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Orson Scott Card Pleads 'Tolerance' For Ender's Game Movie

interval1066 writes "A story in Wired describes Orson Scott Card's quest for tolerance in response to a boycott for Gavin Hood's film adaption of Ender's Game, saying that 'The gay marriage issue is moot' in a statement to Entertainment Weekly. Card is a long time anti-gay and defense of marriage activist. 'His concern, ostensibly, is that someone might be petty enough not to see his movie simply because he spent years lobbying for laws that treated certain people as less than human. The fallacy he employs here — that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others — is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies, and a way of evading responsibility for the impact of their words and actions.' I guess he didn't see this film and the box-office importance of wide appeal coming, did he?"

1,448 comments

  1. Really?!? by realityimpaired · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Orson Scott Card is pleading for tolerance? That's rich.

    1. Re:Really?!? by somersault · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He'd have been better off not saying anything. I'm sure I've read about him being a bigot in the past, but I'd actually forgotten about it. I can understand people not liking things that they feel are too "different", but I can't understand why he'd actively campaign against people who are different from him..

      This is like some weird, modified version of the Streissand effect at work.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    2. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an amazingly accurate handle you use.

    3. Re:Really?!? by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, believe it or not, those who have different points of view deserve tolerance, regardless of whether you agree with them or not.

      Crazy communists deserve tolerance,
      Crazy white supremacists deserve tolerance,
      Crazy Tea party members deserve tolerance,
      Crazy gay activists deserve tolerance,
      Crazy anti-gay activists deserve tolerance.

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem. Case in point, a lot of people enjoy Disney movies and Ford cars despite Walt Disney and Henry Ford being nasty antisemitic pro-nazi nutjobs.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    4. Re:Really?!? by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      his answer is really perplexing. it's like just because his opinion side lost and the issue is settled in courts that somehow his opinions on the issue no longer should matter to other people... did he change his opinion on the issue? apparently not. why the fuck even make a statement like that? should have just kept his mouth shut.

      i don't really see what people see in the novel either... which is the reason I'm not going to see it, not the apparent fact that he is an idiot(ok, I saw the trailer and that's another reason).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Really?!? by tbannist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, I think you cross a line when you call for the violent overthrow of the government for the crime of treating people equally. I wasn't aware that Card had done that or advocated to criminalize/keep criminalized homosexual behaviour so the the government could jail anyone who dared to admit they were gay.

      I don't think I need to actually consciously boycott Card. I was already tired of his endless rehashing of the Book of Mormon in every thing he writes. These (new to me) revelations about his bigotry have made anything with his name of it completely unappealing.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    6. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He'd have been better off not saying anything.

      You don't get people talking about a new film by staying quiet. The publicity agents for the film must be loving this whole thing. I expect some people will stay away but how many more will only be going because all the controversy keeps this film on their radar?

    7. Re:Really?!? by Danathar · · Score: 1

      I read his statement.

      I have no idea where the "Pleading" came from. There is no pleading going on.

      He asked the QUESTION if supporters of gay marriage would be tolerant. The implication is of course they should, but pleading? Nah.

    8. Re:Really?!? by Danathar · · Score: 1

      did you read the novel?

    9. Re:Really?!? by mlk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Neither Walt Disney or Henry Ford are currently alive. Do their companies now stand for pro-nazi-ness?

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    10. Re:Really?!? by Bigbutt · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is that what it was?? I was reading some book years ago and about a third of the way through I realized it was a story from The Book of Mormon (family converted when I was 14) that was Sci-Fi'd up a bit and laughed. I'll have to see if I still have it.

      [John]

      --
      Shit better not happen!
    11. Re:Really?!? by Thanshin · · Score: 1

      Yes, believe it or not, those who have different points of view deserve tolerance, regardless of whether you agree with them or not.

      It's not a question of belief. What you say is a philosophy I, for example, might not follow.

      My point of view is that tolerance is not binary. The acceptance of the beliefs, opinions or practices of others is to be given based on a number of criteria. For me, bigotry isn't not to accept the beliefs of others, is to have personal opinion as the overwhelming criterion.

      I have no problem with the disqualification of beliefs based on their scientific inaccuracy or on their discrimination of human beings.

      However, I fully agree with you on the idea that whether you agree or not with a point of view can never be accepted as a reason not to tolerate it.

    12. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I may read it after his funeral. Don't want to give him the satisfaction when he's there to enjoy it. Or I may read something else.

    13. Re:Really?!? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      I can understand people not liking things that they feel are too "different", but I can't understand why he'd actively campaign against people who are different from him.

      I sympathise with this view entirely. If people are leaving you alone and harming nobody while behaving differently, then just leave them alone.

    14. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not at all. In fact, now their companies are owned by Jews.

      Hmmm.

    15. Re:Really?!? by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You call the scheme of picking just one alternate sexuality scheme, promoting it above everything else, and banning the rest, including fully natural behaviour -- "equal"?

      A vast majority of animals, and most human cultures other than graeco-roman allow polygamy, usually as the default mode. By a quirk of history, this particular culture won and imposed it customs on everyone else. And now, unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

      Up until late 19th century, the age of sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult. Yet these days, this natural behaviour is considered the most heinous crime that must be eradicated at all costs, including curbing all civil liberties. Before, people acted with revulsion only to sexual relations with an actual child -- today, if a woman of this age sends her naked photo to the father of her child, she goes to jail for "pedophilia".

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    16. Re:Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Before, people acted with revulsion only to sexual relations with an actual child -- today, if a woman of this age sends her naked photo to the father of her child, she goes to jail for "pedophilia".

      Almost. They both go to jail for child pornography, she for producing and he for possessing. Then the child goes into a home, and probably eventually into the military or a prison. Either way, the state profits.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:Really?!? by Thanshin · · Score: 5, Funny

      Better yet, download it from the Internet!

      Each time you do that he loses a book's worth. Do it enough times, fast enough, and you might just bankrupt him before he dies.

    18. Re:Really?!? by schnell · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Neither Walt Disney or Henry Ford are currently alive. Do their companies now stand for pro-nazi-ness?

      No, but the overarching point is that if you let the opinions and views of the artist cloud your interpretation of the work, you will never enjoy anything because ultimately *everybody* out there has some belief you disagree with. You can refuse to put dollars in the pocket of someone you disagree with, fine. But in general it's like refusing to read the Declaration of Independence because Jefferson was a slaveholder.

      Some of the best advice I was ever given was "trust the art, not the artist." Artists are stupid people like everyone else and will always break your heart if you expect them to be as awesome as you want them to be. Leave them out of it and you'll have a much easier time enjoying art for what it is.

      --
      "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
    19. Re:Really?!? by ideonexus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I loved loved loved "Ender's Game" as a youth, but 10 years ago, when I discovered Orson Scott Card's blog and his perpetual stream of scientifically illiterate bigoted ravings, it really tainted everything with his name on it for me. Suddenly, "Ender's Game," "Speaker for the Dead," and "Xenocide" were no longer deep books about ethical conundrums, but shallow stories where ethical conflicts just happen with depth given to them by the reader--because there's no way Card's shallow, binary mind could possibly comprehend the many ethical dimensions of the events he describes in his stories.

      As for tolerance. You are correct, I am completely intolerant of Card's intolerance. I am choosing to not give my patronage to the film adaptation of his book because his personal views and political activism have soiled the whole thing for me; however, I fully support his right to voice those views. By contrast, Card believes that those he disagrees with, homosexuals, should be incarcerated and stripped of their rights. So I find the attempts by many online to draw an equivalency between the intolerance of those participating in the boycott and Card's intolerance extremely weak.

      --
      i ~ Celebrating Science, Cyberspace, Speculation
    20. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sure, and tolerance he can have. Tolerance does not mean putting money in his pocket. Not going to see his movie is not being intolerant. It is simply choosing to see another movie and tolerating others seeing that one.

      Disney and Ford are dead. When Card dies this issue will go away unless his children are hateful bigots as well.

    21. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      None of those things are like handing a bigot money.

      I don't have to buy Jefferson a slave to read his works, I don't have to pay an artist to see his work in a museum. I do have to give Card money to see his film, he will use that money against people who I like.

    22. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You call the scheme of picking just one alternate sexuality scheme, promoting it above everything else, and banning the rest, including fully natural behaviour -- "equal"?

      I don't think you read the post you replied to.

    23. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 0

      it's like just because his opinion side lost and the issue is settled in courts

      It's not settled in courts.

      that somehow his opinions on the issue no longer should matter to other people... did he change his opinion on the issue?

      Why do you want to punish people for their opinion in a way that has nothing at all to do with the opinion? You think that's how free and open exchange of ideas works, that you're supposed to financially punish everybody you disagree with, instead of just voicing your own opinion? It's totally insane. Luckily only a small number of people on EITHER side of these social issues are so extremist and intolerant that they let it consume their entire life with hate.

      I don't support gay marriage, but honestly it's never even occurred to me to boycott movies by director who do support gay marriage. I mean who cares? They support gay marriage. Oh no, I'm so threatened I have to shut them down!!! They can't be allowed to ever have a successful movie again!!

    24. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      The odd thing is that the point of Ender's Game is tolerance. The same man who wrote in essays that homosexuality itself should be criminalized and gays thrown in jail wrote this fantastic book that teaches tolerance.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    25. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 4, Informative

      Funny since people like Card actively boycott all sorts of advertisers for sponsoring shows that might possibly show gay people in any sort of positive light. Yet they then come back and bitch about bein persecuted when their own tv show/movie/book gets boycotted because of their own views. He is a fucking hypocrite.

    26. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite. Nothing actually happens.

    27. Re:Really?!? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Tolerance? The book is all about training kids to genocide!

      Not to mention the LDS propaganda that the Savior of the World is a Mormon kid born in defiance of the rules against having more than 2 kids.

    28. Re:Really?!? by emilper · · Score: 2

      unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

      Not really, only if you sign a contract in which you promise exclusivity to at least one partner.

      Up until late 19th century, the age of sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult.

      Up until late 19th century the marriage was a civil contract, drafted by lawyers, which was about income and assets, not about sex.

    29. Re:Really?!? by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      No, an Ad Hominem attack is not what is in play here. We're discussing whether it is morally justified to support a person or organization whose profit from goods and/or services sold will be used in furtherance of the oppression of a political minority. Mr. Card is the example under discussion.

      But tolerance is not the same as acceptance, and this is where you have made a critical flaw in your reasoning. Tolerance means allowing them to participate in the discussion, to excercise free speech. It does not mean we should accept that their position has merit. I tolerate people who reject the theory of evolution, but I do not accept their position is valid. They're still nutjobs. I do not fund organizations that are anti-evolution out of some misguided notion that I must be tolerant of their viewpoint.

      And as far as people enjoying Disney movies and Ford cars... well, they may be ignorant, or simply not care enough, or lack alternatives. But that's another kind of logical fallacy -- just because people do it doesn't make it right, and it's no argument for the furtherance of those activities. We all pick and choose our battles -- we can't fight for every righteous cause. But that's no argument for not fighting at all. If I choose to tell Mr. Card to fuck off today, but go to a Chic Fil A tomorrow, that doesn't mean I don't support gay rights... it just means I place more value on not being hungry than not being entertained.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    30. Re:Really?!? by Salgak1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Bingo. Picking on Card GUARANTEES a repeat of the "Chik-Fil-A" effect. For most Chik-Fil-A restaurants, they achieved record sales during the boycott, and elevated sales afterwards. . .

    31. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. The submitter and those above you are not being reasonable in the slightest. Or put another way, maybe those that don't support gay marriage SHOULD boycott directors and producers that vocally do?

    32. Re:Really?!? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is something along the lines of "the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence. Only an emergency can justify repression."

      Yay Whitney V California!

    33. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, the state sure profits, why the state makes money running orphanages, paying for the foster system, and operating prisons.

      Nobody else is getting rich off that system.

      Just the state.

    34. Re:Really?!? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 2

      No, but the overarching point is that if you let the opinions and views of the artist cloud your interpretation of the work, you will never enjoy anything

      His opinions do not cloud my mind, his opinions make me sick.
      Since I know his inhuman attitude I did not even reread the books of him I already own. And certainly I won't buy anything from him ever again.

      ... because ultimately *everybody* out there has some belief you disagree with.

      That has nothing to do with believes. I don't care what people "believe" unless they run around to proselytize others or agitate to their disadvantage.

      My only way to interact with such people in a way they somehow notice me is via money, money I won't spend for their "art", money they ultimately won't receive.

      However the really evil one is obviously Cards father/family, who was/where not able to educate him properly :D

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    35. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      And what wrong with ad hominem? The entire point here is to make this particular bigot

      miss out on some money.

    36. Re:Really?!? by sivo · · Score: 1

      It's not an ad hominem, that's strictly a fallacy arising in rhetoric. Boycotting the film would be refusing to put money into the pockets a person whose views are particularly repugnant to you. I can understand the gesture if the money would be used to support lobbying groups or political activism. It need not be an argument against their views so much as a refusal to directly support them.

      Still haven't decided if I will see the movie.

    37. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Being tolerant does not mean seeing his movie. It simply means tolerating it being there.

      He asked the question because he wants to deflect away from his own intolerance. I suggest he compromise, he simply apologize for being a hateful jerkwad then promise to stop being one and they go see the movie.

      We both know he won't do that. He wants to be a bigot and somehow believes he can force people to be tolerant of such intolerance. Being tolerant is not a binary thing, I am tolerant of a great many things and not tolerant of others. We all draw that line somewhere, for some it would be violence or stupidity or bigots like Mr.Card.

    38. Re:Really?!? by Danathar · · Score: 0

      You NEVER read the next book did you? The book after Ender's game is called "Xenocide" for pete's sake! It's EXACTLY about the struggle that Ender has with what he has done. In fact nearly ALL of the books following Ender's game have that as a primary or background focus.

    39. Re:Really?!? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      I can both tolerate a person's opinion and not patronize them (e.g. not purchasing one's chicken sandwiches or books or movie tickets). I'm sophisticated that way. Your definition of ad hominem is pretty loosy-goosy in my opinion, in that you're using it outside the realm of argument. Buying or not buying something is not a form of argument. Not supporting, patronizing, or enriching someone because of their distasteful views isn't a debate.

      In fact, even within the realm of argument, stating that I disagree with Card due to his views that I do not share isn't ad hominem either. It would pretty much just be stating the topic of disagreement.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    40. Re:Really?!? by girlintraining · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Some of the best advice I was ever given was "trust the art, not the artist." Artists are stupid people like everyone else and will always break your heart if you expect them to be as awesome as you want them to be. Leave them out of it and you'll have a much easier time enjoying art for what it is.

      I can enjoy art without making a financial contribution to the artist. I know this is a difficult concept to grasp in the age of RIAA and copyright maximalists, but it was only recently that art became a work for hire, and throughout most of human history art was something you did to pass the time once the business of staying alive was completed. Our ancestors made music and beat drums in the evening because the hunting and gathering of food was done; It was to promote tribal unity, to express emotion. But there was no profit in it. Art will continue well after capitalism is nothing more than a footnote in our history books.

      But until it is, we should continue to make educated decisions about what purposes to which our money will be used once it leaves our hands. Some may decide that the cost of the entertainment of watching Mr. Card's work exceeds that of the civil liberties of homosexuals -- that the benefit exceeds the harm. That is their right, and we must respect it.

      However, if someone takes the extra step of being socially responsible and not giving Mr. Card money to continue his campaign of bigotry, that should be commended. And I am on the side that works of entertainment are not worth the oppression of a polical minority.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    41. Re:Really?!? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue.

      That's true. I hate Nazis, but I love the boots.

      So, if you want to see the Ender movie or read any of Orson Scott Card's books, go right ahead and enjoy them. Just be aware of the kind of person you are supporting when you do so. And the kind of beliefs. And hope like hell you never find yourself on the wrong side of his notion of "society's sexual norms". And hope like hell nobody like him ever comes to power.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    42. Re:Really?!? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      This is like some weird, modified version of the Streissand effect

      The modification is apparently the insertion of a superfluous "s".

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    43. Re:Really?!? by tgd · · Score: 2

      Tolerate those who have crazy beliefs.

      Never tolerate, for one second, someone who wants to hurt others because of those beliefs.

    44. Re:Really?!? by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I skimmed the essay linked from the summary. I think it reflects a narrow-minded point of view (assuming that society cannot prosper unless all families look like Card's family) but I would hardly call it "hateful." If that is what you think hate speech looks like, you've had a very sheltered life.

      The "prejudicial" label fits, because Card is fundamentally asserting that his values are normative and should become universal. But how is that not the same as what we do when we call him a bigot?

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    45. Re:Really?!? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      I do have to give Card money to see his film

      No, you don't. This is why God created scene releases.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    46. Re:Really?!? by hedwards · · Score: 2

      Because it's what we can do. He used his fame and money to advocate a bigoted point of view, and it sounds like he hasn't learned a damned thing.

      Now, if he'd own up to the fact that he was wrong and has learned better, then I wouldn't mind giving him money.

      I'm not sure how people can live with yourselves, ultimately, tolerating this sort of bullshit makes them a part of the problem. The difference between right and wrong is not hard, you just have to think about it for a few minutes.

    47. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      having any belief is fine and i'll tolerate it as long as it doesn't hurt someone else unfairly. once that happens, i will fight against it. i will not tolerate someone who is actively fighting against people that are different then them. once your belief affects other people, it's not *just* a belief to be tolerated. i can decide to *not* tolerate it and still be ok at that point.

    48. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      That kind of crazy makes me think "the lady doth protest too much".

    49. Re:Really?!? by epine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well said, but I have quibbles.

      Suddenly, "Ender's Game," "Speaker for the Dead," and "Xenocide" were no longer deep books about ethical conundrums, but shallow stories where ethical conflicts just happen with depth given to them by the reader--because there's no way Card's shallow, binary mind could possibly comprehend the many ethical dimensions of the events he describes in his stories.

      You depict this as a literary cop-out, but in fact it's no small matter for the writer to create this space where the reader can import their own baggage and make the story their own. The sustained theme of Ender's Game is manipulation and counter manipulation, and how manipulation flows from point A to point Z through various waypoints. It's about how the rationality of the individual becomes embedded in the group and takes on political dynamics. His story is not so hollow that you feel your sitting in a curtained booth having your palms read by some fat, cynical, overdressed, sharp-eyed, post-menopausal woman who sized you up as you took your seat in a New York microsecond.

      That said, his homophobic blog rantings rate among the worst drivel I've ever forced myself to wade halfway through.

      Agatha Christie's Top 10 Racist Moments. Christie came to mind because I read an account by one of her contemporaries of not being able endure a social dinner in her company.

      Tolerance? If he's going to write these things, I hate his guts to the point where I would step up and excuse myself from the dinner table, damn the tuxedos. I don't wish him ill in any overt way. I just hope he self-selects himself into a like-minded coterie of the small minded and is never heard from again, unless he chooses to embrace a different path, placing a higher weight on the fallout of how he proposes to arrange the affairs of others to appease his own spastic bristles.

      He's in a bit of a commercial pickle, because much of the audience for science fiction where the driving themes are non-romantic are too sophisticated to appreciate his personal politics. I say most because there has always been the other contingent within our ranks.

      Dr. William Shockley on Race, IQ, and Eugenics

      Somehow I doubt the Shockleys of this world amount to a driving force behind opening-weekend box office receipts.

    50. Re:Really?!? by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Orson Scott Card is pleading for tolerance? That's rich.

      Yeah, nothing quite like the intolerant pleading for tolerance. I can feel the irony rays bouncing off the outer walls of the building, thought it was a tremor.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    51. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orson Scott Card is pleading for tolerance? That's rich.

      So, you're no better than him, right?

    52. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 2

      As a kid, Ender's older brother is a bully and loves torturing animals just because, which is why the military program rejects him. Great leaders aren't sadists. They need empathy so their troops will want to support them.

      In the Fantasy Game, Ender keeps dying to the Giant in his version of the Kobyashu Maru, and eventually kills the Giant by thinking outside the box. In a video game, he doesn't mind killing because it isn't real, and it sure beats dying.

      Ender is tricking into killing an alien species because he thinks he is playing a game BUT the most important part is the end (and the entire rest of the series) in which Ender discovers the truth. He also discovers there is one alien left alive, who doesn't hate him. And Ender vows to find a safe planet for the last Hive Queen to right his wrong. The Buggers are perceived to be evil and abhorrent, when in reality they aren't if you get to know them. Ender writes a book called The Hive Queen in defense of his former enemy.

      Jane, the first AI in the universe comes out to Ender because she knows he is tolerant and will accept her.

      He also writes a book called Speaker of the Dead in which he says we must speak truthfully in all things about a life to really know someone.

      When Humans then encounter their next alien species, Ender works to prevent another Xenocide and preaches tolerance.

      The book doesn't advocate genocide/xenocide. It isn't about training kids to that end. It is a cautionary tale of how prejudice can lead to horrible mistakes, about empathy and tolerance. You either never read the book, or you have terrible reading comprehension.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    53. Re:Really?!? by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Not allowing those assholes you listed to infringe on the rights of others is intolerance? Then intolerance is overrated.

      The fact that people want to Chick-Fil-A Ender's Game is laughable at best.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    54. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tolerance, up to a point. That point is when they attempt to enact their craziness on society.

      And, if one doesn't want one's views and beliefs held against oneself by others in society, one should keep them to one's self.

    55. Re:Really?!? by braeldiil · · Score: 1

      Tolerance is not approval. I tolerate his view by allowing him to have it, and by allowing him to freely state his view in public without government interference. That's tolerance. I may think he's an idiot, or a bigot, or pond scum, but I don't stop him. The tolerance he (and apparently you) want is actually a freedom from consequences. He should be free to say whatever he wants, but no one else should have the right to respond to him. He's an intellectual bully, wanting to hit at powerless groups, but running and hiding when they start to hit back.

    56. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, it was an ordered exception to the rule, because they wanted a child with a very specific skill set to use.

      I'm not sure that's better.

    57. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, believe it or not, those who have different points of view deserve tolerance, regardless of whether you agree with them or not.

      No one "deserves" tolerance. You have certain minimal obligations towards others who haven't committed a crime against you, and hating you (or more typically disagreeing with you) is not a crime.

    58. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You should read more of his other writings.
      The man is a bigot, and I see no need to do anything with/for him besides tolerating him to the barest degree.

      http://www.salon.com/2013/05/07/sci_fi_icon_orson_scott_card_hates_fan_fiction_the_homosexual_agenda_partner/

    59. Re:Really?!? by Danathar · · Score: 2

      So the "deepness" of the book had to do with how much you DID'NT know about the author?

      I hate to break it to you, but the depth of a novel is ALWAYS (see exception) about what the reader takes away from it, not the source authorship. The exception of course being religious texts.

      Knowing who and what card does or stand for does not change the book. The ethical conflicts you detected in the book are the same. Their worth is independent of the source author's views on gay marriage.

      Given how shallow Hunger games is, had it occurred to you that the story of Ender (if done right) might OUTWEIGH the authors views on other subjects?

    60. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      speaking of insanity - you're free to spend your money on bigots (and be one yourself), the rest of us who don't care about who does what in their own home or care to give economical advantages to people based on religion, are under no fucking obligation to give money to people we don't like. You are insane to suggest that a free exchange precludes people from withholding money for any arbitrary reason.

    61. Re:Really?!? by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why do you want to punish people for their opinion in a way that has nothing at all to do with the opinion?

      Because that's one of the things available to you to protest.

      You think that's how free and open exchange of ideas works, that you're supposed to financially punish everybody you disagree with, instead of just voicing your own opinion? It's totally insane.

      So, you think a free and open exchange of ideas should translate into a free and open exchange of money? That people should somehow enrich him because it has nothing at all to do with his very vocal political views?

      Why should they reward him?

      I don't support gay marriage, but honestly it's never even occurred to me to boycott movies by director who do support gay marriage.

      Has it occurred to you there are people who do exactly this? Christian groups have called on the boycott of banks because they supported gay pride events. It's hardly an isolated occurence. Hell, when people started boycotting Chik-A-Fil a bunch of other people started deliberately going there.

      So, you think if you actively works against, say, purple people having rights, that purple people should enrich you in other endeavors? Why exactly? Out of kindness or stupidity? You have no right to expect people you have publicly stated are evil and should have no rights to buy your product.

      But let's not pretend that Christians and other groups don't actively boycott things which they deem offensive. People choose to vote with their wallets all the time -- do you really think if Al Qaeda released a feature film that people should go see it? Why would you line the pockets of someone who hates you?

      I'm sorry, but Orson Scottt Card is publicly on record as being a douchebag who campaigned against the rights of other people. To expect that group of people to say "oh well, the one has nothing to do with the other " and go to his movie is ridiculous.

      OSC is free to hold his bigoted opinions, and people are free to choose to not pay money to see this movie. He's an idiot if he thinks 'tolerance' means people should forget about what he's done in the past and pay money to see it.

      This amounts to "waaah, I hated those people for so long and now they won't give me money". Well, duh!

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    62. Re:Really?!? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Disagree. By tolerating intolerance, you are allowing intolerance to perpetuate itself, which is counter to the goal of tolerance.

      Walt Disney and Henry Ford are dead, no longer promoting nazism/anti-semitism, and their companies do not do so either, so there is no point boycotting them anymore. By the same logic there's nothing wrong with buying an HP Lovecraft or AC Doyle book nowadays (although I'm pretty sure they're all in the public domain by now) or Siemens or IBM equipment. However OSC has still been spewing homophobic rhetoric quite recently and shows no signs of stopping. Paying to see the Ender's Game movie would be funding an active promoter of homophobia.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    63. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      The Nazis were not leftists.

    64. Re:Really?!? by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      I agree. I boycott business that are pro gay marriage so I can understand people for it boycotting those against it.

    65. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 2

      One is not a bigot by calling out a bigot. That's ridiculous.

    66. Re:Really?!? by bfandreas · · Score: 1

      For me it was Lovecraft. I loved his books. But the more I read and the more I grew up I was really turned off by his racism. While I can read around that the enjoyment is basically gone.

      Card can call for tolerance as much as he wants. If the movie doesn't iron out the kinks his intolerance introduced into his writing then I have absolutely no intention to watch it since I assume I will not enjoy it either. My time is too precious to me to waste it on it. But he may rally the anti-gay-marriage troops to watch his movie. They propably wouldn't have bothered with Sci-fi(that's not in the bible) otherwise. So it might be win-win for him.

      --
      20 minutes into the future
    67. Re:Really?!? by cyborg_zx · · Score: 4, Funny

      Fine, it's like some weird Treissand effect.

    68. Re:Really?!? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      There are many religions. Even many that are not acknowledged as religions by those who follow them.

      I can't be tolerant of anyone who forms beliefs based on a religious cult.

      But it's a cult-like behavior to label other people as belonging to a religious cult. Really. The most virulent anti-other-religion people are religious themselves. Flame on with your intolerance, dude.

    69. Re:Really?!? by ideonexus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Thank you for the thoughtful response. I do still feel there is something highly 'accidental' to the genius of Card's Ender's series, but I have read some criticisms that damn the books for being highly manipulative in the way they persuade the audience to forgive Ender's actions:

      "Card has spoken in interviews about his tropism for the story of the person who sacrifices himself for the community. This is the story, he tells us, that he has been drawn to tell again and again. For example, in justification of the scenes of violence in his fiction, Card told Publisher’s Weekly in 1990 that, “In every single case, cruelty was a voluntary sacrifice. The person being subjected to the torture was suffering for the sake of the community.” I find this statement astonishingly revealing. By “The person being subjected to the torture,” Card is not referring here to Stilson, Bonzo, or the buggers, who may well be sacrificed, but whose sacrifices are certainly not “voluntary.” Their deaths are not the voluntary sacrifices that draw Card’s concern. No, in these situations, according to Card the person being tortured is Ender, and even though he walks away from every battle, the sacrifice is his. In every situation where Ender wields violence against someone, the focus of the narrative’s sympathy is always and invariably on Ender, not on the objects of Ender’s violence. It is Ender who is offering up the voluntary sacrifice, and that sacrifice is the emotional price he must pay for physically destroying someone else. All the force of such passages is on the price paid by the destroyer, not on the price paid by the destroyed. “This hurts me more than it hurts you,” might well be the slogan of Ender’s Game."

      --
      i ~ Celebrating Science, Cyberspace, Speculation
    70. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me more about how the state profits if a young adult spends most of his life in prison at a cost to the state of around $20,000 per annum.

    71. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Informative

      Go get a polisci book, read it before you post again.

      Right and Left have not a thing to do with authoritarianism.

      The National Socialist Party is about as accurate a name as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

    72. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You call the scheme of picking just one alternate sexuality scheme, promoting it above everything else, and banning the rest, including fully natural behaviour -- "equal"?

      No, we call picking same-sex marriage, and making it equal to your marriage, equal. Sex (as in the act of fucking) has nothing to do with it.

      And now, unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

      1) We aren't talking about the entire world, we're talking about the USA. I know, it's easy to confuse the two, given how the USA likes to impose its laws on other countries.
      2) I was unaware that sex with someone other than your spouse was illegal in the USA. I suspect you are actually full of shit when you claim that it is.

      Please stop trying to oppose same-sex marriage until you learn what the fuck marriage actually means. Until then, you just look like a loon.

    73. Re:Really?!? by mjperson · · Score: 1

      Certainly they all deserve tolerance. But they do not all deserve support. Tolerate their presence sure, but you don't have to put money into their pockets by going to see their movies. That's not tolerance, that's active support for them.

    74. Re: Really?!? by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I doubt that's true. In Pennsylvania a horny prosecutor (his motivations were suspect, and he ran a bad girls boot camp) tried to go after a teen for sending a picture to a boy, the judge sided with the teens. Unless you find an example of the contrary I'm calling bullshit.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    75. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue

      You must not have read any of his Shadow books.

    76. Re:Really?!? by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      You should read more of his other writings.

      I really disagree with that. :-) I thought _Ender's Game_ was dull and shallow, and based on that one essay, I have precious little to learn or gain from reading his political writings. So unless there is some hidden gem much better than _Ender's Game_ out there, I have at least 999 better things to do than waste more time reading Orson Scott Card.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    77. Re:Really?!? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Antagonizing nose-pickers simply because their behavior is repulsive to you doesn't make them stop picking their nose.

      Likewise, though, people who have personal practices that they KNOW gross other people out need to get over the idea that it's a 'phobia' that triggers the revulsion. Live and let live means not being an 'In your face' troublemaker.

      Yeah, we know. Years of being looked down on (or years of shutting yourself out of the mainstream and self-perceived oppression) lead to a temptation to say "we're here. get used to us." Get over it and stop giving the 'leaders' of your movement the power they crave.

    78. Re: Really?!? by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I personally try to avoid my money being used against my interests. Ford and Disney aren't really relevant like that at this point. I wouldn't boycott a bar he attended, but I wouldn't buy him a drink either. I'm not extreme in my avoidance either, so if it's a great movie I will see it, but if it's good I'll pass it over for something else that's good.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    79. Re:Really?!? by microbox · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      By a quirk of history, this particular culture won and imposed it customs on everyone else.

      Polygamy isn't "natural" to humans. We are naturally almost monogomous. If you're a younger person this might not make a lot of sense, but you will discover it is the truth when your "light goes on".

      Humans aren't strictly monogamous as male anatomy testifies; however, that is not the same as saying we are naturally polygamous. Sexual jealously can tear societies apart, which is why polygamous situations involve a *rich* man and a couple of women of different ages -- the youngest being the "love" interest.

      No-one else really likes this arrangement -- which is also a biological imperative -- and it is no accident that monogamy is dominant.

      Humans are born to suffer with all the competing desires inside of them. The sooner your light goes on, the happier you'll be.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    80. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ford still builds cheap ass junk cars, and charges out the ass for parts... Walt Disney exploits children for profit... Yeah they seemed to have progressed....

    81. Re:Really?!? by microbox · · Score: 1

      have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue

      OSC slips the odd anti-semitic slur into his books -- not sure who he is titillating.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    82. Re:Really?!? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Is Salon still really around? They moved out of that expensive building, no? Or did some sugar-daddy bail them out of that mess?

    83. Re:Really?!? by Velex · · Score: 1

      While I would defend to the death his right to publish his ravings on the internet, he still has no inherent right to my money.

      Apparently a lot of other people feel the same way, hence a boycott.

      I tried to read Ender's Game once. A friend lent a copy to me. I don't think I got further than the first 20 pages or so when I found myself thinking that, gee, something's not quite right here. This sounds just as contrived as a Chick tract. So I looked up his background and lo and behold I found out he was a Mormon.

      Maybe some day I'll finish Ender's game, but if the first few pages are any indication, it's a contrived, shallow story that attempts to create a pity party for a contrived, shallow protagonist. Apparently I'm not the only person who thinks that, and apparently there are people who think that who don't even care about gay marriage.

      Neon Genesis Evangelion was a much more compelling story with similar themes. Then again, I just set a pretty low bar for a compelling story.

      That being said, maybe the movie will be better. Perhaps I'll torrent it at some point in the future and watch it opposite Battleship.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    84. Re:Really?!? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 2

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      Choosing to not financially support a person that you disagree with is not an ad hominem. Making personal attacks that are suppose to cause a response due to emotions rather than the validity of the argument is an ad hominem attack. Card is free to make a fool out of himself any way he sees fit, and others are free to not give him any money.

      You are free to say anything you want, but that doesn't mean you won't have any consequences for your actions. I read and enjoyed all of his Ender books before he publicly came out with his views on homosexuality. While I am not gay, I don't think I should give money to someone who will probably use it to attempt to subjugate my friends and relatives who are homosexuals. Luckily I didn't have this conundrum back in the 80's when I eagerly purchased his books. He didn't make his views known until 1991.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    85. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they aren't leaving me alone! They're... kissing! Right there in front of me! Walking around together, holding hands! Going to restaurants, sipping from the same milkshake!

      How can you possibly say that they are leaving me alone when they do all that in my presence??!?

      (Disclaimer, this post in no way reflects the views of the poster, who, like a certain Asian, loves sweaty basketball players.)

    86. Re:Really?!? by somersault · · Score: 1

      Nothing satisfies your anti-gay sentiment like stuffing hot cockerel meat into your mouth.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    87. Re:Really?!? by sribe · · Score: 1

      Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      No, it is not--well, at least not by people who know what the words mean.

    88. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, so does the US - Hear me out - The US allows it because, you can quite literally fuck as many people as you want. There are no real laws against that. What you *can't* do is profit from becoming legally bonded with more than one other individual. You can choose to marry a single individual, and gain certain financial benefits, namely tax breaks - however you cannot stack said tax breaks and so forth.

      However, if you wish to have a harem of women, there is literally nothing to stop you, other than... women.

    89. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's not a judgement when he openly claims knowledge of the "right way."

    90. Re:Really?!? by Holi · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about punishing him. How is my not going to his movie a fucking punishment. How is my not wanting to financially support a bigot who actually called for the overthrow of the government if gay marriage happens in any way anything but my choice.

      It's said many times by those who want less regulation, vote with your wallet, which is what we are doing. Now you are telling us we are wrong?

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    91. Re:Really?!? by AdmV0rl0n · · Score: 1

      Why exactly?

      Its an amusing side track that a reality that exists is that putting aside political and social background, one things stands forth. The groupings of people who want to grab the flag on 'fairness' and on 'equality' and on 'expression' only apply it to their own values. Thats always been the case, but it gets lost that the world and universe is not based upon one group of singluar values. Always the first to make the pleading for society to grant tolerance, yet seemingly very swift in seeking its removal.

      Thus, Orson Scott Card should be denied a living, he should be outcast, he should be shown no tolerance. This is kind of the start of how things go badly. A section gets denigrated, then they need to be punished, next they need to be imprisoned.

      I see this from the liberal left, and from the socialist left, and as another example from the islamic fundamental movement. Having been able to use and express themselves using the medium of openness, freedom, free expression, and via democratisation and persuasion and by demonstration in the free society that was created by the people they hate (no offense, but the hard working, married man and women and democracies where racism and real world challenges on civil rights were a battleground) - Now, the answer in this society is to become intolerant of a grouping and to start the vilification based upon the fact they hold different opinions and do not share the fanatical views of those now publicly stating that this is how it should go.

      I think as much as a person should be able to campaign for gay rights, a person should be able to hold an opposing viewpoint. They may be wrong, but in a democracy people are supposed to have the freedom to do so. And the same applies to gay marriage. In either case, at the end, hopefully an educated and enlighted people will make forward steps (and in general I believe that is the case) as people moderate and understand over time.

      People are conditioned by their surroundings. Expecting people who have been conditioned from birth to drop everything and just agree with someone else isn't viable. Frankly - replacing democracy with political correctness where people are commencing thought crimes and onto where they get criminalised isn't tolerant, isn't democratic, and isn't good.

      --
      We`re all equal .. Just some of us are less equal than others.
    92. Re:Really?!? by Ixokai · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bear in mind, that's just one of many. Card has written many, many, many times on this subject -- even arguing that homosexual acts should be criminalized, that an adult willfully engaging in sex he doesn't find acceptable with other consenting adults should go to *jail* and be deemed an unacceptable part of society.

      Not all hate speech is going to say 'faggot' and 'burn in hell' and stuff like that: those extreme positions are also supported and maintained by more intellectual and softly spoken declarations of the inhumanity of the minority and supporting that it has no right to be seen as a peer because its difference is too different to allow.

    93. Re:Really?!? by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      And now, unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

      Really? I haven't looked at the laws about this in European countries, but in the United States, it isn't a criminal offense to have sex with someone other than your spouse. It may cause issues when it comes to divorce proceedings, but that's strictly a civil contract matter.

    94. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you giving Card your money? Or did he already get everything he's going to get from the studio for the rights to make a movie from his book?

    95. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Probably true. I just meant to point out why I said that.

    96. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Because it's what we can do.

      Why do you need to DO anything to Orson Scott Card, regardless of whether you can? If you feel strongly about gay marriage, go advocate for gay marriage. You can do that without targeting people. Just like Orson Scott Card found a way to advocate against gay marriage without being a total dick and doing stuff like ruining pro-gay businesses, trying to get pro-gay people fired, and screening his own employees for their political views -- despite being ABLE to do those things.

      He used his fame and money to advocate a bigoted point of view

      There are famous and rich people advocating for gay marriage as well.

    97. Re:Really?!? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Just be aware of the fact that when you fetishize certain sexual practices, you yank other people who engage in them into the closet with you.

      Put another way: when you fetishize storm-trooper boots you do it at least in part because of the taboo nature of it. If you had grown up with your mother insisting your put on your dark leather boots every day before going to school, and it was a mainstreamed thing, it wouldn't be the turnon that it is for you.

      So have your fun, but do so knowing that you're enabling a 'closeted' sexual culture.

      Have a nice day and 'nananana' to contradictions. If you wish.

    98. Re:Really?!? by Insightfill · · Score: 5, Interesting

      By a quirk of history, this particular culture won and imposed it customs on everyone else.

      There's a societal down-side to polygamy, one that needs STRONG cultural overrides to prevent. If (presumably) richer men are allowed multiple wives, that means that there are fewer wives for the rest of the men. You then end up with an excess of unmarried, non-parental young adult men, and being married and a parent is usually a calming influence. These single men are usually the first in the streets if things take even a tiny down-turn. We still see this in Arabic countries which allow polygamy, as well as countries where there's an imbalance of men and women, such as China and India (one-child policies as well as gender-based abortions responsible.

      Up until late 19th century, the age of sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult.

      That works when age of menarche is around 16-17 as it was in England until about the 1850s. This meant that a woman who was old enough to have children was taller and more experienced. Larger families also meant she was likely to have helped raise and take care of siblings. The average age in the US is currently ~12.5. Not enough time to grow the whole body, and not likely to have a lot of experience raising siblings.

    99. Re:Really?!? by TWX · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the public, in general, liked Chik-Fil-A before the scandal.

      Ender's Game isn't mainstream. It may be in the mainstream of Science Fiction, but it's not mainstream as in Star Trek or Star Wars or even Blade Runner. It simply isn't going to be in the public consciousness in the same way, even with Ford and Kingsley on the cast.

      I enjoyed the book when I read it, but I've tried reading other Card books and haven't been as impressed.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    100. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How so?

      I am not encouraging the use of Law against him or people like him. That is what he does. I am only suggesting people not give him money. I am not suggesting we overthrow the government to prevent him from doing what he likes, again he advocated that.

      You can't see how that is not as bigoted?
      I tolerate him, I hope he gets better, but I don't want to give him my money.

    101. Re:Really?!? by NotSanguine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yep, the state sure profits, why the state makes money running orphanages, paying for the foster system, and operating prisons.

      Nobody else is getting rich off that system.

      Just the state.

      Not sure how you figure it's the *state* making money on this. Actually, it's the Prison/Industrial complex making all the money. Even with the kids.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    102. Re:Really?!? by Holi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yep, it's basically the philosophy of guilt. Do what ever you have to to succeed as long as you feel bad about it afterwards.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    103. Re:Really?!? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Are you giving Card your money? Or did he already get everything he's going to get from the studio for the rights to make a movie from his book?

      being the way he is he probably is going to get some kind of cut at least over x proceedings.
      it also would mean other movie deals from other books.

      I don't think it's a good book nor did the trailer make me want to see the movie so.. no. even less now that he used the tolerance card for me to go see his movie - so I'm intolerant of anti-gays since I don't want to give his movie a chance? what bullshit is that...

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    104. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I am sure he will get a percentage, if he is not also pants on head stupid he will get a percentage of the gross. Since no movie ever made money according to hollywood.

    105. Re:Really?!? by Petron · · Score: 1

      Where does this "Disney was a Nazi" claim come from? Considering that Disney came out with anti-Nazi propaganda films Disney made, Der Fuehrer's Face, and Education for Death... It would seem the opposite.

      I know people point to pictures/video of Donald Duck in a Nazi uniform saying "Heil Hitler", but that is from De Fuehrer's Face, where Donald was in a Nazi Munitions factory and forced to feed their war machine... but woke up to find out it was a nightmare, immediately looked at the US flag and the Statue of Liberty and signed up for the US Military to fight against Nazis. The whole cartoon ends with the song "De Fuehrer's Face" where Donald throws rotten tomatoes at Hitler.

      --
      if (it != oneThing) it = another;
    106. Re:Really?!? by sbrown123 · · Score: 1

      >We're discussing whether it is morally justified to support a person or organization whose profit from goods and/or services sold will be used in furtherance of the oppression of a political minority.

      Last I checked the majority of Americans support gay marriage. So the reverse, those against it, are the political minority.

      >But tolerance is not the same as acceptance

      True. This is why the KKK has the right to exist even though their views are not acceptable by the majority.

    107. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      The website is still there. I know nothing else about that issue.

      Either way, they are quotes so if you don't like Salon surely you can find them elsewhere.

    108. Re:Really?!? by Holi · · Score: 1

      Where do you see tolerance in Ender's Game. Ender is never tolerated, even after he wins. Ender is always the third. Only one person in the whole world tolerates him, his sister.

      Maybe if you view the book as succeeding in the face of intolerance, but it's a real stretch to say that is the message. I think more likely is that the message is brutality wins and even the good have it in them.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    109. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why do you want to punish people for their opinion in a way that has nothing at all to do with the opinion?"

      Because the opinion isn't what's being punished.

      What is being punished are the actions of this bigoted retard.

      We don't punish murderes for the opinion that someone needs to die, we punish them for murdering people. Because we don't want to be dead.

      We don't punish child molesters for the opinion that children should be fucked, we punish them for fucking children. Because when we were children, we didn't want to be fucked.

      OSC is trying to force HIS opinion on to everyone else, the opinion that two people MUST NOT be allowed to marry if they're a gay couple and make being gay a crime.

      He wants to punish gay people because he's gay and doesn't want to be fucked?

    110. Re:Really?!? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Do their companies now stand for pro-nazi-ness?

      Yeah, during the times that it makes them money.......

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    111. Re:Really?!? by operagost · · Score: 1

      Gee, that "contract" thing is what I thought LGBT people were so angry about. I guess some animals are more equal than others.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    112. Re:Really?!? by Lumpy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Free broken child that will make a good soldier that will not question orders.

      It is hard to find soldiers that will gladly kill americans and children. Broken family kids are easy to mold into what the leaders need.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    113. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Adultery is still listed as a crime in many jurisdictions, but prosecutors don't bother with it.

    114. Re:Really?!? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      those who have different points of view deserve tolerance, regardless of whether you agree with them or not

      Correct.

      Crazy communists deserve tolerance,

      Correct.

      Crazy white supremacists deserve tolerance,

      Correct.

      Crazy Tea party members deserve tolerance,

      Correct.

      Crazy gay activists deserve tolerance,

      Maybe. Depends what they are trying to achieve.

      Crazy anti-gay activists deserve tolerance.

      False false false. Unless you are using a different definition of activist from me, the anti-gay activist, crazy or otherwise, is actively working against me. The activist isn't gonna say "I dislike what you do, but whatever", they are going to say "I dislike what you do, and will do everything in my power to keep you from doing it". And that does not deserve tolerance. It deserves to be called out at every opportunity.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    115. Re:Really?!? by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      Ah, where's my mod points when I need 'em. Funny.

    116. Re:Really?!? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Read history that is not westernized. Poly is actually quite normal in the past. Just like how it was expected that you got your sister in law pregnant if your brother dies and they don't have a kid.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    117. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Ender is the protagonist of the series. So he is the one that needs to demonstrate tolerance. It isn't about the world tolerating him.

      But for what it is worth, people initially see him as a hero for saving the Earth. Then after he writes a book on tolerance (The Hive Queen), society rails against his actions as a Xenocide, but loves the author of the book on tolerance. They also worship him for writing Speaker of the Dead, not realizing that he is the same person.

      Again, there is a lesson on tolerance and acceptance there.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    118. Re:Really?!? by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      I was already tired of his endless rehashing of the Book of Mormon in every thing he writes.

      LOL!

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    119. Re:Really?!? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      I think the theory goes like this: They are profiting from the work of pro-nazis. If we boycott them, then no other company will want to associate themselves with such unsavoury characters in future for fear of long-lasting consumer backlash. If we don't boycott them, then such companies will work with nasty people and play the long game on the basis that the public will soon forget once the perpetrator is gone. Never forget, never forgive, and the message will eventually get through. It might take generations, but making the world a better place is something worth investing time in.

      I have no idea whether this theory holds water or not.

    120. Re:Really?!? by runeghost · · Score: 1

      Tolerance does not mean you should support despicable behavior and ideas. Mr. Card is free to spew his bigotry as much as he wants. My decision to not see the film based on his book, and to make certain that others are aware of what he will likely do with any money or publicity that flows his way as a result of said film is not censorship or intolerance, it is well deserved judgement.

    121. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So? Just give more money to the people you like, then. Net win!

    122. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      No, but the overarching point is that if you let the opinions and views of the artist cloud your interpretation of the work, you will never enjoy anything because ultimately *everybody* out there has some belief you disagree with. .... Some of the best advice I was ever given was "trust the art, not the artist." Artists are stupid people like everyone else and will always break your heart if you expect them to be as awesome as you want them to be. Leave them out of it and you'll have a much easier time enjoying art for what it is.

      Much talent, little wisdom

      --
      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
    123. Re:Really?!? by operagost · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you've been waiting a long time to make that joke, but if I received rooster meat in a restaurant I'm pretty sure I'd send it back.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    124. Re:Really?!? by runeghost · · Score: 1

      Or the Republican and Democratic parties of the United States.

    125. Re:Really?!? by Ixokai · · Score: 1

      First, It is not "punishment".

      Card has no expectation or right to my money; and no one is advocating that his opinion be criminalized or penalized in any way. He has a right to whatever money he has earned through his work. If I choose to give -- or not as the case may be -- him money, that's me exercising my rights. That does not punish him.

      Second, Card does not merely "not support" gay marriage: he does not merely have an opinion. He is an activist and major player in the political arena to deny gay people the right to marry. He is an influential member of a Church which poured huge amounts of money into Prop 8 in California, he sits on the board of the National Organization for Marriage. He is not merely a man with an opinion, he is an active political force on this issue.

      Third, his stance is not merely that he is against gay marriage or for "protecting traditional marriage" -- go read his writings. He has argued that adult, consensual homosexuality has no place in society and should be criminalized. He since said that he merely wanted to keep existing laws "on the books" passively and that he wouldn't argue to reinstate them, but that doesn't really jive with what he said.

      Every dollar I give him, small as my individual dollars are, is a dollar towards a person who is an active force against something I believe is an issue of fundamental rights and fair society. It's not that I'm threatened, its that it is counterproductive. To donate money to the Human Rights Campaign and turn around and patronize establishments like Chick-fil-A or this movie simply does not make sense.

      I don't hate him, there's no exclamation marks involved in my thinking, and anyone who does go see this movie or buy his books I don't view as a bigot or supportive of bigotry. Some may be ignorant of what's behind it, some may prioritize their life and money differently, but for those of us who do KNOW who he is and what he has said, supports, and actively tries to do in society, our choice to not support him is valid.

      It is not "punishment", he has neither right nor claim to our patronage. It is political, though.

    126. Re:Really?!? by gman003 · · Score: 1

      Actually, thanks to the magic of Hollywood accounting, I would bet that Card won't see a single dollar of ticket sales. He may not even have gotten a writer's fee, but in any case, he's probably going to be effectively paid a flat rate.

      Funny how one evil organization is able to cancel out the evil of a kinda-evil individual.

    127. Re:Really?!? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      "Pleading" can be over-interpreted. It doesn't necessarily mean on-his-knees-begging. Asking is pleading, pleading is asking, the words are essentially synonyms, "pleading for tolerance" is just an idiomatic phrase, like "lurching to the right" doesn't involve actual lurching, or "running for office" doesn't involve athletic activity.

    128. Re:Really?!? by NotSanguine · · Score: 2

      Yes, they both espouse extreme left-wing positions associated with the National Socialist Party (Nazi). Nazi's were totalitarians and, thus, left-wing. As were Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan. The particulars may vary at points but the man thrust is the same.

