In conclusion, I have no problem with gay/lesbian/bi/10%-people wherever they are. I've had gay men hit on me, and it doesn't bother me (it is, after all a compliment). I've also tried to pick up lesbian women with little result, and I haven't thought "damned d**e" after that. My point is that the word "marriage" doesn't apply, being a religious term. Whatever civil contracts and personal promises people make is between them, and I am fine by the State awarding them the same rights and responsibilities overall as married people get. Lacking a) the religio-moral dimension, and b) the child dimension makes me feel it's a different sort of union altogether, though, and I would like to say I'd rather see the State remove all benefits altogether for marriages than being forced to acknowledge something to be that which I see it is not.

      oh, one last thing. If this: To use one of your examples, we're not saying "listen, everyone, now 'cowboy' is a verb meaning 'to arrange festive floral bouquets," is your mode of debate, you might want to take a long look at how honest you are, specifically asking yourself the question: "Did I toss that example in there to evoke an image of the parent being a redneck, flower-hating, gay-bashing s.o.b.?" Maybe not. Yet I, as I'm sure many others, would appreciate an objective mode of discourse. Even in an inherently subjective subject matter such as this.

  505. Of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    everybody knows homosexuals cause Windows insecurity. I mean if only hetrosexuals programmed then Windows would never crash, never need a reboot, and never need updating. Now we have to write out code with protection against gays and their viruses.

  506. Affirmative action debate by crimson30 · · Score: 1

    But you live in the country whose gov't conducted racist policy. If you say the gov't is to be charged, you're still liable for it, as a taxpayer.

    Excellent. That's what I've been trying to say. If anyone is responsible, it should be the taxpayers at large and not a specific racial group.

    So basically, you have no problem with enforcing the law, even it it could cause another civil war in this country.

    You think restitution would lead to civil war? I beg to differ.

    Its not discrimination if it redresses previous wrongs, and done in a manner that negatively impacts an entire racial group.

    That statement is ridiculous and untrue. Maybe you should read it again. That line of reasoning could be used to support genocide.

    So basically, you're against discrimination when it impacts your racial group, specifically your least intellectually qualified individuals.

    Uh, no. I'm against ALL discrimination. Skin color and race should be completely transparent. Affirmative action violates this ideal.

    And you don't care if the United States can function after such legal judgements are rendered. Which makes you the ultimate selfish individual.

    First of all, I don't see such a method as being a fatal blow to the U.S. economic system as you do. Second, I fail to see how it is selfish if I stand to gain nothing.

    1. Re:Affirmative action debate by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 1

      If anyone is responsible, it should be the taxpayers at large and not a specific racial group.

      But such financial judgements could only be administered on a local level, since I am not aware of a strategy that could get a civil action against the federal gov't. Also, instead of a federal spread of culpability, its would have to be limited to states with documentable acts of overt discrmination. Its not the taxpayers at large that would have to pay a financial judgement, its the taxpayers of a municipality across the south that would have to pay.

      You think restitution would lead to civil war?

      If large enough to bankrupt municipalities, that would be spread across the south. There would be hideous financial chaos. That is always trouble.

      Its not discrimination if it redresses previous wrongs, and done in a manner that negatively impacts an entire racial group.
      That statement is ridiculous and untrue. Maybe you should read it again. That line of reasoning could be used to support genocide.

      Pre-60's discrimination, impacted specifically non-white minorities. If this current version sets the equivalent of loose quotas based on population, you can argue that some individuals will be losers, but you can't establish that one ethnic/racial group will be favored over another, only that by ratio of population they are equivalent. It does hit the concept of the "fittest" individuals at "examination" time not being selected, but that doesn't impact racially, only individually. Since I haven't suggested people who fail to get placement in jobs or university should be executed, I fail to see where it supports genocide.

      Skin color and race should be completely transparent. Affirmative action violates this ideal.

      It wasn't before the federal civil rights acts. Where is the restitution?

      I don't see such a method as being a fatal blow to the U.S. economic system as you do.

      Well, its going to be near impossible to resolve specific acts of discrimination actionable by tort against one set of individuals against a set of other individuals. The only target of legislation will have to be at townships, cities, and POSSIBLY state gov'ts. You can't prosecute a gov't group for following the law, but at the Federal level, you can argue that basic human rights were being denied by unequal application of the law (14th amendment). You can then proceed to argue the law was unequal, because in many districts blacks weren't permitted to vote, or there was a conspiracy to deny the vote. In which case, those gov't might not be able hide behind local law for their acts. The key is not to find a specific act to convict the local gov't, only present a conspiracy to inflict financial or physical harm to a class action group, and then RICO trebles the damages. The beauty of this approach is that it does not require a specific instrument, you just have to show a conspiracy was involved, and RICO makes it hurt. Now all these local gov't would be stuck not being able to pay for anything except court awarded damages. It'll collapse loser towns across the entire south.