      Right-wing positions are conservatives, some libertarians, anarchists.

      ACs are getting dumber by the minute. Sigh. Fascism [e.g., the Nazis] is fundamentally right-wing.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    129. Re:Really?!? by bwcbwc · · Score: 1

      "people like Card"... prejudiced pot, meet stereotyping kettle. Sigh...

      --
      We are the 198 proof..
    130. Re:Really?!? by nylrym · · Score: 1

      maybe those that don't support gay marriage SHOULD boycott directors and producers that vocally do? I don't think they should, but that would be their right if they felt strongly enough. I have gay friends and family members who would like to be able to get married. I don't see how not wanting to give money to someone who 1) uses their wealth and societal influence to try and make that impossible and, in fact, 2) advocates for overthrowing the government if they were allowed to do so (http://www.deseretnews.com/article/print/700245157/State-job-is-not-to-redefine-marriage.html) make me unreasonable. Why do you want to punish people for their opinion in a way that has nothing at all to do with the opinion? You do realize that this is how nearly all punishment works, right? If someone commits assault, we imprison them. We don't assault them back.
      Crimes are rarely punished in any way relating to the crime itself. It's not practical or tenable.
      Why?
      Because that's the way it works. I am not given the option of doing so in a way that directly relates to his opinion. And it's not, strictly speaking, about punishing him anyway. It's about my personal responsibility for what I spend my money on. If a local restaurant owner hosts dog fights in his spare time, I'm not going to buy his burgers, despite the lack of relation between the two. It's not just about buying a movie ticket - I want to live in a particular kind of world (one where people who think revolution is the appropriate reaction to two men getting a marriage license) are less successful and where more tolerant people are more successful. So I spend a little money toward buying that world.

      If you insist on seeing it in pure capitalistic term: Orson Scott Card is a brand of fiction. As the primary representative of that brand, Orson Scott Card the man alienated me, and many people like me, from his brand. If I choose to take my business elsewhere, and encourage others to do the same, what is that other than capitalism at work?


      I don't think taking my business elsewhere based on the conduct of the businessman is at all unreasonable. I don't see how not buying stuff from person X infringes on his free speech either. He's no more entitled to have his movie see than I am to have mine seen. Not that I have one...

    131. Re:Really?!? by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      >We're discussing whether it is morally justified to support a person or organization whose profit from goods and/or services sold will be used in furtherance of the oppression of a political minority.

      Last I checked the majority of Americans support gay marriage. So the reverse, those against it, are the political minority.

      Um, no. The political minority here is the gays, not the gay-marriage supporters.

    132. Re:Really?!? by operagost · · Score: 1

      The way I handle this is to ask people if they think that Cuba's government is left-wing. Then I ask them if Nazi Germany was right-wing. If they say yes to both, then I know their "political spectrum" is basically the useless one that just has different kinds of authoritarian governments on it. The one that matters goes from authoritarian on one end to anarchist on the other.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    133. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, I'm completely against charging kids for sending other kids naked pictures of each other, even though I think that doing that is stupid on a number of different levels. Being a teen and overdosed on hormones isn't a crime.

      It used to be that we discouraged that sort of behavior to keep kids out of jail. Now it seems like we're looking for ways to get people in jail even for stuff that doesn't harm anyone. I'm not sure what brain-dead prosecutors are taking these cases, but it needs to stop.

      On the other hand, the whole "it's a conspiracy to get people into the military" is a little... uh... far-fetched.

    134. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 0

      There's a bit of a gap between necklaces of beads and the Sistine Chapel.

      There are many views on what is socially responsible. I'm reasonably certain your view doesn't have a monopoly on that.

      --
      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
    135. Re:Really?!? by CoderFool · · Score: 1

      If a God made us then we should probably do as He says, which in the case of the Mormon God is that only a man and a woman who are legally wed to each other can have sex with each other. The examples of monogamy/polygamy/polyamory in the animal kingdom would not apply and you could call God a Bigot.

      If a God made us and told us what to do or He'll send us to Hell...wouldn't that perhaps make Him like a mob boss? Wouldn't tithing or other donations to His church be protection money?

      If you believe there is no God, or that God has left the scene, and all practitioners of religion are practicing priestcraft (selling salvation/absolution for a small donation)...then why not have sex with anyone or anything you like? Or what, beyond the law of the land, is to stop you from stealing or murdering or snowdenning?

    136. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have. Me going to see this movie would be like a black person donating to the KKK.

      Or to godwin this analogy, like a Jew donating to Hilter.

    137. Re:Really?!? by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      I am seeing his point of view as "eyes for eyes and teeth for teeth." There isn't really a "more than" in this case... It is his point of view and I respect that. Will I apply his point of view to my action? It is up to me.

    138. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I prefer the X/Y axis of left to right and authoritarian to Anarchism. Since you can have Left Libertarianism and Fascism both on the same chart and still make sense.

    139. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, really? The NSDAP (National Socialist German Workers Party) was explicitly a Nationalist, Socialist party. It also added a massive dose of serious racism and a half dozen other bits of crap.

      All actual Fascist parties were combinations of Communism-inspired absolutist socialism and good old fashioned nationalism, as that's pretty much how Mussolini came up with the idea, taking communism and adding nationalism so he could sell it to the working class Italians who had previously rejected regular due to its internationalist bent which went against their culture of Garibaldi-inspired Italian nationalism (and remember, Garibaldi was in living memory for many of those working-class Italians)

    140. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      someone who, as a result of their prejudices, treats other people with hatred, contempt, or intolerance

      You're clearly encouraging stigmatizing him as a result of your contempt for his opinions that differ from yours.

    141. Re:Really?!? by elabs · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't say he actively campaigned. He spoke his opinion. What's wrong with that? Aren't we all free in this country to speak our minds? Just because you disagree with someone doesn't make you a bigot.

    142. Re:Really?!? by bwcbwc · · Score: 1

      ...We're discussing whether it is morally justified to support a person or organization whose profit from goods and/or services sold will be used in furtherance of the oppression of a political minority. Mr. Card is the example under discussion.

      Or conversely, whether it is morally justified to boycott a work that is the product of the combined effort of hundreds of people simply because it is based on an artistic work of an individual whose views fall somewhere on the spectrum between disagreeable and repugnant, With or without consideration of the merits of either the derived work or the original.

      The real issue here for me isn't whether to boycott or not, or whether either side should be prevented from expressing their views, it's Card's whingeing about the reaction of those who have found his viewpoint to be offensive. If you're going to take a faith-based position, don't try to ameliorate the tenets of your faith to satisfy your greed.

      --
      We are the 198 proof..
    143. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      No, not because he has a different opinion, but because he wants to force that opinion on others. If he wants to speak nonsense, but not use the force of law more power to him. If that was his position I would have no problem going to his movies.

      You can't be so dense as to not see that fact.

    144. Re:Really?!? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 4, Informative

      Read 'Sex at Dawn'. Or one of several well-researched books on the topic.

      First of all, I don't think you can claim that 'we are naturally almost monogamous'. There are several cultures (that still exist!) that were never monogamous and don't hew to the scheme of rich men and several wives.

      Don't 'Flintstonize' the past. That is, don't assume what's happening now is the same thing that has been happening in the past, just slightly more advanced. Monogamy hasn't really been the state of affairs except for the last few hundred years at best. Casual and secretive non-monogamy has been happening for a long time.

      Lastly, consider this: there are countries in the Middle East where adultery is a capital crime. They'll KILL you for having an affair.

      There are more than 0 affairs that occur in those states, and they do, in fact, kill the people involved.

      What creature on Earth needs to be threatened with death to adhere to its natural inclinations? Moreover, which creature will actually run counter to its 'natural' inclination and risk death for a few moments of sweaty, non-procreative activity.

      Monogamy is a social construct, which is fine. Humans have those and we work with them. That doesn't make it the only social construct, the most natural social construct, the best social construct or even the CORRECT social construct.

    145. Re:Really?!? by crontabminusell · · Score: 1

      You do realize you're being more of a bigot than he is?

      I have never heard of "intolerance of intolerance" being described as bigotry before. Card is actively campaigning against (i.e. spending money to oppress or support the oppression of) a whole group of people. h4rr4r's MetaIntolerance (if you want to call it that) is simply choosing not to support someone he/she sees as a bigot. There is a big difference there.

    146. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 0

      Orson Scott Card has suggested that the government should enforce certain societal rules and discourage people from going outside of the norm in public. The idea is valid, and could have some benefits, just as the alternative of allowing total freedom does.

      The poster you're referring to is encouraging hate, boycott and stigmatization on the basis that he doesn't agree with this. This is quite more bigotry.

    147. Re:Really?!? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Put another way: when you fetishize storm-trooper boots

      Uh, I was joking.

      I don't really dig storm-trooper boots. Six-inch spikes on the other hand...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    148. Re:Really?!? by Enigma2175 · · Score: 1

      Just like Orson Scott Card found a way to advocate against gay marriage without being a total dick

      You mean advocating jail time for the "crime" of being gay or advocating the overthrow of the government if they pass gay marriage laws is NOT being a total dick? How could he possibly get MORE dickish without growing a foreskin on his head?

      --

      Enigma

    149. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      They were National Socialists as opposed to the communists who were international socialists.

      You might find this more than a little enlightening. (Well worth the investment of time.)

      You may also want to view their demands: Program of the National Socialist German Workers' Party

      --
      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
    150. Re:Really?!? by Zalbik · · Score: 2

      A vast majority of animals....allow polygamy,

      Really?!? Animals are getting married now? Who performs that ceremony?

      And now, unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner,

      No...you can have as many sexual partners as you can handle. Society has specifically restricted the legal concept of marriage partially to promote familial bonds, and partially due to historical customs.

      If there were a significant number of people fighting for polygamous marriages (as there are for gay marriage), then I'd be all for it. As it is, the specific fact that there is very little interest in polygamous relationships indicates that society does not currently consider these types of relationships beneficial or normal, regardless of history.

      You call the scheme of picking just one alternate sexuality scheme, promoting it above everything else, and banning the rest, including fully natural behaviour -- "equal"?

      You should really read the parent post. His point was:

      Yeah, I think you cross a line when you call for the violent overthrow of the government for the crime of treating people equally.....I wasn't aware that Card had done that or advocated to criminalize/keep criminalized homosexual behaviour

      Yes, Card had said some asshat words regarding gay marriage. He has the right to do so. He never advocated overthrowing the government for it. He never advocated criminalizing homosexual behavior. He said some words.

      Fiscally punishing someone due to their opinion is stupid. It discourages free speech, discourages open communication, and discourages the expression of new ideas. Unfortunately, with free speech and open communication you sometimes end up with idiots like Card spouting off crap. The best thing to do is ignore them.

    151. Re:Really?!? by zarthrag · · Score: 1

      Not sure how you figure it's the *state* making money on this. Actually, it's the Prison/Industrial complex making all the money. Even with the kids.

      Q: Exactly where do you think state employees/reps go to (and come from)?

      A: The private sector that's gaining from these policies. They're practically one in the same.

      --
      Why can't all fpga/microcontroller manufacturers just release free optimizing compilers???
    152. Re:Really?!? by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Was really hoping someone would point that out. Thanks Sribe.

    153. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Muslims, you racist bastard?

    154. Re: Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      If the law says it can happen, then it is reasonably to worry that it will happen eventually. If it is undesirable for it to happen, then the law should not specify it. I'm not against laws regarding child pornography, but I'm against the laws as written targeting those they are meant to protect.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    155. Re:Really?!? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you're going to have to explain that.

    156. Re:Really?!? by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      This is like some weird, modified version of the Streissand effect at work.

      Exactly. The average movie-goer was likely to be completely ignorant of Card's stance on homosexuality and his activities in that regard. It is likely that he has brought a lot more attention to that than there would be if he had just kept his mouth shut.

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    157. Re:Really?!? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what non-Western history you're talking about. If you're talking about a bunch of rich rulers with harems, then yes, there was all sorts of polygamy, but considering the situation, that was limited to a minority by the nature of who was doing it. The ancient One Percent, if you will.

      On the other hand, even in societies where there is polygamy allowed today, most people don't have multiple wives. What's worse, where there is polygamy, there is a great deal of young men who have no prospects for ever being more than average in terms of making a living (or worse), and they have to deal with a number of otherwise available females now being married to rich men who already have other wives. It is speculated that this is one major reason that young men in Muslim countries are so susceptible to rhetoric that would otherwise shorten or end their lives: with a much greater competition for females (due to a reduced pool of females) they are willing to take high risks to either make a name for themselves, or to sacrifice their lives for their 70 virgins somewhere else. Add that to the other hardships of living in a place like the Palestinian territories, and you've got a real problem on your hands.

      Or if you want an example closer to home. Look how the polygamous situations in the Mormon breakaway sects works. Older men tend to take marriage age females for themselves and drive off the younger men. When the girls are distributed, it is a potent means of rewarding compliant behavior.

      We laugh at the idea of someone falling for the 70 virgins or certain theologies, but consider how you might feel if you were in a very conservative society where you can't really have sex with girls, or even date them without specific rules, and then you are looking at the reality of simply not having a wife ever. You might well consider certain otherwise unthinkable actions to be a lot more attractive.

      Polygamy may not have been uncommon in the past, but that doesn't mean that it was common. I'm not going to suggest that we aren't wired for multiple partners, at least in certain circumstances, but I should also point out that as a social species, we might well have adapted a slight bias towards men keeping multiple women as a means to encourage the more competitive and warrior-like tendencies of young males. And given the realities of living today, I am not sure that maintaining that imbalance is necessarily in our best interests. Doing what comes naturally is not always a good idea for a society that is trying to put an end to violent competition.

    158. Re:Really?!? by cyborg_zx · · Score: 1

      The exception of course being religious texts.

      They hardly seem like the exception when people will go about explictly trying to eek out depth of interpretation from them.

    159. Re:Really?!? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Bit of a straw-man argument there. No one is saying "Don't tolerate people who oppose gay marriage." They seem to be saying "This guy opposes gay marriage, if you approve of gay marriage, maybe you don't want to give him your money."

      Ford and Disney, being dead, aren't really parallels. Chick-fil-a is a better parallel: the accusation there was that money you spent on chicken sandwiches was going to suppress gay rights, so you might not want to eat there.

      Totally fine for the CEO of chick-fil-a to dislike, even hate gay people, totally legal for him to personally give money to lobbying groups to outlaw gay marriage. But I don't have to give my money to a homophobe, let alone give them money that is then going to be used against causes I'm for. It's not at all ad-homenim.

    160. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 0

      So, you think a free and open exchange of ideas should translate into a free and open exchange of money?

      Hmm in general yes, you need a free and open exchange of money in order to exchange ideas beyond a certain scale.

      Has it occurred to you there are people who do exactly this? Christian groups have called on the boycott of

      Of course that's occurred to me, what do you think I've been talking about! You should think about the groups you are aligning with. It's quite clear that your type of economic boycott in retaliation for free speech is a sign of radicalism. Do you think radicalism is healthy?

      You have no right to expect people you have publicly stated are evil and should have no rights to buy your product.

      You do have that right if you value civility and free speech. Just like I am perfectly entitled to expect that if my boss is a flaming liberal, and finds out that on Facebook I'm a raging conservative, I will be able to keep my job. Because I don't believe it's right to punish people for their peaceful opinions, even when I have the power to do so, even when it involves money.

      Your mentality is unstable and uncivil. It's great for people who are in the majority, and it sucks when you're in the minority.

    161. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Advocating a law is hardly "forcing an opinion on others".
      This is democracy. It is ultimately voters or their representatives who get to decide, after much debating.

    162. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing rich about it. Everyone - everyone - deserves respectful treatment, even if they advocate the disrespectful treatment of others.

      And everyone has a right to object to gay marriage, abortion, whatever other hot-button issue you want to trot out. We shouldn't criminalize thought, and we shouldn't refuse to associate with or listen to people who have different beliefs than ours. If your own behaviour doesn't meet this standard, you have no right to complain when others don't meet it.

      In other words, grow up.

    163. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sympathise with this view entirely. If people are leaving you alone and harming nobody while behaving differently, then just leave them alone.

      Like Muslims, you racist bastard?

      Leaving you alone and harming nobody doesn't sound like a muslims to me

    164. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 0

      Read the rest of the thread then.

    165. Re:Really?!? by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

      Polygamy isn't "natural" to humans. We are naturally almost monogomous.

      First, anything that real people really want to do is, by definition, "natural" to humans. For example, a significant percentage of humans will "naturally" gorge themselves on whatever food is available. A not-tiny percentage of humans will not take their partner's gender into account when deciding who to sleep with. A not-tiny percentage of humans want to be in sexual situations with more than 2 people involved. And some people want to maintain more than one romantic and/or sexual relationship, despite the difficulties and complexities and (until very very recently) social stigma involved.

      Second, we're definitely cheaters. About half of all husbands and a third of all wives admit to cheating on their spouses at some point in a marriage, even though they know full well that doing so may ruin their lives.

      Third, like all other species, humans vary a fair amount. What's normal for one person may be completely abnormal for someone else.

      If what works for you is monogamy, then by all means do that, and enjoy it thoroughly. Just don't assume that it works for everybody, or is somehow more natural than what other people are doing.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    166. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is because despite the hate directed at them they welcomed their restaurant guests to come enjoy their meals. For those few weeks they stopped checking all of the government issued sexual orientation cards and denying people access. Oh wait... that is right, there is no way to tell when someone orders food their sexual preference let alone as they walk through a door.

    167. Re:Really?!? by Bongo · · Score: 2

      There isn't a clear definition of left and right so it doesn't really matter.

      There is an abstract one that defines views based on, do you consider the problem to be in the Individual or in Society?

      Greens, communists, socialists, whatever, fixate on the system, on fixing what they perceive to be a broken and deeply unfair society.

      Conservatives, business-tycoons, libertarians, whatever, fixate on the problems being with the individual, that the individual is lazy, unmotivated, unwilling, and leaching on other's tax contributions, so they emphasise incentives and tax cuts and privatisation of services and so on.

      What is maybe more confusing about things like Nazis and Fascists is that they are more like a cult of tribal power -- tribes don't really have individuals, and a King may believe that he IS the tribe. So individual v society as a line doesn't work so well because neither pole is very differentiated. It is all about blood and power, mixed with a techno-industrial military. Ie. very bad news.

      But in a more modern society where democracy is more or less in effect — ie. everyone would rather preserve a defective collaborative system, than rip it up and start a civil war the moment the other side wins an election — then left right in terms of society and individual, isn't such a bad definition.

      Then I'd say, all conservatives/right want is that people work harder, and all the liberals/left want is that the system be more fair.

      And I notice neither of these say much about whether a nation will go invade another country, and interesting that American Left/Right doesn't seem to relate much to that either. That's more about whether they are progressive or not, whether they are willing to change attitudes and step though the looking glass.

      Lately in Europe we're having a very hard time tell apart progressives from the old fashioned Greens who thought of themselves as progressives but the outcome of their policies is driving people to what appears to be a right wing stance, even though it is a post-green stance, sometimes, and just moronic at others.

    168. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The National Socialist Party is about as accurate a name as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

      Actually the National Socialist Party name is accurate. There is some history you may be missing. Although that focuses on the Soviets, the National Socialist government is woven into the narrative. I think it is well worth the time.

      They had a program with demands as well: Program of the National Socialist German Workers' Party
         

      --
      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
    169. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure how you figure it's the *state* making money on this.

      I didn't, that was sarcasm.

    170. Re:Really?!? by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Fiscally punishing someone due to their opinion is stupid.

      Anti-polygamy and artificial age of consent laws punish people not only fiscally, but also with real prison. So do zoophilia and necrophilia laws.

      You can't have "equal" mean "equal but only within current political correctness".

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    171. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't agree with you.

      Teenager with raging hormones. Men and women who ogle attractive / rich people despite being relationships. Men and women who do said ogling surreptitiously so as to not be overt. Some say (quick googling) cheating is prevalent in 30% - 60% of society. How many societies around the world are polygamous? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygamy#Forms_of_polygamy Most of the Middle East still recognizes it, parts of Africa. Historically, a lot more countries (India, parts of China) practiced polygamy too.

      Just because current Western society hammers it into your brain to want monogamy, I personally don't think humans are "naturally" monogamous.

    172. Re:Really?!? by emilper · · Score: 1, Informative

      the LGBT were angry about not being allowed to sign a contract covering what everybody else had covered (such as inheritance, common properties, pensions etc.), not about the provisions for polygamy or polyandry, and not about legal provisions for whom they can choose as sex partners, that was fixed a few years ago.

    173. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You win the internet.

    174. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      You mean advocating jail time for the "crime" of being gay

      Bullshit.. citation?

      Anyway, people who aren't consumed with hate can value the things produced by people they disagree with, especially when the thing being produced has nothing to do with the "bad" opinions. I'm not saying people should watch every propaganda film ever produced and praise it for its art out of some duty to free speech.

      I mean really, grow up. You guys sound like the mental toddlers who said they'd move to Canada if Bush won, and the other group of toddlers who said they'd move to Canada if Obama won.

    175. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      Not so much, no. There is some history you may be missing. Although that focuses on the Soviets, the National Socialist government is woven into the narrative. I think it is well worth the time.

      Many of their program demands are familiar socialist themes:

      Program of the National Socialist German Workers' Party

      11. That all unearned income, and all income that does not arise from work, be abolished.

      Breaking the Bondage of Interest

      12. Since every war imposes on the people fearful sacrifices in blood and treasure, all personal profit arising from the war must be regarded as treason to the people We therefore demand the total confiscation of all war profits.

      13. We demand the nationalization of all trusts.

      14. We demand profit-sharing in large industries.

      15. We demand a generous increase in old-age pensions.

      16. We demand the creation and maintenance of a sound middle-class, the immediate communalization of large stores which will be rented cheaply to small tradespeople, and the strongest consideration must be given to ensure that small traders shall deliver the supplies needed by the State, the provinces and municipalities.

      17. We demand an agrarian reform in accordance with our national requirements, and the enactment of a law to expropriate the owners without compensation of any land needed for the common purpose. The abolition of ground rents, and the prohibition of all speculation in land.

      --
      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
    176. Re:Really?!? by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem

      Yes, exactly. And your point would be..., what? If I don't want to give my money to anything that might remotely profit an ignorant dickhead like Card, I'm doing it to hurt him, not his books or the movies made from those books. Surely, you are not suggesting something as patently stupid as the notion that, since his books don't contain the overt hatred that he personally displays, he somehow deserves a pass from people who would prefer not to give him money?

    177. Re: Really?!? by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Judges decisions are part of the law, as we live under a common law system.

      Consistently nudes are not held to be child pornography, this is now part of the law.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    178. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      That gives you plenty of bodies to throw at making war! For most of human history, that was probably normal, to lose a large number of males to conflict over resources... Now its about the money!

    179. Re:Really?!? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Why do you want to punish people for their opinion in a way that has nothing at all to do with the opinion?

      This has nothing to do with the guy's opinion, and everything to do with his actions. As I understand the situation, he has actively tried to disallow gays from marrying the one that they love. If all he's done is said "I don't agree, but whatever", then that'd be fine. But that isn't what he does.

      I don't support gay marriage, but honestly it's never even occurred to me to boycott movies by director who do support gay marriage. I mean who cares? They support gay marriage. Oh no, I'm so threatened I have to shut them down!!!

      Funny, because I suspect that is how people who oppose gay marriage feel, threatened by the idea that gay marriage may become a reality, and as a result, it would only be natural that they would not want to give money to those who would use that money to try and make gay marriage a reality. I actually find it surprising that it's never occurred to you to boycott people who support gay marriage.

      But then again, just because you do not support something, does not mean you support getting rid of it. I do not support spinach, but that does not mean I would support getting rid of it.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    180. Re:Really?!? by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      There are many views on what is socially responsible. I'm reasonably certain your view doesn't have a monopoly on that.

      Perhaps, but I'm pretty sure Step 1 for everyone is giving a fuck.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    181. Re:Really?!? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I can enjoy art without making a financial contribution to the artist. I know this is a difficult concept to grasp in the age of RIAA and copyright maximalists, but it was only recently that art became a work for hire, and throughout most of human history art was something you did to pass the time once the business of staying alive was completed.

      Maybe that's true in your halcyon 'noble savage' scenario. In reality, art has largely been for hire since the dawn of civilization. Artists have to eat too.

    182. Re:Really?!? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      Bullshit.. citation?

      Dude, the quote is right there at the top of the Wired article. And it's not the only time he's said that.

    183. Re:Really?!? by levork · · Score: 5, Informative

      He never advocated overthrowing the government for it.

      Yes he did. From an article he wrote for the Mormon Times:

      Faithful sexual monogamy, persistence until death, male protection and providence for wife and children, female loyalty to children and husband, and parental discretion in child-rearing.

      If government is going to meddle in this, it had better be to support marriage in general while providing protection for those caught in truly destructive marriages.

      Because when government is the enemy of marriage, then the people who are actually creating successful marriages have no choice but to change governments, by whatever means is made possible or necessary.

      And more:

      Regardless of law, marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage, and help me raise my children in a society where they will expect to marry in their turn.

      I don't know about you, but "I will act to destroy that government and bring it down" is a pretty clear advocation of overthrowing the government.

    184. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      He's pleading tolerance for HIS movie, while at the same time ACTIVELY USING HIS CELEBRITY against rights for other people.

      It's not like this is his PRIVATE opinion, he's out there making crazy statements about the government if they don't PUNISH, and/or keep punishing, a group his religion calls sinners.

      People are showing the exact same "tolerance" for his writing that he is showing for Gay people. Except he is advocating putting people In JAIL, others Just don't want you to watch his movie.

    185. Re:Really?!? by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      Um, no. The political minority here is the gays, not the gay-marriage supporters.

      I think the GP has managed to confuse majority by numbers and majority by power. It's a common newbie mistake for people who spend too much time on the internet. ;)

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    186. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you a loon? Cuz you sound like a loon.....oh never mind, your a nutter thumper, my bad.

    187. Re:Really?!? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      If we transform that to be, "Step 1 - People actually caring about the issue," then I can agree with you.

      --
      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
    188. Re:Really?!? by CastrTroy · · Score: 2

      But one could argue that a polygamist should be entitled to have all his wives covered by the insurance offered by his job and that the polygamist should be able to use income splitting on his taxes with all his wives. That's the point trying to be made here. Why is one type of relationship the only valid one. Why not allow marriages between more than 2 people?

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    189. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Did you have an actual argument or just some shitty name calling? Yes "people like Card" as in "religious bigots" who have numerous times staged widespread, public boycotts against people, shows, movies, books, etc. Then when the tactic is used against them they can't stop bitching about being persecuted. I have some sympathy for such shit heads.

    190. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I Agree, igrnor them and not got to their movie or buy their books, as you suggest.

    191. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      No, claiming the movie is bad because you don't like someone associated with it would be an ad hominem fallacy. Boycotting it for the same reason involves no logical fallacy as it isn't an argument, it's an attempt to punish the person, or at least to make a point about your opinion of the person.

      Anyway, I disagree. I don't think intolerance deserves tolerance. Not every point of view needs to be accepted just because it's somebody's opinions. Everyone has a right to their opinion, but that doesn't mean the rest of us can't object to it. At the risk of an RAA, Hitler had a particular point of view regarding Jews, and I dare say this point of view should not be tolerated.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    192. Re:Really?!? by Aranykai · · Score: 1

      I think its not so much natural inclination to be faithful to one mate so much as to be jealous of others with our mate. Since we must coexist with minimal violent interaction for our 'enlightened' society to work, its only logical to make a social law that states you don't touch another man's wife. This would be especially true where women have fewer rights and are considered property of their husband.

      --
      If sharing a song makes you a pirate, what do I have to share to be a ninja?
    193. Re:Really?!? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the links you provided indicate that Chik-Fil-A has had elevated sales after the counter-boycott, in fact, the first link explicitly states that they most likely wouldn't. Overall, Chik-Fil-A sales have continued to rise but the chain is expanding and sales were increasing both before and after the boycott, so it would be nearly impossible to determine what, if any, long term impact the boycott would have on sales. Interestingly, the second article predicted a landslide victory for the Republicans based on the Chik-Fil-A anti-boycott, obviously that call was way off.

      On the other hand, Chik-Fil-A quietly withdrew corporate funding from several vehemently anti-gay organizations, so the boycott despite seeming to have backfired, it may have ultimately accomplished it's goal.

      By the way, I've eaten at Chik-Fil-A and I found the food to be quite good. Compared to much of the other fast-food available, I can see why they're growing so fast.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    194. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      And a growing number of vocal people think THAS A BAD THING.

      We have out own right-wing terrorist religion... They just happen to be IN CHARGE of things right now. How many States Legislatures had "emergency sessions" during last weeks "freedom" holiday specifically to pass religious-backed laws on the down low?

    195. Re:Really?!? by rwven · · Score: 1

      So bizarre how attitudes change, isn't it?

      Card has had his stances and been vocal about them for a LONG time. Slashdot nerds/geeks have been pining away for an Ender's Game movie for a LONG time.

      The moment they get their wish of a movie...they suddenly decide to take issue with something Card's been doing the whole time.

      THAT'S rich..... I believe the term is "hypocritical," actually.

    196. Re:Really?!? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Not sure I even agree with your exception. Certainly it seems that most of what most people take away from religious texts has very little bearing on the book I just read. I go to church on occasion with friends, and never cease to be amazed at how the minister, a presumed expert on the text, can take what appears to me to be an insightful and enlightened passage, and twist it around 180 degrees to mean the exact opposite of what I just read.

      Any reading is going to be a sort of collaboration between the author and the reader - at one end you perhaps have the "penny dreadfuls" with only just enough substance and lurid imagery to fire the imagination of the reader. On the other you might have, I don't know, maybe academic research papers written to convey information where the only contribution of the reader is to conceive of implications and flaws. Most (good) books fall somewhere in the middle, with the author offering evocative imagery and/or ideas and the reader selectively focusing and embellishing on the aspects that speak most strongly to them.

      If anything religious texts tend to be an extreme example of this - they (tend to) be collections of millenia of social wisdom and cultural edicts out of a different age, frequently wrapped around a central authoritarian theme (at least in the West). A naive reading often reveals them to be intensely self-contradictory (as wisdom often is) and the subtlety and conceptual density easily lends itself to intensely selective interpretation. The fact that the book is often held up as the incontrovertible word of God only serves to amplify the effect - the parts that speak to your own fears and insecurities provide unwavering validation for your own biases, while others which are worded at least as strongly are simply overlooked. Hence the phenomena of (just for example, every religion has it's analogues) Christian bigots ruthlessly persecuting homosexuals while themselves freely eating shellfish and wearing clothing made of fibers from many different sources.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    197. Re:Really?!? by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between stigmatizing someone, and refusing to give them money. I don't stigmatize homeless people when I walk straight past them. I'm not stigmatizing Orson Scott Card when I stay at home rather than going to the movies. I don't give the homeless man money because I don't want it to end up in a drug dealers pocket, and I don't give OSC money because I don't want it to end up in an anti-gay group's pocket.

    198. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will never eat there again........and lets examine PaPa Joh s.......they had a huge drop in revenue...like 40% when that douche started talking hate.....yup....another place I will never eat at. boycotting Business and people that talk hate DOES work.....in the best possible way.

    199. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been a long while since I read the series, but, if the violence in the books are portreyed "sacrificial" to the violator (Ender), then that's something psychologists would call extreme narcissism bordering on sadism. You will never be able to convince or explain this to a real narcisist though, since their very personality is about how great they and their / their group's ways are. Simply, any criticism will never be tolerated or understood (simply !grok'ed ;-).

      For me, the book was about a small boy who beat the odds, even while being the odd one out and having all the odds against him. I think that's what most normal people would identify with, and a good reason the books became so popular, besides having good original plots and ethical dilemmas.

      However, in the real world, beating the odds and coming on top shouldn't override ethical considerations and "doing the right thing" (whatever that is). Justifying violence and slaughter, just because you're a small boy who needs to assert himself in the world, well, really speaks of grave personality-flaws such as insecurities and a perverted / false sense of confidence.

      The problem with all personality traits: They are so ingrained, that only those around can see it. For the person to see it themselves, requires much needed ability for introspection, which usually have no fertile ground when serious personality flaws are present.

    200. Re:Really?!? by happy_place · · Score: 1

      23 years ago, most of your favorite politicians were on record campaigning against these issues. Including liberal stalwarts... Times change, even OSC's comments appear to have been one of acceptance. I say that's a far cry from claiming the government should be overthrown. If anything we should support his acceptance of such inevitabilities. But it's always much funner to be able to beat on a few and cry "I told you so!" and "I was right before you!", because that makes us all that much better people.

      --
      http://www.beanleafpress.com
    201. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You are seriously deluded or misinformed if you think the military wants society's rejects.

    202. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Some was supposed to be no.

    203. Re:Really?!? by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      Orson Scott Card has suggested that the government should enforce certain societal rules and discourage people from going outside of the norm in public.

      What the cause of Card suggestion to do so? Could it be from hatred/belief? What is the "norm"? Majority? If it is, could it be a "Argumentum ad Populum"? Yes, it is still a valid idea and there is an expectation of damage to the target group. It is up to the government (or actual people) to apply his idea.

      And the poster suggest may also be the same feeling/belief. It is another encouragement/suggestion/expression to others, and I see it is valid (similar expectation of the outcome).

      When you said the outcome of following his idea may have some benefits, the similar trend would also applies to the poster idea. The difference is there would be different groups of those who gain the benefits. If you are in the benefit group from his idea but not the poster, you would feel that the poster is more bigotry than he is, and vice versa.

      As I said earlier, whether or not the poster point would be applied to me is all up to me (or any other reader). That's why I don't really see which is worse/better than the other.

    204. Re:Really?!? by sylivin · · Score: 2

      I loved loved loved "Ender's Game" as a youth, but 10 years ago, when I discovered Orson Scott Card's blog and his perpetual stream of scientifically illiterate bigoted ravings, it really tainted everything with his name on it for me.

      Err... what? What kind of person stops reading books because they dislike the author's political views and it "poisons the experience?" Did you refuse to read any Charles Dickens in school due to his commentary on the class system? What about Mein Kampf? I expect about 99.9999% of people would disagree with his views, yet many people read it anyway - often required reading in colleges. How about movies? Can't watch an action movie anymore because the director's political views are too unlike your own? Does this also apply to television shows? Music? Every aspect of culture in existence?

      Welcome to humanity. Here you will find a ton of people that you will never, ever agree with. However, many of them can still spin a good yarn and create fascinating worlds of fiction. You are doing yourself a disservice if you shut out elements of culture when you disagree with those that write it.

    205. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Crimes are rarely punished in any way relating to the crime itself. It's not practical or tenable.

      It's really weird and dysfunctional that you'd compare an opinion you disagree with to a crime. Just thought I'd mention that in case you didn't realize it.

      If you insist on seeing it in pure capitalistic term: Orson Scott Card is a brand of fiction. As the primary representative of that brand

      That's ridiculous, Orson Scott Card is a person, not a brand of fiction.

      By your logic, if I don't want to hire black people that's fine because really black is just a brand and I'm voting with my wallet.

      I don't see how not buying stuff from person X infringes on his free speech either.

      Well it doesn't directly, but it has a chilling effect, and it's childish behavior. Most people are more complex than a single issue and singling out someone for widespread punishment (like boycotting every single thing they produce) because of one issue is a sign of small mindedness.

    206. Re:Really?!? by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

      +1 (a hundred times ! ) It can't be said often enough or loud enough ... If you believe in freedom of expression you have to believe in it for everyone and defend everyone's right to it, even asshats and fucktards (maybe especially asshats and fucktards!) who don't agree with you or your belief means exactly nothing!.

    207. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      That's idiotic. Bigotry means treating people badly because of your prejudice. The key there is prejudice, as in prejudging, or (to be perfectly clear), judging based on assumptions before you actually confirm those assumptions. Card advocates the negative treatment of gays because he has prejudged that they are evil, or deviants, or want to force him to get gay married, or whatever it is people like that think. h4rr4r, on the other hand, is basing his treatment of Card on the way Card himself has acted. He judged him, but not prejudged him. So no, it's not bigoted.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    208. Re:Really?!? by gothzilla · · Score: 1

      You do know what "tolerate" means, right? There's no way in hell you will ever convince me that tolerating behavior that causes actual harm to people is a good thing.

    209. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you skimmed the essay, you skimmed too quickly or didn't get very far. About halfway through the essay is this loaded statement.

      The dark secret of homosexual society -- the one that dares not speak its name -- is how many homosexuals first entered into that world through a disturbing seduction or rape or molestation or abuse, and how many of them yearn to get out of the homosexual community and live normally.

    210. Re:Really?!? by emilper · · Score: 1

      oh, that is simple. It's all about rationing: you don't want to have young men in their 20s blowing themselves up in the hope they will get sex at least in the after-world.

    211. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Staring at the sea, staring at the sand, starring down the barrel at the arab on the ground.....he's alive....he's ......dead. Killing an Arab.

    212. Re:Really?!? by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      Bear in mind, that's just one of many. Card has written many, many, many times on this subject -- even arguing that homosexual acts should be criminalized, that an adult willfully engaging in sex he doesn't find acceptable with other consenting adults should go to *jail* and be deemed an unacceptable part of society.

      That's the stance of many fundamentalists, you know, the kind of folks who rail against the liberal 'nanny' state that wants to tell you how to live your life ;-)

      Common sense and logic aren't necessary for believers in the one (or whatever) true faith.

    213. Re:Really?!? by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hmm in general yes, you need a free and open exchange of money in order to exchange ideas beyond a certain scale.

      But that doesn't mean I need to give you my money when I disagree with you and think you're an idiot. I won't prevent you from selling your stuff to other people, but I sure as hell won't reward you by buying it.

      "You have no right to expect people you have publicly stated are evil and should have no rights to buy your product."

      You do have that right if you value civility and free speech.

      Wait, you have a right to my money? What right would that be again? It's my money, I have a finite amount of it, and it is my right to spend it on what I want for whatever reason I choose. If I think you're an offensive prick, that is going to factor into my decision.

      I have the right to disagree with you and withhold my money from you -- I'm under no obligation to give you money for any reason whatsoever. And if your free speech offends me, my remedy is to not buy your crap by exercising my freedom of choice.

      If you don't like that fact, then you should refrain from so publicly making those claims if you don't want to live with the consequences of me thinking you're an asshole. If you campaign and say I shouldn't have rights, my rational response as a consumer is to not buy your stuff.

      Do you think Jews should buy from Nazi's because it would be mean? Why should they provide money to people who hate them? Good luck with that.

      Because I don't believe it's right to punish people for their peaceful opinions, even when I have the power to do so, even when it involves money.

      Peaceful? Really? "... any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down ...". This man actively spouted that these people are evil and deserve no rights, and you think they should reward him by seeing his film?

      I'm not saying he should be arrested for the stuff he says, but he can damned well live with the fact that he has offended people who don't wish to spend money on his product.

      Your mentality is unstable and uncivil.

      Wow, an ad homenim attack -- here's one for you: You sir, are a fucking moron and a douchebag.

      Not spending my money on the product of your labor when I disagree with you is my right. Expecting that I will buy your crap when you spout hatred towards me is irrational and childish.

      I don't owe him or anybody else a living, and expecting that I should spend money his stuff is stupid.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    214. Re:Really?!? by fliptout · · Score: 1

      Agree. Ender's Game is the 50 Shades of Gray of adolescent sci fi.

      --
      A witty saying proves you are wittier than the next guy.
    215. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Advocating a law designed to oppress a minority is exactly that.

      This is a republic not a direct democracy. For good reason we protect minorities from the oppression of the majority.

    216. Re:Really?!? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Of course, if the movie fails to make a substancial profit, chances are no studio will buy the rights to another of his books until after he dies. The flip side being that if the movie makes a huge profit, chances are every studio will try to buy and produce one.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    217. Re:Really?!? by Michael+O-P · · Score: 2

      I would say joining the board of an anti-gay marriage group would qualify as "actively campaigning." I have many opinions to which I do not contribute my time or money.

      --
      I'm Peggy.
    218. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, that "contract" thing is what I thought LGBT people were so angry about.

      Um, yeah, it is. We're upset that you and your wife (or husband if you are female) were permitted to sign one, but we aren't. We get a "different" contract, if we get one at all.

      I guess some animals are more equal than others.

      Yes, your heterosexual marriage is presently more equal than my homosexual marriage.

      I'm sorry, were you trying to make a point against the LGBT crowd? Because you failed horribly.

    219. Re:Really?!? by mlk · · Score: 1

      But that is quite different to OSC who we can tell right now that we don't like his views on gay marriage.

      Disney & Ford no longer actively support the views that there owners once did (as far as I am aware). Telling the company now is rather pointless. If they start working in ways that "we" find disagreeable then it is time to boycott again.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    220. Re:Really?!? by BanHammor · · Score: 1

      Then you can pretty much rule out white supremacists since they advocate for various heinous deeds done to a sizeable chunk of population.

    221. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the LGBT were angry about not being allowed to sign a contract covering what everybody else had covered (such as inheritance, common properties, pensions etc.), not about the provisions for polygamy or polyandry, and not about legal provisions for whom they can choose as sex partners, that was fixed a few years ago.

      If that were true, they would have accepted a civil unions law that gave civil unions 100% equality with marriage. I have yet to meet a gay couple that would have accepted a civil union, even if it was legally equal to marriage in every way. Most would claim some bullshit about the "separate but equal" issues in the civil rights era, where a water fountain for blacks was dirty and unmaintained while the "white's only" water fountain was new and shiny. I call it bullshit because if a law says two things are equal, they are equal, period. It's not like inheritance laws for gays can get dirty or leak. These are not physical objects.

      When I would explain that "separate but equal" only applies to physical objects, they would say that they wanted to be "married", not unionized. So I ask them was stopping them from putting on white dresses, saying vows, exchanging rings, smearing cake on each other's faces, throwing a party and telling everyone they know that they are married? What difference does it make what the government called it?

      If you want to be married, be married. Marriage is about love, trust and commitment. It's not about inheritance rights, taxes and contracts. Why must you demand that government call your relationship a "marriage" when the "rights" part can be achieved with using that exact word? Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      This is not about equal rights. If it were, they could have had it years ago with little resistance. This is about revenge and punishing those they hate; religious people.

      Don't mod this down because you don't like it. Be an adult and reply with why you think I'm wrong.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    222. Re:Really?!? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are more than 0 affairs that occur in those states, and they do, in fact, kill the women involved.

      FTFY

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    223. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that there should be sodomy laws, as realistically, that harms no one outside of that couple. It's a throwback to puritan values being part of that state apparatus. It is an example of either religion and the state being previously more intertwined, or more recently, is it an overreaction to push back against advances made by the gay rights movement.

      In the sense of Card, I believe that certainly the second situation of overreaction is at play here. There is nothing that prevents himself or fellow Mormons from preaching against and shunning homosexuals even if the act itself is entirely legal in private life. I find the desire to re-criminalize something that isn't really criminal to begin with is likely just more of a frantic measure to regain some sort of equilibrium while they digest what is happening now at what appears a strikingly fast pace.

      I'm not going to pretend that I regard his position as entirely reactionary and illegitimate, at least when it comes to the actual marriage developments. If gay and heterosexual couples are now equivalent in terms of things like adopting children, that isn't a situation any more where you are simply invading people's homes. We are now granting specific legal rights, benefits and responsibilities on those couples. To me that is more legal or political than anything else, and I believe that voters should have complete discretion over that. It is not a privacy issue any more.

      Considering that the progress towards gay marriage rights has proceeded rapidly, and has done so along the line that marriage is some sort of human right, I can see why someone like Card and his ilk would probably overreact. He believes it is wrong, and now he's watching the world effectively go to a proverbial Hell in a handbasket at a breakneck speed. You or I might find this perplexing, because we are not paddling against the current, but someone like Card is not riding the iceberg, he's on a collision course with it and is now doing whatever he can do to avert disaster for his position, even if those actions are ultimately counterproductive.

      Is he right to ask you to watch his movie, even though your money is going to go to him? Artistically, if it is good, there should be no reason to suggest he is a terrible writer even if you dislike his opinions. Realistically, he's getting paid for this, and he'll likely use some section of his money to promote his views. In that sense, I guess you just have to weigh your entertainment options with your political and moral views.

      As a personal example, I'm quite against so-called abortion "rights", but I have paid money to see bands that are more or less in complete contradiction to my views on that to the extent of taking up collections for Planned Parenthood and other pro-choice groups. That's because I like them as musicians and support their music. Still, I will generally draw the line at buying none of their merchandise. I want to hear them play and reward their work, but I am under no obligation to make them rich. In that sense, if you actually like the movie or want to see it, then watch it, just do so on Netflix or something. In the end, he's probably already received his advance on the movies anyway.

    224. Re:Really?!? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      I know this is a difficult concept to grasp in the age of RIAA and copyright maximalists, but it was only recently that art became a work for hire, and throughout most of human history art was something you did to pass the time once the business of staying alive was completed. Our ancestors made music and beat drums in the evening because the hunting and gathering of food was done; It was to promote tribal unity, to express emotion. But there was no profit in it.

      It depends on how you define "recent." Art has been a professional career choice pretty much since at least the formation of the first city-states after agriculture allowed people to specialize in something other than daily food acquisition. We're talking Bronze Age Mesopotamia at the latest, and plenty of later Stone Age cultures (especially in the Americas) had professional artist classes as well.

      So, "throughout human history" is only true if you're counting prehistory as part of human history too.

      Even before artists could thrive as an independent class, art as a means of attracting attention and benefit for yourself dates back at least to the Neolithic period in which stone axes were polished for beauty, such as at the Langdale. And it may even go as far back as our prehuman ancestors if you believe the theory that the Acheulean handaxes made by homo habilus made many of them as a way of showing off skill to attract mates.

      Art will continue well after capitalism is nothing more than a footnote in our history books.

      Sometimes I worry it's the other way around, but in truth, I doubt either will disappear entirely. People will always have inspiration to create beauty, and there will always be scarce resources that people will want to hog for themselves.

      --
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    225. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, no. Fascism is fundamentally socialist but with a nationalist bent rather than internationalist. It is only right wing when you use the right/left split on nationalist vs internationalist lines (as most europeans do). If you use the typical socialist/capitalist split that most North Americans use to define left wing vs right wing, and is often used in the UK, Fascism is explicitly left-wing (for example, the basic BUF platform is fundamentally indistinguishable from the current Labour platform)

    226. Re:Really?!? by clarkn0va · · Score: 1

      Card believes that those he disagrees with, homosexuals, should be incarcerated and stripped of their rights.

      That's the first I've heard of this. I thought he was in favour of governments and laws that preserve the traditional definition of marriage. Advocating for the incarceration or curtailing of rights of a whole demographic is a totally different animal, and one that I've not before seen attributed to Card.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    227. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      Actually, LGBT are angry about not being able to "marry." Civil partnership laws that give equivalent rights as marriage aren't good enough. It has to be called "marriage" for them to be happy.

      On the surface it's about rights, but at the root it's about forcing cultural acceptance of their sexual preference.

    228. Re:Really?!? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Okay, so tea partiers and communists have different ideas about what the guiding principles of our society should be and should certainly be allowed to voice their opinionsin the ongoing debate known as politics (I will ignore for the moment that the TP seems to be a tightly focused special interest group which gains popular support by hiding behind mostly ineffective support for all manner of popular bigotry)

      But, how exactly are anti-gay activists less deserving of tolerance than white supremacists? One group wants to relegate gays to second-class citizenship, a small minority of the population. The other wants to relegate all non-whites (a majority) to the same status, having their actions arbitrarily curtailed by the will of the few. Perhaps you have a greater personal stake in the the anti-gay fight, or figure that the white supremacists lack the power or popular support to be more than a nuisance, but while those are certainly valid reasons to choose your own battlefield, they are not relevant to the discussion of whether or not a particular group is worthy of tolerance.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    229. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Bingo. Picking on Card GUARANTEES a repeat of the "Chik-Fil-A" effect. For most Chik-Fil-A restaurants, they achieved record sales during the boycott, and elevated sales afterwards. . .

      I plan on seeing the movie. During the Chick-Fil-A boycott, I ate more chicken sandwiches than at any point in my life!

      It's not that I'm anti-gay. I think gay people are awesome. It's because I'm pro-Constitution. The Constitution says you have the right to free speech. Nowhere does it say you have the right to marry, straight, gay or otherwise.

      I always used to hear liberals say "I may not agree with what you have to say, but I'll fight to death for your right to say it." It's amazing how fast that goes out the window when someone says something they view as "intolerant". I figure, if they're willing to claim to fight to the death for opposing views, the least I can do is enjoy a chicken sandwich with some waffle fries and see a movie I was interested in already.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    230. Re:Really?!? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      He might well be more vulnerable than Chik-fil-A was, but I don't know if that would counter the effect unless most science fiction fans are pro-gay. Many are, but there are surprising numbers who are not, or more often, they just don't care.

      Ender's Game is probably the best thing that Card ever wrote, and like others I can attest to the fact that some of the other stuff he wrote was not as interesting or easy to get through, but that doesn't take away from the book itself. If the movie is a good adaptation, then you might run into the same effect of "I'm not going to miss a good movie because the author happens to dislike gay people", because honestly, Orson Scott Card isn't going to turn around the forward motion on that front anyway.

      Ironically, I don't think I am going to bother seeing it either way. Mostly because I feel sort of "meh" about it.

    231. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you are acknowledging is, marital arrangements are constructed and recognized for the benefit of society. This is the fundamental aspect of the conservative case against gay marriage. You might or might not agree on gay marriage, but you seem to admit that marriage is not a construct based on individual rights.

    232. Re:Really?!? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Damnit. Bad moderation. I hate your dropdown box with my flaky optical mouse, Slashdot.

    233. Re:Really?!? by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      I think it is important to consider what he does with the money he receives from the movie. If he spend millions of dollars backing anti-gay rights movements, then it is perfectly reasonable for someone to boycott the movie, even if it is not directly related to his views.

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    234. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bear in mind, that's just one of many. Card has written many, many, many times on this subject -- even arguing that homosexual acts should be criminalized, that an adult willfully engaging in sex he doesn't find acceptable with other consenting adults should go to *jail* and be deemed an unacceptable part of society.

      Not all hate speech is going to say 'faggot' and 'burn in hell' and stuff like that: those extreme positions are also supported and maintained by more intellectual and softly spoken declarations of the inhumanity of the minority and supporting that it has no right to be seen as a peer because its difference is too different to allow.

      And right now folks who commit statutory rape are put in jail. What about Nambla?

      I am not saying any of these are right, and I am not saying that homosexuality is wrong. What I am saying is that perspectives matter. To him, Homosexuality is on par with pedophilia and so he argues against it. For you, maybe homosexuality is OK, but maybe pedophilia is not. For a nambla member, Pedophilic homosexuality is ok, but something else is different.

      So would you expect nambla members to boycott you for having a different opinion?

      And yes, I am using extremes to illustrate a point and do not espouse either pedophilia or NAMBLA. Neither do i espouse homosexuality, but I dont really care there either. I do draw a line where a person is not mature enough to rationally made decisions. But you are castigting someone for belief types that others would castigate you for. I wont even go into politics or religion or anything else, since that gets murkier still.

      I still go watch Matt Damon movies because he is a good actor, even though he is a political idiot...

    235. Re: Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      If the picture is intended to arouse desire, then it's pornography. And it is not a stretch to imagine an instance in which such a picture is being sent between minors.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    236. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      The "prejudicial" label fits, because Card is fundamentally asserting that his values are normative and should become universal. But how is that not the same as what we do when we call him a bigot?

      It's different because the latter is not espousing a value so much as a meta-value: a value regarding values. Admittedly, it's a semantic mine field, but I would assert that there is a distinct difference between intolerance to intolerance, and intolerance in general.

      More to the point, Card's brand of intolerance comes from prejudice and assumptions based on general attributes of a person (their sexuality). On other hand, intolerance to Card and his ilk is based on specific actions they have taken. It's the difference between treating someone as a criminal because they are black (prejudging), and treating someone as a criminal because they just confessed to robbing a liquor store (judging).

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    237. Re:Really?!? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      With Hollywood Accounting, the blockbuster hit "Ender's Game" will cost 100 million to produce, bring in a billion dollars in revenue and somehow when it comes time to pay Card his share of the profits, it will somehow have become a completely unprofitable venture.

      I wouldn't worry about Card getting much after the fact.

    238. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      I'm actually not sure what he's saying, since "government" can have two meanings. In one sense he could mean to destroy our system of government through violent overthrow. Or he could mean to overthrow those currently running the government through the ballot box.

      Italy has had about 60 governments since WWII. That doesn't mean their system of government has been overthrown 60 times by violence, that means those running the government have been kicked out through the legal political process and replaced with new ones.

    239. Re:Really?!? by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the explosion of book sales which will likely create additional profit for him (people like to buy books when the movie adaptation is being hyped up).

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    240. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Paying to see the Ender's Game movie would be funding an active promoter of homophobia.

      I enjoyed the book. I will see the movie. I will not pay a dime to do it, though.

    241. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, he was almost right, what the state makes is power. What the cronies make is money. The two walk hand in hand, more often than not.

    242. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess the irony is lost to many people here, but the valorous defenders of gay marriage are acting like Ender: they have been attacked, and thus must utterly destroy their enemy without hesitation, for the good of all. It is right, for the cause is just.

    243. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Being vocal about your boycott is hardly plain indifference.

    244. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Card has no expectation or right to my money

      The white boss is saying "Blacks have no expectation or right to my money so I won't give them a job." What's your response? Well you can't change your skin color so that's not fair. Okay well "Muslims have no expectation or right to my money." Now what? Your religion and your stance on gay marriage are both beliefs that can be changed.

      Society has decided that people have a right to get fair treatment economically. Making hiring decisions about people based on their religion is considered bad.

      Well I believe making purchasing decisions based on the business owner's private beliefs is also bad. I'm sure you would say that someone who refuses to shop at stores where gay people work is a bigot. While the store doesn't have a RIGHT to that person's money, you see how A) the person not shopping there is a punishment, because he's withholding his money and B) it's wrong to punish people who are gay, even if you yourself aren't gay, don't want to be gay, and don't like gays. I mean don't you see the attractiveness of saying "Yeah that guy is gay, but that's okay, I'm going to let him lead his life the way he wants, I'll still shop at that store, even though I think being gay is gross."

      Isn't that a better person than "I hate the gays, I won't shop there?" Or do you see no distinction because both of them don't embrace gayness?

      You might say Orson Scott Card's beliefs are not private -- well "private" only means "separate from the transaction at hand" not that they can never be shared publicly. Race and religion aren't private either, but most people consider them to have nothing to do with most business transactions, despite being public.

    245. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AIDS is a significant societal down-side to homosexuality.

    246. Re:Really?!? by Hatta · · Score: 3

      The state is a wholly owned subsidary of the prison/industrial/military complex.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    247. Re:Really?!? by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 2

      Well, in that case, let's change the law to only allow people to marry a member of the same sex. People using the reasoning you suggest should have no problem whatsoever with this since it is logically identically "Equal Treatment".

    248. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most intolerant people I know are "tolerant" Liberals.

    249. Re:Really?!? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      I really fucking hate it when people make shit up out of whole cloth like this, simply to support their personal political agenda or vendetta.

      A vast majority of animals, and most human cultures other than graeco-roman allow polygamy, usually as the default mode. By a quirk of history, this particular culture won and imposed it customs on everyone else. And now, unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

      Please, demonstrate for me how polygamy is the norm through even a majority of cultures - forget most. It's simply not true: the gross majority of cultures are predominantly monogamist or serial monogamist. Homosexuality, pedophilia, and the like aren't entirely unheard of, but they're not exactly common except for in Muslim culture.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    250. Re:Really?!? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      The one that matters goes from authoritarian on one end to anarchist on the other.

      Nonsense. Both are quite significant as are several other axes that don't appear in the standard 2D grid. Community v. individuality (hippie communes don't fit well in the traditional model that associates community focus with authoritarianism; neither do cutthroat "rather be the oppressor than eliminate oppression" societies), pacifism v. militarism, religiousness (which doesn't correlate as well with "left" v. "right" outside the US), openness to outsiders, tribalism v. multiculturalism, etc.

      --
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    251. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      That depends on what was meant by "people like Card". If it meant "white people" or "sci-fi writers" or "people over 60", then yes, it's stereotyping. More likely, it meant "people who actively campaign against gay rights," in which case it's not stereotyping, it's grouping people together based on their actions and then specifying the action used to create such a classification.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    252. Re:Really?!? by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

      You must send it back all the time then since "chicken" at these restaurants includes both sexes.

    253. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We (Americans) are in a capitalist society. That's all there is to it. The only recourse citizens have against a non-government agency/person/thing is boycott. I am not silencing them, or stripping their first amendment rights. What I am doing it telling them, "not with my money."

    254. Re:Really?!? by jratcliffe · · Score: 1

      Up until late 19th century, the age of sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult.

      The idea that marriage is now much later than it used to be is a common misconception, at least for Europe and the US. Really, the outlier in (relatively) recent history was the post-WWII era, when age of first marriage dropped sharply from the levels of the late 19th and early 20th century. In 1890, average age of first marriage for women in the US was 23.5, and 26.5 for men. http://www.census.gov/hhes/socdemo/marriage/data/acs/ElliottetalPAA2012figs.pdf In the late 18th century, average age was 20-22 for women, ~26 for men. http://www.amazon.com/Marriage-England-1500-1800-Abridged-footnotes/dp/0061319791/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1327690657&sr=8-3

    255. Re:Really?!? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      The key word there is "activists", used to describe the anti-gay group, but not the white supremacist group. Hence why I also said that the pro-gay group might not be deserving of tolerance, because activist was used there too. I've never a pro-gay activist that was pushing for something that should not be tolerated, but I won't dismiss it as impossible.

      Without "activists", "crazy white supremacists deserve tolerance" sounds like it is simply about "people who hold the belief that whites are the superior race". Throw in activists, and yes, they would be undeserving of tolerance. Just as I've never met a pro-gay activist that was pushing for something that should not be tolerated, I have also never met a while supremacist activist who was pushing for something that should. I guess it's possible, but it seems a lot less likely.

      tl;dr, I tolerate the KKK's opinions. But their actions I would not.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    256. Re:Really?!? by DaveQat · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue.

      Depends on the book. In the Homeward series, for example, a gay character has a nickname that is the same as a word for "sphincter" in the conlang in the series, because of course gay people are about nothing but teh buttsex. And that gay character eventually swallows his desires and has sex with a woman for the "good of the species", or something like that.

    257. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, an Ad Hominem attack is not what is in play here...They're still nutjobs

      I'm sure the rest of your post was cool too.

    258. Re:Really?!? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2

      This is America. In theory, we 'overthrow the government' every 2 or 4 years. It's called regime change. I don't see anything odious about his statement.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    259. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      By this logic I can't watch movies by Richard Donner, Matt Damon, Mark Wahlberg, George Clooney, Spike Lee, Jim Carrey, and a large number of other Hollywood elites.

    260. Re:Really?!? by clarkn0va · · Score: 1

      I don't know that Card speaks out against being gay so much as he's publicly against sanctioning gay marriage.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    261. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      What the cause of Card suggestion to do so?

      There are benefits for society to do this, I assume this is the reason he is suggesting this. If you can't see them, you are probably too narrow-minded. Enforcing the norm provides a stronger social order, a clear balance of power and a more unified set of values, more collectivism, and generally more efficient state maintenance and exchanges. Going out of the norm, on the other hand, leads to more freedom, more individualism and less restricted creativity. It's purely a matter of which aspects of society you want to promulgate.

      What is the "norm"? Majority?

      This is the definition of the norm, yes. Note that a democracy is a system which is based on the concept of following the majority's decisions. If they are opposed to the minority's, then so be it.

      When you said the outcome of following his idea may have some benefits, the similar trend would also applies to the poster idea.

      By the poster's idea, are you referring to the idea of vocally encouraging people to boycott the movie on ad hominem principles? The only benefit of doing that is to set up a large scale ad hominem campaign.

    262. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      He is judging the person based on his opinion on a particular subject. That is prejudice.

    263. Re:Really?!? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To be fair, it worked pretty well for C.S. lewis and the new testament.

    264. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      We only protect minorities from the oppression of the majority if the majority wills it so.

    265. Re:Really?!? by Microlith · · Score: 1

      But how is that not the same as what we do when we call him a bigot?

      When we call him a bigot, we realize that he is attacking a group of people blindly for a property out of their control and highlight this. In a world dominated by his values, those people are criminalized and imprisoned, and I can only imagine that being the start. In "our" world those people, and he, are free to live their lives as they see fit.

      They are not the same in the slightest.

    266. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree completely with Mr. Card. The intellectual contortions that many go through in order to legitimize the perversion of homosexuality is breathtaking.

    267. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Also known as democracy.
      Your point being?

    268. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to be fair, not all gay activists deserve to be tolerated either... as with any group there are some that are so fanatic and one-sided that they are doing exactly what they complain is being done to themself (just like OSC here)

    269. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boo hoo. Boycott all you want. It worked so well with Chik-fil-a.

    270. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Well said! I've been searching for some linguistic distinction to clarify all this nonsense: tolerance versus acceptance does the job nicely.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    271. Re:Really?!? by levork · · Score: 1

      And somehow you don't think his statement "whatever means is made possible or necessary" covers the possibility of violent overthrow? What reason would he otherwise have to add that blanket modifier to his sentence?

    272. Re:Really?!? by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. IMO, he was talking about overthrowing a government via the democratic process. The Card quotes in the GP post are angry and unclear - which is surprising, considering that he's someone who communicates via the written word for a living, but still innocuous.

      (I hope that people in the NSA and other American spy houses can differentiate between this kind of language and real terrorists...)

    273. Re:Really?!? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Oh really? It takes all of 5 seconds and a google search to tell you how severely misinformed you are.

      Nazism rejected the Marxist concept of class struggle and instead promoted the idea of Volksgemeinschaft ("people's community"). Nazis wanted to overcome social divisions which they considered artificial; instead, all parts of the racially homogenous society should cooperate for national unity.[17] Nazism denounced both capitalism and communism for being associated with Jewish materialism.[18] Like other fascist movements, Nazism supported the outlawing of strikes by employees and lockouts by employers, because these were regarded as a threat to national unity.[19] Instead, the state controlled and approved wage and salary levels.[19]

      Did I really need to quote this here? This is the tip of the iceberg; Nazi social policy was rife with Marx-infused social policies (aka socialism) of "us vs. them". They replaced 'capitalism' with 'anything Jews run' in their ideology, but the end was the same.

      It's idiotic political leftists in the US who make claims like you, in the hope that the evil committed by the Nazis wouldn't be associated with their ideals - in much the same way as the so-called liberals in the US have tried hard for decades to associate the Nazis with "right wing" ideology.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    274. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Cut and dry, I like it.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    275. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was the former. Thank you for getting my point.

    276. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You need to read the constitution.

    277. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      They called themselves that. Doesn't mean they actually were. You assume think that China is really a "People's Republic"? They must be since they call themselves that, right?

    278. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 2

      Nicely put. "Intellectual bully" is right on the nose. Everyone's always yammering about their damned first amendment rights: well it goes both way. You may have the right to say what you want, but I have the right to respond, and to think you're an asshole for saying what you said. (The proverbial "you", that was not directed at the parent comment).

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    279. Re:Really?!? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Assume = actually

    280. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Read your own quote.
      Nazism supported the outlawing of strikes by employees and lockouts by employers, because these were regarded as a threat to national unity.

      That sound leftist to you?

      Nazism rejected the Marxist concept of class struggle

      How about that?

    281. Re:Really?!? by rsborg · · Score: 1

      Crazy anti-gay activists deserve tolerance.

      Us non-crazy folk tolerate him - and his right to say what he wants. Toleration doesn't mean that actions can't have consequences.

      If he wants to spout the crazy, let his works suffer association. No one is denying him his rights; There is no "right to profit".

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    282. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The parent that you replied to was being sarcastic.

    283. Re: Really?!? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Lumpy is a idiotic troll, and whoever voted him up should feel bad, but during the height of the Iraq occupation they were taking anything they could get to pass their QA. And they had to keep lowering the tests. Simply put, they had to hire X amount of people for a shit job nobody wanted. People desperate for work fit the bill.

      Historically, the poor get sent to war. Ideally though, yeah, the military wants the best of the best. And they usually get made into officers and get the fuck out of areas where bullets are flying.

    284. Re:Really?!? by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      What creature on Earth needs to be threatened with death to adhere to its natural inclinations? Moreover, which creature will actually run counter to its 'natural' inclination and risk death for a few moments of sweaty, non-procreative activity.

      Answer: Homo Sapiens Sapiens -- they've got this sadistic streak in them, I think. See Darwin Awards for a few examples of individuals of this species who, when threatened with possible death, still run counter to natural inclination and risk death for a few moments of sweaty, non-procreative activity (skydiving without a parachute, wrestling alligators, driving a rocket into a cliff, sniffing gasoline and then playing with matches, etc.).

      The standard with us human beings appears to be that while there's a general clustering of "normal" activity, as a species we appear to try and do just about everything imaginable, and let survival select the winning strategies that will eventually become popular with the population at large (usually via social constructs). So, this said, there must be some reason why this aberration of monogamy (or aberration of polygamy, depending on how you look at it) became socially selected. Whether it's still a valid selector or just "junk social DNA" is an exercise left to the reader.

    285. Re:Really?!? by levork · · Score: 1

      As I pointed out to another commenter, his explicit use of the phrase "whatever means is made possible or necessary" makes it pretty clear he wasn't just talking about overthrowing the government via the democratic process. There is nothing unclear about that. As you say: he's a writer, and the fact that he deliberately decided to add this phrase makes it very clear where his intentions lie.

    286. Re:Really?!? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's right, SPIN IT BABY! Shake it for the money!

    287. Re:Really?!? by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

      You can drop the "people like" in "people like Card". Card himself is a board member of the National Organization for Marriage - an organization that has organized many boycotts of pro-gay businesses.

      Card asking people not to boycott him for being anti-gay is hypocritical in the extreme.

    288. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I liked "Ender's Game", it's OK. But the latter books - they are just weird and stupid.

      Like, why do they need a whole planet for a closed-walled colony of about 10 thousand people? And it's also based on religion, really? Then the whole premise of a planet of geniuses who somehow can't connect dots about their induced OCD.

    289. Re: Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3

      You are seriously deluded or misinformed if you think the military wants society's rejects.

      They will take what they can get. There's been plenty of articles on how the recruiters are scraping the bottoms of barrels because less and less educated people are making the decision to go die in the desert for someone else's profit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    290. Re:Really?!? by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      It depends what you mean by 'tolerance'. So far as I'm aware, no-one's called for OSC to be thrown in jail. People have just loudly disagreed with what he says, and advocated not giving money to him. That's a fairly big distinction, and one most beautifully pinpointed by the A.V. Club article on the topic:

      http://www.avclub.com/articles/enders-game-author-orson-scott-card-issues-plea-fo,99915/

      As a gay person, am I willing to 'tolerate' people who believe that being gay is wrong or whatever? Sure. I don't want OSC sent to prison for thought crimes. Am I willing to 'tolerate' people advocating that homosexual activity be criminalized and I be thrown in prison? Well, it depends what you mean by 'tolerate'. I wouldn't want to forcibly prevent him from expressing his opinion, but I certainly don't think anyone should 'tolerate' it actually happening, or any form of violent revolution to cause it to happen, as OSC has advocated (see above). Am I likely to spend money on his stuff? Nooooope.

      "Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue."

      Um. Perhaps you haven't read his books closely enough. All of OSC's fiction is very deeply tied into his views on 'societal issues'; that's basically what he writes about. It's least obvious in Ender's Game, but he has, for instance, written an *entire series of SF books* which was a retelling of the Book of Mormon.

    291. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He didn't really plead for tolerance. That's rhetoric to make him look worse. Here's what he said:

      "Ender’s Game is set more than a century in the future and has nothing to do with political issues that did not exist when the book was written in 1984.

      With the recent Supreme Court ruling, the gay marriage issue becomes moot. The Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution will, sooner or later, give legal force in every state to any marriage contract recognized by any other state.

      Now it will be interesting to see whether the victorious proponents of gay marriage will show tolerance toward those who disagreed with them when the issue was still in dispute.

      Orson Scott Card"

      Does that sound like a plea to you? Sounds to me like he's going to sit back and watch the hypocrisy. Nobody expects any tolerance from gay supporters.

    292. Re:Really?!? by rabtech · · Score: 1

      This is getting way into the weeds but the reason for polygamy (and conversely the reason it must be banned today) is that the death rate among males was quite high in earlier times, usually through war but sometimes through deaths on hunts, etc.

      If you look at the polygamist communities in western countries today, they all have some rigid set of rules or structure that allows them to kick out most young males... Even then that sometimes isn't enough, requiring the existing men to marry younger and younger.

      Human birth rates are close to 1:1 and without a lot of war to kill off the young men you simply can't sustain a polygamous society.

      --
      Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)
    293. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "People like Card?" How about instead of generalizing like an ass, you put in the bare minimum of effort required to make yourself not look like a huge tool and find out whether Card himself has done that or not?

    294. Re:Really?!? by Reverand+Dave · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem. Case in point, a lot of people enjoy Disney movies and Ford cars despite Walt Disney and Henry Ford being nasty antisemitic pro-nazi nutjobs.

      By the same token, a lot of people don't support either of these companies for the exact same reason. It's their right to do so. A lot of people came unglued at the stuff the guy from Chik-fil-a said and boycotted the restaurant despite the fact that's not the default position of actual company, just one guy on top of it. It's people's right to boycott and famous people, if they are image conscious will keep their mouths shut so as not to trigger a boycott.

      tl;dr
      If you're going to do or say something that might piss people off, don't whine when you have pissed people off.

      --
      I got here through a series of tubes
    295. Re:Really?!? by Dishevel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well. You can be bitchy about it all you want.
      I think if you had any ability to comprehend what you read after you think you saw a "Conservative, Gay hating, Fucktard" post something you might have noticed that I specifically pointed out at the beginning of the post that I was not stating the right or wrong of the current situation at all.
      Just that "Technically" it is in fact "Equal" and therefore "Non Discriminatory".

      So step down from your box of "Feel Good Rage" and listen.

      Personally by the way, I think that government should have nothing to do with marriage at all.
      Marriage by a church should in no way be recognized by the state. If the state wants to confer certain things to those who apply to be legally bound together by the state they can of course. Though it should have nothing to do with what ceremony they want to perform in their church.
      There would be no problem at that point. The State could state what does and does not constitute a "Civil Union" and that should not include anything religious or have anything in it that cares about the sexual orientation of the members of the union or their sex.

      Churches that want to perform gay marriages may. Those that choose not to may. And none of it would have any state recognized legal meanings.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    296. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      A democracy necessarily oppresses minority.
      For example, the law that prevents rape oppresses people who think rape is the natural order of things and should therefore be allowed. But the majority thinks otherwise, so it's not allowed. People that are pro-rape will be considered mentally ill or deviants, just what some people consider gay people to be. There is no more value to any belief, just a relative agreement established through the majority.

      The American constitution, like the American declaration of independence, is full of make-believe feel-good fallacies justified by artifices like the existence of God. It is not an accurate description of how human activity is organized in today's society.

    297. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      since you group "slashdot" as one, you are by extension part of that group - so you are saying that you are yourself a hypocrite? or could it be different people arguing the different viewpoints? (not that there is not bound to be hypocrites here too. but slashdot users are not a single entity) infact saying that we are all hypocrites because some of the people here have argued both ways makes you a bigot (judging everyone in a group based on your opinion on the most vocal fanatics)

    298. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      Oops, read over that part. You're right. He is going over the top, especially on an issue as unimportant as this.

      Yes, unimportant. The gays "they're violating our rights" are blowing it out of proportion. It's a privilege, a cultural institution that has in it prohibitions for what is considered the good of society based on relation, age, sex or current marital status. Race used to be a factor, but society decided that wasn't important anymore. If we say this is about rights, to avoid hypocrisy we need to stop prohibiting polygamy and incestuous marriage too (age is questionable, since it's about the ability to legally consent).

      On Card's side, relax, the only detrimental effect on society that gay marriage has is all the fighting about the issue.

    299. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You do have that right if you value civility and free speech. Just like I am perfectly entitled to expect that if my boss is a flaming liberal, and finds out that on Facebook I'm a raging conservative, I will be able to keep my job. Because I don't believe it's right to punish people for their peaceful opinions, even when I have the power to do so, even when it involves money."

      impressive, a two-year old who types so well...
      hope that growing up thing works out for you, boyo...
      (fasten your seatbelt, its gonna be a bumpy ride !)

      urine idjit

    300. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He didn't really call for the violent overthrow of the government. Here's what he really said:

      "What these dictator-judges do not seem to understand is that their authority extends only as far as people choose to obey them.

      How long before married people answer the dictators thus: Regardless of law, marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage, and help me raise my children in a society where they will expect to marry in their turn."

      Of course it didn't happen that way. The dictator judges haven't been the downfall of Democracy... yet.

    301. Re:Really?!? by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      I assume this is the reason he is suggesting this. If you can't see them, you are probably too narrow-minded. Enforcing the norm provides a stronger social order, a clear balance of power and a more unified set of values, more collectivism, and generally more efficient state maintenance and exchanges. Going out of the norm, on the other hand, leads to more freedom, more individualism and less restricted creativity. It's purely a matter of which aspects of society you want to promulgate.

      My answer already mentioned in my previous reply. I did not say that there is NO benefit. I said there are similar because there are some benefit. It depends on how you define "benefits" at this point. Maybe the benefit from the poster is what you call "narrow-minded."

      This is the definition of the norm, yes. Note that a democracy is a system which is based on the concept of following the majority's decisions. If they are opposed to the minority's, then so be it.

      So it is "Argumentum ad Populum" and it could may or may not be right. Although, I am not going to define what "right" or "wrong" because it depends on one's interpretation.

      By the poster's idea, are you referring to the idea of vocally encouraging people to boycott the movie on ad hominem principles? The only benefit of doing that is to set up a large scale ad hominem campaign.

      I still see that they both are equal. Let say A=poster, B=Card, C=government, and D=target. B suggests/encourages C to attack D. A suggest/encourges D to attack A. It is very similar but on a different route. The difference of D in this point is that latter D would include those who are not in the former D. But I would leave the judgement to them because they are not me.

    302. Re:Really?!? by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

      One distinction: In Ender's case (in Ender's Game), he did what he did (xenocide) in ignorance, which doesn't fit into this, "stomp on the competition to get to the top and then confess your sins for absolution" philosophy.

    303. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK - here is the plain truth: The majority of people world-wide regard homosexuality as a perversion of nature, like bestiality or nymphomania. And the idea that this small minority demand legitimacy and "marriage rights" is anathema to the majority. The majority in this country have no interest in persecuting the homosexuals or invading their bedrooms and dragging them away. That is because we are tolerant. But you cannot expect the majority to agree to modify the natural, time-honored institution of man-woman marriage to include any other combination or component any more than it can consent to calling a tail a leg. That is because we are rational.

    304. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      I don't support gay marriage, but honestly it's never even occurred to me to boycott movies by director who do support gay marriage. I mean who cares?

      Ah, but there's the difference between you and Card. He's actively trying to stop people from doing something that doesn't effect anyone else, and then bemoaning the prospect that anyone might try to stop him from doing something that negatively effects other people. You may be satisfied to sit quietly with your bigotry, but Card, apparently, is not.

      Oh, and off topic but: I don't support your right to marry, either.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    305. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asa Butterfield (Ender), Harrison Ford (Graff), Abigail Breslin (Petra), Gavin Hood (Director and screenwriter), Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (Producers) and Summit Entertainment and Lionsgate (distribution companies) have absolutely nothing to do with Card's anti-gay stance, and put far more work into this film than Card did. Do they deserve to be punished for Card's opinions?

    306. Re:Really?!? by Reverand+Dave · · Score: 1

      Tolerance is condescension.

      --
      I got here through a series of tubes
    307. Re:Really?!? by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      "The book after Ender's game is called "Xenocide" for pete's sake!"

      No, it's called Speaker for the Dead. Xenocide is the third one.

    308. Re:Really?!? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Just to be fair, not all gay activists deserve to be tolerated either...

      Agreed, which is why I said "maybe" when I addressed that line. As I stated in another reply, I've never a pro-gay activist that was pushing for something that should not be tolerated, but I won't dismiss it as impossible, so I said "maybe".

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    309. Re:Really?!? by RobbieCrash · · Score: 1

      That democracy is flawed and that those flaws need to be addressed.

      --
      Keep on knockin'
      https://robbiecrash.me
    310. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Subtle difference, JackieBrown. You're protesting to stop people from doing something that doesn't impact you, as opposed to protesting against people who are actively trying to take away someone's civil rights.

      I realize you were probably being rhetorical and you may not actually demonstrate against gay marriage, but your point was still stupid.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    311. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      It's more like $35k -$50k yearly for most states... That goes to private companies and powerful unions. Compared with the oh so evil teacher unions that only get $5k-$7k per student. And the police/guard unions threaten VIOLENCE, that you and yours will be victims, if they don't get their raises, because they aren't doing their job of REFORMING criminals.

      You'll notice in states that "broke unions" they only prohibited TEACHERS unions from collecting dues... Police and prison guard unions were not effected because they contribute to the "correct" party.

    312. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Preventing you from raping someone is not oppression. To even compare pro-rape to gay people is pretty fucking horrible.

    313. Re:Really?!? by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Apparently you're very ignorant of the prominence this book has. It is considered one of the greatest sci-fi/fantasy books of all time.

      NPR (National Public Radio) has it on their top 100 list of all time at 3rd. : http://www.npr.org/2011/08/11/139085843/your-picks-top-100-science-fiction-fantasy-books

      Same at Amazon : http://www.amazon.com/Best-Science-Fiction-Novels-Time/lm/RIBUB5MTVYA03

      Tied for 2nd for sci-fi at Wired: http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2012/12/and-the-winner-is-readers-choice-for-top-10-science-fiction-novel/

      Pick a list for sci-fi/fantasy and you will find it no lower than 5 or so all-time.

      Any real sc-ifi enthusiast that has ventured beyond the "quality" offered by Hollywood there is absolutely no denying Ender's Game is not just mainstream, but in fact among the elite. The sci-fi public very much loves Ender's Game. Chik-Fil-A ranks ~10th among the fast food public behind fine establishments like Dunkin Donuts and Pizza Hut. And yet the very act of attempting a boycott of Chik-Fil-A to punish them for the same political position was a spectacular backfire, generating record sales.

      In cases like this it appears to me to be less about defending the political position of the boycott target, and more about defending the right of a business owner, or business itself, to HAVE a political position and the right to defend it. No one likes having other people's position forcibly shoved down their throat. It's good to know that when they see it happening to others they demonstrate their distaste.

      You could point to exactly the same effect in the protests levied against JC Penny's for hiring Ellen DeGeneres (a married gay woman) as a spokesperson. (http://jezebel.com/5909347/homophobic-protest--from-one-million-moms-actually-boosting-jc-penney-sales)

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    314. Re:Really?!? by SpaceManFlip · · Score: 1

      People on Slashdot say similar things all the time, with regard to other issues than gay stuff. Suddenly everyone supports the wonderful government we have that is perfectly transparent and benign?

    315. Re:Really?!? by enjerth · · Score: 2

      Profit is not limited to monetary terms.

      The currency of the state is law and power. The more control they get, the more they thrive.

    316. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These quotes could also be bombastic versions of saying how he encourages people to vote.

    317. Re:Really?!? by gonzo67 · · Score: 1

      Actually, fiscally punishing people for stating their opinion is not stupid. It is how someone can exercise THEIR free speech by demonstrating with their wallet how much they disagree with them. If you wish to financially support those who you disagree with,go for it. However, your opinion on not supporitng them fiscally is...as you say...stupid.

      Free speech does not mean free from repercussions.

    318. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      It worked pretty well in the 1860's and again in the 1940's. we rode the "repopulation" curve pretty well in the USA and people made VAST SUMS of wealth in both aftermaths.

      It's just about time to gear up for the next war... About the time we elect GOP'rs in 2016 because we're annoyed with the current guy and forgot what they caused.

    319. Re:Really?!? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      You can, as you decide what you do :D

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    320. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, sweety, it's not. But I'm not sure I can make it any clearer. Judgement is always based on your opinions, that's why it's called "judgement", not "fact finding". Prejudice is a particular form of judgement where your opinions are based on unfounded assumptions. Since Card has made it quite clear how he feels about gay rights, assumptions that he is anti-gay are well founded.

      Or if you meant that judging somebody because of that person's opinions is prejudice, well then you're still wrong. Again, it would only be prejudiced if you were judging based on unfounded assumptions about that person's opinions. For instance, if I judged you to be a bigot because I assumed you were anti-gay, that would be prejudice, since you haven't specifically expressed your feelings about gay rights. But, one more time now, Card has clearly expressed his feelings about gay rights, and so judging him based on those expressed feelings is no prejudice.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    321. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not "punishing" who I disagree with. I'm choosing to "not reward" who I disagree with.
      Choosing to not voluntarily purchase an unnecessary item of consumption (a movie ticket or book where part of its proceeds are given to an author who actively advocates and supports suppression of LGBT equality/civil rights) is not punishment of that author.
      In this case, it is choosing not to reward Orson Scott Card.
      If you can't see the difference, then: "Dave, this conversation can serve no purpose anymore. Goodbye."

    322. Re: Really?!? by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      And which "hate" would that be ?? IF by "hate" you mean "dissent with the policies of the current administration", I seem to recall that, just one administration back, we were told Dissent was Patriotic. . . So, please, elucidate on this supposed "hate" . . .

    323. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      I think you mean the latter, but yet, I get your point. I should pay more attention to user names, I probably would not have made that mistake on your other post =)

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    324. Re:Really?!? by Insightfill · · Score: 2

      What you are acknowledging is, marital arrangements are constructed and recognized for the benefit of society. This is the fundamental aspect of the conservative case against gay marriage.

      True: society has an interest in defining what a marriage is. But: if such a contract has no negative effects, it shouldn't be disallowed. As Jefferson once said on religion "it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." The conservative argument against gay marriage so far has not been "it's not good for society", but a much more narrow "what will MY children think?" In fact, such an arrangement has no such effect. We know that you can't "catch teh gay" no more than you can cure it (think Exodus group). A few opponents have actually dropped "God's intended order" or similar into it.

      There are some definite societal negatives, but society also changes. Here's a "weak negative" on gay marriage; retirement systems worldwide largely are based on relying on the next generation. In the past, an elderly person would move in with their child (oldest male?) and help raise the kids. Currently, the US has a system which relies on the next generation to pay for the retirement of the prior one. If a gay couple marries and produces no children, then there's a net loss in the next generation's providers. This isn't the whole story, however. By the same measure, we should also ban the marriage of the elderly and infertile - they're not going to contribute children, but they're going to depend on society in retirement. In most developed countries, we see a shrinking of birth rate as female education grows, and there's a reliance on an immigrant population to provide that support; we should be discouraging female education and encouraging immigration if this is a societal goal, but we do neither. Further: a pair of gay people who either cohabitate or don't will not produce children whether or not we allow them to marry. The net effect of this ruling on "number of children in the next generation" is zero.

      There are actually some benefits to society of having adults without children running around. They can work like dogs without a break. They BOTH are able to work, rather than have one not working and staying home to raise the kid(s). They pay the same public school taxes as everyone else, effectively lowering the price per household of education.

    325. Re:Really?!? by gonzo67 · · Score: 1

      Where does the Constitution say you have the right to not experience repercussions from your speech? The boycott of a business who makes statements or acts you disagree with is ALSO "free speech". So...if you went out of your way to support a company that supports bigotted actions, then you are tacitly stating you agree with their position. If you went no more or less than you did prior, then you are simply saying you a neutral on the issue. If you avoid the company, then you are saying you disagree with their position. In all cases, you are "speaking" via your wallet.

    326. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's what Enigma2175 was referring to. That quote does not advocate jail time for the "crime" of being gay.

    327. Re: Really?!? by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      You haven't dealt much with kids from the system have you?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    328. Re:Really?!? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Actually I would take the opposite view, though perhaps our definition of activist is different - The crazy white supremacist activist that wants to publicly proselytize and try to change government policy - okay. All voices should have the right to (try to) be heard in the political dialogue, to do otherwise is to assume that the current state of affairs is "correct" and contesting it is undesirable. Burning crosses in people's yard on the other hand is no longer activism, it's terrorism, in the old fashioned non-political "application of violence to inspire unpopular change through fear" meaning. Same thing with beating gays or other hate crimes -that's no longer activism. In the most favorable light the best you can say is those class of actions are a form of extremist extra-legal vigilantism. (with intra-legal vigilantism I suppose being the vigilante enforcement of criminal conduct being ignored by proper channels)

      As a no doubt unpopular example - is it the UK that has a Pedophile Party? Somewhere in Europe at any rate. Now I certainly don't find children sexually attractive, and will freely admit there was a very good reason for the historical backlash against pedophilia. However, in the US at least we now have a public policy based on deeply delusional perception of child sexuality. I don't expect our society to advance to the point where pedophilia can safely shed it's stigma any time soon, but if voices arguing against the current policies are silenced in the name or moral outrage we won't ever have the opportunity to adopt a more realistic and nuanced position.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    329. Re:Really?!? by denmarkw00t · · Score: 1

      but I can't understand why he'd actively campaign against people who are different from him..

      I'll provide a little anecdotal evidence as to the "why," which is, he's a bigot. Story:

      My girlfriend went to high school with his (niece? I can't recall the exact relationship off the top of my head) - regardless, when they were at his house once, he denied one of their friends from coming along because he was gay.

      He's bigoted, through and through, and it has shown in both his professional and personal life.

    330. Re:Really?!? by Ixokai · · Score: 1

      I reject your definition of private.

      Once one becomes an activist and puts their name, their reputation, their money behind a cause that is no longer a private matter. It is at that point entirely justified to consider those matters of public policy that they are so strongly advocating when deciding if you want to give them your business or not.

      Card has done that, and in doing so has forfeited any claim to this being a private opinion or belief that he holds.

      There's a lot of false equivalencies you have going on there that I'm not gonna address because the above is sufficient, but--

    331. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that's the thing about tolerance.

      You can't claim that you should be tolerant of different lifestyles while also claiming that one particular lifestyle (in this case gay-bashing) is not deserving. In the absence of an objective morality against which you can compare lifestyles and determine which ones are or are not "moral" you have to extend the same tolerance you want to receive to those you disagree with.

      Basicly Card is arguing that the issue of whether or not he thinks homosexuality is moral behavior is irrelevant to whether or not Ender's Game will be a good movie. Which unless they did a serious re-write to add some gay bashing to to the story, seems like a reasonable argument.

    332. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hilarious. So Henry Ford was an "antisemitic pro-nazi nutjob" because he told the TRUTH about Jews, and their pernicious influence in every country they leech off?

      Where have you been? You idiot. Is this good enough to convince you?

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asGvjbfIASA

      And how has that video only got 4,700 odd views?

    333. Re:Really?!? by scot4875 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Be an adult and reply with why you think I'm wrong.

      Marriage is made-up, and religion doesn't own it. Marriage predates Christianity. Even if we did decide that Christianity did own religion, the Bible defines marriage in a whole bunch of ways that we don't even recognize today.

      You don't get to decide what marriage is; we all do. And as a group, we've decided that marriage includes gay marriages. Support is overwhelming, besides a few scared trolls like yourself. It will be passed in all 50 states; it will be recognized at the federal level; it is inevitable at this point. So get used to it and fuck off.

      Let me ask you this: how does 2 guys or 2 women getting "married" affect you in any way? It won't happen in your church, because you clearly come from a group of bigots, so you can't whine about that. You won't have to go to the wedding, because despite your claims to the contrary, I don't believe that you have any gay friends. So what the fuck is your objection? You don't like losing the word "marriage"? The concept of "marriage" is special to you? Well hell, maybe that explains why gay people want one too!

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    334. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To be fair, many states quietly started down that path way back in the 1990's and 2000's. unions started negotiating coverage for "partners". Adoption agencies wouldn't adopt to "gay couples" but to one partner or the other. Some states even started offering Civil Unions....

      EXCEPT... For that pesky little DOMA law in 1996 that made all those small steps ILLEGAL TO RECOGNIZE at the Federal level. And set off a chain of counter laws and State CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS to FORCE employers and insurance companies to VOID the fairly negotiated steps taken. That's what happened here in Michigan, as soon as the ink was dry on our "marriage" amendment, they went straight for University professor unions that negotiated "+ 1" style "no questions" coverage for partners.

      So in short, its not the "gays" that started this open fight... It's the "moralists" that are actively UNDOING any small progress and actively trying to use the LAW against gays. Now that the fight is in the open, after the LAW said gay couldn't be made illegal anymore, why go back to living in shadows??

    335. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go back one more sentence:

      How long before married people answer the dictators thus: Regardless of law, marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage, and help me raise my children in a society where they will expect to marry in their turn.

    336. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like letting rich women take multiple husbands would even that out.

    337. Re:Really?!? by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      The "idiotic political leftists" in Germany were the only people standing against Hitler.

      The "free market" capitalists loved Hitler and brought him to power. The "free market" capitalists also brought the Great Depression to Germany, with its destitution and starvation.

      You're mixing up some sensible thoughts with a lot of mindless propaganda.

    338. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't murder be considered a 'natural' behavior though? Good morals and natural behavior may contradict each other.

    339. Re:Really?!? by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Are you not advocating support of gay marriage under the law? Is that not forcing your opinion on others exactly as you condemn him for?

      Dont get me wrong here. I dont actually have much of an opinion on the topic other than that govt shouldnt be in my bedroom at all unless I am violating the rights of someone (or some thing) in that bedroom with me. But the hypocrisy here is amazing. You are requiring a group to accept something they do not believe in, and then saying that they are horrible people for doing precisely the same to you.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    340. Re:Really?!? by Ixokai · · Score: 1

      I... there is so much wrong here.

      I'll say only: I am not castigating anyone for any beliefs. I am calling out someone who is a *political activist* who is attempting to impose his beliefs upon the nation and refusing to financially support him because of that activism.

    341. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always used to hear liberals say "I may not agree with what you have to say, but I'll fight to death for your right to say it." It's amazing how fast that goes out the window when someone says something they view as "intolerant".

      How did that go out the window? As you admitted, you went and ate chicken sandwiches and plan to see the movie. How are all those liberals going to stop you from doing that?

      Chik-Fil-A and Card's rights are also not infringed (they can still sell sandwiches/movies, while holding to their views/speech)

      How are your rights infringed when it is they who decided to take their money elsewhere?

    342. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Why do you need to DO anything to Orson Scott Card, regardless of whether you can? If you feel strongly about gay marriage, go advocate for gay marriage. You can do that without targeting people.

      Sure and why did the US need to get involved in liberating Nazi concentration camps during WWII? We could have advocated for Jewish rights without specifically targeting anybody. But that would have been a pretty hollow and pathetic gesture under the circumstances.

      Sometimes the best defense is a good offense. When someone is actively campaigning to take away a person's civil rights, the most effective way to defend those rights is to stop whoever is trying to take them away. If I came to your house and demanded all your money, would you go out and campaign for your right to keep your money, or would you throw me the hell out of your house?

      He used his fame and money to advocate a bigoted point of view

      There are famous and rich people advocating for gay marriage as well.

      Yes, and there are bananas for sale at my local grocery store, but that's not relevant either. The point is that he's using his money and fame to do something that we believe is wrong (specifically, trying to take away people's rights), and now he's asking us to just ignore that and support him anyway. He wants us to see his movie to make him more famous and more wealthy so he can use that against us. It'd be like asking the Westboro Baptist Church to fund the gay pride parade. Only difference is that the gay pride parade doesn't challenge anybody's rights.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    343. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hmm? I don't feel like that when I read the entirely of the Ender series.

      You cannot really feel sympathy for Ender's suffering other than the one you'd feel for someone extremely dangerous being used as a weapon. You cannot feel any sympathy for Bonzo, except the one you'd feel for an rabid animal you need to put down ASAP. Sincerely, *I* happen to think it is okay to walk away from an attempted beatdown or muggling attempt with the other party permanently crippled or dead, as long as you just reacted and not provoked them in any way (so it does _not_ apply to Ender, which is quite capable and willing to provoke the other side in order to utterly crush them).

      Manipulative my ass, it is brilliant: you walk away from it thinking about "maybe 'enough' is a good philosophy to have", and "the world is a really evil place, not a single instance of black or white being available... just shades of grey".

    344. Re: Really?!? by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      Except laws like DOMA passed by the RIGHT, and 20 state constitution amendments. FORCIBLY REMOVED that option from the table pre-emptively.

    345. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the context of the book Ender's Game, I don't know how you could possibly say that Ender is guilty, especially considering the scene where the xenocide happens. He's had a bunch of adults propagandizing him into doing it for years, he's a small child and then there's the scene I just referred to (trying not to spoil it here). Not to mention, the aliens had a superior military and they attacked first and then attacked a second time after that. So given the course of events, it's not hard to argue that Ender's actions were justified, even ignoring everything else. The outcome turns out to be bad, but they couldn't have known that at the time.

    346. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      There is no absolute meaning to life, nor any authority to what is right or wrong. All we can do is make arbitrary choices.
      The idea being democracy is that arbitrary choices are judged to be best if the majority agrees to them.
      There are other systems too; each has its trade-offs. Democracy has the advantage that it gives legitimacy and a fairly good satisfaction rate, mitigating the risk of revolt.

    347. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      I'm not as petty as they are.

    348. Re:Really?!? by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      It's because I'm pro-Constitution. The Constitution says you have the right to free speech. Nowhere does it say you have the right to marry, straight, gay or otherwise.

      Oh, so in other words, you don't understand the Constitution. The Constitution does NOT say you have the right to free speech. The Constitution DOES say that the government can't impede the free speech you already have a right to.

      The Constitution doesn't grant us rights. We already had them. The Constitution limits the power of the government. That's all it does. It doesn't have to say "you have the right to get married" because YOU ALREADY HAVE THAT RIGHT. In fact, the only way the government can *stop* you from getting married is to PASS A LAW THAT SAYS YOU CAN'T -- and that law also has to be found Constitutional, because hey, that's what the purpose of the Constitution is! It tells us what is legal for the GOVERNMENT to do! DOMA, anybody?

      I'd give you a pat on the back and say, "it's ok, it's a really subtle distinction; a lot of people get it wrong." Except you claim to be pro-Constitution and you don't even know what it is. And it's NOT a subtle distinction. So ... good job being all pro-Constitution and stuff. Maybe try learning what it is so you don't sound like a jackass.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    349. Re: Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      Regardless, they would not be happy with 100% civil union throughout the country. Even in states that allowed civil unions, they still demanded gay marriage.

    350. Re:Really?!? by nylrym · · Score: 1
      He's talking about the system.

      If the Constitution is defined in such a way as to destroy the privileged position of marriage, it is that insane Constitution, not marriage, that will die.

    351. Re:Really?!? by Wookact · · Score: 1

      I refuse to give money to someone who may use that money to fight against equal rights for all.

      You may refuse to give money to anyone who ticks you off as well. I will not berate you for that.

    352. Re:Really?!? by Insightfill · · Score: 1

      Seems like letting rich women take multiple husbands would even that out.

      You would think! Our "monkey heritage" means men want to be assured that the children they're raising are their own genes. We don't "share" well. Because of "child-raising" duties and historical rules of asset management, there aren't enough rich women to go around! I had a single female friend buy a condo in the 90s and the word "spinster" was on the paperwork.

    353. Re:Really?!? by nylrym · · Score: 1

      Also, again
      If the Constitution is defined in such a way as to destroy the privileged position of marriage, it is that insane Constitution, not marriage, that will die.

    354. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I am not supporting forcing them to enter into gay marriages. I am adding an option anyone can have, not limiting marriage to a select few.

      I am doing nothing to them. Unless they are gay, gay marriage does not impact their lives.

      If you really can't see the difference I am afraid I cannot help you.

    355. Re:Really?!? by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      Hell, when people started boycotting Chik-A-Fil a bunch of other people started deliberately going there.

      That whole thing was quite a deBAWKle.

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    356. Re:Really?!? by nylrym · · Score: 1

      No. Go reread the article - he uses terms like "any means necessary" and "If the Constitution is defined in such a way as to destroy the privileged position of marriage, it is that insane Constitution, not marriage, that will die." That's not encouraging voting. That's something else.

    357. Re:Really?!? by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Some of the best advice I was ever given was "trust the art, not the artist."

      The best advice I've ever given myself: there's more art than I have time to deal with, anyway. More good art, even. In fact, there's so much to do between music, TV, movies, and video games, that I'll never get to all the *good* stuff, let alone all the mediocre stuff. So if an artist/company/whatever sticks their neck out and gives me an easy excuse to cull them from my to-read/to-listen/to-play list, I feel that they're doing me a favor.

      I don't need to see Ender's Game. Just like I don't need to play Zynga or EA games, or see Mel Gibson movies. Sure, I'll miss some good stuff (well, probably not in the case of Zynga...) ... while I'm enjoying other good stuff.

      Orson Scott Card is free to talk all he wants, and I'm free to walk. And neither of us goes to jail! That's the beauty of free speech!

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    358. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      To some people, rape could be a cornerstone of their culture and identity. Preventing them from indulging in it would then be very much akin to oppression.
      The difference is that rape generally causes severe distress to the raped, while gay marriage generally causes very mild distress to the observer. Establishing that difference however requires making judgements of the morals of the people involved, which are arbitrary. It is not impossible to imagine that some humans could live under a belief system that causes them to have severe psychological trauma whenever they see ostensibly gay people, while at the same time accepting rape as an everyday occurrence.

      The majority of current human cultures just happens to have different morals than this. Refusal to accept that those morals are arbitrary and not necessarily "better" than others is just plain denial.

    359. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 0

      But that doesn't mean I need to give you my money when I disagree with you and think you're an idiot. I won't prevent you from selling your stuff to other people, but I sure as hell won't reward you by buying it.

      That's why I started my response with "hmm" because it was like a non-sequitur to begin with. The relationship of money to free speech is much larger than the issue we're talking about, and it has totally different reasoning behind it.

      Wait, you have a right to my money? What right would that be again? It's my money

      Yeah I do. If I sell the best pizza around, and you want pizza, and in fact you've bought my pizza in the past and agree that it's really good, I would expect you to buy my pizza even though we've had a disagreement on Slashdot. If you refuse to buy my pizza (I'm talking about me, not Orson Scott Card) because of a simple disagreement OUTSIDE of the transaction at hand (buying pizza), then that's a moral fault in you. It's childishness.

      And if your free speech offends me, my remedy is to not buy your crap by exercising my freedom of choice.

      That's ONE remedy. And it's one remedy that marks you as a childish and intolerant person.

      Just like another remedy would be to beat me up. And that remedy would mark you as violent.

      Or another remedy would be to write a witty post on Slashdot that beautifully illustrates your side. That remedy would mark you as a passionate intellectual advocate.

      I mean.. I don't know why this is so hard for some people to understand. Your actions reflect on you. If you act like an intolerant radical who joins boycotts against people to affect their business just because you disagree with their opinion which has NOTHING to do with their business, then other people see you as an intolerant radical.

      Do you think Jews should buy from Nazi's because it would be mean?

      I mean this gets back to what I was saying about beliefs outside the immediate transaction. If a Jew feels that the business owner wants to do him harm, in person, and would if he could get away with it... guess what? That's DURING the business transaction. On the other hand, if a Jew said "Wow, I just found out that you once said Israel is wrong to occupy Palestine, so I'm never coming to your shop again" then that is stupid.