      But, IANAL. There may be some form of judicial brake that would make it impossible to conduct cases in this manner, and I'm sure the judicial system would conspire to never allow this to occur. But ultimately, there are still two problems. 1) Judicial awards do not fix the problem; basically that 250+ years of slavery and segregation has robbed a whole population of people of the wealth and position and relegates them to near permanent poverty status for generations. It just means that an identifiable group of individuals get a cash award, and the racist white people conducted a wise strategy to secure wealth & power at the expense of another racial group. I think its

      --
      There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
    2. Re:Affirmative action debate by crimson30 · · Score: 1
      Also, instead of a federal spread of culpability, its would have to be limited to states with documentable acts of overt discrmination. Its not the taxpayers at large that would have to pay a financial judgement, its the taxpayers of a municipality across the south that would have to pay.

      Again, you are directing blame at people who did not actually commit the crimes, but the descendants of those people. You are trying to pin a crime on people who weren't responsible for it. If you are to be fair about it, you might as well make EVERYONE pay EQUALLY.

      Its not discrimination if it redresses previous wrongs, and done in a manner that negatively impacts an entire racial group.

      That statement is ridiculous and untrue. Maybe you should read it again. That line of reasoning could be used to support genocide.

      I fail to see where it supports genocide.
      I admit, it's a quite a stretch, but I could see turning it into:

      "It's not discrimination (against Jews) if it redresses previous (perceived) wrongs, and done in a manner that negatively impacts an entire racial group (genocide)."

      I know. Semantics. No need to point out the flaws in my thinking. I probably should have kept that comment to myself, and I just wanted to offer an explanation for my statement (which in hindsight, is hyperbolic).

      I think its preferable that the federal gov't has spread the "pain" in the manner it did, and preserved some form of meritocratic system of distribution, rather than point a finger at a southern gov't, and proceed to redistribute cash.
      And here is where we differ. I find it reasonable to spread the pain, but not in a manner that promotes discrimination, which is inherently unjust.

      You may sit smug now, thinking that you as an individual are not being unduly burdened by affirmative action, but you might learn otherwise when loved ones are killed and property destroyed by a disenfranchised class of individuals in armed revolt (whom I believe currently make up 40% of the U.S. military).
      I don't believe I'm following you here. The first half of that statement would seem to suggest I am somehow unduly burdened by affirmative action. And I would request a source to back up your claim of such a high rate of disenfranchisement in the military. I believe your reality of how military folks currently feel has been greatly distorted by the media.

      But its not surprising to see that individuals like you are so concerned about "justice" and "rule of law", but think it acceptable to ignore injustice inflicted upon a group of people by "rule of law".
      To say that I am "so concerned" with "rule of law" illustrates that you have not been paying attention to what I've been saying. I very clearly pointed out, more than once, that I believe law can very well run counter to justice and is without any real merit on its own. I thought I made my contempt for blindly following the law quite clear.

      As for finding it acceptable to "ignore injustice inflicted upon a group of people", it is YOU who is ignoring injustice. Discrimination is unjust by any means and you are trying to justify it. And just what statement in this thread did I make to make it sound like I think it acceptable to "ignore injustice inflicted upon a group of people"?
  507. WTF by timmarhy · · Score: 1

    why the hell does ANY corperate body have ANY say in how a bill gets voted?? YOU vote this senators in, they represent YOU. corperate policy should have nothing to do with it.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  508. FUNNY ! How anyone who doesn't aggree with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with the HOMOSEXUAL lifestyle choice is a threat to such People. And the lable
    " rabidly evangelistic, gay-hating preacher???" is suddenly applied to anyone who Stands in the way and just wont aggree with the choice.

    I think Homosexual Activist's are "STRAIGHT Hating BIGOT's"! So Now let's turn the arrow the other WAY.

    btw : It is not GAY there is nothing happy, cheery, bright, and pleasant about being Homosexual. It's simply a lifestyle Choice that many dont agree with. We could get into the finer points of the "LifeStyle" but we dont have time to discuss it here.

    I dont like BOOGER Eating, Toe Cheese eating Fat Chics. Wonder what that makes me , hmmmmmm?

  509. Re:Companies are private organizations by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

    Rigth so let's make murder legal, because otherwise It'd just be inforcing my belifes on others. All law is someone's morals.