      Do you think Orson Scott Card is going to leap out of the movie screen and throttle anybody in the audience who supports gay marriage? If so, then you should not go to the movie even if you are interested in the movie itself separate from Card.

      Peaceful? Really? "... any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down ..."

      Yeah. I'm sure he is advocating armed rebellion. In fact, didn't he just get arrested the other day for attempting to kill the Supreme Court justices? Because obviously he's a very violent guy.

      Wow, an ad homenim attack -- here's one for you: You sir, are a fucking moron and a douchebag.

      What I said wasn't an ad hominem attack on Enigma. I said his mentality is unstable and uncivil. When people adopt a mentality of punishing everybody who disagrees with them, you introduce instability and incivility in your society. Look at a contentious issue like abortion or gay marriage.. if more people said "well I don't want anything to do with those damn pro lifers" and "I am boycotting all the pro choicers" then would society be MORE CIVIL or LESS CIVIL? Would society be MORE STABLE or LESS STABLE?

      I was making a legitimate point about what we're talking about, not engaging in ad hominem like you just did.

      Not that I expect an apology from someone who says "sir" and then insults me. Do you think that sounds cool because you heard it in a Winston Churchill quote or something? How cutting!

    360. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, what a bunch of whiners, why do they care so much about having equal rights?

    361. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Actually that culture would be bad. Cultural relativism is stupid.

      Gay marriage does not cause distress to an observer, I have been to one. Everyone seemed pretty happy. I noticed no distress.

      Any human who is distressed when they see gay people has a problem, not the gay people. I don't like peanut butter, in fact I hate it. I simply don't eat it. I do not attempt to prevent others from eating.

      They might be arbitrary, but so is everything. Like it or not I can still call some better than others.

    362. Re:Really?!? by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why must you demand that government call your relationship a "marriage" when the "rights" part can be achieved with using that exact word? Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      And the only HONEST reason why we'd need a "civil union" that's 100% equal to marriage but not marriage is to enshrine the religious bigotry of these Christians into law, which is expressly forbidden by the First Amendment. And that, in turn, would be basically admitting that gays are not protected by the Constitution. Would you make such an admission? Could you afford to dare to?

      It's not about forcing bigoted Christians to recognize anything; it's about forcing the state to recognize that it is not at liberty to appease them. And that is a fight we all have a stake in. "First they came for gays..."

      No one cares about what Fred Phelps thinks, but everyone loses if Uncle Sam bends over for him.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    363. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heterosexual marriage has a potential to benefit society by contributing to the renewal of population. Homosexual marriage doesn't. And before you ask, I don't think sterile people should be allowed to marry.

    364. Re:Really?!? by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      It's really going to suck for you in the next decade or so. Your team is losing, badly. If you look at the polls, the trend for acceptance of gay people and gay marriage has skyrocketed since the turn of the century, and it shows no sign of slowing down. I predict that we're about 3 election cycles away from gay marriage being all but standard nationwide.

      I suggest you get over it and move on with your life, otherwise you'll end up like the fringe racists that still hide out in the edges of society. Nobody wants to be one of those guys. Just do it. Nobody will judge you. Nobody will even know. It's easy. And if you're religious? God won't even hold it against you; it's his job to do the final judgement, not yours.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    365. Re:Really?!? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Marriage in is one of the oldest traditions in human history. Long before Christ. Civilization is rather recent concept by the standards of our species age. The problem with polygamy is that it puts many of the females into the hands of the view men. It's no longer a 1 to 1 ratio. This is a dangerous in that it foments cultural jealousy among men. This doesn't happen over night. It takes a generation or two eventually leading to war and the breakdown of modern civilization.

      Basically, the way I see it you can really only pick between the two. Advanced civilization, or polygamy. Do we want to go back to our natural urges, or pave a new path to societal prosperity?

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    366. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      This is your brain. This is your brain on religion.

    367. Re:Really?!? by rgbatduke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How is that surprising? TBOM is America's first Science Fiction novel, after all! Steel swords and old world plants and animals in America, magnetic compasses, a Middle East with unrecognizable geometry -- it's clearly an alternate history steampunk novel ahead of its time.

      So OSC didn't have far to go. With that said, I think Ender's Game is a decent novel. Perhaps his only decent novel. Not exactly a unique idea even as SF novels go, but enjoyable enough to read.

      In the end, it's like Chick-Fil-A. It's hyper-Christian (closed on Sunday), its founder/owner is fond of gay-bashing, but it has damn good chicken and the actual people who work there are often lovely and courteous. Boycotting CFA over this issue is probably overkill. Ditto boycotting Ender's Game, the movie, or OSC books in general (aside from the fact that many of them are mediocre, which is a good reason not to buy anything).

      After all, what's really at fault isn't any individual person here, it is "religion" -- believing scriptural dogma just because, for better or worse, to the complete exclusion of common sense, concern for human dignity and rights, and the simplest of honest ethical principles. All religious scriptures are fantasies, science fiction, mythologies, stories, and generate an enormous amount of pain and suffering in the world through the agency of those raised within the religions who cannot seem to differentiate fantasy from reality, or use anything like actual human judgment or rational ethical principle to make ethical decisions.

      Sigh.

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    368. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Judging someone implies associating a person to a certain moral standing.
      Associating a bad moral standing to someone just because that person has a different opinion than you on a narrow and specific subject is prejudice, since you disregard all the other opinions that constitute a person or even their rationale.

    369. Re:Really?!? by nylrym · · Score: 1

      How is my decision to eat less Chik-Fil-A different from your decision to eat more?

    370. Re:Really?!? by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Feeding a troll (I hope):

      What contortions? "It doesn't hurt me or anyone else, therefore it is none of my business"; doesn't qualify as much of a contortion.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    371. Re:Really?!? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      2) I was unaware that sex with someone other than your spouse was illegal in the USA. I suspect you are actually full of shit when you claim that it is.

      It depends entirely on what state you live in.

      http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2012/11/15/illegal-cheat-spouse-massachusetts/

      http://www.9news.com/news/article/317914/188/Cheating-on-your-spouse-still-illegal-in-Colorado

      http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2012/01/13/cheating-arizona-wife-could-face-jail-time-under-states-anti-adultery-law/

    372. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Actually that culture would be bad.

      You do realize good and bad are left to each culture to define? Your argument is worth a godwin point.
      What are you suggesting to do about those people then? Forcing them to remote reserves? Exterminating them? Forcing them to discard their culture and learn ours?
      You're simply calling bad what you are not accustomed to. Historically, those people were referred to as barbarians, and were either reduced to slavery or dealt with using one of the above methods.
      I used rape or opposition to gay marriage as mere examples. This is valid for any idea that you do not share. A more concrete real-world example of a practice that defined certain societies but is illegal by most laws today is cannibalism.

      Gay marriage does not cause distress to an observer

      You're presuming that any human being feels the same way you do when facing a given situation. This is downright megalomaniac.
      If you cannot imagine that some people could feel distress at seeing anything, you severely lack the capacity for abstraction.

      They might be arbitrary, but so is everything. Like it or not I can still call some better than others.

      You can say some things are better than others, but if you believe that this "better" is absolute and is true regardless of the person involved, then that makes you a deluded simpleton.

    373. Re:Really?!? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      What he's apparently observing, but not comprehending, is that the extremes of left and right "wrap around" and meet on the far side, at least on some issues.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    374. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Ah ha! Now I see the problem. You think we're judging him as moral shit simply because he has a different opinion. That's not it at all. It's the specific opinion he that he holds that we judge him for. And more to the point, it's the actions he takes as a result of those opinions that we judge him for. I don't judge him based on whether we have the same taste in food or music or art. I judge him because he has expressed a desire to take away the rights of another group.

      And, again, you really are just wrong about the definition of prejudice. It absolutely requires judging without evidence. That's where the "pre" comes in. It's unrelated to his rationale or his other opinions. Now, for instance, if I assumed that because he's a homophobe he's also a racist, that would be prejudice. If I assumed he's a racist because he expressed his opinion that black people are inferior to whites, that's not prejudice, it's just standard garden variety judgement.

      I've no doubt that Card has some rationale for why he wants to take away the rights of gays. But just because you have a reason for being a certain way, doesn't mean you aren't that way. If he's a homophobe, then he's a homophobe regardless of his reason, just like if you're Christian, then you're Christian regardless of your reasons. So again, if he has confirmed himself as a homophobe, which he has, then judging him as such is not prejudice, no matter what rationale he has.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    375. Re:Really?!? by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Nope, nothing you said makes Ender's Game mainstream. It's well regarded in the sci-fi niche, but it had no TV show, cartoon, video game, anything to make it mainstream (a comic book series barely counts).

    376. Re:Really?!? by NotSanguine · · Score: 0

      Not sure how you figure it's the *state* making money on this.

      I didn't, that was sarcasm.

      It's hard to tell rank stupidity from sarcasm, friend.

      See what I did there?

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    377. Re: Really?!? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Says someone that has never said anything of value here on slashdot.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    378. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      So then you think anything should be fine? That sounds far more simpleton to me. I really do believe their are some absolutes, simply because the alternative is thinking that things like honor killings are acceptable.

      Even if they are distressed, that is not the gay persons problem. I can imagine a lot of things, even painfully stupid things like you are describing. I cannot however accept them as reasonable.

    379. Re:Really?!? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I used to think the same thing but Orson Scott Card fought against the de-criminalization of sodomy in the 90s because it would prevent the government from arresting and imprisoning openly gay men. His reasoning was that it was beneficial to society to have cudgels to use against anyone who refused to publicly conform to societal norms (specifically in this case, heterosexuality). Since then, it seems he's campaign against every gay rights issue he's come across. So from his actions, I think it's pretty clear his opposition to gay marriage is derived from his opposition to gays in general.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    380. Re:Really?!? by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      It does impact me. We are members of society and societies are made up of people and families. For the past 30 or 40 years, we have been chipping away at family values and that has shown a great impact in our world (and before anyone tries to link me to racism, I am really not. I know I can't prove that, but my wife is black - she passed away 2 months ago - and my children are of course mixed.)

      I am all for civil unions and I don't have a problem with what people do inside or outside the bedroom, but devaluing marriage does impact me.

      I think for income tax purposes, though, we should tax based on address, not marriage. I know many straight people that live together with several children but don't get married so they can maximize their tax returns.

    381. Re:Really?!? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I'm actually not sure what he's saying, since "government" can have two meanings. In one sense he could mean to destroy our system of government through violent overthrow. Or he could mean to overthrow those currently running the government through the ballot box.

      He used the phrase "by whatever means is made possible or necessary."

      That implies a little more than voting for somebody else.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    382. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      I call it bullshit because if a law says two things are equal, they are equal, period.

      Indiana almost passed a law making pi = 3.2. How would that have fit into your logic?

      When politicians and lawyers get together, you get All kinds of stupid in one place . We cant trust those people to balance a budget without outside help, so letting them legislate that two people can or cant get married is patently absurd and should never have been tolerated in the first place. If our elected officials are so out of touch that they cant understand that a large part of the purpose of government is to protect the few from the many, then we need to stand up and replace them before we become the few...

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    383. Re:Really?!? by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Please, demonstrate for me how polygamy is the norm through even a majority of cultures - forget most. It's simply not true: the gross majority of cultures are predominantly monogamist or serial monogamist. Homosexuality, pedophilia, and the like aren't entirely unheard of, but they're not exactly common except for in Muslim culture.

      WTF!? Surely this is flamebait, right? You can't possibly be lumping gays, kiddy fuckers, and Muslims for any legitimate purpose. Saying homosexuality is common in Muslim culture is a great example of "mak[ing] shit up out of whole cloth" if you ask me. (Unless you meant they're unheard of in Muslim culture, which is still pretty far-fetched unless you used to be the president of Iran)

    384. Re:Really?!? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      AIDS is a significant societal down-side to promoting people running around having sex all willy-nilly, rather than settling down in committed groups. Has it occurred to you that you just made an excellent argument FOR gay marriage?

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    385. Re:Really?!? by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      So your position is that because there's nothing about it produced by Hollywood yet, it isn't mainstream. It must be first sent through the intellectual meat grinder, rephrased and had its content molded in order to be embraced by the illiterate masses.

      Only one among the illiterate masses could even formulate that argument.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    386. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Let me ask you this: how does 2 guys or 2 women getting "married" affect you in any way?

      It offends me.

      How does drilling in ANWAR affect you in any way? How does a woman having or being denied an abortion in Texas affect you in any way? How does taxing rich people affect you in any way? I can do this all day, but I think you get the point. So don't give me that "how does it affect you" bullshit until you can answer these:

      How does it affect you if the government calls your relation a civil union vs a marriage? Can you not have a wedding? Can you not wear a ring and tell everyone you are married? How does it make what you have any different?

      The only difference I can see is that a civil union does not make me offended. But that's your whole point isn't it? You want to offend me and all Christians because you hate all Christians. Never mind that Muslims hang gays on the streets, they deserve to be heard and have their religious freedom, we must offend all Christians. And that's exactly why it will be held in a church. Democrats have already blocked a law protecting Chaplains in the US military from refusing to perform same sex marriages. How long do you think it will be before that same-sex couple sues the Catholic Church demanding "equal rights" to have a chapel wedding?

      This isn't about equal rights. This is about getting even for perceived wrongs done to you. Tell me again how I am the bigot?

      I don't believe that you have any gay friends

      My mother owns a beauty salon that I worked in from before I was old enough to see over the counter. I know it's cliche to assume that gay me do hair, but it's a cliche for a reason. You have no idea how many gay friends I have. I have kinda grown up around them. I know what they are like, how they feel and what they are all about. And I feel they deserve equal rights under the law. But they do NOT have equal rights under religion. You don't have to like it. You don't have to be in a religion. But since freedom of religion is guaranteed under the Constitution, government has to respect it. By the way, can you tell me marriage is guaranteed in the Constitution? I can't find it anywhere.

      I don't believe you have any religious friends. If you did, you wouldn't think they are all bigots.

      And marriage is not just a Christian concept. It certainly predates Christianity. It appears to predate the earliest mentions of the Jews as far as the Bible goes. I would even say that the Bible agrees that civilization itself predates marriage as there is no mention in the Bible of Adam and Eve ever getting married. That doesn't mean shit as on July4, 1776, marriage was strictly a religious rite and carried no weight whatsoever in American law. It was, however being regulated by Jewish law in God knows what BC. So it was a religious rite for thousands of years before it was ever recognized by the United States Government. Sorry, but those are the facts.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    387. Re:Really?!? by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

      I wasn't being bitchy. Just pointing out an equivalent logic that just about everyone supporting the originally proposed logic would reject venomously. Sorry you read it that way.

      I didn't want to muddle my original post, but there is another argument on equality grounds against your originally proposed argument (whether or not you agree with it):

      It is sexist - not equal treatment of men and women. You are disallowing women from doing something men can and vice-versa.

      For the record, I agree with the rest of your argument. Church and State should remain separate whenever possible.

    388. Re:Really?!? by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Be an adult and reply with why you think I'm wrong.

      As a white-male-hetero I fully agree with you on an intellectual level. They should have settled for the same privileges with a different name, it makes perfect logical sense... This was my initial stance, one I argued with my LGBT friends in college, and the stance I used to justify not signing their petitions or supporting their demonstrations.

      I've come to realize, though, that this isn't a logical issue to them, this is an emotive "rights" issue. Why would they want to settle for the same, while accepting that they are (at least semantically) inferior? Civil unions might destroy the actual discrimination, but the context would still be discriminatory. We'd be telling them "fine, you can marry, but you're still really second class sorry."

      Its like if we removed "separate but equal" from African American's, but classified them as different (lesser) still. The actual abuse has been eliminated, but all of the baggage behind it remains.

      This is hard for people like me to understand, since I've never really been in that position. I've never been a topic, and no one has ever really wanted to classify me as anything other than the majority. I'm normal, by default. This is a very privileged position.

      Another thing that turned me was the fact that I don't actually understand why they shouldn't be allowed to do whatever they want. It doesn't hurt anyone to let them claim the title of "married". It doesn't hurt me. It doesn't hurt society. It doesn't hurt my relationship. If won't make America's abysmal marriage statistics much worse. There is no reason to really oppose it, then, at least according to my strong social libertarian (little-"L") principles. The main arguments I have seen have been from a religious foundation, which holds no water with me, nor should it in government. Some have been based bigoted exclusionist rhetoric; "they are different, therefore evil and corrupting". Or they have been based on naive political ideologies (big-"L" Libertarians, mostly), whose rationals often smell utopian, and verge on being completely aloof of human consequences, and some arguments from this quarter strike me as logically inconsistent.

      The big thing is that there really is no reason whatsoever not to let them. It hurts no one. If is a net positive, in that there are more happy people, more inclusive definitions of "rights", and we're closer to all of us having an even playing field. And, a bit more snarkily, it pisses of bigots and homophobes, which is a personal plus.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    389. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      And the only HONEST reason why we'd need a "civil union" that's 100% equal to marriage but not marriage is to enshrine the religious bigotry of these Christians into law, which is expressly forbidden by the First Amendment.

      Um, the First Amendment actually "enshrines the religious bigotry of these Christians into law" and forbids government from getting involved in religious concepts. If the federal government is not allowed to recognize the Ten Commandments, how can mandate licenses and set rules for marriage?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    390. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      None of those things are like handing a bigot money.

      I don't have to buy Jefferson a slave to read his works, I don't have to pay an artist to see his work in a museum. I do have to give Card money to see his film, he will use that money against people who I like.

      MPAA and RIAA accounting being what it is, there is nothing saying that you would be giving any money to Card even if you see the movie 5 times in the theaters, and buy a wheelbarrow full of Enders Game Blu rays...

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    391. Re:Really?!? by orgelspieler · · Score: 2

      I think that government should have nothing to do with marriage at all. Marriage by a church should in no way be recognized by the state. If the state wants to confer certain things to those who apply to be legally bound together by the state they can of course. Though it should have nothing to do with what ceremony they want to perform in their church.

      There would be no problem at that point.

      You want to bet? Most people who are anti-gay marriage are really just anti-gay but don't have the balls to say so. While I completely agree that the state should get completely out of the business of which consenting adults can and cannot fuck, the conclusion you draw that everything would be hunky dory at that point is just misguided.

      When Texas passed their anti-gay amendment, they even spelled out "or equivalent to marriage." So it's not about separate but equal. It's about "protecting" us from teh evil gayz! The irony is that the only place marriage even comes up in Texas state law is regarding divorce. Way to protect the sanctity of marriage!

    392. Re: Really?!? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      I doubt that's true. In Pennsylvania a horny prosecutor (his motivations were suspect, and he ran a bad girls boot camp) tried to go after a teen for sending a picture to a boy, the judge sided with the teens. Unless you find an example of the contrary I'm calling bullshit.

      http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2013/05/09/students-face-possible-child-porn-charges-in-sexting-scandal/
      http://www.heraldextra.com/news/local/education/precollegiate/sexting-teens-face-felonies-warns-school-district/article_17818510-05ea-5131-be1f-1403438dcadb.html
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeiLWAcmWsU

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    393. Re:Really?!? by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      So your position is that because there's nothing about it produced by Hollywood yet, it isn't mainstream.

      Exactly. Mainstream means: mr. Average Joe has heard of it.

    394. Re:Really?!? by xevioso · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, your side is losing.

    395. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Yes, they both espouse extreme left-wing positions associated with the National Socialist Party (Nazi). Nazi's were totalitarians and, thus, left-wing. As were Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan. The particulars may vary at points but the man thrust is the same.

      Right-wing positions are conservatives, some libertarians, anarchists.

      ACs are getting dumber by the minute. Sigh. Fascism [e.g., the Nazis] is fundamentally right-wing.

      And anarchists don't belong on that spectrum anywhere. They cant be anywhere on the political spectrum because the spectrum presupposes a belief in the necessity of government, and differs only in its construction of how the government should behave.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    396. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a silly argument.
      How does one man murdering another man, the two of which you will never meet, affect you? It doesn't. so let it happen.
      Jackass.

    397. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OSC has already been paid and the movie is made. You aren't denying him anything and he isn't going to change. Go enjoy the movie just like you do for every other holywood nutjobber. Geez.

    398. Re:Really?!? by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you want to be married, be married. Marriage is about love, trust and commitment. It's not about inheritance rights, taxes and contracts. Why must you demand that government call your relationship a "marriage" when the "rights" part can be achieved with using that exact word? Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      Perhaps. But why exactly do those bigoted Christian get to own the word marriage, and have that ownership explicitly endorsed by the government? Why is their bigoted sacrament more equal than, say, a Universal Unitarian sacrament, in a nation of laws under the 1st Amendment?

      The answer is a certain Christian minority feels entitled to special privileges that "must" be endorsed by the federal government, and if we dare point that out they will whine that we are being narrow-minded because...they want to call us names, lacking an actual defensible rationale. I refuse to accept their claim for special status.

      Furthermore, you are wrong. The traditional marriage is about child-creation, child-rearing, inheritance rights, contracts, property, love, lust, household creation, economic sharing. All. Of. The. Above. To accept a narrow definition is to piss on the traditional marriage as understood in practice for thousands of years.

    399. Re:Really?!? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Fiscally punishing someone due to their opinion is stupid. It discourages free speech, discourages open communication, and discourages the expression of new ideas. Unfortunately, with free speech and open communication you sometimes end up with idiots like Card spouting off crap. The best thing to do is ignore them.

      Unfortunately, since Card makes his living from selling his creative works, people ignoring him is precisely what's fiscally punishing him. He isn't being fined; people are simply refusing to associate with him, even by proxy. Which does indeed discourage unpopular communications, which may or may not be a problem; but in any case, you can avoid it by not using your popularity as capital but posting anonymously instead.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    400. Re:Really?!? by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      Only on slashdot could you get away with making claims like this ...

      Do you hold it against Obama for claiming homosexuality is wrong during the 2008 campaign?

      I guess political bias wins over science fiction bias.

    401. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      I loved loved loved "Ender's Game" as a youth, but 10 years ago, when I discovered Orson Scott Card's blog and his perpetual stream of scientifically illiterate bigoted ravings, it really tainted everything with his name on it for me. Suddenly, "Ender's Game," "Speaker for the Dead," and "Xenocide" were no longer deep books about ethical conundrums, but shallow stories where ethical conflicts just happen with depth given to them by the reader--because there's no way Card's shallow, binary mind could possibly comprehend the many ethical dimensions of the events he describes in his stories.

      That is as may be, but keep in mind that comprehension of the power of their works is not necessary to the works themselves being powerful. Mozart couldn't hear a damn thing, but his works were still extraordinary. Van Gogh was bat-shit crazy and still made some awesome paintings. Just because he couldn't understand the power of his art doesn't mean it doesn't have power. Granted, Card only really had the one good story, and most of the rest are mediocre, but as they say where I work "Even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while".

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    402. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I reject your definition of private.

      I was explaining the way in which I was using it in my post, not trying to redefine something you used. You didn't even use the word private in your first reply to me. It doesn't make sense to me that you're rejecting my own explanation of my own usage of a word.

      If you want to call it something else, fine.. "Well I believe making purchasing decisions based on the business owner's [non-immediately-relevant-to-the-business-transaction-at-hand] beliefs is also bad."

      Once one becomes an activist and puts their name, their reputation, their money behind a cause that is no longer a private matter.

      Yes, in the common sense of the word "private" you're right. However..

      It is at that point entirely justified to consider those matters of public policy that they are so strongly advocating when deciding if you want to give them your business or not.

      I don't believe it's justified. You do. That's a difference of a opinion. It's not a point of fact. I know my belief isn't dominant which is why I explicitly said "I believe..."

      There's a lot of false equivalencies you have going on there that I'm not gonna address because the above is sufficient, but--

      I don't think the above is sufficient and I'm sure you knew that I wouldn't. I'm curious to hear your reasoning on why financially punishing an employee for his public opinions and views (though private to the business, by my definition) is not equivalent to financially punishing Orson Scott Card for his public opinions and views (though private to the movie, by my definition). That's clear enough to me that I'm not sure it's what you're even referring to as a false equivalence.

      Are you disagreeing that making business decisions based on irrelevant-to-the-transaction beliefs of the other party is not a punishment for those beliefs? I mean, punishment means "The infliction or imposition of a penalty as retribution for an offense" and that's exactly what you're doing, the offense being the espousal of certain views, and the penalty being to withhold your money for something that you otherwise would spend on.

      Anyway, enough speculation on my part, I'd like to hear your views fleshed out a bit more if you care to respond.

    403. Re:Really?!? by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      There are more than 0 affairs that occur in those states, and they do, in fact, kill the women involved.

      FTFY

      Not exclusively, and the current application of the law was not it's original intent.

      Having a woman killed because she was raped us just as un-muslim as it was un-christian for Henry VIII (Or Bill Clinton?) to do what he did.

      Cultural and religious standards are only one aspect of the problem, systemic corruption is another.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    404. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ford does. He's a fascist shithead. Almost as bad as Henry Ford.

    405. Re:Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      I am all for civil unions and I don't have a problem with what people do inside or outside the bedroom, but devaluing marriage does impact me.

      Firstly, it impacts you because you choose to let it impact you emotionally. Allowing someone else to get married has no direct effect on your life. Gay marriage laws in no way impact your ability to get married or any of your other rights. Laws are crafted to protect people's rights, not to stop them from being upset because they don't feel comfortable with what someone else is doing.

      Secondly, the burden of proof is on you to show that allowing gays to marry in anyway devalues marriage. If you're really worried about the sanctity of marriage, you'd should be focusing on quickie marriages, serial marriages, and divorce rates, all of which have been trending up since long before any state passed gay marriage. If there's a threat to marriage, it's that people aren't interested anymore, or else don't take the commitment seriously. How is more people wanting to participate a threat to the institution?

      It boggles my mind that you can't draw parallels between your own biracial marriage and gay marriage issues. Forty or fifty years ago, a biracial marriage was at least as taboo as a gay marriage is today, and until 1967, was illegal throughout much of the US, including many of the same states that are now trying to prevent gay marriage. Back then, people made the same arguments: biracial marriage was a threat to society, a threat to family values, a threat to the institution of marriage. Did you marry a black woman because you were trying to overturn marriage? Of course not. Open your brain for half a second, and try to imagine that gay couples today are going through the exact same thing. They are being targeted, harassed, and vilified simply for being in love.

      And if nothing else, just recognize that you're on the wrong damn side of history. In thirty of forty more years, gay marriage will be legal in every state and will be widely accepted, just as biracial marriage is today. And the children of that age will look back and think how ignorant and how bigoted it was to try to block that.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    406. Re:Really?!? by SanDiegoFreeway · · Score: 2

      How is that surprising? TBOM is America's first Science Fiction novel, after all! Steel swords and old world plants and animals in America, magnetic compasses, a Middle East with unrecognizable geometry -- it's clearly an alternate history steampunk novel ahead of its time.

      I've always described TBOM as the world's most famous piece of Christian fanfiction.

      --
      -J
    407. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you've really thought this through. It's ok for a 12 year old girl to start having babies cause she started her period? She's old enough to understand what such a thing will do to her life and her childs life, not to mention what it will do to our society (assuming large scale adoption of such attitudes)? But I'll agree we don't need any laws. I can protect my daughter from you just fine without them.

    408. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      The Constitution doesn't grant us rights. We already had them. The Constitution limits the power of the government. That's all it does.

      Um, that's the Bill of Rights, not the Constitution. The Bill of Rights restricts the government. The rest of The Constitution actually gives the federal government lots of power. For example, see Article 1, Section 8 for the powers given to Congress. There's a bit too much to quote, so I'll just quote the last one:

      To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.

      This is also known as the "necessary and proper clause.
      ...all other Powers vested by this Constitution...

      Why would the Constitution say this if it did not give any powers to the government?

      Maybe try learning what it is so you don't sound like a jackass.

      May I suggest taking your own advice?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    409. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      I tolerate people who reject the theory of evolution, but I do not accept their position is valid. They're still nutjobs.

      You just proved conclusively that you do *not* tolerate such people. You resorted to name calling and belittlement in order to bolster your own prejudice against them. Whether they are right or wrong, you failed to see your own intolerance, and blithely claim you are not intolerant.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    410. Re:Really?!? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      How is my decision to eat less Chik-Fil-A different from your decision to eat more?

      Have you ever said, "I may not agree with what you have to say, but I'll fight to death for your right to say it."?

      If you have said it, you lied.

      If you have not said this or anything similar to it, then my comment didn't apply to you. You are honest about not supporting people who have opinions different than your own and do your best to silence all who disagree with you so that America may one day be of one mind. All who oppose you, including their families, must be punished into submission and silenced until they think the same way you do. You are one who is proud to be against differing ideas and cultures and feel that everyone in the world should... no.... MUST think correct thoughts.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    411. Re:Really?!? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Tolerate those who have crazy beliefs.

      Never tolerate, for one second, someone who wants to hurt others because of those beliefs.

      Yes. Tolerate everyone regardless of their beliefs. Whether you think they are crazy or not. As an atheist (or maybe agnostic, I'm not really sure), I understand fully the "message of Jesus Christ". His message was simple, even if the various catholic denominations have all but abandoned it. The only way to begin to heal an intolerant person is to teach them about tolerance by example. Being intolerant towards them only deepens the schism, and hardens their beliefs. A violently intolerant person should be treated with pity. Do what is necessary to protect others from that person, but pity them.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    412. Re:Really?!? by redneckmother · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is America. In theory, we 'overthrow the government' every 2 or 4 years. It's called regime change. I don't see anything odious about his statement.

      Welcome to Corporate America, where the inhabitants are offered a slate of different talking heads every so often. The policies and direction never change, just the faces who occupy the offices. Oops, sorry, time for my meds...

    413. Re:Really?!? by proverbialcow · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue.

      Not so. Enchantment is about pre-ordained heterosexual marriage and the struggle of the Christian partners against pagan deities. It's a thinly-veiled showcase of his beliefs.

      Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem. Case in point, a lot of people enjoy Disney movies and Ford cars despite Walt Disney and Henry Ford being nasty antisemitic pro-nazi nutjobs.

      No, boycotting the business of someone whose beliefs you despise is called the free market. Christians do it all the time. Whether or not someone can enjoy a movie is incidental to whether or not they choose to do so. Personally, I boycotted the movie Powder because the director was a convicted child molester. I don't give a shit whether or not the movie was any good. Disney knew of his history when they hired him, and I won't give them a dime of my money for that product.

      --
      The only surefire protection against Microsoft infections is abstinence. - The Onion
    414. Re:Really?!? by tqk · · Score: 1

      You're an ignorant fool who doesn't know what he's talking about.

      The political terms Right and Left were coined during the French Revolution (1789–99), and referred to where politicians sat in the French parliament; those who sat to the right of the chair of the parliamentary president were broadly supportive of the institutions of the monarchist Ancien Régime.

      None of that has anything to do with politics today. Ditto "conservative" vs. "liberal."

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    415. Re:Really?!? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Then you are not fit to make any judgement, as you are unable to discard your bias.

    416. Re:Really?!? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You are not fit to make any judgement as you clearly don't make them.

    417. Re: Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      You do not understand. Even if all rights are equal, they still wouldn't be happy if they could not get the socially sanctioned title of "marriage" to apply to their fully rights-equal civil union.

    418. Re:Really?!? by tibman · · Score: 0

      That doesn't sound like a good soldier to me. You are suppose to question orders. After the questions are resolved, you follow them. How else do get the commander's intent? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intent_(military)

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    419. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither Walt Disney or Henry Ford are currently alive. Do their companies now stand for pro-nazi-ness?

      Can't speak about Ford, but Disney is one of the most fascist companies in the fucking world. They're the fucking reason for the copyright law changes which are preventing so much of our work as a culture from entering the public domain and being available for free use.

    420. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say the question of "Is boycotting this move overkill?" depends on what's on the line once the movie has been released. I agree that it would be overkill if none of the people who helped make this movie have been paid (i.e. camera, sound, light, gaffers, etc) as those people don't necessarily have that much choice in what movie they work on. However, if they've been paid a salary and don't depend on any release-based bonus, then I would argue that a boycott is entirely reasonable.

    421. Re:Really?!? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely correct. This is about two other things.

      1. Forced endorsement of their relationships. They want to legally require that everyone pretend that their domestic partner is their spouse. There is no such thing as same sex marriage. It's like legally mandating Santa Clause.

      2. Crush dissent. We're starting to see this already. Bakers who have religious objections to baking cakes with two grooms are being sued for discrimination in public accommodations. That's why they want to co-opt marriage. Disagree with redefined marriage? Tough shit, if you do or say anything against it, they'll sue you into oblivion.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    422. Re:Really?!? by tibman · · Score: 1

      and its citizens are the employees? What does that make the prisoners? the clients? lol

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    423. Re: Really?!? by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Ummm, an article about potential charges being filed, and one that involves an acquittal (which means it will unlikely be an issue in similar circumstances going forward), and the acquittal was an adult third party, hardly evidence of jailtime.

      From reading those articles I think my point is re enforced, moralizing schoolboard in Utah scares people, and in another charges may be made, if so most likely against those forwarding and posting publicly, and possibly against the girls.

      I don't get the impression that was going to happen, and just the newspaper being sensationalist.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    424. Re:Really?!? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      "So the "deepness" of the book had to do with how much you DID'NT know about the author?"

      How many times have you had your enjoyment of something (music, movie, artwork, etc) ruined or at least diminished because you found out the creators' original intentions and they were so much less than what you had taken from those works on your own, using the context of your own life and knowledge? That happens to me ALL THE TIME. So, in other words, the answer to your question may very well be "yes".

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    425. Re:Really?!? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Thanks. :(

    426. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All you are saying is that same-sec couples shouldn't care what their union is called. The easy response is that you shouldn't care if their union is called a marriage. Nor should you care if the government terms their union a marriage. That does not affect you in any way and, therefore, should not be your concern.

    427. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here's the problem: if you put money in the pocket of any activist bigot, you're guaranteed to be putting money toward his cause. If you find the idea of donating to an anti-gay campaign repugnant, it's not going to be less repugnant if you're doing it through a proxy.

    428. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil unions are not recognized by most other countries so once you leave the country you are screwed. Only actual marriage is accepted for visa etc.

    429. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you can actually see videos on YouTube of people, both the man and the woman, being stoned to death by crowds of their neighbours for adultery.

    430. Re:Really?!? by Hatta · · Score: 3

      The product. Our justice system is designed to manufacture criminals which profits police, judges, lawyers, politicians, prison guards, prison owners, small towns that surround prisons, etc. There are lots and lots of people in our economy that benefit when someone is incarcerated, and fewer who benefit when one is freed. That creates a lot of perverse incentives.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    431. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Some researcher I heard recently described it as all cultures basically having serial monogamous relationships with fooling around on the side. That is, a couple commited to each other but with some non-commited relations. What she said was there was not evidence of in socieites was a universal tendency towards anything-goes, or commited relationships between more than 2 people at the same time. Even in societies with polygamy there is always some social benefit to gain from that relationship to outweigh the drawbacks (ie, women outnumber men or have no economic freedom). But at the same time the commited relationship with no side affairs was not seen. So basically humans seem to naturally gravitate to a pair bond with some cheating.

    432. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      No, in those countries they execute both the man and woman involved.

    433. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't hand someone popularity that I know is using his weight for something I'm diametrically opposed to.

    434. Re:Really?!? by Bosconian · · Score: 1

      Then if the anti-gays protest the protest by pushing attendance to this film, then the pro-gays must begin the anti-protest protest by buying two tickets to every other film playing _except_ Ender's Game.

      Thus will voices be heard through one-upsmanship. cha-ching!

      --
      Scarce, scared, scarred, sacred... -Col. Bruce Hampton
    435. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Destroying governments can mean voting in new governments. I used to think in parliamentary systems that when they said a government has collapsed that something really awful had happened, like a coup or an overthrow or the capital building fell down, but what it actually means it that they couldn't reach an agreement to work together. We overthrow the government in the US quite often, voting out people we don't like and getting new majorities in power.

    436. Re:Really?!? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      If the government recognises any marriage at all, it should recognise them all under the same terms and language, simple as that. If they're going to call it 'marriage', everyone should get a marriage. If they're going to call it a civil union, nobody should get a marriage.

      The problem is that a government segregation, even just in name, is a tacit acknowledgement that the two systems or the people involved in them are not the same. If they're equal, why would there need to be a distinction between them? That distinction is important for social dynamics. Showing that people are equal at a government level helps to normalise them at a societal level. Clearly that's not all that needs to happen--it's not like racism or sexism have gone away even if non-whites and women are equal under the law--but it's a good start.

      The only legal argument that I can muster against distinguishing between the two is that when something is named something different, the lawyers will use that. It's like the bad twist in stories where 'no man' could possibly defeat the evil villain...so the villain is beaten by a woman! In law, calling something by a different name makes it a different thing. If 'marriage' rights are enshrined, then someone will find a way to attack civil unions by claiming they're not the same as marriages. The devil is in the details, so I wouldn't trust it when someone tries to introduce NEW details.

    437. Re:Really?!? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why government is still in the marriage business at all. Considering how people marry, divorce, marry, divorce, etc. it has become a joke. Why not just do away with the silly paper and all that. If you want to buy a house together then do it. When you're sick of each other sell it and split the money. Why go through all the rigamarole anyway? If you want to go and walk the aisle with someone do it. Get a preacher or get your next door neighbor or get an Elvis impersonator to do the service of your choice. I got married 33 years ago to a woman I love dearly. I don't stay with her because of a scrap of paper with a government seal on it.

    438. Re:Really?!? by evanbd · · Score: 1

      By a quirk of history, this particular culture won and imposed it customs on everyone else.

      There's a societal down-side to polygamy, one that needs STRONG cultural overrides to prevent. If (presumably) richer men are allowed multiple wives, that means that there are fewer wives for the rest of the men. You then end up with an excess of unmarried, non-parental young adult men, and being married and a parent is usually a calming influence. These single men are usually the first in the streets if things take even a tiny down-turn. We still see this in Arabic countries which allow polygamy, as well as countries where there's an imbalance of men and women, such as China and India (one-child policies as well as gender-based abortions responsible.

      This is an obvious problem in societies that also have the problem of being strongly patriarchal and/or misogynistic. (The obvious examples you site have these issues.) In cases where women are equally allowed and able to engage in such relationships, there is no a priori reason to suspect such a problem.

      The only evidence I know of that is directly relevant to modern times and from a sexually equal setting is highly anecdotal. I've looked a little for better without luck. But, what I've seen and heard from the polyamory community is that this is most likely a non-issue, and that if it isn't, you probably have your genders reversed. Basically, I've seen weak anecdotal evidence that in some circles, the women tend to participate in more relationships than the men do. I haven't seen any evidence (weak or otherwise) of the reverse effect. And, of course, this report should be taken with a large grain of salt, as it's based on fairly strongly selection-biased sources. However, I think it's strong enough to call your fears into question.

      For reference, I (male, straight) in a happily polyamorous relationship. My partner (female) has a paramour (also male, also straight). The three of us get along well, and none of us are actively dating anyone else.

    439. Re:Really?!? by dragonard · · Score: 2

      Damned good chicken?? Which Chik-Fil-A do *you* eat at?

      And don't get me started on that artificially flavored and colored alleged vegetable substance CFA calls "waffle fries".

    440. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      You realize that the vast majority of people on the earth fit into this category. Do you honestly ignore half the people you meet everyday just because they're religious? Do you have a multivolume book that describes in detail all the things you must boycott? If you have a list of allowed people and disallowed people that you can associate with, isn't that the same as an intolerant religion?

    441. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One AND the same.

    442. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting, how do you define hurt? As far as I've seen, Card has never advocated violence toward homosexuals. Instead he views homosexuality as sinful and wrong and something that should not be affirmed by the state. In the sense of depriving a group of something they want, yes, he wants to hurt others, but that's not much different from LGBT activists wishing to hurt Card financially for his beliefs.

    443. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in those ages, women did consent to those sex acts either, prior to the 19th century, women were property, and married off via arangements between husband and the woman's father. Something like "Consent" of the women was never taken into account.

      The "vast majority of animals" are NOT polygamous, there are many species that are monogamous.

      Lets also discuss polygamy and homosexuality. Polygamy was practiced by men, who could have many wives who were essentially treated like property and often ignored in favor of newer younger wives. No women could have two husbands.

      Homosexuality in Roman times was diffrent. It was not an act of love, but domination. A younger boy RECIEVED from an old man, or a slave was fucked by his owner. The act of having a penis, and penetrating someone, was consired to dominate them. Just as women didn't have penises and were penetrated, considered less.

      Most of the anti-sex laws that are now draconian, at one time, thousands of years ago, were vast liberalizations, and humanitarian.

      captcha: stigma

    444. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, you've publicly established your PC credentials. Now fuck off.

      I don't agree with OSC. I'm still going to enjoy his novels and the film. Because... I'm a fucking adult not a student activist who can't accept that others have different views of my little pet issue... and I don't feel the need to stamp my feet publicly until everyone is forced to listen just to my bellowing and the bellowing of my fellow ideologues.

    445. Re: Really?!? by LoRdTAW · · Score: 0

      Lumpy, your parent poster is correct. You are a troll. Plain and simple. I have you on my foes list a.k.a. my slashdot shit list. Everytime I see your little red dot as I scroll down, I give you post a glance and see that you have little of value to say.

      How did you get on my shit list? You replied to a post of mine in a very nasty and condescending manner possible. In real life you wouldnt have the balls to speak like that to anyone so you vent your frustrations here on slashdot to make you feel better about yourself.

    446. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said that they wanted to mold them, not that they wanted societal rejectes. The difference is really large if you care to look at it.

    447. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OSC is messed up or in the closet. All his books exhibit an unnatural obsession with young boys and sexuality and violence.

      Spoilers: For example: Take "Songmaster" which starts as the tale of man-boy love between a poor kidnapped boy who is the galactic equivalent of an Italian Castratro and the Emperor who owns him only to grow on to another slightly less inappropriate man-teen love (this time adulturously though and ending in a suicide). Finally turning into a old man around young boys story who is so wretched that merely hearing the sound of his raspy voice will alter (scar) them forever.

    448. Re:Really?!? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      What do you mean by the state? The people as a whole? The government and their clique?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    449. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead of being a troll, you should take the whole 30 seconds it would have required to find the qualifications for being an Officer in the military. It's a minimum of a BS or BA degree, though if you are close enough ROTC can help with your last few credits prior to Officer training.

      Education requires money, so it's not about the best of the best becoming an officer. It's a way for those with money to ensure their kids don't see a firefight except on a video screen.

    450. Re:Really?!? by psithurism · · Score: 1

      I have yet to meet a gay couple that would have accepted a civil union, even if it was legally equal to marriage in every way.

      Either you haven't met (m)any gay couples or maybe they won't talk to you about these issues anymore?

      bullshit about the "separate but equal" issues

      If the laws are separate, they can be updated independently. The civil union side could be left out of future updates to the marriage laws, or updated separately by biased measures similar to prop 8. What is so bad about letting all marriages between two consenting adults be covered under the same laws? Separate but equal never worked out in the past, no matter the context, why do we have to try it again here?

      If you want to be married, be married. Marriage is about love, trust and commitment. It's not about inheritance rights, taxes and contracts.

      Yeah, gays have been getting married far before they were legally allowed to do so, because marriage is about love. Having your marriage accepted with the legal rights it gives you is pretty nifty too, which is what they are pushing for.

      Why must you demand that government call your relationship a "marriage" when the "rights" part can be achieved with using that exact word?

      Why must _you_ get so hung up on that exact word? Maybe the word is as important to them as it is to you.

      Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      So, these Christians only respect the exact legalese the government uses to discuss rights for couples?

      This is not about equal rights...This is about revenge and punishing those they hate; religious people.

      What are you talking about? Who is punishing religious people? Is it the gay guy I met in college bible study?

    451. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If that were true, they would have accepted a civil unions law that gave civil unions 100% equality with marriage.

      Where was that legal, but unused? There are some on both sides that will reject anything but a complete win, but from what I saw, a majority of the gays would have been happy with a civil union that was 100% equal. The problem was that so many were only 90% equal, while falsely claimed to be 100% equal by those that are against gay marrriage..

    452. Re: Really?!? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Gosh Mr Trolly McTrollerkins, that's a funny way to say "I agree with you".

      Because if you look at the part where we disagree, it's not there!

    453. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't really work to say this. Any advance in equality/justice/fairness is not going to solve every single problem in the world and that does not mean that making a step in the right direction is being a dick to everybody else who has a problem. If you have a problem with poly- rights, then go complain about poly rights instead of being a dick to equal marriage campaigners. (This does not mean that anybody who is being discriminated against gets a free pass to discriminate against others, as happens far too often)

    454. Re:Really?!? by spiffmastercow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But one could argue that a polygamist should be entitled to have all his wives covered by the insurance offered by his job and that the polygamist should be able to use income splitting on his taxes with all his wives. That's the point trying to be made here. Why is one type of relationship the only valid one. Why not allow marriages between more than 2 people?

      We should allow it, honestly. There's no compelling reason not to.

    455. Re:Really?!? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I don't think that there should be sodomy laws

      I do. It should be mandatory.

    456. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I can disagree with you telling me why I'm doing something. I am a non-straight supporter of equal marriage and I have no issue with religious people, I have a problem with the idea of "separate but equal" being okay.

    457. Re: Really?!? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "If the law says it can happen, then it is reasonably to worry that it will happen eventually. If it is undesirable for it to happen, then the law should not specify it. "

      I would go further and say that it is almost inevitable. And badly formed laws -- as we have learned throughout history -- have a tendency to be worse than no law at all.


      ---

      "You do not examine legislation in the light of the benefits it will convey if properly administered, but in the light of the wrongs it would do and the harms it would cause if improperly administered." -- Lyndon B. Johnson

    458. Re:Really?!? by KhabaLox · · Score: 1

      I agree with your argument that a civil union that is equal under law to marriage is equal in it's application. However, the name does carry weight, and calling something that is equal in every respect by a different name marginalizes it.

      For example, suppose we called immigrants who have gained citizenship "Legal Immigrants," while calling people born in the country "citizens." Under law, we say that a "Legal Immigrant" is exactly the same as a "Citizen," but we just call them something else. This has the effect of stigmatizing the Legal Immigrant, and even if by law they are the same, many people will view them as different, which is a problem.

      Also, the clerical and legal challenges involved in updating the entirety of the legal code at Federal, State and Local levels would not be insignificant.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    459. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It offends me.

      And that which offends should be illegal. Make smoking illegal because it offends me. Some people are offended by alcohol. Lets start a second Prohibition, the first went so well. Some are offended by porn, or obesity. Lets make them illegal.

      How does drilling in ANWAR affect you in any way?
      How does a woman having or being denied an abortion in Texas affect you in any way?
      How does taxing rich people affect you in any way? I can do this all day, but I think you get the point.

      1) I own ANWAR. The US is owned by the people, not the politicians. I have the right to be offended by someone mistreating my property. And yes, I've seen ANWAR, have you?
      2)I'm from Texas, and one-day, my daughter or granddaughter (I have neither now, but I might, someday), may be in Texas. So something that takes away "her" rights in TX would harm her, so that's offensive. I also empathize with the millions in TX under that law. For someone who claims offense at everything, you have a remarkable lack of empathy.
      3) What does taxing rich people have to do with this? Most aren't "offended" by taxes on the rich, unless you are talking about increasing taxes on them to give cuts and subsides to the rich, which does *directly* affect them.

      How does it affect you if the government calls your relation a civil union vs a marriage? Can you not have a wedding? Can you not wear a ring and tell everyone you are married? How does it make what you have any different?

      It doesn't. Until you go to sign up for insurance and the form says "spouse" not "partner" and you either have to fill it out with a chance of rejection of all claims later because your partner is not a "spouse", or spend $10,000 on lawyers up front to verify legality.

      So much in the US assumes "spouse" of a married partner, that transitioning to a concept of a civil union is, by definition, not equal. To claim this obviously inequal situation is equal is a lie. Lying to me is offensive.

      And marriage is not just a Christian concept.

      And neither is Christmas, Easter, and so many others, but Christianity claims them all now. Winter Solstice celebrations pre-date Christianity, as do spring-rebirth celebrations and fall festivals of death (all-saints day being the tie-in there). If marriage is not Christian, why do so many opposing unions claim religion as the reason? They want to defend family by preventing families, so maybe it's just their logic circuits are broken.

    460. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, up until the 1970s being gay was considered a psychological disorder. As with most psychological disorders, there were psychological treatments which met varying levels of success in curing the then called "disorder".

      As much as gay people like to compare themselves to an ethnic group when it comes to treatment, it is not like that at all. Being gay is nothing like being Black, or Asian. It is only like being "gay".

      Society has become more and more accepting of LGBT issues, but you can not expect the same transition like we see with ethnic issues. Science 40 years ago was not trying to cure being "Black", but they were trying to cure being gay (and in some cases met success).

      Whether they should have attempted or not is a very different topic, where I believe the choice should be left to the person and not be institutionalized.

    461. Re: Really?!? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Consistently nudes are not held to be child pornography, this is now part of the law."

      It goes further than that. I don't have the actual citation at hand, but a few years ago a case of "simulated child pornography" got as far as the Supreme Court. In its ruling, the Court said that in order for something to be "child pornography", it must meet two criteria:

      (1) It must be an actual child, not a drawing or simulation, and

      (2) it must be actual pornography, as defined elsewhere in the law.

    462. Re: Really?!? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "If the picture is intended to arouse desire, then it's pornography."

      With all due respect; no, it isn't. It can be, but that's not the whole definition.

      In order for it to be pornography, it has to [A] be intended to appeal to prurient interest, AND (the most important part) [B] have no other socially redeemable value (such as art).

      In other words, in order to be pornography legally, it has to be just pornography. It cannot have any other conceivable purpose.

    463. Re:Really?!? by Ixokai · · Score: 1

      The Employee-Employer relationship is fundamentally different then the relationship between Card and I: there is an imbalance of power in that relationship and that invalidates the comparison.

      Here, I am the customer: there are any number of possible places where my money can go and no one has any claim on it. If I do not buy something it is not a penalty, therefore the act of not buying something is not a punishment. He has no claim on my money, and so its lack is not a penalty. It is not something he would otherwise have had or that he would have had through some obligation or which has been taken away from him -- those are what make something a penalty.

      The act of buying something is entirely within my sole discretion and is entirely my unqualified right to determine, for any reason.

      That said: it is not merely his public opinions that are at issue. I do not boycott people who disagree with me. I could, and it would be entirely within my right, and entirely moral for me to do so, but I don't so its moot. Card is not being boycotted for his opinions (by me) -- he is being boycotted because he is a political activist, and therefore the money I give him supports and funds activism that I find reprehensible.

      Yes, if someone wants to not shop at a store because it has gay people in it, they are entirely free to do so. Doing so does not punish the store.

      If someone wants to spend their money only in stores run by Christians, that's entirely fine and moral. If someone wants to spend their money only in stores which have a good reputation for being 'green', that's entirely fine and moral. If someone does not want to buy a product because they believe the company is harming the environment or its suppliers are being abused, that's entirely fine and moral. The inverse of these are all also true, and just as fine -- though rarely do people want to buy something because the company is hurting the environment, more likely the inverse is that people don't care... which is ALSO entirely fine. Importantly, in none of those cases are they punishing anyone.

      Card's political agenda is hurting people, his political activism is hurting people. Thus, I will not patronize him -- or Chick-fil-A, for that matter -- because it is my unqualified right to support those businesses and people I want to. My money is power, and empowering people who are actively championing against basic human dignity is something I choose not to do.

    464. Re:Really?!? by Bobartig · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, this is nonsense and here's why: There were 1400+ pieces of federal legislation that would have to have been piecemeal amended to include the same benefits for civil unions as well as married couple to bring same-sex civil unions into line with marriage on the FEDERAL level alone. On top of that, there needed to be changes in virtually every states' laws to bring CU parity. On top of that, there would still need to be additional legislation for states to recognize each others' CUs. On TOP OF THAT, was the matter of actual discriminatory toward same-sex relations with respect to marriage and legal recognition. Your claim that ANY of this would have been remotely accomplishable several years ago by simply accepting civil unions in place of marriage is laughably, laughably naive. Settling for civil unions crosses one hurdle, but erects literally THOUSANDS more, whereas fighting for and winning marriage crosses 2,000 hurdles at once.

      This has nothing to do with the government "calling" or "defining" marriage in any particular way. Those are rhetorical false equivalences that merely distract from the core issue at hand: equal treatment under the law. Your proposed solution does NOTHING to achieve that goal. Way to belittle our truly discriminatory legal framework by continuing to be ignorant of the fundamental issue. Your "physical objects" analogy is profoundly stupid. There is not, nor was there ever, a feasible pathway for bringing any sense of equality between civil unions and marriage as legally recognized institutions.

      --
      This is where I get my recommended daily allowance of "Foot in Mouth."
    465. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most would claim some bullshit about the "separate but equal" issues in the civil rights era, where a water fountain for blacks was dirty and unmaintained while the "white's only" water fountain was new and shiny. I call it bullshit because if a law says two things are equal, they are equal, period. It's not like inheritance laws for gays can get dirty or leak. These are not physical objects.

      Because in the end it comes down to this:

      Application from SomeBigCorp Inc

      Are you married?
      No, but I do have a civil union...
      Sorry, we only accept spouses as trustees.

    466. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a "preference"! You try it and see how much you like it! It's how these people are wired. Unlike morons like you I have no hangups about how many adults of either gender want to get together in some kind of relationship and what they want to call it. Neither does it bother me whether society wants to call that "marriage" or "civil union". I just think everybody should be treated the same way legally. In any case I am completely hetero and could never imagine having a same-sex relationship. In fact I think anyone that wants to deny LGBT people the same rights granted to traditional hetero couples are a bunch of fucked up assholes that are utterly clueless about "preferences"! Equally bad is it for people to base their bigotry on some fuckin' religious superstition! Many religious people seem to believe in some kind of all-powerful Santa Claus and even though the imaginary deity is sooo fuckin' powerful they feel compelled to do its dirty work for it. Also, they don't believe in "moral" choices because they want to force people to follow a path that they define as the correct "moral" choice. Religious people that believe in either a reward for what they perceive as following the "right" rules and/or a belief of punishment for violating the rules are incapable of making a moral choice because they're being bribed and/or terrorised into making that choice. If someone is holding a gun to my head in order to make me do something that pretty much takes the free and moral part out of the equation. So if you think that Santa Claus is giving you a warm spot in a heaven for following his rules or punishing you with a place in a hell, that makes you incapable of making any moral choices. Only people that don't believe in that bullshit can make a moral decision!

    467. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      You're projecting things that may not be there. Let me project a little too. Perhaps someone strongly believes that Card is taking an incorrect stance, that person concludes he must be ignorant because only ignorant people feel that way, and because he's ignorant he must also be very shallow. Therefore this person's view of the books changes and now is are unable to see his books as anything other than shallow, and any depth that appears is solely due to the enlightened reader.

      The thing is, really awful people can still create art that is worthwhile.

    468. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right-wing anarchists?! Anyone going by that name is a skin-head looking to overthrow the current government so they can go on a killing spree.

      Anarchists aren't on the traditional political scale by definition - they refuse to engage in politics.

    469. Re:Really?!? by DrGamez · · Score: 1

      Don't think sterile people should marry.

      Golly. Your parents have done a number on you, there is probably a reason you're hiding such ignorant statements behind the cowardly cloak of anonymity.

    470. Re:Really?!? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Pick a list for sci-fi/fantasy and you will find it no lower than 5 or so all-time.

      I find that surprising actually. It's not that good a book. For example, I can list a bunch that just are better and more influential: H. G. Well's "War of the Worlds", Dan Simon's "Hyperion", Henry Kuttner's "Fury", Asimov's "I Robot", Jules Verne "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea", William Gibson's "Neuromancer", George Orwell's "1984", Poul Anderson's "Boat of a Million Years", and Heinlein's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress". That's nine right there. It just doesn't make my short list of best sci fi ever. Maybe top 100 though.

      Having said that, it's definitely in the elite of science fiction both in terms of quality and actual sales.

    471. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Besides, OSC's SF books have nothing to do with his views on a totally orthogonal societal issue. Boycotting the former because of the latter is called an ad hominem.

      I thought in capitalism, the only vote you got was with your pocketbook. If you don't like the company or the person that profits from something, you should boycott. That's hoe capitalism is designed, right? Why do you hate capitalism?

    472. Re:Really?!? by Bobartig · · Score: 1

      It offends me.

      So? Get over it. Your faith, nor any other faith, is the steward of marriage. Your being offended means absolutely fuck all when it's leveraged as a crutch to deny people equal treatment under the law. Now I know you claim that you have no problem with all persons receiving equal treatment under the law. I don't have to believe you, because even if you did believe that, you are still adamantly chosen to support a viewpoint that precisely guarantees unequal treatment. To the extent that you advocate two entirely conflicted and incompatible notions simultaneously, there is fundamentally no reason to assume any sincerity in your claim.

      Lawsuits or chapel weddings? Parade of horribles, and complete bullshit of the first order. How many lawsuits are there when non-christians demand Catholic chapel weddings, and how do those go over? Your intellectual dishonesty is stunning.

      --
      This is where I get my recommended daily allowance of "Foot in Mouth."
    473. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One is not a bigot by calling out a bigot.

      If you are calling a person a bigot for bigoted reasons than that is precisely the situation that you have.

    474. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Up until late 19th century, the age of sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult.

      Actually, the average age of the onset of puberty has declined over the last 100 years. But a few hundred years ago, because of poor nutrition, it was quite common not to reach puberty until 17 years of age or even later. But the age of consent at that time was 12 years in many countries ie well before puberty for a significant percentage of adolescents.

    475. Re:Really?!? by Bobartig · · Score: 1

      By getting hung up on a word, he can pretend like his outrage is about that word instead of just religious bigotry. It's about MARRIAGE, damn it, not my hate of gays, my LOVE OF MARRIAGE WITHOUT GAYS MESSING IT UP. HGRHRHRHRH!!!

      --
      This is where I get my recommended daily allowance of "Foot in Mouth."
    476. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sarcasm in your parent's post was SO thick... how the hell did you miss it?

    477. Re: Really?!? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      While I won't defend the "Defense of Marriage Act" as I thought it was a stupid law even when it was being passed, the motivation of its supporters at the time was that the "institution of marriage" was being watered down and they attempted to remind judges that the 1st amendment actually meant something.

      What these people forgot was the words "congress shall pass no law", thinking that passing a law saying that a law shouldn't be passed isn't hypocrisy. Yes, that is a double negative, which is precisely the doublethink that went into that awful legislation in the first place.

      Still, it was at least an attempt to try and keep the whole issue of gay marriage out of the federal level. That it ended up having the opposite effect only goes to show that the government should keep its dirty paws off of what is ultimately a religious issue and not a civil matter. That anybody with an internet connection and a mouse can become a member of clergy (and even that step isn't strictly needed) only goes to show that you can believe anything and find anybody to perform any ceremony you want between what ever people you want, including yourself alone.

    478. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I read them as an adult. Ender's Game was interesting, but I'd already read better sci-fi with similar themese (ironically, probably influenced by Ender's Game). And then I read the rest. My wife, who read them all for the first time as a child, loves them, so has most everything he's written. In the second book of the series, I asked her if he was a religious nut. She didn't realize he was Mormon, but then she was raised in a Mormon area, so it may have not hit her radar. By the third, I was skipping pages when they got preachy. Someone reading them for the first time as an adult would likely notice the issues you raise, and they sneak by children because they'll not understand the issues yet.

    479. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That works when age of menarche is around 16-17 as it was in England until about the 1850s. This meant that a woman who was old enough to have children was taller and more experienced.

      But growth rates would have also been slower, for the same reason that the onset of puberty was delayed. Poor nutrition. This is the reason children in poor countries are physically immature and undersized for their age.

       

      Larger families also meant she was likely to have helped raise and take care of siblings. The average age in the US is currently ~12.5. Not enough time to grow the whole body, and not likely to have a lot of experience raising siblings.

      A 12.5yo in 2013 can look like an 18yo used to look. They can be fully developed and very tall. This is particularly true in some black and Mediterranean racial groups. Have a look at the girls at your local junior high school sometime. Inexperience raising siblings is hardly a justification to raise the age of consent well above physical maturation.

    480. Re:Really?!? by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      Here's a clue. Chickens are roughly 50% male and 50% female. Some chickens are kept through adulthood for eggs, others are killed on maturity for meat. Only the females can lay eggs.

      Which gender of chicken do you think you're most likely to be eating in any given bite?

    481. Re:Really?!? by Bobartig · · Score: 1

      In what drug-induced hallucination did you convince yourself that such a fiction as a civil union equal to marriage could ever have existed? Let me clear that up for you right now. There is no such thing as a civil partnership that gives equal rights to marriage. There was never such a thing, there was never going to be such a thing. There was no way for our nation to pass laws that would bring it about. Federal law ensured, in no less than 1,400 separate legal provisions, that civil unions were not equal to marriage in the eyes of the law. States refused to recognize the unions of other states. Same-sex couples in civil unions were denied familial visitation rights, inheritance rights, tax treatment, etc. etc. of married couples. Conservative state legislatures were actively crafting an untenable framework to prevent equal treatment of CU couples for the past several years. It strains incredulity, and rings profoundly insincere to suggest that marriage equality came about after the LGBT community rejected an equivalent, attainable legal status in civil unions, not to mention the callous disregard for reality that maintaining such a fiction requires.

      --
      This is where I get my recommended daily allowance of "Foot in Mouth."
    482. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is able to cancel out the evil of a kinda-evil individual.

      Even though gay marriage has gained acceptance with roughy 55% percent of the population, that still leaves 45% percent of the population that doesn't.

      So does that make that 45% who doesn't hop on your bandwagon evil???

      I'm going to the movie the day it opens. But first I'm going to stop by Chick-Fil-A for lunch.

      Does that make me evil too??

    483. Re:Really?!? by boule75 · · Score: 1
      I mostly agree.

      Some believed or hoped that they would be less discriminated because they would have acquired this "right". But the fact is that anybody still distinguishes between "mariage" and "gay mariage", the former being related to the cult of fertility, and the later to "two consenting adults living together until divorce or death".

      The atheists have just robbed the word in France too, and they have gained no respect for it, just the contrary. How sad.

      P.S. : in France one has to "mary" by the mayor before being allowed to be maried in Church if one chooses so, and since the late 18th century.

      --
      I am not Remy Mouton, unfortunately: http://remy.mouton.free.fr/art/
    484. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... sexual/marriage majority matched being a biological adult ...

      With most people working 10 or 12 hours a day and eating meat once a week, puberty didn't occur until a girl was 17. Only a well-fed middle-class had to deal with sexually-charged 14 year-olds and they had time to chaperone her.

      ... Yet these days ...

      Puberty hasn't changed; modern society is just more upset by the consequences. These days we spend much time thinking of panties so we can save all those school-girls from the sexual/economic freedom they have. Although now, the internet can send a metric fuck-load of men straight into her bedroom.

      ... she goes to jail ...

      Women get another pass. Few western courts will send a school-girl to jail (US Georgia excepted) and they hesitate more when it is a woman with a baby. The father might land in jail for possessing child-pornography. 21st century society on the one hand is encouraging school-girls to prick-tease (sexualizing them). But on the other hand can't handle the photographic consequences of that indoctrination. Although now, the internet can provide instant international distribution to any photograph.

    485. Re:Really?!? by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      "What creature on Earth needs to be threatened with death to adhere to its natural inclinations?"
      I am not sure that that is a valid argument.
      Also, of course, Monogamy is the only natural state, but not because a few tribes in Africa do not practice it, or that you claim it is a cultural construct, but because Polygamy is the natural state.

      In any group based species you necessarily get alpha males, you only need like 1% percent of the population to be breeding males to breed every female. And it is in the best interests of evolution for the smallest and best top percentage to do all the breeding.
      In all monkey based species this is how it is.

      In fact, this is inscribed in our DNA. Males with a X and a Y chromosome have more random features as people. We are more divergent. Compared to females who have a redundant copy of all DNA, who tend to be more average.
      Females tend to all be capable, while it is expected and good for significant percentages of all males to die off before procreation.
      It would be interesting to look at different species gender chromosomes, specifically in species were they are truly monogamy based and have been for a long long time.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    486. Re:Really?!? by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      is *not* the

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    487. Re:Really?!? by Andtalath · · Score: 2

      This would be fine and dandy if the US was a secular state.
      Which it is not.

      The state and the church are very closely tied.

    488. Re:Really?!? by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      You just proved conclusively that you do *not* tolerate such people. You resorted to name calling and belittlement in order to bolster your own prejudice against them. Whether they are right or wrong, you failed to see your own intolerance, and blithely claim you are not intolerant.

      I'm sorry, I can't hear you over the sound of a stampede of raging Tu Quoques, Ad Hominids, and Appeals to Emotion...

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    489. Re: Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      The leading gay marriage advocate in the country, Evan Wolfson, disagrees, "I'm not in this just to change the law. It's about changing society." His goal is not just for equal rights, it's forcing homosexuality and gay marriage to be socially acceptable.

    490. Re:Really?!? by Andtalath · · Score: 1

      How do you define left/right?

      Liberal/conservative?
      Bigger state/smaller state?
      Peace/war?

      To me, the left believes that we should take care of each other since nurture is nice.
      The right believes that people get complacent and need to fight for themselves.

      Nazi Germany was a VERY nurturing society to everyone who fitted their ideals.

      They where also conservative as fuck.

      And very war-like.

      But the extreme right is anarchy, the extreme left is big brother.

    491. Re:Really?!? by crc64Error · · Score: 1

      Yes, tolerance from the same people who demand tolerance. Go figure. Believing something is wrong, or counter to your beliefs, is not hate. It makes little difference to me, what an actor, singer, director, or artist believes. If I like his product, I will buy it. However, if they force there way into my home, and demand I agree with them, I have a problem with that. If they block my access to a store, gas station or theater, I have a problem with that.

      Fact is, if "Gay Marriage" wasn't the hot button issue of the day, most of you wouldn't give 2 cents about it. You still have not stopped watching movies with the male bigot Sean Connery in them. You have not stopped listening to Fifty Cent, who apparently has parenting issues. This all reeks of hypocrisy.

      I have a strong enough self, to have friends with different opinions then mine. I do not worry about "catching" "fat", "gay", "nerd" or any stereo type or lifestyle or whatever, from hanging out with people with different opinions.

      Every time some one disagrees with a group of people, it is now labeled "Hate Speech". So bullying is used to attack the "Hater". Which is most hateful? Expressing an opinion which disagrees with yours, or trying to ruin someone's career?

      But, I am just one person between everyone else, trying to stop this stupid fight. And I am not well spoken or very loud. I'm sure I will just be collateral when it is over.

    492. Re:Really?!? by Nethead · · Score: 1

      What are these various catholic denominations you're talking about? Lutherans?

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    493. Re:Really?!? by rwven · · Score: 1

      I never voiced an opinion regarding the enders game movie one way or the other. I made an interesting observation regarding mob mentality, and quite possibly the ignorance of people to all the facts (on this side or the other).

    494. Re:Really?!? by outlander · · Score: 1

      Umm, if a person calls out someone making bigoted statements - that is, statements which are not factual, that claim that certain behaviors or characteristics inhere in $class_of_people because of a shared characteristic, and using that to bolster an argument for the inherent inferiority of that class - then naming that behavior is hardly bigotry.

      false analogy, ad ignorantium, argument from final consequences, tu quoque, moving the goalposts....might want to reconsider your position.

      --
      "Truth is what works" -- William James "It works!!" -- o-dark-AM comment
    495. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good attempt at sounding logical, but you let your bigotry slip into the end of your post there. Asking to be recognized as equal is all about gays "punishing" religious people they hate, is it?

      Anyway, you asked for a rebuttal of your point that "separate but equal is equal" for non-physical things, so here goes. So long as there are two separate legal constructs for marriage, with one that excludes gay people, the door is always open for legal discrimination. Gay people would constantly have to fight to close whatever gaps develop between the rights "gay married" people have versus what "really married" straights have as laws evolve and bigots get elected to encode discrimination into law. Having the same marriage construct apply to both groups makes it much more difficult for the government to discriminate between the two groups, because rule changes would automatically apply to all marriages, gay and straight.

      And really, if you're honest about equality under the law, there is no good reason to have two separate legal constructs for the same thing... defining gay marriage separately is useful only if you intend to treat them differently. Maintaining two separate constructs is a legal headache at best if you're honest about keeping the two aligned going forward, or an open invitation to write discriminatory laws at worst.

      Finally, marriage isn't about defining a couple's relationship, it's about social acceptance of that relationship. When straight people get married, they're making a very public declaration that "hey, we're together, and we want everyone to respect that fact." I'm sure even a bigot like you can undestand why gay people would want the same thing, and a second-class "almost but not really marriage" designation isn't going to cut it. Take your "separate but equal" crap back to the last century, where it belongs.

    496. Re:Really?!? by muridae · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you this: how does 2 guys or 2 women getting "married" affect you in any way?

      It offends me.

      How does drilling in ANWAR affect you in any way? How does a woman having or being denied an abortion in Texas affect you in any way? How does taxing rich people affect you in any way? I can do this all day, but I think you get the point. So don't give me that "how does it affect you" bullshit until you can answer these:

      Drilling in ANWAR reduces my chance of seeing native species in their native habitat. It might, unknown at this time, affect me by spilled oil reducing the selectivity of ice and causing climate changes.

      A woman getting an abortion doesn't affect me. An individual woman being denied an abortion does not affect me either. But the systemic "anti-abortion" groups affect me because they tend to forget that before abortions were legal, they still occured. In back alley doctor's offices, and the patient mortality rate was absurdly high. Lowers the population, sure, but it also lowers the population. You should be able to figure out why that could be good or bad.

      Taxes on the rich affect everyone. Higher taxes on them means more revenue for the government. Whether that's good or bad is up to you, but seeing "don't bankrupt medicaid and don't raise taxes" is the rally cry for certain people makes me giggle.

      So you can make up straw-men arguments and move goal posts all day? Fine. The answer you are looking for is that separate but equal is not allowed in this country. Period. The end.

      Now answer me one: how does the fact that my religion allows for same-sex marriages affect you? Oh, it doesn't, because I'm not your branch of christian so I'm going to hell anyways? Then piss off, wanker.

      As to the rest of your screed, marriage pre-christianity was regulated by the different religions that existed at the time. Greeks, Romans, Goths, Vikings, they all had variants of marriage; and that's just sticking with the cultures that modern Christians are likely descended from. Take a look at historical marriage in Old England, dowry and arranged marriages. Are you proposing that since that is your history we should all go back to that? Or should we at least embrace a modern only view? If it must be modern major religions only, take a look at Hindi and other Indian marriage rites. Prepare to have your closed mind blown.

    497. Re:Really?!? by NatHoward · · Score: 1

      For those who didn't recognize it, "TBOM" means, I think, "The Book Of Mormon".

    498. Re:Really?!? by muridae · · Score: 3, Funny

      Polygamy is an abomination. One should not mix greek and latin roots.

    499. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I ask them what's stopping them from putting on white dresses, saying vows, exchanging rings, smearing cake on each other's faces, throwing a party and telling everyone they know that they are married? What difference does it make what the government called it?

      What's stopping them? The law. Specifically a civil marriage celebrant in Australia is required to say during the ceremony: "Marriage, according to the law in Australia, is the union of a man and a woman to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life."

    500. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. I think you are thinking of the Homecoming series. The fourth and fifth books are basically LDS rehash.

    501. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the recent studies showing that children raised by same sex couples are at least as psychologically and emotionally healthy, and very possibly a little healthier on average, mean nothing? Taking in and properly raising a non-biological child who'd otherwise probably have a much worse upbringing, or having a biological child by some form of fertility/surrogate treatment doesn't help the renewal of the population? The children of gay families or infertile straight adoptive families are somehow less worthy of the stability and protection of marriage? Do these children possess magical auras that invert their numerical value and prevent them from counting towards the population, in addition to [DATA EXPUNGED]? Because really, the concept of such a logical dissonance somehow imposing itself on the laws of reality is drifting into SCP Foundation territory here.

    502. Re:Really?!? by Etcetera · · Score: 1

      It's not in the Public Consciousness, agreed.... however it's in the Military Consciousness a great deal, especially the USMC. It's almost literally the bible for current officer training methodologies... so much so that "he's an Ender" is a phrase you'll hear to describe someone here and there.

    503. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At several times in your life, you purchased goods or services from bad and worse people. I may have hired a serial killer to fix my plumbing or car at some point. Either you always investigate your eBay seller's philosophical background (and every shipping handler along the way) or you're spouting associative bullshit to defend your fallacy. You sound even more ridiculous when one considers second-hand products or stock exchange or whatever branch of economics you imagine.

      I'm almost stunned by the bullshit of your logic. At the end of the day, intelligent humans make their purchases by the intrinsic value of a product/service. Increasingly, that's all there is to see. Specs and a price tag.

      Not to say all purchases are objective. Marketing does extensive research on how to exploit (your) weaknesses, and push sales on the impressionable and weak-minded (guess who I'm talking about) with sleights like branding. If you have children, teach them the scrutiny you lack; disguises are more clever every year and youth-related markets start imprinting younger and younger. When they've finances of their own, teach them to wonder "Will I actually use this? Immediately? Often?" and not to succumb to your knee jerking.

      All said, you're welcome to disregard the book product and/or movie product as poor quality and unworthy of your time and money. Personally, I disregarded portions of the book as his agenda (some of us have the mental capacity to distinguish and separate not only art from artist, but art's content) and expect the Hollywood'ization of rhetoric and hyperbole. I can't claim explosions have zero appeal, but it's less likely I'll buy a ticket to a generic action-and-drama flick if that's what the machine puts out, I have video games for that.

      -Falos

    504. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Oh bull pussy! Spin this thread a little faster. I'm only mildly dizzy and still haven't tossed my lunch yet.

      You know it, I know it, and everyone else here knows that language as used above was meant to incite feelings of revolt. He even said amended his first claim with "by whatever means is made possible or necessary." If he wanted to vote out the offending "regime" which btw carries a negative connotation as in it isn't legit, then he would have said for his viewers/followers/whatevs to go vote them out. He didn't say that though did he? You're deflecting and attempting a whitewash of the past.

    505. Re:Really?!? by quantaman · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you this: how does 2 guys or 2 women getting "married" affect you in any way?

      It offends me.

      How does drilling in ANWAR affect you in any way? How does a woman having or being denied an abortion in Texas affect you in any way? How does taxing rich people affect you in any way?

      Drilling has environmental impacts that affect the entire planet.

      A woman having/being denied an abortion in Texas affects that woman and the fetus in a profound way.

      Taxing rich people affects the economy, taxes for everyone else, and government services.

      Two gay people getting married affects those two people, in an overwhelmingly positive way. The fact that it makes you slightly uncomfortable isn't really relevant.

      How does it affect you if the government calls your relation a civil union vs a marriage? Can you not have a wedding? Can you not wear a ring and tell everyone you are married? How does it make what you have any different?

      The only difference I can see is that a civil union does not make me offended. But that's your whole point isn't it? You want to offend me and all Christians because you hate all Christians. Never mind that Muslims hang gays on the streets, they deserve to be heard and have their religious freedom, we must offend all Christians. And that's exactly why it will be held in a church.

      Yes... telling two people their relationship isn't worthy of the title "marriage" shouldn't affect them at all, clearly the only objective is that everyone wants to offend Christians.

      Democrats have already blocked a law protecting Chaplains in the US military from refusing to perform same sex marriages. How long do you think it will be before that same-sex couple sues the Catholic Church demanding "equal rights" to have a chapel wedding?

      Lemme think... lets try never (well ok, they can sue but they'll lose).

      If you're hired by the government to do a job, you need to do that job and you're not allowed to discriminate doing that job.

      If you're a priest employed by a church you're protected by the constitution from having to violate your beliefs.

      This isn't about equal rights. This is about getting even for perceived wrongs done to you. Tell me again how I am the bigot?

      Because you've apparently decided that your offence is more important than them having a relationship with equal status to your own.

      I don't believe that you have any gay friends

      My mother owns a beauty salon that I worked in from before I was old enough to see over the counter. I know it's cliche to assume that gay me do hair, but it's a cliche for a reason. You have no idea how many gay friends I have. I have kinda grown up around them. I know what they are like, how they feel and what they are all about.

      Oh I'm sorry, I didn't realize you have gay friends. Obviously anyone with gay friends can't discriminate against gay people because people are incapable of compartmentalizing something like that!

      I guess that means kids from the south in the 1800s who grew up around slave kids couldn't be racists either since they would have had some black friends.

      And I feel they deserve equal rights under the law. But they do NOT have equal rights under religion. You don't have to like it. You don't have to be in a religion. But since freedom of religion is guaranteed under the Constitution, government has to respect it.

      Agreed. So why do we all now have to follow your religion and not call it a marriage?

      Or are you saying only Christians are allowed to be married?

      By the way, can you tell me marriage is guaranteed in the Constitution? I can't find it anywhere.

      I don't believe you have any religious friends. If you did, you wouldn't think they are all bigots.

      And

      --
      I stole this Sig
    506. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Since I know his inhuman attitude I did not even reread the books of him I already own.

      Buying that stuff before you knew about it is fine. We do that all the time because you really can't know everything about anything. However, now that you DO know and have taken the stance that is revolting and non-deserving of your time & money (as I feel as well), take the final 60s you'll ever waste on the fool and get those books from your shelf and throw them directly into the trash. Don't even donate them to Goodwill, the Library, or your local used book store. Just trash them and chalk it up as a loss. His voice & influence is forgotten and lost when it has been ignored down into the noise floor.

    507. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're offended at a person's sexuality which has been proved as something they cannot control?
      Do you hate others for similar non-conformity, such as the colour of their skin?

    508. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and I can call myself an elf, but it doesn't make me one. Just like people's democratic republics tend not to be democracies as we would term them, "National Socialism" bears no relation at all to socialism.

    509. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why do you hate others based on facets of their personality that they cannot change?

    510. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Also, again
      If the Constitution is defined in such a way as to destroy the privileged position of marriage, it is that insane Constitution, not marriage, that will die.

      And again, he said "whatever means is made possible or necessary".

      That clearly extends beyond merely voting. In fact voting is effectively no longer on the list of "possible" means. Gay marriage opponents can no longer muster a 50% vote for a federal law against it, much less the percentages they would need to amend the constitution against court rulings in favor of gay marriage. Support for gay marriage is now over 55% of the public, and that percentage is steadily rising at about 2.4% per year. Gay marriage is seen as a civil rights issue by an overwhelming percentage of people under 35, and the largest percentage of gay marriage opponents are senior citizens. Gay marriage proponents are literally burying more and more gay marriage opponents every day as they drop dead of old age.

      If he (or his ideological allies) attempt to oppose gay marriage by some means beyond a now utterly-futile vote against it, if he (or his ideological allies) attempt to bring about the "death" of the constitution by some means beyond a now utterly-futile vote against it, then I am prepared if necessary to take up the same means, whatever those means may be, to preserve the constitution and to preserve interracial marriage and to preserve gay marriage.

      I do not take kindly to anyone threatening to use "whatever means is made possible or necessary" to kill the constitution. I do not take kindly to any bigot threatening to use "whatever means is made possible or necessary" to exterminate interracial marriage or gay marriage. The government has no business using race, religion, or gender as a basis to discriminate between acceptable and unacceptable marriage applicants.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    511. Re:Really?!? by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

      Thus, Orson Scott Card should be denied a living, he should be outcast, he should be shown no tolerance. This is kind of the start of how things go badly. A section gets denigrated, then they need to be punished, next they need to be imprisoned.

      Tolerance is allowing him to spew his drivel, not paying him for it. I'm not in any way saying he shouldn't be allowed to make an ass of himself on the Internet, but if you think I'm going to pay for the privilege of being told that my partner and I should be in prison because he gets weirded out by the thought of us having sex, you've got another thing coming.

      I think as much as a person should be able to campaign for gay rights, a person should be able to hold an opposing viewpoint.

      Campaigning for gay rights is about giving equal treatment to everybody. Nobody gets special treatment under the law. That is most emphatically not what Card is arguing for. Gay marriage? We should all be allowed to have miserable sexless lives if that's what we choose, not just straight couples.

    512. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I agree completely with Mr. Card. The intellectual contortions that many go through in order to legitimize the perversion of homosexuality is breathtaking.

      What contortions?

      The law has no business examining a person's race, religion, or gender as a basis to discriminate between acceptable or unacceptable applicants for a driver's application, marriage application, or anything else. It's impossible to write a marriage law to discriminate against interracial couples without the law examining the applicants' races, it's impossible to write a marriage law discriminating against inter-faith couples without the law examining the applicants' religions, and it's impossible to write a marriage law discriminating against gay couples without the law examining the applicants' genders. It's unconstitutional to discriminate against gay marriages for the exact same reason it's unconstitutional to discriminate against gay marriages.

      Race, religion, and gender are equally invalid criteria for the law to examine as a basis to approve or deny driver's applications or marriage applications or anything else in law. No contortions at all. Equal protection and equal treatment under the law for all people, as people, regardless of anyone's race religion or gender.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    513. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      P.S.
      Based on another post I see from you I think maybe I misinterpreted your post. I thought you were arguing with the person you were replying to. If you were agreeing with the post you replied to, then consider my previous post to be "emphatic agreement" with you. Chuckle.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    514. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Destroying governments can mean voting in new governments.

      It can. But that hardly seems to be the case here.

      When he calls the government a "mortal enemy" and vows to use "any means necessary" to "destroy that government and bring it down", and says "that insane Constitution [] will die", that's a wee bit stronger than merely saying "I feel like voting against it" and gently suggesting "heay I think it would be swell if maybe you voted against it too". Not to mention the fact that voting against it is now pretty well futile. There's 55% nation-wide support for gay marriage, and that support is rising at a steady 2.4% per year. He can't muster majority support for a federal law against it, much less the supra-majority percentages that would be required to change the constitution, which would be needed to overcome constitutional court rulings in favor of gay marriage.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    515. Re:Really?!? by thesupraman · · Score: 1

      I would claim that Disney has a long and strong history of supporting (and being supported by) a very close
      relationship between their government and them, with the main of furthering their control and profitability.
      Thats how they broke our copyright system to further themselves financially, at the cost of society in general.

      They also quite like to rewrite history and then use their position to strongly promote their new 'cleansed' view of
      it.

      Not completely unlike a National Socialist view, really, which was strongly a a close relationship between an exclusive powerbase in government, and an exclusive powerbase in the private sector, with close likes, working together to control and guide the populace....

    516. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1
      I agree with you on a lot of things, I even agree with you on most of this post but I would like to point out:

      If I choose to tell Mr. Card to fuck off today, but go to a Chic Fil A tomorrow, that doesn't mean I don't support gay rights... it just means I place more value on not being hungry than not being entertained.

      I have to beg to differ here! It doesn't mean you value not being hungry more than entertainment. It means you lack conviction to your cause! You are not willing to sacrifice, to suffer even, to further the goals you profess to uphold. That stance makes it seem that you only care about the cause as long as it doesn't inconvienience you. I don't care how hungry I am, I will not buy a damned thing from Card OR Chick Fil A (and many others). Those 2 entities will use my hard earned money to hurt the people that I care about. I WILL NOT ENABLE THIS! That makes me a hypocrite and makes me partly responsible! You do not give your executioner the bullets to put through your skull. That is stupid. And if indeed you will be eating some chick fil a tomorrow instead of many of the alternatives available to you, I will lose respect for you (not that you care) and I will know from now on that whatever you say is merely lip service. There comes a time when you must stand up for something you believe in and suffer for the cause. Loyalty is a human trait that seems to be in short supply these days.

    517. Re:Really?!? by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Or, you could note that in all probability a substantial fraction of the cast and production staff and delivery system for this movie, like all movies, is composed of individuals of widely varying sexual preferences including many who are gay. It is also almost never the case that all the people who make a movie are fully paid off when the movie is finished -- at the very least the producers, the directors, the cast, and other contributors get a percentage of the take in addition to the writer(s) of the screenplay. Orson Scott Card might actually have been paid substantially up front for the movie rights and have done very little in the production and might only get a comparatively thin slice of the pie.

      Also, Orson Scott Card has plenty of money -- seriously -- with or without the movie. He's a public figure, has written many, many books, and a fair number of them have been bestsellers. He can almost certainly remain visible in his opposition to gay rights for the rest of his life on his existing wealth and income regardless of how the movie does.

      It is impossible to boycott all of the people who oppose gay marriage or other gay rights. Unless they are vocal/visible, it is impossible to even know who they are, although if you happen to know the religious preferences of an individual you might be able to make a good guess. Boycott the Baptist Church? Sure, if you want to call "not being religious" a boycott. Boycott every restaurant, car dealership, grocery store owned or managed by a Baptist, including ones that are vocal about gays? Not possible, not in the South where I live. Mormons are even more invisible. Boycott the entire 1/6 of the world that is Muslim? In your dreams.

      At least OSC is up front about his position. That means it can be sensibly opposed. Or better yet, ignored.

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    518. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      And it means nothing. It is all lip service. He says out of one side of his mouth to love them all and be tolerant but then hate them all and incarcerate them. You really can't see why people want this guy to be relegated in obscurity? I realize this a work of fiction, but real world implications happen when you support his "art". It matters absolutely not one bit what the hell his book is about. For me, he is not worthy of any support. You go ahead and keep cheerleading though. That is your right.

    519. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Mom was a movie dumbass. The point was that a gay couple can not procreate. If two women decide to get a sperm donor, then they have still not procreated.

    520. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are frigging hilarious! Really, you believe that monogamy is "new" Sumerian and Egyptian history show something very different. The give away is this bullshit line here: "Casual and secretive non-monogamy has been happening for a long time." Um, yeah.. it was secret but you know it has been happening for thousands of years.. yeah yeah, they didn't write it down cuz it was sekrit! Pfft

    521. Re:Really?!? by kNIGits · · Score: 1

      Forgetting that I was on Slashdot and not on Google+, I instinctively reached to click the +1 button. You've hit the nail on the head, my friend.

    522. Re:Really?!? by lessthan · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd like to know where you got your information. Civil unions are nothing like marriages, except that they are supposed to bind two people together.

      Civil unions are a creation of the states, they do nothing on a federal level. There are no laws requiring other states to recognize a civil union or confer whatever benefits the original state granted the couple.

      The civil marriage contract, on the other hand, conveys a bevy of legal protections and abilities and, until DOMA was enacted, required to be honored in all the states of the Union. (Which is why any Constitution lover should be pissed about DOMA, it violates the constitution, specifically the Contract Clause which states that any legal contract made in any state should be honored in ALL the states. Even after that court case, that bit is still intact.) The most prominent of those protection and abilities (the ones everybody brings up) are the right to sponsor a spouse to become American citizen, the right to make medical decisions on behalf of an incapacitated spouse and the tax benefits.

      Frankly, the medical one scares me the most. Imagine going to Disney World with your spouse. (I was going to go with spouse throughout this hypothetical, but that made it even longer, so I'm going to use the male pronouns. Please feel free to substitute the female pronouns according to your orientation.) Something goes wrong. Did he eat bad shellfish? Is it heat stroke? An aneurism? You're not a doctor you don't know! You get to the hospital and he is breathing (you think) but he is so still...

      The nurses wheel the gurney away and tell you to wait in the waiting room. Hours go by with no word. The door suddenly jumps open. Is it a doctor? No, not even close. The hospital has contacted the next of kin, which isn't you (you aren't married and Florida doesn't recognize civil unions), it is his mother. This is bad news. She hates you. You're "that faggot that seduced my son away from Christ!" to her. Maybe the fact that someone you love and she claims to love is hurt will cause her to unbend a little and you can concentrate on what is wrong with him instead of fighting. Of course not. She gets a doctor who is willing to talk to "a family member" but when you ask her what is going on, she refuses to tell you. You aren't a family member, so the doctor won't talk to you. You get more insistent with her. She can't be that cruel! She gets security to throw you out of the hospital. The End. Maybe he had a really bad case of sunstroke, maybe he had a congenital heart defect that killed him. You won't ever know, unless he calls you when he is conscious.

      You made it through that long hypothetical, good job. I really want you to imagine sitting in a hotel room, staring at a cellphone, knowing that your loved one may already be dead, knowing that it may be days before you find out. You have no legal options, you have no way of finding anything out. No one is under any obligation to tell you what happened and she won't tell you. She can bar you from the funeral, she can bar you from the burial. You can end up never seeing him again. Is this something you'd wish on another human being? Don't make excuses. Don't focus on the icky sex stuff, you think our sexy times are gross and we think your sexy times are gross, get over it. This HAS happened to people before. This has RECENTLY happened to people. Marriage equality would protect us from a horrific scenario that straight married people have never faced. Why do we have to beg for something that a decent person would just give? (And that is why so many of us hate the religious. "Love one another" is well and good, if you don't actively try to punish people who do things you dislike because you find it icky. It is kind of a contradiction and everybody hates a hypocrite.)

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
    523. Re: Really?!? by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      The burden of proof should be on the challengers of the current laws.

      The face that divorce is up and marriages are on the decline is a good indicator of what I said before about the destruction of the family.

    524. Re:Really?!? by lessthan · · Score: 1

      Surely you've seen this answer before, but here we go again... A truly intelligent person can see that living in harmony with his(her) fellows creates a greater benefit than every man(women) for themselves. How many hands did your computer go through to end up in front of you? How many people are here contributing to this discussion? One man couldn't have built the Hoover damn or threaded the sky with the steeples of the great cathedrals. You need me and I need you. Why do you think that your God promoted peace in the first place? It was just a whim of His?

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
    525. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Why is is it that so many on the right have NO CLUE what freedom of speech means?

      If I call you ugly, stupid, bigoted, or otherwise insult you, that is NOT a violation of your freedom of speech. That is my usage of my freedom of speech. This seems to be the big one for right wingers. "Waaa.... waaa..... waaa..... I was insulted, that's an attack on my freedom of speech!". No it's not. You have the right to speech, and I respect your right to speak, and I have the right to not-respect the content of your speech, I have the right to criticize your speech, I have the right to insult you and your speech.

      If I say "shut the fuck up", that is not a violation of your freedom of speech. You still have the right to continue speaking, and I have the right to express my opinion on it, and to say I think you should stop speaking.

      I have the right to stop being your friend if I dislike your speech. I have the right to tell other people they shouldn't be your friend. I have the right to avoid you, and avoid spending my money in your business because I dislike you and what you say. And I have the right to suggest to other people that should avoid you and not spend their money in your business. None of that is a violation of your freedom of speech.

      What DOES freedom of speech mean?

      It means the government can't put you in prison because it doesn't like what you have to say, it means I can't use the government to put you in prison for saying things I dislike, it means the government cannot deny you equal-access under the law because the government dislikes the content of your speech.

      You can be a member of the KKK, the Nazi party, NAMBLA, or whatever else. And if a city issues parade permits for activist groups, the city cannot deny you equal access to obtain a parade permit. THAT is a violation of your freedom of speech. I may utterly abhor your speech, but I will fight the government on your behalf, demanding that the government MUST issue parade permits on content-neutral terms. And once you do get that parade permit, I will either stay the hell away from your abhorrent parade, or I will show up at the parade to use MY freedom of speech to shout you down and insult you, protesting against your cause.

      honest about not supporting people who have opinions different than your own

      I will fight the government on your behalf if they try to imprison you for your speech, or if the government denies you equal access under the law. However beyond that I do NOT need to support cause, I do NOT need to respect you or what you have to say, I do NOT need to assist you in any way. I CAN and WILL oppose you in every way in my power. I will oppose you in every way SHORT of trying to criminalize your speech or deny you equal treatment under the law.

      There are a lot of things I dislike, there are a lot of things that offend me, but I am DEDICATED to the position that no one.... not even me.... can use violence merely because we are offended by what you have to say. And that specifically means that no one.... not even me.... can use government-sanctioned violence to arrest or imprison you merely because we are offended by what you have to say. That neither I not anyone else can use the force of government to deny you equal rights under the law, simply because we dislike what you have to say.

      Freedom of speech means I strictly reject violence against you for your objectionable speech (including the threat of police), and strictly oppose oppose striping your legal rights for your objectionable speech. But in the arena of speech-vs-speech, in the social arena, I can disrespect and combat your objectionable speech with all vigor.

      so that America may one day be of one mind

      Today we are nearly all of one mind that women should have an equal right to vote. And in getting to that point, there was nothing wrong with any disrespect that was expressed against opponents, there was nothing wrong with any insults cast against opponents, the

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    526. Re:Really?!? by lessthan · · Score: 1

      It is called CONSENT!!!! Every argument about marriage equality always devolves into some idiot saying that if we allow the gays to marry, we'd have to let the necrophiliacs, the zoophiles, and the pedophiles get their freak on. The dead and animals cannot consent. The age of consent for humans is an artificial line where, when crossed, our society considers that person capable of giving consent without a guardian's input. It has to be artificial, because all of nature is about gradients. Somewhere between black and white, in all the grays there has to be a point which is definitely black and a point that is definitely white. You may disagree with where I say the black starts, but we are still worried about it being black. Do you think that the age of consent is wrong? Fine. Campaign about it. Post fliers, produce commercials. Maybe with a good enough argument, may the rest of us will agree with you and we'll change it. It is still all about the ability to consent!

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
    527. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homosexuality doesn't cause AIDS any more than being black causes sickle-cell anemia or being female causes osteoporosis.

      Furthermore, victims of disease don't get to choose who they are. All of them deserve your sympathy, not your scorn.

    528. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The only thing I am asking them to accept is that our government does not.... cannot.... discriminate on the basis of race, religion or gender.

      If the government issues driver's licenses, the government cannot examine race, religion, or gender of the applicant as a basis to discriminate between acceptable and unacceptable applicants.

      If the government issues marriage licenses, the government cannot examine race, religion, or gender of the applicants as a basis to discriminate between acceptable and unacceptable applicants.

      The government cannot selectively exclude gay marriage applicants for the exact same reason the government cannot selectively exclude interracial marriage applicants. There's no way to write such a law without examining the race, religion, or gender of the applicants.

      Gay marriage has no more effect (and no less effect) on opponents than interracial marriage has on those opponents. There is nearly no effect at all, other than denying them the "freedom" to use the force of government to discriminate on the basis of race, religion, or gender. Live and let-live. They are being denied the power to constrain other people's lives.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    529. Re:Really?!? by cffrost · · Score: 1

      I'm going to the movie the day it opens. But first I'm going to stop by Chick-Fil-A for lunch.

      Does that make me evil too??

      Not necessarily, but it does suggest that you're an easily-manipulated victim of corporate propagandists.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    530. Re:Really?!? by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      If the government issues marriage licenses...

      You've moved beyond my patience with the federal government right there. WHY does the government have a right to define my marital commitment. Who it is to is immaterial. WHY does my marital status have any bearing on my taxes, my health insurance, or anything else!? My whole point is that the federal government should not be subsidizing me because I have kids, because I'm married, because I ama minority or because I have warts the size of Volkswagens on my ass. WTF is the federal government doing in my pants?!

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    531. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If (presumably) richer men are allowed multiple wives, that means that there are fewer wives for the rest of the men.

      The problem here is not multiple partners but, instead, men being allowed to have many marriages and woman being forbidden to. If everyone was allow equal rights to partner with whomever they wished this would no longer be a problem.

    532. Re:Really?!? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Oh, I read the book all right, in 1985, BEFORE the hand-waving sequels meant to "take back" the horror of what was done in the first book.

      I also remember the bullying and sadism of the kids at Battle School which IMHO was worse than the revelation that the kids were being trained to lead fleets without their knowledge.

      Ender should feel no guilt, he was deceived. If anyone needs to atone for the "Xenocide" it's Razer and the rest of the Battle School staff and the leaders of earth.

      But Lost Boys turned me off of Card forever.

    533. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I... there is so much wrong here.

      You... yes, there is. I'm... that's just... Oh, my... It's just that... written stammering... It... it looks so... so... stupid.

    534. Re:Really?!? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      Thanks for that. I was wondering if somebody set up us.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    535. Re:Really?!? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Like Muslims, you racist bastard?

      And what race are Muslims again?

    536. Re: Really?!? by Rational · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the directors, the producers and those on the cast with profit-sharing deals are the ones who least need to worry about paying the bills, so you can boycott to your heart's content without worrying too much about sending someone's family to live under a overpass. Personally, I'm not going to boycott the movie, because I thought the book was shite, and I don't think it counts as boycott if you had zero interest in the first place.

      --
      "Be nice, veer left, and never stop thinking" Iain Banks - Walking On Glass
    537. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or; a mans wifes (or husbands), can have their own husbands (or wifes). Look at it as a graph, rather than a tree - in computer science terms.

      Another unnnatural thing is this idea about possesion. You are applying the concept of relational possesion to polygamy, ignoring the other possibilities of polygamy.

    538. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You appear to be completely missing the point. Just like adoptive parents (straight or gay), they're still raising a child. It really doesn't matter whether they're raising a child who shares their DNA or not, they are still raising a child.

    539. Re: Really?!? by bmearns · · Score: 1

      The burden of proof should be on the challengers of the current laws.

      The burden of proof is always on the one making the claim. You're claiming that gay marriage erodes marriage. Now offer any kind of argument for how it does this.

      The face that divorce is up and marriages are on the decline is a good indicator of what I said before about the destruction of the family.

      I can totally agree to this, but it is in no way caused by gay marriage, that was my whole point.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    540. Re:Really?!? by harlequinn · · Score: 1

      "First, anything that real people really want to do is, by definition, 'natural' to humans."

      Anything?

      I'll make a list of things that some "real people really want to do":
      Raping others.
      Killing others.
      Killing themselves.
      Enslaving others.
      Self mutilating.
      Mutilating others.

      By your definition these are all "'natural' to humans". I'm pretty sure most people won't share the same view and will exclude some behaviours from what they consider natural or not.

      For arguments sake, assuming you are correct, just because it's natural doesn't necessarily mean it's right.

      (btw - I'm all for anyone being able to marry).

    541. Re: Really?!? by mcvos · · Score: 1

      That's exactly my consideration here. I don't mind if he's rich. But if he's going to use my money to actively campaign against basic human rights, then maybe I don't want to give him my money.

      But I don't have any special feelings for Ender's Game anyway, so it's an easy movie for me to skip. If someone says he simply has to see it, I'm not going to stop him.

    542. Re:Really?!? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      I was wondering if somebody set up us

      ... the bomb?

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    543. Re:Really?!? by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      Marriage is a civil institution that relates primarily to property. The US gov't has only been involved in marriage for a few hundred years because the US gov't has only existed for a few hundred years.

      Yes churches and religious groups kept marriage records and performed ceremonies. "The state" has evolved over time and for quite a bit of it religious groups were part of the state. That had some flaws - go read some European history.

      Marriage as a civil institution serves some very concrete situations. It handles various situations that arise for couples in terms of property rights, inheritance rights, child custody, immigration, criminal law, taxes, pensions, etc. There are problems that crop up for couples that are more complicated than if they came up (if they could come up) for individuals.

      Laws relating to marriage are designed to address those situations. To provide couples with reasonable expectations that they can plan on and to simplify people's lives in terms of their interactions with the state.

      The laws relating to marriage are generally there to make people's lives run more smoothly and therefore often get overlooked. But at times they crop up and when couples (both or individually) avail of them they understand the benefit those laws provide.

      Gay couples can already get married in religious services in all 50 states. The debate about the religious institution of marriage is a debate each religious group can work through. Eventually all of them will recognise same sex marriage but that's up to their individual congregations so generally the point is moot for most of us.

      This civil institution of marriage (it's like Java - it's a VM, it's a language, it's a beverage, it's an island!) is the issue that all citizens should be concerned about and it should respect the rights of each citizen and weigh the various concerns. You being "offended" is way lower on the scale than gay citizens having legal protections for their relationships just as straight citizens do.