  510. Re:Companies are private organizations by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

    You do have a good point. The whole speck in your brother's eye / plank in your eye thing. I think a lot of Christians push hard on this one, because (As far as I can tell) there really are not mainline groups out there pushing for acceptance and tolerance of murder. It's quite natural to push harder in areas you feel you are loosing, No?

  511. Re:Companies are private organizations by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

    On a completely different note, I would be interested in seeing which teaching you are reffering to, if I am in error (I'm certinally not perfect), I'd appreciate more detail. (I do not mean to "call you out" on this, if you are right then you will have made me aware of something I am currently not)

  512. s/should/shouldn't/ by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    with that edit done, I agree

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:s/should/shouldn't/ by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

      Whoops. Sorry about that. (And thanks for noting the mistake.)

  513. Re:You already have! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    at no point in my post did I state anything about my religious affiliation
    You stated exactly that, here:
    I wouldn't dream of telling any religious person, whatever their religion or denomination, what I think of their religion.
    If you'd had something you identified as a religion, you would have said "any other religious person". If you simply made a mistake when posting, say so and I'll rephrase my answer.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  514. Ooh! Feel the unthinking prejudice! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    At least two Troll mods, the first of my posts in about a month to be modded Troll at all. The first day I've been modded down overall for the day (two troll, one flamebait, one interesting, one insightful) in about a year. Hit a nerve?

    I guess at least two somebodies care enough about the post to mod it down - even if they don't get beyond "Religious homophobe! Kill!" - so I guess it at least got read.

    Atheism is a religion. No robes, no stained glass, no incense, still a religion. Learn to live with that fact, 'coz modding it Troll won't change it.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Ooh! Feel the unthinking prejudice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You sure whine a lot, you must be a christian. And atheism isn't a religion, it's just a word for "other". Like "gentile" or "pagan".

      You're an idiot and self-described homophobe, live with it.

  515. Re:this is good news & I appauld Microsoft's d by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

    Whine and complain? Nope... just going to call you a fucking bigot and be done with it. The Ku Klux Klan would be proud to have you as a member.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
  516. Re:You already have! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Atheism isn't a religion. Because you have a mistaken understanding of the word does not make it correct. Might try the definition of religion. Notice that the fourth definition came about because of the similarity between the activities of zealots and the religious, not because it constitutes religion.

  517. Re:You already have! by aichpvee · · Score: 1
    Nihilists believe that there is "nothing".

    Agnostics refuse to take a position.

    I think you would be less confused if you considered the difference between believing something on credible evidence (for instance, I believe Australia is a continent and does in fact exist, despite never having seen it for myself) and a belief (aka faith) in something without evidence (god/gods, unicorns, fairy dust, etc).

    You should really check out Jonathan Miller's A Brief History of Disbelief. It's an excellent documentary on the subject and you'd probably learn something.

    --
    The Farewell Tour II
  518. Re:You already have! by aichpvee · · Score: 1
    The constitution doesn't actually grant you any rights to free speech. This is a common misconception.

    The first amendment states: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    You have no right to say anything, nor does anyone else. The government (federal, mind) just isn't allowed to pass a law against you doing it. The side effect is that in general you can say whatever you want, but it isn't protected in the constitution.

    Of course this is the same amendment that people have misrepresented to mean that religious organizations can legally not pay the same taxes levied against non-religious corporations of similar size and income.

    --
    The Farewell Tour II
  519. Borderlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This whole discussion has this song playing out in my head...

    Every bristling shaft of pride
    Church or nation
    Team or tribe
    Every notion we subscribe to
    Is just a borderline
    Good or bad, we think we know
    As if thinking makes things so!
    All convictions grow along a borderline

    (Joni mitchell)

  520. Re:You already have! by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

    You have no right to say anything, nor does anyone else.

    From Wikipedia:
    The Ninth Amendment, particularly when taken in conjunction with The Tenth Amendment, emphasizes that the Bill of Rights is not a grant of rights from the government to the people, but a reminder that it merely enumerates some of the most important powers not granted to the government.

    Because the Constitution is a document describing the powers of government, the language it uses will be government-centric. We do have those rights, specifically because the government cannot regulate them. (Unless, of course, everyone goes batshit and amends that out of the US Constitution, but that's another matter entirely.)

    Also, most of the rights it affords citizens may not be abridged by state governments either. (Amendment 14, Section 1). Of course, that's only if you interperet the Constitution by the word and letter.

    Of interesting note is the way that the Supreme Court decided to interpret the 9th amendment.

    But then again, our government hasn't ever worked for us. Even when our nation was in its infancy, we had problems and arguments over the document. Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton had entirely different views on what the constitution said--and they both wrote it. Alexander Hamilton (and, of course, the almighty dollar) eventually won that one.