      This is plainly clear. And in the future - the not very distant future I might add - those who don't understand that will be viewed by decent society as hateful, anti-social bigots. Everyone's free to be a hateful, anti-social bigot, but the rest of us are also free to call that out and to shun such people. Everyone has a right to their opinion and to speak their mind. No one has a right to avoid the social consequences of doing so.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    544. Re: Really?!? by Ricwot · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that be the Koran?

    545. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the LGBT were angry about not being allowed to sign a contract covering what everybody else had covered (such as inheritance, common properties, pensions etc.), not about the provisions for polygamy or polyandry, and not about legal provisions for whom they can choose as sex partners, that was fixed a few years ago.

      If that were true, they would have accepted a civil unions law that gave civil unions 100% equality with marriage. I have yet to meet a gay couple that would have accepted a civil union, even if it was legally equal to marriage in every way. Most would claim some bullshit about the "separate but equal" issues in the civil rights era, where a water fountain for blacks was dirty and unmaintained while the "white's only" water fountain was new and shiny. I call it bullshit because if a law says two things are equal, they are equal, period. It's not like inheritance laws for gays can get dirty or leak. These are not physical objects.

      When I would explain that "separate but equal" only applies to physical objects, they would say that they wanted to be "married", not unionized. So I ask them was stopping them from putting on white dresses, saying vows, exchanging rings, smearing cake on each other's faces, throwing a party and telling everyone they know that they are married? What difference does it make what the government called it?

      If you want to be married, be married. Marriage is about love, trust and commitment. It's not about inheritance rights, taxes and contracts. Why must you demand that government call your relationship a "marriage" when the "rights" part can be achieved with using that exact word? Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      This is not about equal rights. If it were, they could have had it years ago with little resistance. This is about revenge and punishing those they hate; religious people.

      Don't mod this down because you don't like it. Be an adult and reply with why you think I'm wrong.

      The issue with "separate but equal" while granting the legal rights of marriage it essentially puts into law the idea that Homosexual love and relationships are not equal to their heterosexual counter parts. It paints homosexual love as less than heterosexual love.
      I would contend holding out for full equal treatment and recognition of homosexual love and relationships is the goal, not forcing bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage. A group in society that has suffered un-equal treatment wishes that to be remedied and to start receiving equal treatment, however equal treatment does not simply boil down to equal legal treatment. Equal treatment under the law is just one many strands of equal treatment in a society.

    546. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all I have to do to be a serial killer in the middle east is to marry one girl, and then sleep around? And they take care of all the wet work FOR me? Talk about a life of luxury!

    547. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Agatha Christie's Top 10 Racist Moments" confuse me for a number reasons. All the examples are spoken by her characters - taking the statements as racist doesn't make her racist, only the character. But are the statements racist? Maybe in a literal sense of, "I'm English therefore better than anyone who isn't" - an attitude as common amongst all nations today as it was then (usually referred to as "patriotism" rather than "bigotry") - but not in any common sense. There doesn't seem any sense of "physical characteristic x implies physical/mental/spiritual characteristic y". Her work shows it's age - her description of an exotic young Spanish lady looking out of place in the north of England and Christie's desire to re-situate her in a bull ring is pure romance and doesn't fit well with anyone who's visited Huelva for example. The other examples, to a greater or lesser degree, trigger similar thoughts.

    548. Re:Really?!? by Quila · · Score: 1

      It's not a "preference"!

      Many gays disagree. If it's genetic, biological, then the anti-gay people could potentially come up with a "cure." It could go back to being considered a disease, which it was until recently.

      I don't care what gay people do, although I do resist any small group of the population trying to force its views on the rest (religious right, activist gays, same thing). I just took time to understand the views of those against gay marriage, something gays and their supporters rarely do. It's much easier demonize the opposition, which lets you feel morally superior.

    549. Re: Really?!? by sageres · · Score: 0

      That's why I'll never go buy Stephen King's books or movies, and will never watch movies made by Oliver Stone, or frankly watch anything that has these guys in there.

    550. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for the thoughtful response. I do still feel there is something highly 'accidental' to the genius of Card's Ender's series, but I have read some criticisms that damn the books for being highly manipulative in the way they persuade the audience to forgive Ender's actions:

      "Card has spoken in interviews about his tropism for the story of the person who sacrifices himself for the community. This is the story, he tells us, that he has been drawn to tell again and again. For example, in justification of the scenes of violence in his fiction, Card told Publisher’s Weekly in 1990 that, “In every single case, cruelty was a voluntary sacrifice. The person being subjected to the torture was suffering for the sake of the community.” I find this statement astonishingly revealing. By “The person being subjected to the torture,” Card is not referring here to Stilson, Bonzo, or the buggers, who may well be sacrificed, but whose sacrifices are certainly not “voluntary.” Their deaths are not the voluntary sacrifices that draw Card’s concern. No, in these situations, according to Card the person being tortured is Ender, and even though he walks away from every battle, the sacrifice is his. In every situation where Ender wields violence against someone, the focus of the narrative’s sympathy is always and invariably on Ender, not on the objects of Ender’s violence. It is Ender who is offering up the voluntary sacrifice, and that sacrifice is the emotional price he must pay for physically destroying someone else. All the force of such passages is on the price paid by the destroyer, not on the price paid by the destroyed. “This hurts me more than it hurts you,” might well be the slogan of Ender’s Game."

      One might equate the effects on Ender to exactly the same mental effects on our own armed forces in Afghanistan, who come home with PTSD, have a huge suicide rate, etc. Whether you agree with us being at "war" over there (I don't), it is quite easy to see in real life in this country the "price paid by the destroyer" on our veterans.

      ... and by exactly the same forces, the military commanders who wanted to "win at all costs" regardless of the human consequences either on the ground to the population (the buggers), or the military they are "using" to fight (Ender and his jeesh). Yes, one can argue that the military forces are somewhat responsible as the "destroyers", as is Ender (and thus his "tortured soul"), but the role of servicemen (and Ender/his jeesh) is to "follow orders", the order being to "win".

      I don't see it as any different as what is going on, in real life, right now.

    551. Re: Really?!? by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Does this mean (as far as you know) they struck down the part of the law that includes digital creations (a digital photo of a sketch counting?)

      That part was very disturbing to me, as I would think that anything created without actors/posers/participants is clearly artistic expression (even if it's gross and I don't want to see it).

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    552. Re:Really?!? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      References?

      Because I've only ever seen articles about the women being punished.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    553. Re:Really?!? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Sorry...it does suck doesn't it :-(

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    554. Re:Really?!? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      There are more than 0 affairs that occur in those states, and they do, in fact, kill the women involved.

      FTFY

      Not exclusively, and the current application of the law was not it's original intent.

      Having a woman killed because she was raped us just as un-muslim as it was un-christian for Henry VIII (Or Bill Clinton?) to do what he did.

      Cultural and religious standards are only one aspect of the problem, systemic corruption is another.

      It's barbaric regardless of the sex of the persons involved.

      On top of that, I'd be interested in seeing any actual references you have that show men being punished as the women are because so far I have ONLY seen articles about women being whipped or killed.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    555. Re:Really?!? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      No, in those countries they execute both the man and woman involved.

      I bet they only kill the poor men who can be made an example of.

    556. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you. I wanted to see the movie but I don't want to put money in someones pocket who is going to use that money to curtail my rights or the rights of anyone else. So for that I think their is a need for a boycott. In the Chik Fil A instance it sucks to see the employees get hurt by the boycott but their are other jobs. If people learn that it is unacceptable to most people to not treat everyone equally then perhaps they will stop trying to trample the rights of others. If not because it is the right thing to do then because it is in their economic best interest. Either way everyone gets equal rights and they will learn the World is not going to end or their marriage isn't going to be affected by the marriage of others.

    557. Re: Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      In other words, in order to be pornography legally, it has to be just pornography. It cannot have any other conceivable purpose.

      That has always been a bullshit argument because all film is art, whether it's great art or not. There's an artistic component, it is creative. Porn is art. Further, what purpose do you think there would be in one teen sending naked pics of themselves to another consenting teen? You think that they're exchanging the photos to discuss artistic merit? Border cases aside (like asking someone for a medical opinion, however uninformed) sexting pics are pretty much pornography.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    558. Re:Really?!? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      What do you mean by the state? The people as a whole? The government and their clique?

      The latter, of course. When you manipulate elections and votes (there's lots of other conditions which we're failing, but this one comes first) then the government does not work for the people.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    559. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually marriage is more of a religious thing so the government should recognize ONLY civil unions based on whatever standards the voting public decides. A marriage license is just what we currently call what SHOULD be a civil union that is recognized by the government and isn't directly related to the church ceremony. I know when I got married the only crossover between church and state was that the pastor was legally allowed to sign off on the marriage license but there's no real reason why that couldn't have happened at the courthouse for the legal stuff and then we could have gone to the church to have the religious ceremony and no big deal. That's why I view the whole "gay marriage" issue to be a farce that fails to recognize the real issue here - the current way the government recognizes marriage crosses the line between church and state. Once that is rectified then we can all just get along in a constitutional fashion. But if we keep up the way we're going the separation between church and state will disappear entirely as the state will control the churches which is definitely NOT what was supposed to happen. But then we seem to be strengthening the oligarchy and heading down the road towards total opression with the 'bipartisan" parties cooperating to make us effectively the single party system that's supposed to be so horrible and non-democratic - in spite of the fact that we have never been a democracy but a democratic republic......

    560. Re:Really?!? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      The National Socialist Party is about as accurate a name as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

      Well, it was once Hitler killed Rohm and did away with all the Socialist ideas in the Nazi party except for the name. The Baath Party had the same issue as being the left over arabic arm of the Nazi party still had "socialist" in the name so Syria and Iraq had to keep doing this semantics dance about what what "Arab socialism" means.

    561. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was paid for the movie option decades ago. None of the movie money will be going in his pocket.

    562. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's odd. Every mission I was on had a bunch of officers in the area, usually leading from the front.

      Where exactly did you serve?

    563. Re:Really?!? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      First, when is that program from? The NSDAP had a tension between nationalism and socialism until about 1934, when the Socialist wing of the party was dealt with. What we usually think of Nazis is decidedly on the nationalist side.

      Second, actions rather than party programs show where the real beliefs are. In actual fact, the Nazis cozied up to the industrialists and didn't perform any of that sort of agrarian reform.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    564. Re: Really?!? by iamhassi · · Score: 1

      I will see Ender's Game, even if it does look like that horrible Hunger Games movie set in space. We watch tom cruise movies even though he has been a raging lunatic for at least a dozen years, and kayne west keeps selling music even though he's a huge racist. Apparently the public does not care about politics of the seller as long as the product is good. Just look at all the crap we buy from communist China

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    565. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The vast majority of the founding fathers were Christian, and came here to avoid persecution re their religious beliefs. 2. A "family", by most folks' (At least in most countries' definition), consists of a male and female who have procreated and produced children. 3. If homosexual behaviour was truly "normal", then none of us would be here to argue about this, because Adam would have gone off with Harry, Eve would have gone off with Sally, no "begetting" would have taken place, and when those four died of old age, that would have been all she wrote, so to speak, about humans. God would have been left sitting alone in the Garden of Eden, wondering where he'd gotten his sums wrong. 4. The denominations that have been relenting to the extremist activists demanding equal treatment and leadership positions regardless of sexual behaviour are hemorrhaging membership and entire individual churches who then join with denominations that do not try to rewrite the Bible to make their own behaviours Biblically acceptable. 5. I have no problem with "civil unions".. Those of us with a solid religious background don't necessarily agree on that point, but pretty much are in agreement that "marriage" is between one man and one woman. Referring again to "begetting", that's how it works, folks, like it or not, take it or leave it. That is how we are made, whether you believe in a Supreme Being or in Evolution, That is how we are made.. Deal with it. If you can't deal with it, it's not MY logic circuits that are broken.

    566. Re:Really?!? by netsentry · · Score: 1

      While I would defend to the death his right to publish his ravings on the internet, he still has no inherent right to my money.

      Apparently a lot of other people feel the same way, hence a boycott.

      I tried to read Ender's Game once. A friend lent a copy to me. I don't think I got further than the first 20 pages or so when I found myself thinking that, gee, something's not quite right here. This sounds just as contrived as a Chick tract. So I looked up his background and lo and behold I found out he was a Mormon.

      Maybe some day I'll finish Ender's game, but if the first few pages are any indication, it's a contrived, shallow story that attempts to create a pity party for a contrived, shallow protagonist. Apparently I'm not the only person who thinks that, and apparently there are people who think that who don't even care about gay marriage.

      Neon Genesis Evangelion was a much more compelling story with similar themes. Then again, I just set a pretty low bar for a compelling story.

      That being said, maybe the movie will be better. Perhaps I'll torrent it at some point in the future and watch it opposite Battleship.

      It's pretty easy to look back at works written decades ago and see them as contrived because we have been exposed to so many books and movies in the genre since then that use similar plot lines. Ender's Game was unique because the shallow protagonist you refer to is an enigma. He is a combination of understanding well past his years, genius beyond the level of nearly all adults, and yet sees everything through a child's innocent eyes. The telling of the story with this combination is far from shallow in my opinion. Aside: I also very much enjoyed Evangelion.

      Thanks

    567. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not LDS but have worked with studying ancient north America where supposedly the stories in the Book of Mormon took place,
      along with other archaelogist, researches over the last 20 years in trying to prove / disprove the Book. Using an ancient American north american setting instead of South america as most Mormons believe.

      Steel swords, steel mines and other metals have been known to exist, recovered in mass heaps under burial mounds all along the great finger lakes region in upstate new york. That is common knowledge in the north now.

      Every crop mentioned in the Book of Mormon has been found to exist in some form in upstate new york and ohio, and northern Pennsylvania during ancient times.

      Societies that flourished, the mound builders had a very good knowledge of direction, as well as geometry and astrology.

      The descriptions of their travels throughout the middle east, several areas mentioned have also since been found that match exactly.

      Several animals thought to not have existed in North America mentioned in the BoM have since been excavated along with human remains, from ancient horses, to elephants.

      But as for Orson Scott Card, I too agree he needs to come out of his religous bigotry.

    568. Re:Really?!? by MiSaunaSnob · · Score: 1

      if your ok with calling it a Civil Union why not be ok with calling it Marriage? If its the exact same thing why have a different name for it? Why is it up to me to disprove your argument when the logic behind it is flawed? Your argument is flawed, if they were the same we would call them the same thing. The people who don't want the word Marriage to be used that way have a reason, this reason is bigoted. They are trying to use the difference in words as a tool of oppression, and to further there own agenda. This is wrong.

    569. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      The problem with your comment is that it is entirely incorrect.

      Orson Scott Card initially had a short story, but it really took life when he came up with the concept for the sequel. An editor suggested taking that concept for Speaker of the Dead and inserting Ender, a character from an unrelated short story at that point.

      The novel of Ender's Game was written literally as a means to lead into Speaker for the Dead, a story he had already decided he wanted to tell. The books were actually bundled together and distributed as Ender's War.

      Even more, the "hand-waving" you want to invent is actually something present in the first book. Go re-read the last chapter of Ender's Game in which Ender takes possession of the Hive Queen and vows to right his wrong. From the very beginning, the story was about tolerance, not advocating genocide and war.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    570. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Whatever you do, don't read Jack London or H. P. Lovecraft, who both wrote racist, propoganda books that fed the fear of "Yellow Peril". Supporting these racist authors will have real world implications.

      Watching Lethal Weapon advances antisemitism.

      Driving a Volkswagen on the autobahn is a clear indication you support Nazi ideals.

      And watching a movie whose whole message is one of tolerance clearly will support the exact opposite ideal.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    571. Re:Really?!? by Quiz1812 · · Score: 1

      Let us not forget, early childbirth, at the age of physical maturity, leads to termination of the education. Even women who have children in their early 20's tend to halt their education. They are also too immature to make an insightful choice of mate. Polygamists who practice child marriage solve this issue by their leader allocating preteen girls to the richest men in their congregations to curry favor and garner bigger donations to their church. The young girls become the equivalent of sex slaves. If our population was falling off and we were running out of warm bodies to keep our civilization going, polygamy (not child wives) would make sense since one man can impregnate an astounding number of women in one year, but only one child is the most women can produce in a year. If you look at how many marriages fail between people of young, but legal age compared to how many who marry in their mid to late 20's or later, there is a big difference. The younger the people in the marriage, the higher the odds it will end badly. The real issue though, is his absolute bigotry against homosexuals. He is a hate monger. Gay people do not do any damage to marriage. I have been married for almost 15 years. I have had gay friends in fairly large numbers for most of my adult life. Yet, I have never doubted that I wanted to marry a woman. I have met gay couples with children. They were actually great parents and wonderful examples of how to have a happy and fruitful marriage. In fact, OSC makes a big deal about being a Mormon. Yet I have sat down with more than one Mormon who scoffed at his claims and boldly stated that he knew nothing of his own church. One of them was recently returned from his two year mission!

    572. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Which are we talking about> Saudi Arabia they executed a princess and her lover (1977), Misha'al bint Fahd al Saud, a famous case.
      Here's one with 3 men and 1 women being executed in Pakistan. http://www.theage.com.au/news/World/Four-executed-for-adultery-in-Pakistan/2007/06/05/1180809502745.html
      A couple executed by Taliban. http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/271594

      I found these extremely fast. I've seen nothing at all to suggest that the male participant in adultery is given leniency under strict Islamic societies, and am surprised to hear that someone actually thinks the men are excused in those societies or given lesser sentences. (Actually in Saudi Arabia the sentence is different; beheading for the man, stoning for the woman.)

    573. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alternate sexuality scheme would be one you had in succession. Bisexuality perhaps. Do you mean alternative?

    574. Re:Really?!? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Saudi's publicly executed the nephew of a Saudi ambassador.

    575. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Webster: a person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices; especially : one who regards or treats the members of a group (as a racial or ethnic group) with hatred and intolerance

      Lobbying for a law that punishes what you consider a sin is not bigotry. It is just sharing your beliefs with the government.

      Also, it seems that anytime is has been put to a vote by the people, the people have also chosen marriage between man and woman (which

      Can anyone provide and example where Orson Scott Card showed hate or intolerance to an individual for their beliefs that doesn't involve lobbying for laws based on his belief system?

    576. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I think you cross a line when you call for the violent overthrow of the government for the crime of treating people equally.

      Can you provide a citation?

    577. Re:Really?!? by aurizon · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, tolerance, so he should tolerate bit-torrent downloads, we enjoy his work product and he gets nothing from it.

    578. Re:Really?!? by aestrivex · · Score: 1

      Possibly, but note that chicken from Chick-Fil-A cannot be pirated.

    579. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their only HONEST response was they wanted to FORCE those bigoted Christians to recognize their marriage.

      This is not about equal rights. If it were, they could have had it years ago with little resistance. This is about revenge and punishing those they hate; religious people.

      I completely agree. This is a war against religious people. The next logical step in this story is to start suing churches after legalization. Homosexuality is forbidden in many religions, so what happens when the Catholic Church won't marry a gay couple? Sue them, of course. And since it is the law of the land they will get, at the very least, some cash settlements. Some churches will relent to survive, but some won't.

      It isn't about acceptance, it's about punishing people they disagree with and tossing out a fundamental US right, one for which this country was founded: To worship as you see fit.

    580. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make some good points. But can you really say that all religious scriptures are fantasies? Take the the most famous one, the Bible. It's got a lot of legitimate history in there. In fact, I haven't found anything in it that has been disproven by other sources or archaeology. Sure, there's things that just haven't been proven yet, but archaeology will never find everything. It is actually one of, if not the, most reliable ancient document in existence. If you read it for yourself, you may find it to be more real then you'd think...

      Also, it sad that so much pain has been caused by people using "religion" as their motive. But many of those people are not actually acting on what their religion tells them to do - they're doing what they want and putting their god's stamp of approval on it.
      Sometimes, though, a religion tells it's followers to do something that may actually cause pain to some people. In my case, this is Christianity telling me that homosexuality is wrong. Thus, I'm opposed to it, which I understand is not cool by a lot of people. But consider this: if Christianity is in fact true, then wouldn't it actually be kind of me to tell people that they're wrong to act out on their homsexuality? (I don't think feeling "gay" is wrong, like many things, it's the acting on those feelings that is wrong) If I'm doing something wrong, either morally or just plain doing something incorrectly, I appreciate it when someone corrects me. It doesn't matter how right I think I am, nothing changes what is actually the right way. I'm not going to force anyone to not be gay (I can't), but I cannot support any legal action that tries to make right what I know to be wrong.

      Keep in mind that tolerance, in the way the word is used in our culture (which is not what it really means) can never happen. My opinion is that you are wrong. Your's is that I'm wrong. One or both of us is actually wrong. The media takes one side and then says that the other side has to be "tolerant" by agreeing with theirs. That's not going to happen. True tolerance is agreeing to disagree and moving on in life - it is not forcing the other side to agree with you. If you do, you're being the actual "intolerant" one.

      I'm all for equal rights for homosexuals, but I'm against gay marriage. Gays already have the same rights as everyone else (a gay man can marry a woman). It's an extra right that they are seeking - they want special treatment. You might say that what's wrong here is that they're often being denied the right to marry the person they love. The question is then if that is the only reason/purpose in marriage? If it is, then we need to allow all marriage (multiple partners, animals, children, etc.). Most people wouldn't say that that's right, so there must be some other reason. The truth is, marriage is something so much better than just "love". It's a man and a woman coming together and completing each other through their equal, but different, gender roles.

      One last thing. Calling names (which is actually a logical fallacy) is not helpful to any discussion and reflects poorly on you. I would advise you to try not to make insulting jabs at people in your posts if you want to be taken seriously. I tried to look past them and do just that, but it makes rational discussion much harder.

    581. Re: Really?!? by emilper · · Score: 1

      polygamy was legal in USA ?

      having sex out of wedlock with multiple partners is not polygamy

    582. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is a certain Christian minority feels entitled to special privileges that "must" be endorsed by the federal government, and if we dare point that out they will whine that we are being narrow-minded because...they want to call us names, lacking an actual defensible rationale. I refuse to accept their claim for special status.

      The deeper reality is that that describes what I see in both sides.

    583. Re: Really?!? by ender89 · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean. I loved enders game and the enders shadow series (not speaker for the dead and etc.), and his iron man comic was inspired. I tried reading some of his other stuff and it just gets horribly bogged down. I tried starting his Alvin maker series ( which I expected to be deeply rooted in Mormonism, but whose to say it doesn't make for a good story), but it got intensely weird when they tried to make american natives into some crazy super race. (More Mormonism. Turns out its convoluted and horrible story wise)

    584. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orson Scott Card is pleading for tolerance? That's rich.

      A big shout out to all masturbators. Who do you think you are having sex with when you masturbate regadless of what you might be imagining? The secret to understanding rump rangers is to know that homosexuality is on a continuum with masturbation. That is why it is called perversion

    585. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only about the rights.
      Accepting what would be a legally created line of discrimination is what accepting a "Civil union" is about, You call bullshit because you don't have to live with such issues on the recieving end of the 'agreement". I remember in New Jersey after they passed a "Civil Union" law there, a person working for UPS was denied being allowed by the EMPLOYER to put his partner on the insurance because Civil Unions do not create a "spouse" and that's what the Rights were for, a spouse. Of course the company lost the battle in court but the point was it should never have come to that place in the beginning. "Seperate but equal" doesn't simply apply to objects, it applies to institutions and the terminiology is used to describe the issue with Forced Segregation, not just water fountains but Education in Schools, it was found that the schools for African American students were under funded and the education provided was not on the same level with that found in Caucasian schools.

      Marriage, and the rights, responsibilities, and obligations that go along with the Legal Recognition of marriage can't be duplicated, they may be approximated but those approximations do not carry the legal force and recognition that one marriage license carries.
      This has nothing to do with 'revenge', many of those 'religious people" actually agree with us and do openly accept LGBT in their churches.
      Finally, it is also about the Money involved, inheritance rights, taxes, medical decisions, the whole ball of wax, just like it is with heterosexuals otherwise THEY would have long ago ditched the entire government recognition thing.

    586. Re:Really?!? by anyGould · · Score: 1

      When I would explain that "separate but equal" only applies to physical objects, they would say that they wanted to be "married", not unionized. So I ask them was stopping them from putting on white dresses, saying vows, exchanging rings, smearing cake on each other's faces, throwing a party and telling everyone they know that they are married? What difference does it make what the government called it?

      I would answer this by asking the reverse - why is it so important that existing married couples stay "married"? No reason why man and wife can't go do the dresses and vows and whatnot and get a civil union rather than "married". Why don't they?

      Or a related example - two people can live together, own property and businesses together, have and raise children together, and stick together through thick and thin for 25 or 40 years... but they're still considered to be "living in sin" because they're not "married".

      The label has power - and you know it, because you end with "telling everyone they know that they are married". Except they're not.

    587. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      I don't read Jack London or HP Lovecraft, sorry. Lethal Weapon was dumb and since I found out about Mel Gibson hatemongering about the same time as the rest of you, I don't watch his shit anymore either. VW's dont appeal to me, so you don't have to worry about that as well. It seems you are wanting to paint me as a hypocrite and I'm afraid you won't be able to do that. If you pay this man any money at all, no matter if the movie is 22 hours of kittens, bunnies, and unicorns gleefully playing under the summer sun, he will take that money and do real life harm to LGBT persons. I will not support that and if you do, regardless of your attitude towards gay people, then you're just paying lip service. Heaven forbid you should have to sacrifice or suffer even minutely to stand by your beliefs. This is one of the many things wrong with this country. "Oh I love X but if it inconvieniences me then I suddenly don't care."

    588. Re:Really?!? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      You miss the entire point. You insist there are real life consequences, as if by watching this movie, it advances Card's anti-gay agenda. The reality is that the movie is far likely to do the opposite given that the story itself advocates tolerance. You continue to insist on something that makes no sense logically, and historically has proven false repeatedly.

      If there was a clear correlation, such as all proceeds of the movie going directly to Card (who was likely already paid his set amount), and in turn those proceeds going directly to fund discrimination, then perhaps you'd have a point. Card already has wealth, and that wealth has not caused direct harm to the LGBT community, even though Card has certainly written ignorant essays calling for the criminalization of homosexuality. And despite those essays, homosexuality has not been criminalized. In fact, Utah is rumored to be on the precipice of overturning their gay marriage ban (despite Card's comments, and despite it being a strongly Mormon state).

      The decision to attend the movie or not doesn't advance any political cause. Speaking to your elected officials, voting, volunteering, donating money, etc. These things advance political causes.

      I'd dare say your false pretense of political activism is what is wrong with the country. You think you're making a difference by skipping a movie, and in doing so clearing yourself of obligation for actual action.

      My original statement is that it is ironic that Card is a homophobe despite writing this fantastic story of tolerance, to which you foolishly tried to counter that his story doesn't promote tolerance. However, it does. It influenced me in a very positive way in promoting tolerance as a youth, because I experienced the story without the context of his personal political views. I'd wager most movie-goers will do the same.

      For every single Hollywood movie you can see this summer, I'm sure you can find at least one person attached to the movie who has done or said something abhorrent. And unless you are consistent in your pointless boycott, then yes, you are fully a hypocrite.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    589. Re: Really?!? by SanDiegoFreeway · · Score: 1

      Ha! I like it. I picked TBOM over the Koran for this because, because the various LDS denominations all (IIRC) claim to be restorationist: they are practicing Christianity in it's original form, though I could be mistaken about this. I don't think you'd find any Muslims who would claim the same.

      --
      -J
    590. Re: Really?!? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "That has always been a bullshit argument because all film is art, whether it's great art or not."

      Whether it's bullshit or not, that *IS* the law. All the way up to the Supreme Court.

    591. Re: Really?!? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Yes. As you say, to the best of my knowledge. IANAL.

      The case, as I recall (I remember the ruling better than the details), was over precisely this issue. Somebody had created something... I think it was a "comic" or something like that, in any case "created", not real... that depicted children in a sexual context, but did not of course contain any real children.

      I think we can pretty much all agree that this is in very poor taste to say the least. But according to the courts, it's legal.

    592. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      1) the vast majority of the founding fathers claimed Christianity because people were still burned at the stake for some heresies, less than 100 years before. Smart people would claim Christianity. People like Einstein claimed belief in God, with variable definitions of God - some incompatible with a Christian God, and did so to deflect complaints he wasn't godly enough, as if that had some effect on whether relativity was more descriptive than Newtonian physics.

      2)"Family" for most folks (at least in most countries definitions) are people who live together as a family, or have blood ties. As "family" has few legal benefits, most don't define it rigorously. The few where family has some legal benefits (pacific islands for one I know), the definition is "anyone you claim is family is."

      3) What does "normal" have to do with it? Are you arguing that people with pierced ears should be banned by law from getting married, as that's "not natural"? If not, then "natural" has no effect on marriage.

      4) Spandex is "illegal" under the bible, as is polyester. What do you do with those? How about people who eat the wrong meats?

      5) Then why are you complaining. Every "civil union" I've seen doesn't match marriage in all but name. As such, "separate but equal" doesn't seem to work. Why do you think "separate but equal" will work this time?

      Referring again to "begetting", that's how it works, folks, like it or not, take it or leave it. That is how we are made, whether you believe in a Supreme Being or in Evolution, That is how we are made.. Deal with it. If you can't deal with it, it's not MY logic circuits that are broken.

      So, people should be tested for fertility before marriage certificates are issued? If not, then it's obviously *not* about begetting. Your logic circuits are very very broken.

    593. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil Unions could "in theory" be made "equal" to marriages, but first you would have to make sure to catch and cover every legal loophole everywhere that might make their legal status and the rights and responsibilities conferred 100% equal on both the federal level and in all 50 states, not just 99.8% equal...

      Then you'd have to deal with the vast social stigma issues that would tend to make much of society treat people who have a "civil union" differently than those that have a "marriage". Maybe that doesn't matter to you. But to a lot of gay couples with a civil union, I'm sure it matters like hell. De facto vs. de jure, sir. Not equal.

      I'm sure they COULD have made the blacks-only water fountains shiny and clean and well maintained too. But you could never reasonably expect that to happen. Same with civil unions, if you give one thing to the "mainstream" group and the other to the "minority disliked by many people", inevitably the second thing will not be treated as well. It's just a case of different methods of "not treating as well" here.

    594. Re:Really?!? by athenaprime · · Score: 1

      Fiscally punishing someone due to their opinion is stupid. It discourages free speech, discourages open communication, and discourages the expression of new ideas. Unfortunately, with free speech and open communication you sometimes end up with idiots like Card spouting off crap. The best thing to do is ignore them.

      You are guaranteed the right to spout whatever moronic drivel you want, thanks to the Constitution. You are NOT guaranteed the right to avoid, sidestep, or otherwise be excused of the consequences of spouting said drivel. And you are certainly not guaranteed the right to demand other citizens give you their money for it.

      Speech has consequences. One of those consequences for Card is his butthurt over the fact that his moronic drivel might be cutting into his profits. Boo-frickin'-hoo. Tolerance? I'll tolerate the shit out of him. But Tolerance ends at my wallet. After all, he's not obligated to send a blender to every gay couple getting married from now until the movie ends its run in the theaters, is he? If he shows that kind of tolerance, yeah, I might pony up eight bucks to go see the flick. Otherwise, he's just another case of Authors Behaving Badly, and I do not patronize Authors Behaving Badly.

    595. Re:Really?!? by athenaprime · · Score: 1

      Great. If a bunch of rubes can be found to pass him their money, yay for him. The Chick-Fil-A effect convinced me that faith is dead in America while Religion's walking corpse marches on. How so many people equated deep moral righteousness with the consumption of a mass-produced chicken sandwich baffled me. And if the CFA effect truly is an effect...then he should have no reason to whine for toleration from the people he bashes.

    596. Re:Really?!? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      The Employee-Employer relationship is fundamentally different then the relationship between Card and I: there is an imbalance of power in that relationship and that invalidates the comparison.

      In terms of power, the consumer and the employer are the same. The consumer can decide completely on his own who to purchase from or whether to purchase at all, just like the employer can decide who to hire/fire/give a raise, or whether to do it at all. The only difference is in the impact of the decision.. one consumer doesn't typically make a big difference to a producer, whereas losing your job makes a big difference to the employee. On the other hand, a widespread organized boycott dramatically increases the impact of the consumers' purchasing decision on the producer.

      If you think it's the scale that matters, then we could talk about the morality of an employer paying black employees $10 less per pay period, which has a pretty minor impact but is still quite obviously immoral.

      Here, I am the customer: there are any number of possible places where my money can go and no one has any claim on it. If I do not buy something it is not a penalty, therefore the act of not buying something is not a punishment.

      We're not talking about random customers making rational decisions in a capitalistic framework. We're talking about people boycotting a movie due to the political views of one person involved in the movie. Here's Google's definition of boycott:

      Verb
      Withdraw from commercial or social relations with (a country, organization, or person) as a punishment or protest.
      Noun
      A punitive ban that forbids relations with other bodies, cooperation with a policy, or the handling of goods.

      So your argument about this specific discussion, where people are saying they won't see the movie due to Card's anti-gay stance, is incorrect. A boycott is a financial punishment. The difference between a boycott and a rational purchasing decision is that the boycott is due to an external factor not related to the transaction at hand. If there are two widgets that do the exact same thing, and one is made by Card, and the other is made by someone else, and you exclusively buy the other one and convince other people to buy the other one solely due to the identity of the person who made it.. then you are boycotting Card's products.

      Now if you don't want to see the movie because you just aren't interested in the movie, regardless of Card's involvement, then nothing I've said applies to you. But that's not the group I'm talking about, I'm talking about people who claim to be avoiding the movie solely because of Card's irrelevant speech about gays, implying they would otherwise be interested in seeing the movie.

      Yes, if someone wants to not shop at a store because it has gay people in it, they are entirely free to do so. Doing so does not punish the store.

      There's a store near my house. I've been shopping there for the past 10 years. They hire a gay guy and suddenly I say "Hmm you know, I'm gonna shop somewhere else from now on because I hate gays!" You REALLY HONESTLY believe that is not a punishment against the store for hiring a gay person? How about if I come on slashdot and post "I'm not gonna go to that store anymore because they hired a gay guy and I want to punish them for deviating from what I think is morally right." It's still not a punishment? There's no morality involved? You wouldn't call me a bigot, you'd just say "Oh well, stdarg is just making a rational purchasing decision?" I mean I'm telling you I want to punish them and I'm doing it by withholding my business from the store. I don't know how you can possibly say that's not a punishment. And that's exactly what you're doing -- in fact you're calling it a boycott against Card due to his political activism, and I already showed the definition of boycott is that it's a withdrawal from commerce as a means of punishment.

    597. Re:Really?!? by CHIT2ME · · Score: 1

      Think about this. Peanut Butter and Chocolate can be "married" in a Reece's Peanut Butter Cup, but, two gays or lesbians cannot be married. Seems to me the world's religions need to rethink the definition of marriage!!!

      --
      My karma is bad. Don't get too close!!!
    598. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Ender's Game seems like a decent novel... until you notice that it's a child molester's wet dream.

      Young boys choose to leave their families, live with "trainers" who are teaching them how to do something with implications they don't fully understand, and when one trainer is done with the boys they get sent along to another like pieces of meat.

      I'm pretty sure Card is the type of homophobe who hates The Gay because he has it in himself, and wants to deny it as vehemently as possible so as to avoid suspicion.

    599. Re:Really?!? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      If the government issues marriage licenses

      You've moved beyond my patience with the federal government right there.

      *I* haven't. The present reality has.
      I said *IF* the government issues marriage licenses *THEN* the government cannot discriminate based on race/religion/gender in granting those licenses.

      *IF* the government gets entirely out of the marriage business, I'm fine with that. That is a perfectly reasonable perfectly valid option. If you want to get the law fixed to eliminate government-marriage-licenses, you have my blessing and my passive support. I don't think you're likely to succeed, but if you do, great, problem solved.

      But so long as the government *is* issuing marriage licenses, I would appreciate your support, either passive support or preferably active support, that the government cannot use race/religion/gender as a basis to discriminate against interracial/interfaith/gay marriages.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    600. Re:Really?!? by Zynder · · Score: 1
      I don't miss the point at all. You are arguing from a position of ignorance. You claim OSC is just spouting off at the mouth but he is actually an active member of anti-gay lobbying organizations. Whatever money he makes, whether it is royalties or a set amount matters not. He will use some of that money to advance his agenda in a real and measurable way. He will harm my friends. I am not ok with that. If he has already been paid and the movie flops then maybe he won't get a sequel. Either way he has been deprived of my money which makes me part of the solution and not the problem. That in no way absolves me of further action and if I see it again, I'll step up to the plate again.

      I don't recall claiming his story is not of tolerance, I claim it is mere lip service that he is saying one thing to your face while he's slowly lifting that knife to your back. It's not ironic at all. That is a common attack vector that our police use all the time. That's what undercover agents do. Get in there, get your trust, and then set you up for a fall. I don't play that shit.

      My theory on why you are as dismissive of this is and treat it as no big deal is:

      It influenced me in a very positive way in promoting tolerance as a youth, because I experienced the story without the context of his personal political views.

      Now that you are older, you do not want to ruin those childhood memories which you feel has shaped you into the person you are today. If you admit that this guy is scum then you will feel that maybe you are too. No one wants to ruin their childhood so you just pretend it doesn't exist. This happens to many religious people. All that stuff that was spoonfed to them by the church when they were little and made them who they are get suddenly questioned when the harshness of the real world sets in and they experience extreme loss and pain for the first time. A lot lose thier faith. I am now claiming you don't want to lose yours either (referring to Card). He was a childhood hero to you and you do not want to see the mighty fall. I never had any illusions about him at all so I can see him for what he truly is. If his story of tolerance were a reflection of either his morals or his now regained morals he wouldn't still be pressing his agenda. He would be out apologizing and maybe even helping "the enemy". He doesn't do this therefore his story of tolerance is utter bullshit.

      I will not bet against "I'd wager most movie-goers will do the same." because you will win that one. Not because they do not care, but because they are ignorant. They don't know what kind of douche this guy is, so they will get to experience it as you said, without bias. I mean to change that as much as I possibly can and you're getting pissed at all of us in this thread cause it makes your guy look bad and you advocate for him so if he is flawed, you appear flawed.

      It looks like overall, we are just gonna have to agree to disagree. We are both firm in our stance so we aren't gonna change either of our minds. The only thing I hope to accomplish is that maybe someone else reading these posts, sees them and it influences them. It could go either way as to which side they take but we can't control that.

    601. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had bothered to read any of Card's books, you would realize they all have a theme of tolerance.

    602. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ha. Try academia / journalism. You know, the people who make and propagate the opinions that everyone seems to know about and believe to be serious.

      Like the idea that the prison-industrial complex has a significant amount of power.

    603. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least he is smart enough and wise enough to concede defeat in preventing same-sex marriage even when the victory for this has not been completely won yet. He is a Mormon and for a Mormon to admit defeat in this stage of the game is a very wise, and unlikely, thing to do while many, many others of his faith are perfectly happy to fight against same-sex marriage until they die.

      He is pleading for tolerance not because of any cynical reason. He is doing it as a being one of the first to surrender to those that fought for same-sex marriage. Imagine a 1960's dyed-in-the-wool southern racist told the black protesters that "you won, I lost, please be tolerant of me" in an editorial in an Alabama newspaper when the Civil Rights Act was passed and signed into law. Such a thing would have been unheard of. We should welcome this surrender by Card instead of planning for revenge so that others can feel free to throw in the towel.

    604. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong. The same people that fought Civil Unions are the same bigots and lairs that have attacked and defamed gay people for years. It's a lie that Civil Unions were equal to marriage, and it's a lie that bigots are going to ever back down unless you make them back down.

    605. Re:Really?!? by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      I don't see anything odious about his statement.

      Are you heterosexual? Not looking for a fight just wondering.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    606. Re:Really?!? by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      If people are leaving you alone and harming nobody while behaving differently, then just leave them alone.

      It really depends on what you consider to be 'harming people'.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    607. Re:Really?!? by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      Can I insert a yes here without having to justify my statement?

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    608. Re:Really?!? by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      I haven't read any Polisci. Is he any good? Sounds Romanian.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    609. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I think it's an advocation of voting against them in the next election, which is a subtly different proposition.

    610. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of those things are like handing a bigot money.

      I don't have to buy Jefferson a slave to read his works, I don't have to pay an artist to see his work in a museum. I do have to give Card money to see his film, he will use that money against people who I like.

      Card is unlikely to get more money from you going to see the film. Hollywood generally pays writers a large sum in advance, and then a small proportion of residual profits from the film if that exceeds the advance -- but it rarely does, even for very successful movies, due to Hollywood accounting allowing them to write off the costs of unsuccessful films before they calculate the profits on the successful ones. So he's probably already had every penny he'll get from this.

    611. Re:Really?!? by somersault · · Score: 1

      [lots and lots of citations needed]

      --
      which is totally what she said
    612. Re:Really?!? by kqs · · Score: 1

      Um, the First Amendment actually "enshrines the religious bigotry of these Christians into law" and forbids government from getting involved in religious concepts. If the federal government is not allowed to recognize the Ten Commandments, how can mandate licenses and set rules for marriage?

      Hmm. I don't know of a single law in the US that forces a religious official to perform a same-sex marriage ceremony or any other marriage ceremony if they do not want to perform it.

      But I've seen many, in many different states, which will PREVENT a religious official from performing a same-sex marriage ceremony. Yes, there are many non-bigoted religious officials (some christian, some not) who will happily perform marriage ceremonies on any consenting adults who are legally allowed to be married.

      By your definition, it seems that anti-same-sex marriage laws are the ones which are breaking the First Amendment.

    613. Re:Really?!? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I don't know about that, it seems a bit of a stretch. After all by that standard isn't the New Testament actually Jewish fan fiction? I mean the author supposedly inserts himself into the story with god like powers. He can walk on water, make food appear, heal the sick, and turn water into wine, and is literally too good for this sinful earth. He really does seems like a Marty Stu character, in fact, he could be the first ever recorded Purity Stu character.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    614. Re: Really?!? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      I will cry myself to sleep nightly...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    615. Re:Really?!? by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      So you did not read the post? Nope. AC troll. Moving on.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    616. Re:Really?!? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      Saudi's publicly executed the nephew of a Saudi ambassador.

      I think we are dealing with the exception that proves the rule when we have to go back to 1977 and pull up a case dealing with a Saudi Princess who essentially committed suicide by legal system to find a case of a significant male being executed for adultery, He was just thrown under a bus as all she had to do was keep quiet and marry the man she refused to marry (as much as said to be the real crime by the Saudi family) and they would have lived and things swept under the rug.

    617. Re:Really?!? by rgbatduke · · Score: 2

      Steel swords, steel mines and other metals have been known to exist, recovered in mass heaps under burial mounds all along the great finger lakes region in upstate new york. That is common knowledge in the north now.

      You're not LDS? Really? Curiously, I happened to live in Skaneateles for a decade or so, and I say that you are -- let's put this politely and simply say "mistaken" rather than full of metabolic digestive byproducts up to your eyebrows.

      Rather than taking the trouble to detail the specific, multiple instances in which you are mistaken, let's just cite one pretty good reference:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_and_the_Book_of_Mormon

      that collectively proves you wrong, in detail, in nearly every possible instance of the many, many instances of anachronism and complete, utter failure of archeology to find anything that even the most dedicated LDS fanboy could interpret with all of the world's best hermeneutical exports as be "verification" of the absurdities in TBOM.

      Or you can visit one of my other favorite sites:

      http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/BOM/index.htm

      and work through a very, very detailed, line by line critique.

      Personally, sir, I am suspicious of your claim not to be a Mormon, if you are sufficiently credulous that you think that there were sheep and horses and elephants and steel swords and that the Nephites sailed to the Americas using magnetic compasses and all the rest. But then, there are people who believe that it rained 40 days and 40 nights and covered the Earth with water to the top of Mount Everest (6 inches of rain per minute on every square foot of the Earth's surface) while all of the species that would have been killed by this (which is pretty much all of the Earth's species) were preserved from death in a wooden boat the size of a Wal Mart ventilated by a single carefully described window roughly 1 square meter in cross-sectional area. There is apparently little to no limit on the folly of fools, is there?

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    618. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that's really terrifying then. Consider that the entire message of Ender's Game is that it's acceptable and even heroic to commit murder and genocide so long as you're a young victim of bullies who is being manipulated by military men into becoming history's most effective revenge killer. This is not what I would choose as a moral compass for military training.

    619. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hatred Papa Johns' CEO displayed for his own employees, maybe? Dude lives in a crazy mansion and gets paid absurd amounts of money, and he was talking up how having to take care of them meant he was going to be forced to fire some or cut their pay. Keep in mind that (a) he outright lied about how much PPACA was going to cost him and (b) instead of whining he could've chosen to take a minor pay cut (by his standards) to pay for minimal healthcare for the people who made all those piles of money he bathes in. (An action he should've taken long before PPACA, if he wasn't a greedy hateful fuck. His "dissent" and outrage was all about the law actually requiring him to be a decent human being.)

      Also, since when is dissent beyond criticism? The KKK "dissents" with legal steps taken to improve the lot of African Americans in society, and is rightly despised for it. Your post comes across as claiming that just because the Papa Johns CEO "dissented" with administration policies, that means he should not be boycotted for his "dissent".

    620. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It poisons the experience of reading a book because now you know what the author intended you to take away from it. You're not able to overlook things which troubled you a little during previous readings, but were able to smooth over by thinking "surely $AUTHOR can't mean that". You can't read the work for simple pleasure any more, not if you have a conscience.

      Gay rights issues don't apply much to Ender, but others do -- Ender is deeply tied into some other horrific sociopolitical views of Card's. Card also wrote a series of books which do directly deal with homosexuality, and I read them long before I knew where Card stood and before I had any kind of political sophistication, and you know what? I realize now they were about subtly (or not so subtly) pushing his agenda, not just telling a story. I feel sick to my stomach that I ever let his views on the topic influence mine (and I did).

      Welcome to humanity. We're better at ignoring things when we don't even know they're there to be ignored.

    621. Re:Really?!? by Raenex · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure Card is the type of homophobe who hates The Gay because he has it in himself, and wants to deny it as vehemently as possible so as to avoid suspicion.

      Seems that way to me too. One thing you forgot to mention was that the kids were naked.

    622. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The book doesn't advocate genocide/xenocide. It isn't about training kids to that end. It is a cautionary tale of how prejudice can lead to horrible mistakes, about empathy and tolerance. You either never read the book, or you have terrible reading comprehension.

      I read the book, and I damn well picked up on the theme of "well, humanity HAD to xenocide the Buggers, it was a matter of survival, and Our Hero is actually a sympathetic figure because he was tricked into doing it. And the guys who tricked and manipulated him into being a vicious killer of both human beings and aliens? Welp, doin' what had to be done!!! They're heroes too." The rather obvious parallel to the situation in the book was the mutual assured destruction standoff between the U.S. and Russia (this was a 1980s novel after all), and the moral center of the book, if it has one, is that when monstrous things can wipe us all out, we need our own tragic hero monsters to fight for us. Card beats you over the head with this so many times. Adult generals who commiserate with each other over what awful things they're having to do to Ender, but grit their teeth and do it anyways because they know he's humanity's last best hope against the buggers.

      As for Speaker for the Dead and so on, note that the sequels were written in a context where Card had taken some heat for the content of the first book, including pointed criticism about the way that the other obvious parallel with Ender's story is Hitler. It's full of overwrought sympathy for the genocidal monster who did what "had to be done", and suffered public vilification for it. Although I'm not quite sure Card was consciously apologizing for Hitler, this is not as much of a stretch as it sounds. There's some decent essays about this circulating on the 'net which I'm sure you find by googling if you're curious, and they have some pretty devastating things to say about themes in Ender's Game even if you don't fully buy into the Hitler parallels.

      So, there was more than a little face-saving backtracking involved in casting Ender-the-Xenocide as the savior of the Buggers in the sequels. Not to mention giving Card plenty of opportunities for cheap shots at all the liberal characters who instinctively recoil at the name of Ender, yet are drawn in by Speakerism. Little do they know what a supremely awesome and morally correct yet tragically suffering person Ender actually is!!!

      That last bit is what really strikes me these days. Card indulges in cheap manipulation all the time. It's not just the sequels; Ender's Game itself is rife with it. The torment of Ender is supposed to be about producing one singular person who (a) is a tactical genius and (b) will not hesitate to commit a horrendous act to end the Bugger threat to humanity. You're supposed to believe that this is the only hope for humans to win the war, or at the very least that the main non-Ender characters believe this is true. Yet... these tragic hero generals are depicted as feeling great sympathy for Ender, but resolutely torture him (and other kids) anyways, because they must. These are men who are incapable of pressing the button to kill abhorrent non-sympathetic inhuman bugs themselves? Bugs which everyone in the story accepts will exterminate humanity, regardless of whether the war is a tragic misunderstanding? Nah, not buying that.

      It's worse than that. The ships Ender's commanding in the final few battles turn out to be crewed by real humans who are just executing his orders. Ender's battle tactics are described as involving lots of suicidal diversions, and the ship which commits the final Xenocide is itself engulfed in the cataclysm. So apparently the military had no problem finding literal shiploads of people willing to sacrifice themselves and commit xenocide in the name of defending humanity. So why is Ender so exceptional, again? Not buying it.

      The main plot of Ender's Game makes no sense if you look at it critically. It's just a vehicle for Card to make you feel bad for Ender. Manipulation through and through.

    623. Re:Really?!? by retchdog · · Score: 1

      jesus christ, did you learn genetics by playing metal gear solid?

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    624. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I felt sad about the parents remarks. Whose god says you should individualize statistical arguments to a set with one member?

      Anyway I like Card, both him and his stories.

      Here is a good question for us all: how tolerate should we be of intolerence?

    625. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to correct a couple of incorrect assumptions in here. It is not Christianity that is anti-gay, because by definition we are followers of Christ and not Paul and Jesus made no mention of homosexuals. It is traditionalists that are anti-gay because traditionalists are against anything that isn't the old norm. I am a Christian that believes being gay and acting on those feelings is not a sin.

    626. Re:Really?!? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Last I checked the majority of Americans support gay marriage. So the reverse, those against it, are the political minority.

      If those against are in the political minority, why is it still illegal more than legal?

    627. Re:Really?!? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Which are we talking about> Saudi Arabia they executed a princess and her lover (1977), Misha'al bint Fahd al Saud, a famous case.
      Here's one with 3 men and 1 women being executed in Pakistan. http://www.theage.com.au/news/World/Four-executed-for-adultery-in-Pakistan/2007/06/05/1180809502745.html
      A couple executed by Taliban. http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/271594

      I found these extremely fast. I've seen nothing at all to suggest that the male participant in adultery is given leniency under strict Islamic societies, and am surprised to hear that someone actually thinks the men are excused in those societies or given lesser sentences. (Actually in Saudi Arabia the sentence is different; beheading for the man, stoning for the woman.)

      Well, thank you for educating me on this. I had thought this to lean very much against women, as many things in islam seem to do.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    628. Re:Really?!? by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

      No doubt. Being human, the loudest voices on two sides of a controversy tend not to be saints. The question is how to separate the wheat from the chaff, the meritorious arguments from simple frustration & special pleading.

    629. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You miss the point, mate. Its not about what Chick-Fil-A or Orson Scott Card believe that deserves a boycott. Its the fact that when you give them money, a portion of that money is going to end up in the pockets of hate groups. That's not something to shrug or sigh over, and its not overkill to give your money some other fast food joint or ageing sci-fi author.

    630. Re:Really?!? by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      >> and fewer who benefit when one is freed.

      Uh, no, actually far more people profit, but we are too stupid to understand that.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    631. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      parent very insightful. mods?

    632. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read some more recent articles. They've been much more picky since the recession. Also, with Iraq over, and Afghanistan winding down, there's much less of a chance you will wind up in a hellhole if you sign up. I will grant you, most of the recruits are not society's best, but that shipped sailed long before the Iraq war.

    633. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we have learned anything in this country over the past century, we should have learned that "separate but equal" does not result in equality. My opinion is that the state should get out of marriage and let EVERYONE have civil unions under the law. If you want to get married, see your pastor/priest/rabbi/other religious figure. If you want legal rights, see a Judge.

      My message to Christians still opposed to same sex marriage: Do you really think it's a good idea to get your morality through the state?

    634. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the whole point of polygamy was multiple roots...

    635. Re: Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well in this case, you may be comforted to know that screenwriter only get a tiny cut of the box office revenue. But I think we should get a bit more nuanced about all this. Let's boycott OSC's acts of intolerance and his inadequate attempts at books. And let's praise him for the good that he has done, which is to my knowledge just one book - but a very good one. Of course this has its limits. I would not want to support a truly dangerous organization with my money, even if they made some product that I liked. OSC is just expressing an ugly narrow-mindedness, which is sad given the time, but the expression itself is not infringing on the rights of others.

      It's sad to think about, but most of the great books in the "great books" canon were written by people who have OSC's attitude about gays, or worse. If we had to pare back this canon to only authors who supported same-sex marriage, would a single book remain? This is largely due to the fact that most of the authors were active a good while ago, and social progress in the acceptance of gay rights is comparatively recent. Even the notion of same-sex marriage entered the public conversation only recently. This might be unfair of me, but I guess I view serious Mormons like OSC as people who don't quite live in our time - like Menonites-lite. So while I'm sad that they are behind on some social issues, it's akin to being sad that our predecessors were such racists.

    636. Re:Really?!? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      If (presumably) richer men are allowed multiple wives, that means that there are fewer wives for the rest of the men.

      For starters, that's not true because more females are born than males. It's close to 50/50, but not quite.

      Second, it's been this way for centuries and still is happening today, except in "secret." It's easy to find rich men divorcing their first wives and marrying a second, third, and sometimes even fourth and fifth wives. And rich men having affairs with younger women with promises to marry them. And there still isn't a shortage.

      So I wouldn't expect a shortage of wives if polygamy was in fact allowed. Not that I support it mind you, but your argument doesn't hold water, historically nor currently.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    637. Re:Really?!? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Otherwise known as the justification of cowards.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    638. Re:Really?!? by interval1066 · · Score: 2

      But can you really say that all religious scriptures are fantasies?

      Yes.

      Some religious writing may be based on historical events, but to use any religious writing as a historical record would be foolish, at least without outside verification, as we do with all scientific inquiry.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    639. Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it's OK to be an anti-bigot bigot but not an anti-homosexual bigot?

    640. Re:Really?!? by somersault · · Score: 1

      I'm not campaigning to make his lifestyle illegal, because it isn't that important to me. Making life miserable for gay people seems to be important to him.

      --
      which is totally what she said
  2. Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I cared about the views of the people behind the movies, or the actors... I wouldnt be able to watch any movies. I look forward to seeing this one, whether the author likes or dislikes gay people.

    1. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I guess it depends on what you can stomach. If you're cool enough with the the makers of product X to purchase their product, that's fine. If not, that's fine too. That's the great thing about voting with your wallet - the decision is completely up to you.

    2. Re:Who Cares? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If I cared about the views of the people behind the movies, or the actors... I wouldnt be able to watch any movies. I look forward to seeing this one, whether the author likes or dislikes gay people.

      The primary problem is when he uses his artistic medium and influence to spread this message. Which he most certainly has:

      In the first place, no law in any state in the United States now or ever has forbidden homosexuals to marry. The law has never asked that a man prove his heterosexuality in order to marry a woman, or a woman hers in order to marry a man.

      Any homosexual man who can persuade a woman to take him as her husband can avail himself of all the rights of husbandhood under the law. And, in fact, many homosexual men have done precisely that, without any legal prejudice at all.

      Ditto with lesbian women. Many have married men and borne children. And while a fair number of such marriages in recent years have ended in divorce, there are many that have not.

      So it is a flat lie to say that homosexuals are deprived of any civil right pertaining to marriage. To get those civil rights, all homosexuals have to do is find someone of the opposite sex willing to join them in marriage.

      Translation: "Your entire life has to be a lie because I'm ignorant." And no, I do not go see Tom Cruise movies because he uses his stardom and money he gets from those movies to push a very dangerous religion! There are some issues where I flat out draw the line. I'm not boycotting Clint Eastwood because he's said some politically stupid stuff but there are some issues like homosexuality where I feel like I'm promoting ignorance if I promote those who think homosexuals should not have the same rights as heterosexuals. It's an egalitarian issue in my mind and I'm not going to see Ender's Game nor will I read the rest of the Shadow series.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    3. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's less that he has dumb opinions and more that he directly financially supports people working to make things worse. That's a legitimate reason to not give him money, isn't it?

    4. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's more than that: Orson Scott Card Has Always Been An Asshat. Kind of funny folks are only now caring. Guess no one reads any more.

    5. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You may not care about the views of the people behind the movie, I certainly don't. But I do care about where my money goes, and I don't want it going to fund the oppression of people based on their sexuality.

      Card doesn't just dislike gay marriage but actively funds organisations seeking to prevent it, and if you give him your money then you are indirectly doing the same.

    6. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my head, what youre doing to him is on par with what he is doing to homosexuals. Similarly you also have the "i do it because its right"-justification.

    7. Re:Who Cares? by TrekkieGod · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The primary problem is when he uses his artistic medium and influence to spread this message.

      Sometimes I hear this criticism, and I don't get it. That's the point of art. If it doesn't have a message, what's the point?

      Your objection is that it has a message you disagree with. In that sense, I agree with Card. It is intolerance. And closed-mindedness. If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in, you must believe in a lot of things that aren't true.

      Now, I'm completely against him on the gay marriage issue (and on most issues, really), but why the hell would I have a problem with him voicing his opinions? That's how we get rid of bad ideas. We listen to the arguments, and we refute them. The best way of making a point against racism, for example, is letting the KKK talk and make asses of themselves. We only stop them when they move beyond talking.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

    8. Re:Who Cares? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 2

      You could still read the Shadow series - just buy them 2nd hand. Card won't see an additional penny.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    9. Re:Who Cares? by swimboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      *I* find it much more telling that people feel the need to *insist* that the federal government deny gay people their rights, merely because *their* religious beliefs say that gay people are sinners.

      And then they have the pathological gall to explicitly express that their rights are being trampled upon if someone suggests that gay people should have the same rights as everyone else.

      And furthermore, the government has nothing to do with your "social ritual". Holy matrimony is a religious institution that the government does not regulate. Civil marriage is a contract between two people that the government administers. Just because people use the word "marriage" to refer to both of them does not mean that they are the same thing.

      --
      Ask me how the Heisenberg Principle may or may not have saved my life.
    10. Re:Who Cares? by sageres · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, I read this nonsence. Basically the author is trying to find an excuse as to why a talented author, a winner of multiple awards for his works would come out against something as nice and progressive as Gay Marriage. So, he went out to destroy his character...... by comparing Ender to... Hitler!

      Oy Vey, if this is his entire arguments to call a man an "asshat" -- these people need serious help....

    11. Re:Who Cares? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In my head, what youre doing to him is on par with what he is doing to homosexuals. Similarly you also have the "i do it because its right"-justification.

      Is that a joke? He has a right to his religion. I get upset when that belief infringes on other people's rights. The Federal government has over a thousand laws referring to marriage. Many of those laws benefits couples living together like social security benefits, inheritance rights, etc. I am advocating this from an egalitarian standpoint that those people who are in love with each other are treated like any other pair of human beings consensually in love with each other. And yes, I think that trumps Mr. Card's horseshit religion or his lack of his ability to sit down with his dumbass children and say "Look, two people can love each other no matter what sex they are." But because he's afraid some bearded cloud God is going to fire and brimstone us, I cannot promote equal rights among human beings?

      My justification isn't "I do it because it's right" you idiot, my justification is I do it because these laws are ridiculously unfair to a subset of the people who have done nothing wrong in the eyes of a secular government.

      If you want to call it a "civil union" or whatever, that's fine. But I don't want employers or government offices calling some people "married" and other people "civil unioned" because that can lead to "second class" treatment and promotes discrimination among employers. In the eyes of the government, two humans should be able to marry each other with equal treatment and equal labeling.

      Calling me intolerant on this issue makes no sense. I support freedom of religion but I'm not going to stand for some Christian version of sharia law in what claims to be a secular government.

      Capitalism suffers from a lack of responsibility to know what you are supporting. A small group of people boycotting this movie is merely informing people what they are supporting. Just like I would boycott a company that pollutes.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    12. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article is from 2005...

    13. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is intolerance.

      If you view tolerance as a binary issue, that is. A lot of people preaching about tolerance don't.

      If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in

      There's zero indication that that's true.

      The best way of making a point against racism, for example, is letting the KKK talk and make asses of themselves. We only stop them when they move beyond talking.

      No one is suggesting censorship.

    14. Re:Who Cares? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Your objection is that it has a message you disagree with. In that sense, I agree with Card. It is intolerance. And closed-mindedness. If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in, you must believe in a lot of things that aren't true.

      But I've read all his arguments. I've actually read them all. I went from being a huge Card fan to deciding he shall no longer see a cent of my money and I will no longer read his work. That's not closed-mindedness. He's had his pedestal for quite some time and I'm done with him. I'm not stripping him of his first amendment rights, he can go to the town square and scream himself hoarse for all I care. What I'm stripping him of is my hard earned money that he uses to spread that message on the internet and in his community.

      Would you buy fruit from a KKK vendor? Would you pay for magazines spouting racism just to make sure you are covering all your bases and hearing all arguments of the issue? No. Because that issue is settled in your mind and you no longer want to financially support the other side. I feel the same way about homosexual marriage. And from what I've read he's not providing any original viewpoints on this issue. So the guy's not getting one more ounce of my resources and on top of it, I'll let anyone know who brings him up what he's said in his newsletters and websites about equal rights of United States citizens.

      Believe it or not, KKK members cannot offer you much better arguments for racism than they could a hundred years ago. And for that I'm not stupid enough to accuse you of being closed minded because you ignore their message today.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    15. Re:Who Cares? by TWiTfan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, people tend to react rather emotionally when you accuse them of writing pro-Nazi literature. Film at eleven.

      --
      The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    16. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a tool, not listening to the intolerant ravings of assholes like him does not make you intolerant.

      Nobody is trying to prevent him from speaking his mine, but we sure as hell don't have to listen.

    17. Re:Who Cares? by WilyCoder · · Score: 0

      Wow, thank you captain obvious! I had no idea it was that simple!

    18. Re:Who Cares? by ideonexus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is ZERO equivalency. Making the Constitutionally-protected choice to freely associate or not associate with someone because of their political or religious beliefs by simply not buying a movie ticket is in no way the same thing as supporting the government incarcerating people for their private lifestyle. It boggles my mind that you can see these two things as equivalent.

      --
      i ~ Celebrating Science, Cyberspace, Speculation
    19. Re:Who Cares? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in, you must believe in a lot of things that aren't true.

      What part of not giving money to a bigot implies that someone refuses to listen to any argument against what they believe in? If he wants to change my mind, he can write down a well thought out argument and publish it for free on the internet. If his argument has merit, I'll change my mind. He's done this, his argument doesn't have merit, he's just a bigot. What purpose is served by giving him money?

      why the hell would I have a problem with him voicing his opinions?

      I don't have a problem with him voicing his opinions. I have a problem with supporting that opinion with my money.

      The best way of making a point against racism, for example, is letting the KKK talk and make asses of themselves.

      Great example. If the KKK funded a remake of Birth of a Nation, would you pay to see it?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    20. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to be clear, the issue with Card has never been about whether he likes or dislikes gay people. Nobody cares if he's pro-marriage or anti-marriage. The problem is that he advocates expanding government's role to initiate force against gay people whenever they're detected as having married.

      You're right that we couldn't watch anything if we filtered out all the extreme authoritarians, so it doesn't detract from your point. But don't cast this as merely "dislikes gay people." The guy was(is?) trying to point guns at peoples' heads. That's way beyond "dislike."

    21. Re:Who Cares? by anyaristow · · Score: 1

      It is, but every time I see a geeky community define who is and is not welcome by openly ridiculing conservatives, theists and everyone who enjoys mainstream things (the combination excludes most of their own culture), I, too, see "people working to make things worse." I do think you should spend your money on things that you value and not spend money on things that work against your values, but when you get upset with (or ridicule) people who don't share your values you have injured both yourself, by limiting your options and your appeal to most of your own society, and your cause, by making it unpalatable to people you'd like to convince.

    22. Re:Who Cares? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 2

      Sometimes I hear this criticism, and I don't get it. That's the point of art. If it doesn't have a message, what's the point?

      Beauty? Seriously, though, not all art has a deeper meaning. More to the point, art that has a deeper meaning is repugnant is not something I want to, you know, spend money on.

      Your objection is that it has a message you disagree with. In that sense, I agree with Card. It is intolerance. And closed-mindedness. If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in, you must believe in a lot of things that aren't true.

      You'd have a valid point if the movie were free. But your argument degenerates into the KKK holding a rally and demanding $1 million per person who shows up (except clan members) with the claim that those who don't attend are intolerant. That's simply absurd. No, we all can hear Card's morality for free from critiques. We hear him quite clearly. We even have nice critique[s] of Ender's Game that leave plenty of reason to not bother watching the movie. Your argument would make a lot more sense if you were arguing, of course, that it's intolerant to specifically not shop at a store because the owner was a KKK clan member. To that, I'd tend to more agree.

      Now, I'm completely against him on the gay marriage issue (and on most issues, really), but why the hell would I have a problem with him voicing his opinions? That's how we get rid of bad ideas. We listen to the arguments, and we refute them.

      Which is precisely what's happening. In the mean time, I personally don't think Ender's Game is worth the money to watch.

      The best way of making a point against racism, for example, is letting the KKK talk and make asses of themselves. We only stop them when they move beyond talking.

      That doesn't mean we dedicate, for free, 2 solid hours a day to the KKK on TV. It doesn't mean we go out of our way to fund KKK rallies. It means the KKK, if it can manage to find the funds, can hold a rally. That we choose to not give them money is in part because and in part to show how irrelevant they are. You're too much conflating the negative actions upon another's free speech vs the lack of a positive action to support every stupid fucker's ability to spout off beyond to their limited means and people's willingness to search out for their message.

      So, I'd have to say in that way it is a show of intolerance towards Orson Scott Card and those like him. Just like people are intolerant of and speak out against heavy metal heads, fornication, etc.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    23. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're welcome, WilyCoder - the more you know.

    24. Re:Who Cares? by bwcbwc · · Score: 2

      The primary problem is when he uses his artistic medium and influence to spread this message. Which he most certainly has .

      You mean like 99% of all the media personalities in LA from Bill Cosby to Susan Sarandon?

      I don't have a problem with Card expressing himself, no matter how repugnant I find his views. I expressed myself by ceasing to buy his stuff, so fair's fair.

      --
      We are the 198 proof..
    25. Re:Who Cares? by Jhon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "*I* find it much more telling that people feel the need to *insist* that the federal government deny gay people their rights, merely because *their* religious beliefs say that gay people are sinners."

      I, on the other hand, find it more telling that people feel the need for the federal government to "magically" find rights where none existed before and ignore the actual PROCESS our framers put in place to amend the constitution. There are REASONS why its difficult to change the constitution -- one of which is that wild changes on emotional whims can rip this country apart.

      Being against homosexual marriage is *NOT* unusual or extreme by definition. In all 50 states, only about 7 or 8 allow it, and only 2 were by electoral choice of their respective peoples. Even the left-coast liberal state of California (who voted in President Obama for a second term by a wide margin) ALSO passed Prop 8 amending the constitution of the State of CA preventing homosexual marriage.

      People think that EXTREME? If so, to paraphrase a famous swordsman, "I do not think it means what you think it means".

      When our country is READY to accept this issue without further polarizing us, it will pass an amendment. Until then, the fed should REALLY stay out of it.

    26. Re:Who Cares? by DeathToBill · · Score: 0

      God, no, artists using their artistic medium and influence to spread a message? What is society coming to????

      You disagree with him. That's fine. Dismissing him as ignorant because he disagrees with you is not fine - it's called argumentum ad hominem and it makes it look like you don't actually have any good arguments to make. Show some respect - even for people who disagree with you. Respect them enough to engage with their ideas and demonstrate the superiority of your own, rather than dismissing them with (rather vicious) insults and put-downs.

      Whether gay marriage is an equal treatment question really does depend on your definition of marriage. For all of recorded history up to about 1990, marriage has always, in every society, meant a contract of union between a man and a woman. If that definition is allowed to stand then homosexuals have always had equal treatment - a homosexual man has been free to marry any woman who agrees to it and no-one will try to stop the marriage because of his homosexuality. He has the same right to do this as anyone else - he is treated equally.

      If you're going to argue that gay marriage is a question of equal treatment before the law then you need to justify redefining marriage as a union between any two people who agree to it and who are not already married (perhaps necessarily on the grounds of a sexual union, either existing or intended). You need to argue either that marriage has not really always been between a man and a woman or you need to justify changing that definition.

      --
      Slashdot - News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters, in ISO-8859-1 Has just realised that beta makes this signature redundant
    27. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But do you pay the KKK to hear them make asses of themselves, ensuring that they can continue to fund their movement to infringe on people's civil rights? I don't think that refusing to pay to hear someone who you don't agree with is intolerant or closed-minded.

    28. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when he voices opinions that call for restrictions on someone else's freedoms, i'm fully within my rights to not support him financially if i have even a modicum of self-respect and remotely feel patriotic whatsoever. supporting him financially gives him the ability to make his opinions louder and possibly carry more weight amongst lawmakers. so if *you* refuse to listen to this as an argument for not seeing a movie, then so be it.

    29. Re:Who Cares? by mike1223 · · Score: 1

      And then they have the pathological gall to explicitly express that their rights are being trampled upon if someone suggests that gay people should have the same rights as everyone else.

      Homosexuals already have all the natural rights that any other man has. What they are demanding goes far beyond that. They demand laws mandating that people be forced to associate with them. They demand laws mandating that elementary school students be taught about their "relationships" (and that's the best case scenario). They demand laws against speech and writings that make them "uncomfortable". All these laws are selectively enforced against heterosexual employed white males.

      So yes, the rights of people like me are being trampled upon, and no, homosexuals aren't merely seeking "equal rights".

    30. Re:Who Cares? by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      All this is true. But for those of us who don't possess unlimited money and time, why on earth would we waste some of it watching content we find abhorrent, when there's other good stuff out there? I don't think people who find anti-gay media disgusting should bother to sit through Card's work any more than I think people who find guys kissing abhorrent should pay to sit through Brokeback Mountain for 2 hours. This isn't about any fancy "boycott", its just common sense.

      You might as well start complaining about young single males "boycotting" the Sex in the City movie.

    31. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I like Tom Cruise's action/adventure movies. Mr. Cruise is not a great actor nor are his views acceptable to me but I enjoy his fantasy movies and the time it allows me to "get away". But I am not a Scientologist and do not agree with Scientology. I have decided that he can have his "wacky" and wrong-headed views. He, apparent, has decided the same about me since he does not contact or harass me about my views that he considers "wacky".

      I read Ender's Game after reading the news story of the school teacher arrested because he read Ender's Game to his class and one parent claimed it was pornographic and caused the teacher's arrest. I wanted to see if this readily available book was "pornographic" and how the parent defined "pornography. I fought the book was enjoyable reading and was not pornographic. I would like to see the movie so that I could see how they presented or staged many of the training and fighting scenes in the movie.

      When tolerance is used as the excuse for intolerance, as in this case, we have entered the world of "1984" where "doublespeak" is the doctrine of the moment.

    32. Re:Who Cares? by crashcy · · Score: 1

      Kevin Spacey actively funds an organization that seeks to monitor me, take my money, and censor my views. I still watch his movies.

    33. Re:Who Cares? by swimboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I, on the other hand, find it more telling that people feel the need for the federal government to "magically" find rights where none existed before and ignore the actual PROCESS our framers put in place to amend the constitution. There are REASONS why its difficult to change the constitution -- one of which is that wild changes on emotional whims can rip this country apart.

      I'd love to see where in our constitution it spells out exactly which rights straight people have, and which ones gay people have. Nobody is "magically" finding rights. It's spelled out in black and white, "all men are created equal". It can't get any plainer than that.

      Being against homosexual marriage is *NOT* unusual or extreme by definition. In all 50 states, only about 7 or 8 allow it, and only 2 were by electoral choice of their respective peoples. Even the left-coast liberal state of California (who voted in President Obama for a second term by a wide margin) ALSO passed Prop 8 amending the constitution of the State of CA preventing homosexual marriage.

      Actually, it's 12 states, plus the District of Columbia. And furthermore, it was 3 states, Washington, Maine, and Maryland who passed via a direct vote of the people, and 6 more, Vermont, New York, Rhode Island, Delaware, Minnesota, and the District of Columbia, who passed a vote in the legislature, representing the will of their constituents. Prop 8 in California passed because the Catholic Church and the Mormon Church spent untold millions of dollars campaigning for it. Polls in California before and since the vote show a decided majority of Californians support gay marriage.

      People think that EXTREME? If so, to paraphrase a famous swordsman, "I do not think it means what you think it means".

      When our country is READY to accept this issue without further polarizing us, it will pass an amendment. Until then, the fed should REALLY stay out of it.

      The fed should not stay out of it. One of the express goals of our government is to protect minorities from the tyranny of the masses. That is exactly what is happening here. Saying that anyone should "stay out of it" is the same as saying, "We're doing a good job of marginalizing these people right now, don't go and do something that would change the status quo."

      --
      Ask me how the Heisenberg Principle may or may not have saved my life.
    34. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it very telling that people who fight for "equality" are perfectly fine ignoring people who do things like practice polyamory. I guess some are more equal than others.

      I find it very telling that creating special rights and benefits for married people is somehow "equality" at all. Screw the single people, right?

    35. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Believe it or not, KKK members cannot offer you much better arguments for racism than they could a hundred years ago. And for that I'm not stupid enough to accuse you of being closed minded because you ignore their message today.

      Sure they can, they don't even need to open their mouths. All they need to do is show you any American city with a sizable black population.

    36. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would pay someone to share a message I agree with. I may need to read his works and see his movie. Slashdot and editors that are clearly oblivious to other views than that of gay people are oppressed may loose my viewership though.

    37. Re:Who Cares? by Holi · · Score: 1

      We're not begging for anything. We are demanding that all citizens be viewed as equals in the governments eyes. When a state issues a marriage license, it is not the place of the federal government to say, We will only accept these licenses and not those.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    38. Re:Who Cares? by Holi · · Score: 1

      SO by me not seeing a movie I am calling for armed insurrection? I don't see that.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    39. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i think govt should stay out of marriage. marriage is mostly a religious concept. if you want to get married that's fine, find a religion that allows it, and if none allow it then make up your own, but the govt shouldn't recognize ANY marriage.

      on the govt side there should be a Civil Union, which would get all the rights currently associated with marriage. however it should be expanded to allow ANY 2 adults to enter into a Civil Union. so typically what would probably happen is when you get married you would at the same time be "unioned". but it is only the Union that the govt recognizes.

    40. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but that's one less book on the second hand market. Someone else who would have purchased a second hand copy may now buy a new one instead.

    41. Re:Who Cares? by gtbritishskull · · Score: 2

      The anti-gay factions were the ones who got the Fed into it. They passed DOMA which specifically said that the federal government would not recognize gay marriage which was legal in the state. If the Fed were staying out of it, they would have recognized any marriage which the state recognized (this is how it traditionally worked - the states defined marriage).

    42. Re:Who Cares? by dbrueck · · Score: 0

      Prop 8 in California passed because the Catholic Church and the Mormon Church spent untold millions of dollars campaigning for it.

      Minor correction: the Mormon church didn't spend money in support of Prop 8 (this is a matter of public record).

    43. Re:Who Cares? by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

      If I cared about the views of the people behind the movies, or the actors... I wouldnt be able to watch any movies.

      Then you must be a pathologically contrarian person.

    44. Re:Who Cares? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      He's boycotting the movie, he's not trying to make it a federal offence to go see Ender's Game. Big difference.

    45. Re:Who Cares? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      Books don't make hundreds of millions of dollars. Movies do. Big targets are easier to hit, and targets that are currently in the news make for better publicity for an anti-Card platform.

    46. Re:Who Cares? by Jhon · · Score: 2, Informative

      "I'd love to see where in our constitution it spells out exactly which rights straight people have, and which ones gay people have. Nobody is "magically" finding rights. It's spelled out in black and white, "all men are created equal". It can't get any plainer than that."

      I'd love to see where in our constitution it says "all men are created equal". I really don't need to read further than this to know that you've not read the constitution or the papers by the framers supporting it. But at least you're familiar with catch phrases from the DoI. It appears our tax dollars weren't ENTIRELY wasted on your education.

    47. Re:Who Cares? by N1AK · · Score: 1

      When our country is READY to accept this issue without further polarizing us, it will pass an amendment.

      Your country wasn't able to accept the abolition of slavery without polarisation, was Lincoln wrong? Some things are wrong, cannot be supported and should not be ignored because many other people don't agree. Discriminating against people because of their sexual beliefs is one such issue.

    48. Re:Who Cares? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "The anti-gay factions were the ones who got the Fed into it"

      I don't disagree that DOMA was bad. The fed CANNOT ignore the good faith and credit clause of the constitution. If a state says that every state must honor contracts of the others.

      However you seem to be forgetting that DOMA was a REACTION to something. It didn't come out of the blue. I wonder what that was... Oh yeah... the over-reaching decisions of SCOTUS... Tell me that the SCOTUS isn't part of the fed with a straight face and that DOMA wasn't a reaction to this. You have an interesting "view" of history. Accuracy doesn't appear to play a role.

      "If the Fed were staying out of it, they would have recognized any marriage which the state recognized (this is how it traditionally worked - the states defined marriage)."

      I don't disagree with this, either. In my opinion, this is as it should be. Leave it to the states -- until the constitution can be amended.

    49. Re:Who Cares? by nylrym · · Score: 1

      Good for you!
      Why does that mean I have to? Or that I can't encourage others not to?

    50. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the link, I found it very insightful.

    51. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but your Tom Cruise point indicates the real problem here. If you dig into the personal beliefs and causes of famous hollywood types, you'll find that *most* of them are extremists. Many of them support Scientology. Many of them espouse a radical communist agenda. Some of them are radical anarcho-capitalists. Some of them support and/or actively engage in pedophilic practices. Many of them value the lives of animals over the lives of humans, and thus indirectly (or in some cases, directly!) back the idea of radical, unethical human depopulation through enforced resource scarcity. Many of them want to wipe out organized religion, and others want to push theirs on everyone else.

      My point is that for our little subculture to condemn OSC and boycott his movies and let the rest of that slide is the height of duplicity. I'm not advocating that you boycott all rich, crazy, hollywood types that throw their fame and money around pushing stupid agendas. I'm saying that it's rational (and it's the norm) to separate the art from the artist and enjoy their works anyways. It's common for geniuses to also be crazy. If we ignore the works of all geniuses because of their craziness, nothing good comes of that.

    52. Re:Who Cares? by the+phantom · · Score: 1

      Marriage is most emphatically not a "mostly religious concept." Nearly every human society that has ever existed has possessed the institution of marriage. In most societies, marriage serves economic and social ends as much, if not more than, religious ones. Marriage is the glue that allowed otherwise unrelated bands of hunters and gatherers to meet in the mountains without killing each other, and is the bond that helped maintain stability in feudal societies. Marriage has allowed families to pool resources, and has served to maintain the continuity of cultural capital from one generation to the next. Some of the ends that marriage serves have some religious underpinnings, but most are secular in nature. It is only very recently in human history that anyone has made the claim that marriage is an exclusively (or "mostly") religious institution.

    53. Re:Who Cares? by happy_place · · Score: 1

      They were doing what they thought would protect society. If you don't share that perspective then you're entitled to that perspective. The debate is a lot more complicated than you're making it out to do. Ad reductio arguments aside, OSC's point is that most of this debate is over now, all except the mandatory beatings of any and all that didn't end up on the winning side of the debate.

      I think if people framed the discussion in terms of a desire to do what is best for society, we'd all be a lot more willing to live and let live... and then maybe, we won't destroy society by punishing one another relentlessly for having different viewpoints.

      --
      http://www.beanleafpress.com
    54. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your translation is incorrect. Everything he stated in the quote is true. Now he is purposefully changing the subject of same-sex marriage to allowing homosexuals to marry, but that's another issue.

    55. Re:Who Cares? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Your country wasn't able to accept the abolition of slavery without polarisation, was Lincoln wrong? Some things are wrong, cannot be supported and should not be ignored because many other people don't agree. Discriminating against people because of their sexual beliefs is one such issue."

      Are you honestly comparing the ability to marry the same gender to slavery? Take a step back, breath in, hold it and count to 10.

      Now, lets talk honestly. The civil war cost us dearly. 600k-750k of our brothers, fathers and sons who fought NOT to rid the country of slavery, but to fight against or for the break up of the Union. The issue of slavery was a major issue leading to the stand off, but it was not the ONLY cause.

      Now the question is "Was it worth it". *I* would say hell yes in a heart beat as it *DID* bring about the end of slavery 10, maybe 20 years sooner than otherwise. Had it happened earlier, I doubt a Civil War would have been effective in keeping the union together so perhaps the time was about right.

      We're hearing talks of succession from folks you can't immediately write off as crack-pots. Granted, it's still VERY early, highly unlikely and impossible to predict, but it's out there. I ask the question is federally mandated same-sex marriage worth it? I say no. Let the states deal with it and states which don't permit it would be forced to at least recognize it. Live in TX or CA (assuming they find someone with "standing" to argue prop 8) and want to get married? Go to Vegas or Boston. NV was known for the "quicky" divorce for the same reasons. We've already fought for union once and the price was dear. Is *THIS* really on the same level as slavery? I say firmly and with conviction, "NO!".

    56. Re:Who Cares? by the+phantom · · Score: 1

      For all of recorded history up to about 1990, marriage has always, in every society, meant a contract of union between a man and a woman.

      Actually, for most of human history, marriage has consisted of a non-contractual union (contracts are a fairly modern invention, which reply on a state level society with rule of law) between (generally speaking) a man and as many women as he can afford to marry. There are a few societies where marriage has consisted of a similar non-contractual union between a woman and as many men as she can afford to marry. There are also a fair number of societies where same-sex marriages occur, though they are not the norm (generally, they occur in societies where a man's brother is expected to marry his sister-in-law in the event of the man's death---if the man has no brothers, but has sisters, the sister's might be expected to take over the husbandly duties).

      Of course, this is utterly irrelevant, anyway. For the vast majority of Western history, women were treated like property, and marriage was an exchange of property which happened to include a woman. Is that really the institution that you want legally enforced? Since we all like fancy Latin: argumentum ad antiquitatem.

    57. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interestingly, I find the 8-year-old kuro5hin comments on that essay to be more thoughtful than the ones on Slashdot today.

    58. Re:Who Cares? by swimboy · · Score: 1

      Minor correction: the Mormon church didn't spend money in support of Prop 8 (this is a matter of public record).

      Actually, they spent massive amounts of money by donating to the National Organization for Marriage and the Yes on 8 Campaign, which in turn spent it supporting Prop 8. Of course, that's not a matter of public record because 14 states are currently suing the National Organization for Marriage for refusing to turn over their donor lists. Several sources have corroborated the claim that the vast majority of NOMs funds came from the Catholic and Mormon churches. And the California Fair Political Practices Commission even fined the Mormon Church for nondisclosure of political donations. And that ignores the huge effort they expended via door-to-door campaigns and providing manpower for other lobbying efforts.

      So, maybe the public record doesn't show the contributions that the LDS Church made, but the fact remains that they were the single biggest contributor to the support of Prop 8.

      --
      Ask me how the Heisenberg Principle may or may not have saved my life.
    59. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that depends. How juicy is this fruit?

    60. Re:Who Cares? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Gee, when I re-write this as;

      "*I* find it much more telling that people feel the need to *insist* that the federal government grant gay people these rights, merely because *their* personal beliefs say that gay people are entitled to acceptance by society."

      It still makes sense.

      The argument should be about civil recognition of marriages regardless of the genders of the couple, and that would be the civil issue.

      My sister-in-law has considered herself married to her female partner for a few years now, but having the stamp of approval from the government is very, very important to her. She already had mine, but that license and all the benefits that go with it (simplified inheritance, HIPPAA compliance, in her case favorable tax treatment, and various insurance advantages) was the motivator.

      So this is all about civil recognition. Works for me. Of course, telling me that *my* religious beliefs cannot, repeat *cannot* be considered a valid for my opinion on this topic, and so invalidates my opinion in their opinion, is hypocritical, but winning in court should soothe their souls.

      No, rights should not be voted on, except for the 11th and onward Amendments to our Constitution. Back then, voting was ok. Today, not so much.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    61. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whenever you think your opponent is evil, you have not understood them... and you are wrong.

      Why does the government place a large burden on society, in allowing "spouses" to get social security earned by their working spouse? Is it so that we can have classes of sponges, that merely leach value from society? No, it was specifically implemented to address a problem - mothers would stay at home to raise children, voluntarily destroying much of their ability to increase earning potential.

      So the issue is that you are now extending "rights" in a way that provides benefits to gay couples, without any benefit to society. You can argue (as I believe) that the word marriage should never have made it's way into laws, and that we should be more careful about aligning welfare triggers and welfare needs, but to argue that anyone that is against just redefining the terms already in legal use is evil just shows that you are a moron.

      Be honest, what homosexuals want is "equality", not "welfare". But what they are being given is welfare checks. Unless there is some reason a male-male family has to involve one of them staying home for maximum societal benefit that I am missing...

    62. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      orson ?
      dat you, bra ?
      you branching out now ?

    63. Re:Who Cares? by swimboy · · Score: 1

      "*I* find it much more telling that people feel the need to *insist* that the federal government grant gay people these rights, merely because *their* personal beliefs say that gay people are entitled to acceptance by society."

      Nobody's asking for acceptance by society. Gay people are demanding that they be treated as equals in the eye of the law. It seems that 99% of this battle is due to the people who oppose equal rights trying to make the fight about something it's not.

      Of course, telling me that *my* religious beliefs cannot, repeat *cannot* be considered a valid for my opinion on this topic, and so invalidates my opinion in their opinion, is hypocritical, but winning in court should soothe their souls.

      Nobody's telling you that your religious beliefs are not a valid basis for your opinion, but they sure as hell aren't valid as a defense for passing laws propagating discrimination against an entire class of people.

      --
      Ask me how the Heisenberg Principle may or may not have saved my life.
    64. Re:Who Cares? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      What other institution than government can you possibly lobby?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    65. Re:Who Cares? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      See, for example, http://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/church-clarifies-proposition-8-filing-corrects-erroneous-news-reports which states that in-kind donations were under $200k (not millions) and that the church gave *no* cash donations.

      The individual /members/ of the LDS church probably constituted a big chunk of the contributions to Prop 8, but that's very, very different than the LDS church as an institution directly contributing funds as you stated it - the assertion that Prop 8 passed because "the Catholic Church and the Mormon Church spent untold millions of dollars campaigning for it" is incorrect.

    66. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can demolish any pro-gay arguments you have in five minutes - but you insane liberals won't even LISTEN to opposing points of view - because this is a religion for you. You aren't interested in facts, so you seek to silence any dissent. Go on any forum and try to explain why you think homosexuality is a mental illness, a paraphilia, and you will be banned, and your posts deleted.

      How open minded! How 'accepting' and 'progressive'.

      It is QUITE obvious that homosexuality is a mental illness, which results in people committing depraved acts, and then doing everything they can to FORCE the rest of society to pretend they AREN'T depraved. So if you speak out, you get sacked from your job, or you can be put in prison for SEVEN YEARS in the U.K. for merely SAYING things that 'gays don't like' - i.e. the truth.

      THIS is what your 'lovely' gays do when they don't manage to FORCE themselves and their 'lifestyle' (LOL) onto other people:
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1348207/Christian-hotel-owners-Peter-Hazelmary-Bull-penalised-turning-away-gays.html

      And THIS is why the Jews - sorry - 'gays' - have been pushing non-stop for the past 50 years for 'gay' rights:

      http://rt.com/news/pedophile-syndicate-russian-boy-481/

      Are you happy now? You arrogant, braindead idiot. YOU are responsible for what that poor little boy went through, and what hundreds or thousands of others are going through right now.

    67. Re:Who Cares? by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

      Your objection is that it has a message you disagree with. In that sense, I agree with Card. It is intolerance. And closed-mindedness. If you refuse to listen to any argument against what you believe in, you must believe in a lot of things that aren't true.

      I believe your mother (any wife and daughters) should be provided as a reward for those prisoners in Guantanamo who provide useful information. I can elaborate, but if you refuse to listen, it means you're a close-minded and intolerant hypocrite.

    68. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you buy fruit from a KKK vendor?

      yes if I wanted the fruit and the price was fair sure.

      Would you pay for magazines spouting racism just to make sure you are covering all your bases and hearing all arguments of the issue?

      No for the reasons you suggest its a settled issue my mind is made up race does not matter. The magazines would be of no value or interest to me.

      I have to do business we people I don't like all the time. Especially dear old Uncle Sam. I have given up, I tired of denying myself in the name of social conscience. I only get to live once, if someone is selling fruit I'd like to eat, I'll buy; and no I won't worry much about who or how picked it under what conditions.

    69. Re: Who Cares? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      And you have an example of a valid basis?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    70. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's more than that: Orson Scott Card Has Always Been An Asshat. Kind of funny folks are only now caring. Guess no one reads any more.

      Personally I've been boycotting him for nearly a decade at this point. (I believe his most notorious hate-diatribes were in 1990, 2004, and 2007. The latter ones were when I found out about his positions and decided that I would never buy another one of his works.)

    71. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I may listen to an argument, but that doesn't mean I will PAY to listen to it....
      And I think I've heard quite enough of this particular argument already. I've already lost countless brain cells from being subjected to conversations debating this ridiculous nonsense-
      "A ghost who lives in the sky who created all life doesn't like it when his creations experience pleasure without purpose."
      Ouch, my brain.

    72. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hilarious. It's the 'minorities' who are tyrannizing the masses, as you well know. It's the poor, hard done by 'gays' who are ruining people's lives on a daily basis by FORCING us to pretend that we think what they do to each other is normal, or not sick. It's the poor, hard done by 'gays' who get people sacked from our jobs if we so much as say one word which THEY don't like.

      http://rt.com/news/pedophile-syndicate-russian-boy-481/

      "At first Newton and Truong claimed they were being targeted because of being gay."

      There are hundreds of thousands of these MONSTERS living in your country, just waiting for the chance to meet up with each other and claim to be 'a couple', so that they can get their hands on little boys to RAPE.

      Whose rights are most important, and who needs protecting the most? Little boys, or grown men who are 'gay'?

      MOST people don't agree with gay marriage, just because the Jew media told you otherwise, doesn't make it so.

      You're an embarrassment of a human being, because you actually take the side of our tormentors, the Jews, over YOUR OWN PEOPLE.

      Or perhaps you are a Jew as well.

    73. Re:Who Cares? by AllenABQ · · Score: 1

      However you seem to be forgetting that DOMA was a REACTION to something. It didn't come out of the blue. I wonder what that was... Oh yeah... the over-reaching decisions of SCOTUS... Tell me that the SCOTUS isn't part of the fed with a straight face and that DOMA wasn't a reaction to this. You have an interesting "view" of history. Accuracy doesn't appear to play a role.

      OK, for the sake of accuracy...

      DOMA was passed by Congress in 1996 in reaction to the possibility that Hawaii would make same-sex marriages legal following a state supreme court ruling on the subject. Hawaii never did because the issue was rendered moot via a state constitutional amendment. Congress decided to guard against future attempts by other states to do the same thing Hawaii had come close to doing.

      The SCOTUS? They had nothing to do with Congress reacting to this issue.

      This is all history. You should read up on it before you post.

    74. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the same because one side is not lobbying the government to suppress the other. I am unaware of any group that is lobbying to have heterosexual marriage outlawed. I'm sure there is such a group but I'm also sure it is trivial and an outlier in the data. I find it odd the way political parties align. The party that rails against regulation tends to support family regulation. Please government, tell me how I should build my family. Please government, don't allow my children to watch certain things.

    75. Re:Who Cares? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      The Federal government has over a thousand laws referring to marriage. Many of those laws benefits couples living together like social security benefits, inheritance rights, etc. I am advocating this from an egalitarian standpoint that those people who are in love with each other are treated like any other pair of human beings consensually in love with each other.

      That makes no sense.. if the laws are unfair because they apply only to married people, then very slightly expanding the pool of married people doesn't make the laws more fair. The laws should be repealed.

      Everything you said is still discriminatory against single people which is a much larger part of the population than gay people.

      One has to conclude then that you don't actually care about fairness and egalitarianism, just gay rights.

      If you want to call it a "civil union" or whatever, that's fine. But I don't want employers or government offices calling some people "married" and other people "civil unioned" because that can lead to "second class" treatment and promotes discrimination among employers.

      Employers or government offices call some people "married" and other people "single" -- is that ok in your mind?

      The reason I don't support gay marriage isn't exactly that I'm against gay marriage but that I don't see a point FOR gay marriage. If there's no point, why add it, especially when it conflicts with so many people? Why increase tension with half the population for the tiny benefit of the ~1% of the population who is gay AND who wants to get gay married instead of staying single?

    76. Re:Who Cares? by Wookact · · Score: 1

      Your problem, no one elses.

      If you wish to support something indirectly that goes against your views, that is your prerogative. Just because you do something that others feel is stupid, does not mean you get to call others names for not doing as you do.

    77. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm for sure going to watch that movie even if is going to be dissapointing as laways are after reading the books.
      Loved the Ender's saga books and couldn't care less about the author's opinion on whatever. And much less about people lobbing their causes with boycotts.

    78. Re:Who Cares? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "DOMA was passed by Congress in 1996 in reaction to the possibility that Hawaii would make same-sex marriages legal following a state supreme court ruling on the subject. Hawaii never did because the issue was rendered moot via a state constitutional amendment. Congress decided to guard against future attempts by other states to do the same thing Hawaii had come close to doing. "

      Gotta say, you are right. I mixed up the dates on two key decisions. My bad.

      Still doesn't change the base of my argument that the federal government should not be involved with marriage at all (including DOMA).

    79. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so incredibly stupid. Read some of the laws we're talking about here ... how on Earth is that supposed to benefit single people?

    80. Re:Who Cares? by outlander · · Score: 1

      Your religion, whatever it is, is based on a set of axioms which are beyond the bounds of what can be empirically tested.
      If I stated that purple socks were a requisite of my religion, and that all barefoot people must be denied rights, would you consider that a valid premise?
      If I stated that people going barefoot were unnatural, and lobbied to legislate purple-socks-wearing as a normative behavior, would that be valid?

      Of course not.

      So perhaps stating that ones own set of unprovable axioms are inherently correct to the extent that they should be codified into statute is an argumentum ad populem, because 'everyone knows it's right' shows a bit of hubris, no?

      --
      "Truth is what works" -- William James "It works!!" -- o-dark-AM comment
    81. Re:Who Cares? by vistic · · Score: 1

      Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia which ruled on anti-miscegenation laws... at that time, mixed-race marriage had less popular support than same-sex marriage does now.

      Based on your arguments, I am assuming you disagree with Loving v. Virginia and think it was wrong for the court to force acceptance of people of different races marrying each other.

      Sometimes you have to do what's right because its right rather than wait for popular opinion to catch up.

    82. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      14th amendment: "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."

      Denying people visitation rights, tax breaks and more just because of who they shag is about as unequal as it gets. Unless, of course, you want to argue that homosexuality is a crime in and of itself, and that laws that segregate based on a criminal act are perfectly fine.

      Go fuck yourself.

    83. Re: Who Cares? by outlander · · Score: 1

      Umm, a means of quantifiably demonstrating that a harm occurs, using rigorous and repeatable methods?

      Note phenomena occurs
      Identify large enough sample size
      Document phenomena
      Look for patterns in data
      correct for bias and post hoc ergo propter hoc
      present for peer review
      take lumps & criticism, review work as needed, refine and re-present.

      That would form a valid basis. "Goddon'tlikeit" isn't a valid basis, because we can not establish, in an empirical sense, that God or gods told someone $statement*, or that the profusion of %claims made in a written text cited are demonstrably factually accurate.

      * Revelation is necessarily limited to the first communication-- after that it is only an account of something which that person says was a revelation made to him; and though he may find himself obliged to believe it, it can not be incumbent on me to believe it in the same manner; for it was not a revelation made to ME, and I have only his word for it that it was made to him. [Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason]

      --
      "Truth is what works" -- William James "It works!!" -- o-dark-AM comment
    84. Re:Who Cares? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      A Gallup poll in May 2013 put support for gay marriage at 53% of Americans, and opposition at 45%.
      A Pew poll also in May 2013 puts it at 52% support and 42% opposed.
      A Post-ABC News poll in March 2013 puts it at 58% support and only 36% opposition.
      USA Today in July 2013 puts it at 55% support 40% opposed.

      Furthermore, long term polling trends show that acceptance of gay marriage has been rising at a rather steady 2.4% per year. For comparison, long term polling showed acceptance of interracial rose at just 1% per year. Acceptance of gay marriage is rising nearly two and a half times as fast as interracial marriage was accepted. Gay marriage is overwhelmingly seen as a civil rights issue by those under 35, with opposition primarily residing among senior citizens. Gay marriage proponents are literally burrying the core opposition as more and more of them are simply dying of old age.

      The battles will drag on for a while, but the war is effectively over.

      Gay marriage will be officially recognized nation wide in juts a few years, and any lingering gay marriage opponents will rapidly be dismissed as just as bigoted and just as irrelevant as the lingering interracial marriage opponents. I hope you enjoy Klan meetings. Pretty soon that's going to be the only place anyone is going to sympathetically listen to your persecution complex whinging.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    85. Re:Who Cares? by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about?

      The article has nothing to do with Card's homophobia. It wasn't even triggered by one of his anti-gay rants. The article came out about the time Card was demanding the press be punished for reporting truthfully on abuses by the American government during the War on Terror.

      And, FWIW, your attack on the article doesn't even make sense, it certainly doesn't suggest you read it. The author isn't attacking Card for making Ender Hitler, he's merely referencing what happened when someone else made that claim.

      The author's suggestion is that Card probably never wrote the first two Enders Games novels. He draws this conclusion based upon Card's response to the claim that Ender is Hitler - namely that Card didn't appear to know what was in his own novel, denying the novel contained elements even given references, and the massive quality change that occured between the second and third novels - as well as the substantial delay in publication.

      Is that a reasonable conclusion? I don't know, it sounds to me more like Card has difficulty coping with criticism, and the third novel could easily be bad because he's, ultimately, a hack who got lucky with his first. But it certainly isn't a conclusion drawn by someone trying to explain why Card's homophobic, or more generally, a fascist.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    86. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.
      Scott Card wants to stop all gays from marying (and I suppose from even having relationships, though I haven't read his ramblings).
      The GP, on the other hand, won't participate in his commercial ventures, but takes no effort in forbidding him from saying what he wants.

      As far as I see it, Scott Card should be allowed to post his ignorant diatribe and should be available to engange in whatever legal commercial endeavours he likes.
      But he shouldn't be surprised if people react with negative comments and by not investing in his projects.