  521. This makes no sense by lorcha · · Score: 1
    Why would a company fire a perfectly good employee over sexual preference? I am a landlord, and in my state I can legally discriminate against gays, but why would I reject or evict a perfectly good tenant just because he or she is gay?

    That makes no sense. There has got to be a better reason (layoffs? poor performance?) that you were fired.

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
  522. Re:You're taking irony literally. Allow me to help by mbrod · · Score: 1

    Not explicitly sinful but forbidden:

    http://63.175.194.25/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=bro wse&QR=5560&dgn=4

    4. It is permissible for the husband to have intercourse with his wife in her vagina in whatever manner he wishes, from behind or from the front, on the condition that it is in her vagina, which is the place from which a child is born. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning): "Your wives are a tilth for you, so go to your tilth (have sexual relations with your wives in any manner as long as it is in the vagina and not in the anus), when or how you will" [al-Baqarah 2:223]. Jaabir ibn 'Abd-Allaah (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: The Jews used to say that if a man had intercourse with his wife in her vagina from behind, the child would have a squint. Then this aayah was revealed: Your wives are a tilth for you, so go to your tilth (have sexual relations with your wives in any manner as long as it is in the vagina and not in the anus), when or how you will" [al-Baqarah 2:223]. The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "From the front or from the back, so long as it is in the vagina." (Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 8/154; Muslim, 4/156).

    5. It is not permissible for the husband under any circumstances whatsoever to have intercourse with his wife in her back passage. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning): "Your wives are a tilth for you, so go to your tilth (have sexual relations with your wives in any manner as long as it is in the vagina and not in the anus), when or how you will" [al-Baqarah 2:223]. It is known that the place of tilth is the vagina, which is the place from which one hopes for a child. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "He is cursed who has intercourse with women in their back passages." (Narrated by Ibn 'Udayy, 1/211; classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Adaab al-Zafaaf, p. 105). This is because it [anal intercourse] goes against the fitrah [natural inclinations of man] and is an action which is revolting to those of a sound human nature; it also causes the woman to miss out on her share of pleasure; and the back passage is a place of filth and dirt - and there are other reasons which confirm the fact that this deed is haraam. For more information see Question #1103.

  523. Everyone Is Missing The Point... by piecewise · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You know what's really wrong with this picture?

    We actually talk about how important it is that a COMPANY endorse legislation. We don't talk about how many Americans agree or disagree - but which companies are supporting the resolution or the people behind it.

    This is wrong. And it's wrong to treat LGBT as second-class citizens, which is what we're doing. It's funny how conservatives harp about "moral values," yet they seem to be pretty selective on which moral values they consider worthy of discuss. It's their buzzword - and it's pathetic.

    --
    The next comment I write will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and see it early!
  524. Re:Companies are private organizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if someone thinks that killing you is moral then who am I to say otherwise. Right? No? Ok, how about just stealing your car? No? Smacking your kids around? Still no huh? Screwing you wife then, how about that. Is that OK?

    So you see, you do in fact believe in telling other people what is morally right and in enforcing those beliefs.

  525. Congratulations by Xybot · · Score: 1

    The Civil Union Act took effect yesterday in New Zealand. I'd like to congratulate all those who 'tied the knot'.

    I'm quite proud that we managed to get this though despite the expected fundamentalist fist waving.

    --
    God was my co-pilot, but then we crashed and I was forced to eat him.
  526. From a Right-Winger by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

    I'm somewhat of a right-winger, and, hold on to your hat folks, this is just wrong. People are people, and whether you agree with their lifestyle they have the RIGHT to be who and what they are. Supporting a bill PROTECTING someone from discrimination is a good thing all the way around for humanity. Pulling your support sends the wrong message to everyone.

    --
    I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
  527. Re:You already have! by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Atheists don't believe in a god. Agnostics don't know about god.

    Indeed, one definition of agnosticsm is claiming that it is impossible to ever know whether there is a god or not, which is a positive belief, unlike atheism.

  528. JOIN THE CAMPAIGN TO ANNIHILATE GARCIA by SneakyTroll · · Score: 0, Troll
    In my other highly moderated account I get mod points regularly. I have set about systematically modding down Garcia with them to strike a blow for good taste and good sense at Slashdot.

    But the fight is long and arduous! I need other strong, willing souls to fight the good fight! Join me in modding Garcia to the level of a pathetic troll! Whenever you get mod points, go through each of Garcia's posts in his history and mod them 'Overrated'. That way they will not be meta-modderated and you can continue your work indefinitely. Try and mod the older, less active stories where he is less likely to be modded back up. Join with me in my glorious quest! Join me in the first mod lynching on Slashdot of this serial irritant.

    Yours,

    SneakyTroll.