    87. Re:Who Cares? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      Whether or not that matters to you depends on whether you are concerned with Card's financial gain, in which case you are possibly correct, or your own moral contribution to Card's actions, in which case, the person who buys the new book is taking a tiny amount of responsibility for what he does with their money onto themselves, but by buying used, you aren't.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    88. Re:Who Cares? by DeathToBill · · Score: 1

      contracts are a fairly modern invention, which reply on a state level society with rule of law

      I think state-level society and the rule of law are older concepts than you think. Certainly contracts are. The very earliest forms of writing are records of commercial agreements. This is beside the point of the universality of male-female marriage; a red herring.

      a man and as many women as he can afford to marry

      Note that I didn't say "one man and one woman". It's not accurate to say that marriage is regarded as a union between a man and one-or-more-women; this situation is (AFAICT) universally regarded as several marriages. Ancient societies that allowed polygamy certainly did not consider this some sort of union between the women involved, but between the man and each woman. This is again beside the point of marriage between men and women; a red herring.

      if the man has no brothers, but has sisters, the sister's might be expected to take over the husbandly duties).

      I've never heard of one - care to offer a reference? At any rate, generally speaking, ancient societies that operated in that way regarded the family member as acting as the representative of the dead man - so any children would be legally his. There was no general acceptance of same-sex marriage. This is, again, a red herring, though slightly nearer the point than the others.

      For the vast majority of Western history, women were treated like property, and marriage was an exchange of property which happened to include a woman.

      That is a popular myth, but I don't think it's even close to true. Certainly the formalities have always said that it is not true. If we are restricting ourselves to Western societies in the past thousand years or two then we are basically talking about Christian traditions of marriage. The Christian ceremony of marriage has always included a longish preamble that sets out the purpose of marriage and it certainly doesn't describe it as a transfer of property. It is centrally a promise to love and to cherish, not to own. Ecclesiastical (ie church) law has always recognised the invalidity of a marriage where one partner did not freely consent to the marriage and has provided for annulment of marriages on this basis. If we further restrict ourselves to Anglo-American culture, English law has always recognised the presumed agency of wives with respect to their husband's property - that is, a wife is free to enter into any and all contracts regarding her husband's property and the law will presume that she has the right unless there is specific evidence to rebut it. This is not a wife being part of her husband's property but having control over it.

      I'm not making an argument in the women-always-had-it-good-they're-just-a-bunch-of-whingers line; there have certainly been gross injustices dished out to them and often the law has failed to protect them. But your description of marriage is just gross fabrication. People haven't changed much, you know; people have always grown up, fallen in love, got married, had children, died. It's not always perfect, in fact often enough we manage to hurt each other a lot, but yes, it's an institution that I think is worth legally enforcing. Since the nearest you can come up with to an argument for changing that definition of marriage is a gross caricature, count me unconvinced.

      --
      Slashdot - News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters, in ISO-8859-1 Has just realised that beta makes this signature redundant
    89. Re:Who Cares? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      how on Earth is that supposed to benefit single people?

      Umm ok, let's look at Social Security.

      If you are (or were) married you can get the higher of your own SS benefit or 1/2 of your spouse's (or former spouse's) benefit when you retire. That's an advantage.

      Now can you imagine that benefiting single people? Yeah obviously. Why can't I get the higher of my own benefit or half of my best friend's benefit, or my dad's benefit, or my girlfriend's benefit, or my roommate's benefit?

      You are so incredibly stupid.

      Coming from the guy who CAN'T IMAGINE how the benefits for married people could be useful to unmarried people as well... yet arguing that currently unmarried gay people should be allowed to marry SO THEY CAN GET those benefits... alrighty then.

    90. Re:Who Cares? by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      ". For all of recorded history up to about 1990, marriage has always, in every society, meant a contract of union between a man and a woman"

      Complete and utter bollocks, has it been thus

      Even in the bible marriage has many "definitions"

      Equal treatment is being able to marry the consenting adult you love, not who society says you are allowed to marry

    91. Re:Who Cares? by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      So gay men and women cannot form relationships?

      "whoosh", the sound of reality going over your bigoted little head

    92. Re:Who Cares? by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      "marriage" was purely a civil affair UNTIL religious whackos took control and decided it was theirs. (history - you gotta love it)

  3. less than human? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't say Card went that far. Don't be a tool. He was a bigot, no doubt, but lets not get too exagerated, shall we?

    Ender's game's end of the book reveal and 2 cultures learning to understand each other might be a good message to bring up.

    1. Re:less than human? by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Interesting how he couldn't bring that idea into his real life.

    2. Re:less than human? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many would treat zerogamists as less than human by supporting laws against marrying oneself?

    3. Re:less than human? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Heinlein, in his adult (not teen) later books assumed widespread acceptance of homosexuality and plural marriage.

      At least Lazarus Long's giant freakin' harems of women following him seemed like a plural marriage.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    4. Re:less than human? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      My wife and I are polygynists, and while I am fully for equal rights for non-abusive polygamists, even I can see that there is going to be a fundamental difference between ceasing to worry about gender in marriage, and completely redesigning several parts of government and corporate bureaucracies to allow for legal poly unions. Think of all of the FORMS, man! I mean, it's easy enough to write a woman's name in a man's place or vice-versa, and even redesigning them to say "spouse" instead of "husband" or "wife" isn't a real big deal - everything still lines up. But extra fields? Entirely new forms? From GOVERNMENT WORKERS? Who then have to get them approved, in triplicate, by superiors and superiors' superiors? ;-)

      It's going to be an uphill battle, to say the least. But at least the fundies are now unintentionally working for us. Since they see that gay equality in government is inevitable, they are now arguing (correctly, by the Constitution, in my opinion, but still perhaps for other reasons) that government should be out of the marriage business altogether. If they succeed in that, then perhaps the government will change all government recognition of marriage to "civil unions", and it is a shorter walk from that to "family contracts" than from where we are now.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    5. Re:less than human? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you clarify what chicken restaurant has refused service to polygamists. Or even people of the same sex? I am deeply curious.

    6. Re:less than human? by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      polygyn

      I see what you did there!

    7. Re:less than human? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeap. The funny thing is I support the position of "no state marriage". If you want to have a religious or personal union go ahead, you can even call it marriage as much as you want, it just wouldn't involve laws or the government. So by the reasoning laid out in the summary, I am trying to treat "all humanity" as "less than human"..... I'm trying to wrap my head around that one.

    8. Re:less than human? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The "chicken restaurant owner" is not the owner, he was the CEO and was asked a direct question which he answered with his honest belief. He didn't change company policy to be anti-gay, nor express any comments on the "chick-fil-a gay days" held. In fact, gays do work there and are obviously served there, both without prejudice. I don't believe that is the same as what Card is doing.

    9. Re:less than human? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      So have our girlfriends. ;-) ;-)

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    10. Re:less than human? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      Heinlein, in his adult (not teen) later books assumed widespread acceptance of homosexuality and plural marriage.

      At least Lazarus Long's giant freakin' harems of women following him seemed like a plural marriage.

      For explicit discussions of plural marriage from Heinlein, see his Hugo winning The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    11. Re:less than human? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      He started with that earlier than you think. The Moon is a Harsh Mistress featured plural marriage front and center, and it was published in 1966. Not merely polygyny, either. (In fact, specifically not that option). Polyandry, yes. Something he called a "line marriage". (Not sure if he made that name up or not.) And others. The book explores societal reactions to a radical imbalance in numbers between the sexes. A theme we may see played out here on Earth, if things continue the way they have been in China. The way China has been going, they're going to have to legalize polyandry.

    12. Re:less than human? by youngatheart · · Score: 1

      Ow. You make me feel dense.

      "By denying someone the right to a federally approved marriage of their preference, you're treating them as less than human." I've seen variations this argument repeatedly and that weakness never occurred to me. Whether you agree or disagree, I think you should consider the legitimacy of any argument worth discussing... and I totally missed that insight.

    13. Re:less than human? by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      I'm from southern Utah. I get a reminded of polygamy every weekend at Walmart. (:

    14. Re:less than human? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      You sound like someone who may have some insight into a little thought experiment I've been having this thread. I did not have a religious service for my marriage because I am not religious. I just went, got the cert, and had the justice sign it. Took 10 minutes from start to finish. Not even a kiss the bride- romantic I know :D You have multiple persons you love and care about but the gov won't recognize those. So for people that can't get married or hate the dogma surounded by it, why not set up a corporation(which is the closest to a family contract we have right now)? The corp has the assets, the liability, has to provide all the insurance for the "workers" and whatnot. The corp can provide for whatever the bigots won't allow and they get better tax benefits than just plain old married people! If you should want to get divorced, you simply dissolve the corp and divvy up the liquidated assets. Has anyone done this? I think it would be a spectacular way to poke "the Man" in the eye for being such assholes and it is totally legal, 100% Whadda ya think?

    15. Re:less than human? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      I think that that is so brilliant.... that I thought of it years ago. ;-) But, there's actually an even better option if you're not picky about religion: Form a pagan coven, file all of the paperwork necessary to make it legal, and keep shared resources in the coven's name. The reason this is (was? Not sure if some of President Obama's directives on Medicaid payouts have made this irrelevant) superior is that there are (were? Honestly need to look back into this, I guess) certain circumstances where organizations such as hospitals would not recognize a gay or poly spouse as a family member - BUT, in a coven, every member is clergy, and they can't deny access to your clergy. :-D

      I would really like to see government "marriage" (not church Marriage, churches can do what they want regarding religious ceremonies) replaced with a Family Contract, someday. Forget about sex - why SHOULDN'T an elderly brother and sister who have both had their spouses precede them be able to give one another the same financial security as partners in a married couple give one another, just as one example?

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    16. Re:less than human? by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      Or, begin using war or other life-threatening large scale projects to reduce their male population. I'll take the poly, thanks.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    17. Re:less than human? by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Fascinating. I shall look into this further. Thanks for a most insightful post!

  4. Don't give him the attention. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

    None of his views on this particular issue are evident in the novel, except perhaps in the naming of the aliens - and that might just be coincidence.

    So make the film, and ignore where it comes from. No need to dismiss a story just because of it's author.

    Really, practically every author before 1900 was an extreme racist.

    You'd be better off trying to get Shakesphere out of schools for his anti-Jewish views - those *did* get expressed in his plays.

    1. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of his views on this particular issue are evident in the novel, except perhaps in the naming of the aliens - and that might just be coincidence.

      Off the top of my head they're described as being like giant ants in some physiological and social aspects, so at I guess I'd say the name was mainly from describing them as "bugs", combined with one definition of bugger as " a general-purpose expletive, used to imply dissatisfaction, or used to refer to someone or something whose behaviour is in some way displeasing" (Wiki). I've not read the later books but apparently they're referred to as Formics in them (from the Latin for ant).

      I agree, you can't form an opinion of something based on the author. If the work itself was homophobic then I'd understand it, but in every other situation people would be saying "attack the message, not the messenger".

    2. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Danathar · · Score: 1

      I agree with you completely.

      From a practical viewpoint though, the press will make people who know nothing about the movie go see it...just the opposite of what they are trying to achieve.

    3. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Surak_Prime · · Score: 2

      "Really, practically every author before 1900 was an extreme racist."

      I guess since you modified that with "practically", that means I'm just nitpicking, but right off the top of my head, I seem to recall that Hamilton had some pretty strong opinions about extending full citizen rights to black people who had fought for the country's freedom in "The Federalist Papers", Mark Twain was pretty remarkably liberal in that regard, and whomever the author was that put the parable of The Good Samaritan into Jesus's mouth seemed to be preaching not to judge people by the look of their body but by the content of their character, as well.

      "Everyone else is doing it" is no excuse for bad behavior, especially when the "everyone else" you have to point at are people 100 years or more behind the times. Card gets no pass from me.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    4. Re:Don't give him the attention. by davidtwilcox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The racist views of pre-1900 authors and Shakespeare can be more easily dismissed because our society as a whole has decided those beliefs are wrong and no longer relevant in the big picture. We're no longer fighting on a large scale for civil rights and most of our society can look back on those beliefs as antiquated. However, the fight for gay rights and marriage equality is still going on and is highly relevant to our society, so Card's beliefs are fair game for criticism.

      Whether or not he expressed his beliefs in his books or in the upcoming movie is irrelevant. Card is still very much alive to benefit financially from both and from the wider exposure the movie can generate for him. Since he actively campaigns for anti-gay laws and defense of marriage bills, providing him additional financial support and publicity for a cause I am directly opposed to is not an action I plan on taking. Ignoring the author is not an option for me and many others.

    5. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read Victor Hugo's Les Miserables. He doesn't express racist remarks, directly but he does express bigotted remarks regarding the superiority of the French people.

    6. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      There's a thin line between bigotry and nationalism. But even if true, one example of a bigot does not negate my point, which wasn't that racism or bigotry didn't exist, or even that it wasn't more common. It was that *some* writers demonstrated much more enlightened views, too, well before 1900.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    7. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Thanshin · · Score: 1

      Read Victor Hugo's Les Miserables. He doesn't express racist remarks, directly but he does express bigotted remarks regarding the superiority of the French people.

      He was being clearly sarcastic.

      You just don't get comedy.

    8. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      You don't see the difference between patronizing a live artist and educating yourself about dead ones?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    9. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Sparticus789 · · Score: 0

      So racism and bigotry are OK as long as 51% of the population agrees with them? So pre-1900 authors get a free pass because "everyone" was racist?

      Shouldn't racism and bigotry be wrong, no matter the time period in which they occurred?

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    10. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 1

      providing him additional financial support and publicity for a cause I am directly opposed to is not an action I plan on taking

      Presumably you think your actions are morally justified. Do you think it would be morally right for an employer to fire an employee for expressing a political view he disagreed with because he doesn't want to financially support "the enemy?"

      People have taken the "vote with your wallet" idea and twisted it into "punish with your wallet." There's a difference -- voting with your wallet is supposed to be about letting businesses know that they have displeased you in some way that is directly related to your transaction with the business. Customer service wasn't good, the quality of the product wasn't good, whatever. Voting with your wallet is positive because it leads to positive changes -- businesses with better customer service and better quality get more customers, and the bad businesses either change or go out of business.

      Now it's become "The CEO of Chick Fila is BAD! Vote with your wallets people!!!" The only goal there is to create a more conformist society by punishing dissent which is the opposite of free speech and the open exchange of ideas.

      Frankly that general principle is more important than any contemporary social issue which is why it's so disappointing to see people throwing it under the bus.

    11. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Crimey+McBiggles · · Score: 2

      No, ancient authors get a pass because the sales of their works don't benefit them or any foundation that promotes the bigotry agenda.

      --
      Crimey
    12. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't see the difference between patronizing a live artist and educating yourself about dead ones?

      Yes, but I think the GP DOES understand the meta-concept of "death of the author", and not just when it's convenient for him/her to write fanfic.

    13. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Sparticus789 · · Score: 2

      So racism and bigotry are OK as long as the racist/bigot author doesn't profit from anything they do?

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    14. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, come 2113, you wouldn't mind easily dismissing Card's view and buying whatever stand-in for Blu-Ray edition of "Ender's Game"?

    15. Re:Don't give him the attention. by aevan · · Score: 1

      Believe that falls under moral relativism/presentism. Judging history through the lens of today, with the added hubris that today, we are the pinnacle of morality.
      For all we know, in 100 years we could be judged just as utterly barbaric and immoral, and things we hold right aren't considered such any more.

      Of course this is all just a philosophical exercise, since we can't act based on an unknown future's view, nor can we change (or fully know) the past. All you can do is decide: do you reject everything before this generation as the product of moral decadent people; and if not, will you also you separate current works from their creator's beliefs, and judge the work on individual merit.

    16. Re:Don't give him the attention. by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Do you think it would be morally right for an employer to fire an employee for expressing a political view he disagreed with because he doesn't want to financially support "the enemy?"

      No; however I wouldn't find it any less wrong than the employer voting for a party/policy that discriminates against a section of society either. Fortunately what we're talking about here isn't the same as an employee being fired it's about buying products where a proportion of the profits will go on political lobbying that I strongly disagree with.

    17. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, according to your "logic" every political/activist group should spend time and energy boycotting movies (which have no actually bearing on the issues that the groups represent).

      So people who disagree with gay marriage should boycott movies by people who support it? Should the same apply to abortion? What about political views? What about healthcare? What about other media? Books, video games? How about sports teams?

      This is just a stupid viewpoint to take. I disagree with a lot of the agendas that actors and directors get behind. I don't let that affect my entertainment. If you want to really affect a change, do something to actually help the cause.

    18. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He performs it live? I thought it was a movie ...

    19. Re:Don't give him the attention. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You'd be better off trying to get Shakesphere out of schools for his anti-Jewish views - those *did* get expressed in his plays.

      Slashdot isn't the place for a deep discussion of Shakespeare, but I'm going to, anyway. It's arguable (and is regularly argued) that Shakespeare was not actually anti-Semitic. Shylock is portrayed as a villain, it's true, but his speech, "I am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions; fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer as a Christian is?" shows him (at least in that passage) as a sympathetic human, not a villain, and more generally, the rest of the speech, where he declares that he'll act just as horribly as his persecutors do (and proceeds to do so, driving the play) can be seen as a character's reaction to a bigoted society, rather than of the author's hatred of Jews. Shakespeare had some outright villains who did evil just to do evil, but generally his worst characters (and I'm thinking of Iago and Shylock specifically) had excellent, rational motivations for doing the evil things they did. His writing of them was not based on hatred of their races, but on how society had shaped them into tools for evil.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    20. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Almost. So long as racist / bigot institutions are not furthered by this racism/bigotry. Profit for a racist/bigot author who uses his means to spread racism and bigotry is one way to spread those institutions. Shakespeare doesn't*.

      *Well, you can argue that it does, but it's a relevantly different argument than the Orson Scott Card profit one to the point where a reasonable human being could come to a different conclusion.

      Myself, I'll probably not see the movie in theatres (I just don't see many movies that way) and will probably catch it when it comes on a channel I'm already subscribed to. Stopped buying his books because they stopped being good, or maybe I just grew out of them, not sure which.

    21. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, if your employee says this shit publicly, and their job depends on public perception (both true in this case), then yes, they will be dropped.

      But anyway, this is not at all like an employer firing an employee. In both cases there's a one vs. many power dynamic, but it's going in opposite directions.

      The CEO of Chick Fil-A is going to be fine. He has a net worth of 4.2 billion according to wikipedia. His employees are salaried, not tipped, so there's limited crossfire. When the mayor of such and such a place was apparently going to deny Chick Fil-A a permit on the basis of that opinion, *that* was more of a problem. Orson Scott Card will also be fine. He's not a minimum wage bigot who got fired from a McDonald's or something for blogging his views while keeping them out of the workplace -- I can see that being a bit of an issue too much as his bigotry is his own problem.

      It's a weird culture where you're accused of violating free speech if you say "I'm not going to watch a bigot's movie".

    22. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't dismiss the story, far from it, but I'm sure as heck not paying him money to see it, money which he has, in the past, used to finance his bigoted political agenda.

    23. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 1

      No; however I wouldn't find it any less wrong than the employer voting for a party/policy that discriminates against a section of society either.

      I also wouldn't find it less wrong than the act of voting for a party that you support.. because voting is not wrong at all. Right? Or are you saying that voting for a party that discriminates against a section of society is wrong? Like voting for Democrats is wrong since they discriminate against the rich, which is a section of society?

      Fortunately what we're talking about here isn't the same as an employee being fired it's about buying products where a proportion of the profits will go on political lobbying that I strongly disagree with.

      Yeah I'm not saying the two actions are equivalent, but they are both on the scale of financially punishing someone for disagreeing with your own views in a way that is unrelated to the financial transaction.

      If you vote Democrat that doesn't affect how you do your job. I don't think your boss is morally right to fire you because you voted against his interests as an evil rich business owner or whatever, even if it's true.

      And it would be morally wrong for him to pass over you for a raise or promotion, even though that's less severe than firing.

      And it would be morally wrong for him to make your bonus $10 smaller, even though that's around the price of a movie ticket and now we're on exactly the same financial severity as boycotting this movie.

      And it would be morally wrong for him to make your salary $1 smaller cumulatively over your entire career, even though now we're at the same relative financial severity as boycotting this movie.

      It's the motivation and intent to harm that makes it immoral.

    24. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So racism and bigotry are OK as long as the racist/bigot author doesn't profit from anything they do?

      No, but reading Shakespeare hardly promotes racism, particularly when someone reads it critically.

    25. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 0

      First off, if your employee says this shit publicly, and their job depends on public perception (both true in this case), then yes, they will be dropped.

      Okay. So if my customers don't like black people, then as a business owner I can fire any black person who has to interact with the black-hating public.

      That does make business sense. And I don't even have to be racist myself to fire the black people, I can point to the customers.

      So.. you are the racist customer. Orson Scott Card is black. I am a producer who is deciding what movie to make next and who I want to hire/buy rights from/whatever movie people do, and part of my decision is how my customers will react to my next movie.

      Are you comfortable with your role as the racist customer?

      It's a weird culture where you're accused of violating free speech if you say "I'm not going to watch a bigot's movie".

      I don't think my views are mainstream enough to be called a culture.

      Sometimes I push a principle very far just to see what happens, and then I like the result. I have somewhat extreme and occasionally contradicting views on free speech that I haven't fully worked out. I'm almost certain about society's responsibility to free speech though. Rights don't spring out of nature fully formed and protected. They come from good societies. A good society provides good rights for its members. In our society, in America at least, I feel like rights have become too much associated with the government, and less with society. It's why Bush and a shit-ton of people who voted for him thought he could install a fully functional democracy complete with modern liberal rights in a society that doesn't generate those rights on their own. I believed it too.

      But free speech isn't just about the government not being allowed to enforce laws that restrict certain protected types of speech. That's really dang limited. We have free speech in this country because MANY people not in the government value it in their personal lives to a broad extent.

      You mentioned the case of various mayors and officials threatening Chick Fil-A... officials from Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco all made statements that Chick Fil-A was not welcome. That is bad. And yet, is it much worse than if a few big property owners or banks not connected with the government did the same thing? "Sorry, no loans for Chick Fil-A franchises because we support gay marriage." That would have a greater effect than the mayors of a handful of cities. On the other hand does the size of the effect matter, or are we concerned with principle? Most bankers, I hope, would say "You know, I'm not going to look at it as a personal issue but business. What they do and why they do it is up to them, I'm just concerned with whether the loan will be repaid." Not... "Oh man, I'm Christian, and I absolutely will not give any loan to a Muslim, because I don't want to give money to someone who thinks I'm an infidel."

      Enough of our society IS like that, that we have passed laws protecting people from certain classes of discrimination. Probably not a majority, but a sizable number of people have very anti-liberal views. You and the others who want to demonize Orson Scott Card's business that is unrelated to his personal views are part of that movement away from liberalism and rights. As we go down the road of "voting with our wallet" against anybody who disagrees with us, and having protests, and getting people fired (e.g. Paula Deen), we'll simply lose the right to free speech because it won't exist in practice.

    26. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cultural relativism shall not be used in defense of one's own political enemies....

    27. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (not the same AC)

      Okay. So if my customers don't like black people, then as a business owner I can fire any black person who has to interact with the black-hating public.

      Nice switch-a-roo there. That's a completely different analogy than the one before. Your first analogy is something your employee said pissed off customers, not what I as a customer say/did.

      So no, I am not a racist customer. I'm the black customer, and your employee (Card) is the one who said/did racist stuff that pissed me and other customers off.

      I'm not the aggressor here. Your employee/Card is for expressing his views. He's free to express them of course, but don't blame me or others for our reaction. Our reactions are simply the consequences for Card's actions, which he committed under his own free will. None of his rights are infringed. None of yours are either.

      That is bad. And yet, is it much worse than if a few big property owners or banks not connected with the government did the same thing?

      It is worse. Non-government entities are not the boss of us, nor are we the boss of them. They are not tyrants who can keep us from finding another property owner or bank who would do business with us, nor are we tyrants who can force them to do (or not do) business with us.

      With government, it does have power (granted by society) over all of us, in which it could abuse and become a tyranny.

      From a financial and economic standpoint, whatever non-government entities do, even if we don't like it, is with their own money. But if it's government doing something, even if we don't like it, it's done with our money.

      With that said, this...

      You and the others who want to demonize Orson Scott Card's business that is unrelated to his personal views are part of that movement away from liberalism and rights.

      ... is nonsensical bullshit, no offense. Individuals demonizing a business is moving TOWARDS liberalism and rights. We as individuals are free to express ourselves, and freedom to decide what to do with our own money. And we're doing it in such a way that does not infringe on your/Card's right to express yourselves. Card can still hold his beliefs, he can still write books and make movie and try to sell them. He's just not (and he should not be) entitled to our money.

      As we go down the road of "voting with our wallet" against anybody who disagrees with us, and having protests, and getting people fired (e.g. Paula Deen), we'll simply lose the right to free speech because it won't exist in practice.

      Again, nonsense. Going down this road simply leads to some people/businesses being poorer. Losing your job/money is not the same as losing your rights. You may be poor(er), but you can still speak.

      Really, just answer this simple question: how are your rights to say what you want infringed when I decide to not give you my money?

    28. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 2

      Maybe in your mind, but to many people ancient authors get a pass because people just don't care that they were racist or sexist or whatever.

      All this criticism of Orson Scott Card is as stupid as people who don't want their kids to read any Homer because Ancient Greek civilization promoted homosexuality and pedophilia.

      If a story is good, it doesn't matter who wrote it. In fact, reading a great story and then learning that the person who wrote it has very different, even disagreeable, views than you makes it more interesting, not something to be avoided.

    29. Re:Don't give him the attention. by anethema · · Score: 1

      The difference is Shakespeare is dead. No one is getting money for his thoughts.

      If you go to this movie, you will be giving some small portion of money to OSC. He will use this money to live and lobby to have the rights of a certain (fairly large) percentage of the population removed in some manner.

      If you go see it you aren't ignoring where it comes from, you are, in some small way, helping spread this message yourself.

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    30. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Wookact · · Score: 1

      They can profit, they just wont profit from me.

    31. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough*Disney*cough*

    32. Re:Don't give him the attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shakespeare had some outright villains who did evil just to do evil, but generally his worst characters (and I'm thinking of Iago and Shylock specifically) had excellent, rational motivations for doing the evil things they did. His writing of them was not based on hatred of their races, but on how society had shaped them into tools for evil.

      Interesting you brought up Iago... I thought among all of Shakespeare's villains, Iago's motivations were pretty ambiguous (Racism? Anger at being passed over for a promotion? Jealousy?) He offers no explanation when he's arrested ("Demand me nothing; what you know, you know: from this time forth I never will speak word.")

    33. Re:Don't give him the attention. by runeghost · · Score: 1
      No, it's not. You're completely missing the point. It's not just his views that people have a problem with, it's the way he uses his money and authorial fame to promote them.

      Homer isn't making any money when you consume some version of the Illiad. When Mr. Card makes money, he uses it to promote his bigoted hate speech. Thus, many people don't want to see him make any more money.

    34. Re:Don't give him the attention. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The difference is that, when I buy a Shakespeare book, I'm not sending any money to anti-Jewish causes. If I pay for anything Card gets money on, I am sending money that will go to a cause I profoundly disagree with. The question of whether to go is partly artistic (in which case Card's opinions don't matter) and partly whether I think it a good use of my money. If I could watch the movie for free, without contributing money to Card's political activity, or even if I could be assured that Card wouldn't profit financially by my going, that's completely different from whether I should financially support Card.

      I might well watch "Triumph of the Will" (the famous Nazi propaganda piece), unless part of the money collected went to the American Nazi Party.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    35. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I'm not missing the point you raise, but that point wasn't present in the post I responded to. The post I was responding too was talking about ancient authors and why they get a pass. I disagree with their proposed reason. It's not why ancient authors get a pass, it's why Card is not getting a pass (from some people, like you) -- there is a difference.

      With your hyperbolic rants about "bigoted hate speech" you act like gays are being rounded up in ghettos and summarily executed in gas chambers. I understand why you phrase it in those terms, because it's a shortcut rhetorical trick to embarrass your opponents and silence them and it gives you a sense of power and superiority over them.

      It's so sad to me that some otherwise intelligent and nice people (I'm sure) are soooo consumed by gay marriage that they turn into little better than thugs who want to attack others financially for disagreeing with them.

    36. Re:Don't give him the attention. by runeghost · · Score: 1
      Here are some of Mr. Card's public statements:

      Regardless of law, marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage, and help me raise my children in a society where they will expect to marry in their turn.

      Laws against homosexual behavior should remain on the books, not to be indiscriminately enforced against anyone who happens to be caught violating them, but to be used when necessary to send a clear message that those who flagrantly violate society's regulation of sexual behavior cannot be permitted to remain as acceptable, equal citizens within that society.

      Card has publicly advocated jailing homosexuals to create a reign of terror and overthrowing the government in order to implement laws that will force people to act in ways he finds acceptable. Call his statements "bigoted hate speech" is being generous.

      It is not a "financial attack" when I decline to buy a product and encourage others to do the same. No one has a right to make a profit from anything.

    37. Re:Don't give him the attention. by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Card has publicly advocated jailing homosexuals to create a reign of terror and overthrowing the government

      That's not my interpretation of the quote you posted, which I've also seen elsewhere in this discussion as evidence that Card is a violent bigot. It kind of reminds me of people quoting the Bible saying Jesus is violent because of some passage about him being a sword that divides houses and sets brother against brother, when that is quite obviously metaphorical. Somehow I don't think Card meant that if gay marriage is approved he's going to go on a murderous rampage to singlehandedly overthrow the federal government. I don't know Card personally but I just don't get that vibe from what I've read. So in my opinion those quotes are a very weak attack, really just a pretext for calling him a violent bigot as a rhetorical technique like I said before. He's obviously not a violent bigot nor does he want to throw all the gays in jail.

      It is not a "financial attack" when I decline to buy a product and encourage others to do the same. No one has a right to make a profit from anything.

      Here's the definition of boycott on Google:

      Verb
      Withdraw from commercial or social relations with (a country, organization, or person) as a punishment or protest.

      I'm not sure why people are trying to say it's not a financial attack to organize a boycott against someone. I really am not sure. I'm not calling you physically violent just because I used the word attack (and other people have responded the same way as you when I said "financial punishment"). You want to hurt someone financially due to what they have said in a completely different context. How is that not a financial attack?

      Also you're wrong that nobody has a right to make a profit. Not only do they have a moral right, but a legal right as well, as long as certain conditions are met, which is why we have laws against discrimination based on race, religion, etc. If your company only buys labor from white people, then you are guilty of discrimination, because the black laborers DO have "a right to make a profit from anything" including their time. I give that example not to draw a complete equivalence between going to a movie and giving someone a job, but to illustrate the idea that people have rights in the marketplace as long as certain preconditions (like offering a competitive product or being qualified for a job) are fulfilled. Race is a very obvious example, even to people who want to boycott Card, that shows that simple purchasing decisions can be immoral.

      To get away from the large impact of hiring vs not hiring, here's another example -- if a store that you shopped at for the last decade suddenly hired a black guy, and you start shopping at a different store for that reason.. that is quite obviously an immoral action.

      That's really close to my point with the movie... not that you HAVE to see the movie out of duty to free speech, but that if you want to see the movie but stopped yourself because of Card's involvement, and tried to convince others who want to see the movie to not see it, you're as bad as the racist who stops shopping at a store that hires a black guy. It doesn't make you evil, but it makes you less noble than you probably think you are, and it requires you to acknowledge what you're doing and not pretend you're doing nothing more than exercising your right to make purchase decisions.

      The people who have no interest in seeing the movie because the movie itself doesn't interest them regardless of Card's involvement are completely excluded from what I've been saying, because you're right, the owners of the movie have no right to make a profit from them.

    38. Re:Don't give him the attention. by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      You are acting like Card had NOT waved the white flag and said "I surrender, you won!". By saying "With the recent Supreme Court ruling, the gay marriage issue becomes moot. The Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution will, sooner or later, give legal force in every state to any marriage contract recognized by any other state." he is admitting he has lost and reluctantly is holding a white flag on this issue. I doubt you will hear the same crap from Card on this issue. BTW, there are a lot of other Mormons who will NEVER admit defeat and will fight hard against same-sex marriage until they die.

      >The racist views of pre-1900 authors and Shakespeare can be more easily dismissed because our society as a whole has decided those beliefs are wrong
      > and no longer relevant in the big picture.

      WHEN did our society decide those beliefs are wrong? Society, as a whole, DID NOT take that view until a turning point was reached. Believe it or not Card's opinion on the matter was actually in tune with a majority of people of his society until now. He recognizes that he has lost the war and he is checkmated. The question now is do we get revenge on him for that or take him at his word. He is a *ss-hat but I will give him the benefit of a doubt on just this issue since he was wise enough to admit defeat.

    39. Re:Don't give him the attention. by steelfood · · Score: 1

      When we enjoy Shakespeare, we're not paying him or his heirs.

      I guess we'll go see Ender's Game when it enters the public domain. Oh wait...

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  5. problem mistated. by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From TFA:

    "Responding to reports of a nascent boycott against the upcoming movie version of his beloved 1985 sci-fi novel Ender’s Game because of his stated opposition to same-sex marriage..."

    Whoa, whoa, WHOA there cowboy. People aren't pissed off a Card because of his "stated opposition" to gay marriage. I don't give a rat's ass what most authors think or even what they say. The problem here is that he was so active in campaigns that were openly trying to strip the rights of others based on sexual orientation. People have the right to think what they want, but when they start trying to codify their prejudice into law THAT is where the problem starts.

    1. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, if I stopped watching movies because of the ethos and beliefs of the actors and directors, I couldn't watch anything, especially Tom Cruise.

    2. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Laws are merely codified versions of values/morals/prejudices.

      The question becomes "Who's morals are we going to codify into law?"

      In a monarchy the obvious answer is "The King's morals." But a representative government is a tricky beast. Every citizen has the right to try and have their morals codified. Success depends on their ability to convince others of their position.

      Their position may be wrong, but they still have the right to try to convince others.

    3. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A valid point. I want to marry a goat, a very horny, fuzzy goat.

    4. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      People can think what they want, but as soon as they try to "act" on their beliefs and opinions, that makes them assholes, if their opinions differ from yours?

      Erm, yes? Same with murder, rape, etc. Sometimes acting on your beliefs brings about a bad result.

    5. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage is a religious concept

      FFS. Another idiot who knows nothing about the history of marriage.

    6. Re:problem mistated. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That's bullshit. Technically, you're right, since it wasn't a right they ever had, the campaign wasn't to strip the rights.

      But, that's overly pedantic.Ultimately, people don't get married solely because they want to be married, there's a ton of rights that are granted to go along with that.

      As for the 7 wives thing, why is it that bigots keep trotting that out? That, bestiality and pedophilia will never be legalized because there are serious problems with it. Polygamy and Polygny lead to people being unable to get a spouse because all of a sudden you need only a fraction of the partners you needed to to fill the need for women or men, while the remaining men and women are unable to marry.

      In the cast of bestiality and pedophilia, there's no ability of the animals and children to engage in informed consent.

      Completely different from consenting adults getting married.

    7. Re: problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's the case, but I'm not going to deny him, or you, the right to express his opinion.

      Except that no-one is trying to stop him expressing his opinion; they just don't want to put money in his pocket to help him fund campaigns on this issue.

      Obviously we should all be forced to give him money, or else we're censoring his free speech.

    8. Re:problem mistated. by sageres · · Score: 1

      Well than let me turn your argument against you. There are many more male homosexuals then female homosexuals. Therefore more females would be left unable to find themselves permanent (don't want to say "mates") partners. That means we can technically engage in polygamy.
      And even if we do have population discrepancy (someone has 7 wives), whom to say we can not have polyandry and have a woman take 7 husbands? Everything would than equal out and frankly your argument would be moot.
      Who said anything about bestiality or pedophilia? You must be a one sick puppy to even mention them why we can't allow them.

    9. Re:problem mistated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it ok for those of us who agree with Card's opinion to treat gay activists the same way you are treating him?

    10. Re:problem mistated. by Totenglocke · · Score: 0

      Actors, writers, directors, and producers generally subscribe to one political ideology and most movies involve at least one or two scenes of insulting / vilifying those who disagree with their political agenda. Now we have a writer who's on the opposite side and suddenly the political agenda of those who made the movie matters?

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    11. Re:problem mistated. by Holi · · Score: 1

      I don't watch Tom Cruise movies, but it has absolutely nothing to do with his beliefs. His movies just suck.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    12. Re:problem mistated. by Holi · · Score: 1

      Marriage is a civil construct, Civil Unions were a recent construct to try and appease the LGBT crowd (with less benefits then marriage provides)

      If you are right that marriage is religious and civil unions are civil, then where were civil unions before 1989 and why are atheists married.
      Marriage as recognized by the government is a civil contract between 2 people. Civil unions are the "separate but equal" of the debate.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    13. Re:problem mistated. by Holi · · Score: 1

      Not it's not. it's a bigoted belief, its the modern day version of "Separate but Equal"

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    14. Re:problem mistated. by nylrym · · Score: 1

      Despite my support for gay marriage, the answer to your question is, fundamentally, "yes".
      "OK" is an interesting word, because it being "OK" would imply that I thought it was "OK" to oppose equal rights in the first place. But for the purposes of this discussion let's set this aside. If you disagree as strongly with (for example) JK Rowling as I disagree with Orson Scott Card, then by all means boycott her books and movies.
      I'm not sure why this is even a question.

    15. Re:problem mistated. by Minupla · · Score: 1

      I find it odd then that when I got married by a government official that I received a marriage certificate, not a 'civil union' certificate?

      Min

      --
      On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
    16. Re:problem mistated. by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      How does this make you different than Orson Scott Card?

      Beliefs are not genetic. Beliefs are chosen.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    17. Re:problem mistated. by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Wow that'd be really hard... no wait; now I remember, I haven't paid to watch a Tom Cruise film since he became a cheerleader for a pretend religious pyramid scheme.

      I boycotted Nestle in the past because of what they were doing with baby formula in Africa. No doubt some people here would think I should have ignored that because in their opinion it wasn't related to the chocolate I wanted so I should just ignore it.

    18. Re:problem mistated. by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Wow. That's a pretty blatant misstatement of my position.

      If they "act" on their beliefs by trying to force them on me, then your answer is "hell yes."

    19. Re:problem mistated. by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Isn't that fairly common?

    20. Re:problem mistated. by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      " There are many more male homosexuals then female homosexuals. "

      Love assertions of untruths. Really makes a convincing argument when your base assertion is horseshit

      Gay men are often just more *visible* than gay women, same as camp gay men are more *visible* than non-camp gay men; it does not logically require that there are "more of" one than the other.

  6. hypocracy by sageres · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It seems that there are number of groups on both sides of the isle that plead for equal rights for their believes, opinions and convictions when their cause is under attack, however they are just as eager to deny the rights, prosecute their political opponents whenever opportunity arises.
    The hypocrisy present across entire political spectrum, btw. Left, Right, Liberals, Conservatives, Republicans, Democrats, Tea-partiers and Greens, and ironically Anarchists and Libertarians.

    1. Re:hypocracy by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      Your comment is too insightful for a Slashdot moderator to actually give it points. You have reached critical mass for insightfulness, therefore your comment will be modded down, to prevent the implosion of the website.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    2. Re:hypocracy by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 2

      Choosing to not see a movie is not denying someone their rights.

    3. Re:hypocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Left, Liberals and Democrats don't take people's rights. I'm not sure how brainwashed you could be to believe that.

      The "infringements" that people usually talk about aren't infringements. They're the minimum necessary to have a free society, and people are certainly more free because of workplace protections than they were previously. And despite all the bullshit arguments by RWNJs, the fact is that the 2nd amendment does not guarantee a person the right to have massive magazines of ammo, it guarantees the right to keep and bear arms, for the militia.

    4. Re:hypocracy by sageres · · Score: 1

      Of course there is infringement of rights. It takes a form of bullying, persecution, public denunciations, baiting, badgering, defamation -- all in a press, on the internet, on TV and radio, being a subject to public campaigns and boycotts.

    5. Re:hypocracy by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Do you not understand how tolerance works or do you just see it as a partisan goal with no inherent good?

      You see a boycott of a movie as being equal to bribing a government to deny the rights of a minority and spreading hateful rhetoric so I'm guessing it's the latter.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    6. Re:hypocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, welcome our new equine overlords.

    7. Re:hypocracy by DaveQat · · Score: 1

      It seems that there are number of groups on both sides of the isle that plead for equal rights for their believes, opinions and convictions when their cause is under attack, however they are just as eager to deny the rights, prosecute their political opponents whenever opportunity arises.

      What rights of conservatives do liberals generally attack? The only one that comes to mind is gun ownership, and there's still a lot of legitimate controversy over exactly what the 2nd Amendment means. And very few liberals want to outright ban gun ownership, they just want varying degrees of restrictions.

    8. Re:hypocracy by chartreuse · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and it was the Mormon Church that bankrolled Proposition 8 in California to take away others' civil rights (though I imagine you would deny it, because you "want to have seven wives"). Funny how you leave that factor out...

    9. Re:hypocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, but if you are like the book and want to see the movie and you only choose not to because of his belief system/religion, then that is being prejudice against his belief system/religion.

  7. See My Movie by whisper_jeff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know I lobbied against your right to marry someone just because they're the same sex as you and I know I encouraged the violent overthrow of my government if they allowed you to marry someone who's the same sex as you but could you please go see my movie?

    Um, no.

    1. Re:See My Movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll go.

    2. Re:See My Movie by happy_place · · Score: 1

      For someone advocating government overthrow, his latest utterances are hardly consistent. I think he more or less conceded the debate in his latest comments. If anything I'm more inclined to see his movie because he demonstrates a willingness to accept the ruling of the SCOTUS. So what if his motives are financial, if he advocates for peaceful acceptance of the inevitable?

      --
      http://www.beanleafpress.com
    3. Re:See My Movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too!

    4. Re:See My Movie by TheKeyboardSlayer · · Score: 1

      I'm going.

      I don't give two squirts about what Card does in his personal time nor what he does with money he earns from writing books or making movies. I give him money when I'm entertained by his books...the transaction is completed at that time and I no longer want to have a say in how he spends said money. We'd have a pretty exhausting existence if everyone who paid money to someone for a service or product wanted to dictate how it was spent.

      I loved the book and I will most likely love the movie.

      --
      Insert_Ending_Here
  8. So? by Macgruder · · Score: 1

    I've stopped giving a rat's ass about the opinions of someone just because they happen to be an athletic / film / writer / etc persona. Unless in the very rare case they're actually talking about their chosen profession.

    --
    I'm not crazy,I'm actively irresponsible.
    1. Re:So? by sageres · · Score: 1

      that's right. I'd never see another Ollie Stone's movie because of that nut-job's parasitic and schizophrenic believes and actions. But I'm not like that. I acknowledge that we all have different opinions and believes.

    2. Re:So? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Ah, the important point to be aware of here is that Card uses his own money to fund fighting civil rights for LGBT people. It's relevant because the money that you give to him is money that goes to undermining the secular nature of US law.

      I'm Canadian, and I'm not going to spend any money on some guy's books so he can attempt to deny rights to people, even if they live somewhere that I don't.

  9. I'm going to see it. by dtmancom · · Score: 2

    He wasn't anti-gay rights because he is EVIL, it was because it was his honest opinion that it was wrong for the society, and he had the arguments to back up his point of view. I never agreed with his arguments, but I saw where he was coming from.

    I'll take an honest bigot over a devious do-gooder any day of the week.

    1. Re:I'm going to see it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I take it you're okay with Global Warming deniers?

    2. Re:I'm going to see it. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      He wasn't anti-gay rights because he is EVIL, it was because it was his honest opinion that it was wrong for the society, and he had the arguments to back up his point of view. I never agreed with his arguments, but I saw where he was coming from.

      I'll take an honest bigot over a devious do-gooder any day of the week.

      pretty much nobody is anti-gay because they're "evil", they all make the claim to be otherwise. but don't you get it? he's an asshat. it's not like his so called good arguments disappear into the night because his side lost.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:I'm going to see it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares about his motivations, the result is the same. Just another bigot. Cry me a river about the boycott.

    4. Re:I'm going to see it. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      He wasn't anti-gay rights because he is EVIL, it was because it was his honest opinion that it was wrong for the society,

      I'm not claiming that he's evil but why does that fact that an opinion is honestly held obsolve one from being evil.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    5. Re:I'm going to see it. by sageres · · Score: 1

      We, society of the Oceanian province of Airstrip One, MUST punish anyone who does not believe in the same thing that we do, don't you know that? Freedom of Speech is not part of a Groupthink! Who do you think you are, Emmanuel Goldstein?

    6. Re:I'm going to see it. by intermodal · · Score: 1

      This is one of the most level-headed posts I've seen in this thread. Thank you.

      Personally, I have repeatedly tried to enjoy his books, and with the exception of Ender's Game, I always finish the book wondering why I finished it. But I'll see Ender's Game, like most movies I see, once it's on Netflix or TV.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    7. Re:I'm going to see it. by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      We, society of the Oceanian province of Airstrip One, MUST punish anyone who does not believe in the same thing that we do, don't you know that?

      *yawn* So no one can choose to not go see his movie because to do so is "punishing" him? Give me a fucking break... Oh and it's funny that you whine about this since tons of conservative groups do the exact same thing.

      Freedom of Speech is not part of a Groupthink! Who do you think you are, Emmanuel Goldstein?

      Freedom of Speech means that I am obligated to go patronize a movie? Since when?

    8. Re:I'm going to see it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wasn't anti-gay rights because he is EVIL, it was because it was his honest opinion that it was wrong for the society, and he had the arguments to back up his point of view. I never agreed with his arguments, but I saw where he was coming from.

      I'll take an honest bigot over a devious do-gooder any day of the week.

      This is a statement and sentiment that I can agree with!

    9. Re:I'm going to see it. by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to see it, because it looks to be a really bad movie, at least based on the previews.

      But you can boycott a movie for any reason, it's a matter of how many people want to join your cause. Or if you're anti-gay, like that Chick-fil-a guy, you can say something idiotic and actually drive customers TO YOU, by making a political issue of your business.

      It's better just not to politicize this and let the movie stand on its own (like Chick-fil-a, home of lousy fast food...)

    10. Re:I'm going to see it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what's with the hate on evil - show some tolerance will you? srsly though; While I think GP is flawed, Cards being evil or GOOD does not even enter the discussion as good and evil, while a rather universal concept, it is understood very differently in various cultures. And in this case Cards himself ascribes to some outerspace morality where *only* intent matters, everything is allowed in the name of good so as long as he thinks he's right he *can not* be evil, which would make any discussion pointless.. but I digress. However, that is also why an honest man is better than anyone who is declared good or evil (but perhaps deceptive), as their understanding of the concept may differ from yours - but as long as they are honest there is something to build a common understanding from.

    11. Re:I'm going to see it. by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Yeah but his honest opinion has been turned into his honest effort to incarcerate people for fucking the wrong people. You can, indeed, say what you want and hold that opinion but he crosses the line when he actually tries to enforce it. The 10 bucks you give him for that movie could potentially be $10 used to send a gay person to jail. If you don't care about that, or even side with him, then gather up all your buddies and go see it a dozen times. If you do not agree, however, you don't go see it and try to influence as many others to not see it. If you pick the always available third option of doing nothing (not caring) then why did you even bother to post? This thread should have bored you hours ago. Now you claim simultaniously that you don't agree with him but you see where he's coming from. You know what that means don't you? You agree with him at least a little but won't just come out and say it. You also say you're gonna go see the movie anyway, even knowing what you know now, so you know what that means? You agree with him but won't just come out and say it. I too prefer honest bigots, but I sure don't seem to be finding one in this post. I also don't seem to be finding any devious do-gooders. So what was your point?

  10. Re:Last time I checked... by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not codified into law, huh? It doesn't have massive numbers of government benefits hooked to it, huh?

  11. Looks Cool, Won't See It by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

    It's a shame because the trailer makes the movie seem like it will be pretty awesome, but no bit of entertainment however well produced is worth putting money in the pocket of someone who would trample the rights of my fellow citizens.

    --
    :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    1. Re:Looks Cool, Won't See It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So pirate it then. No money to the loathsome author, you get to see it anyway...

    2. Re:Looks Cool, Won't See It by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I was planning on waiting for it on Netflix anyways...

      I had actually forgotten about this whole "Card is a bigot" drama. If anything, I think it is him stirring the pot in a desperate attempt to be visible. You know what they say... any publicity is good publicity.

      He's just trying to go for the Ozzy Osbourne effect.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  12. Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit? Many a work of science fiction has been around the theme of asking how high of a price are we willing to pay. It is the age old question of whether the ends justify the means.

    Granted, this is only a work of entertainment, but his pleadings for tolerance are not dissimilar from this theme; We are being asked to set aside our morality in exchange for some good or service. I don't think though that a work of fiction, regardless of quality, is worth my freedom and liberty, and even less so for others. Supporting this man's works would mean supporting something I find morally objectionable, even vile.

    I cannot, in good conscience, support a work, however good, that would lead to harm to others' civil rights. Orson Scott Card -- you have been weighed, measured, and found wanting. I will not support you, and I urge any who place any value at all on civil rights to do the same. We cannot overlook this man's desire to force his own morality on others for our own... entertainment.

    --
    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    1. Re:Poison fruit by wbr1 · · Score: 1
      My kingdom for mod points. This is also why I do not eat at chick-fil-a and chew out my girlfriend when she does. And she is bi, but lazy and apathetic politically.

      I read all of the Ender stuff years ago. I did not know that Card was an active homophobe trying to get legislation passed then. No I won't touch his work with a 10 foot pole (or someone else's dick).

      --
      Silence is a state of mime.
    2. Re:Poison fruit by Surak_Prime · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?"

      Actually, this very question has been applied non-hypothetically to the body of research done by Nazi scientists utilizing experiments done on their prisoners. I won't try to summarize the HUGE number of articles involving the philosophies and ethics here, but if you're really interested in that question, I'm sure Google could turn up a few YEARS worth of reading on the subject for you, because it isn't a simple matter at all.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    3. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer I'm sure we would use it, but I doubt we would pay them for it.

    4. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?

      Al quaeda? The people who bomb schools because illiterate subjects are easier to rule? Somehow, I DON'T think they will come up with a cure for cancer - other than stoning. At best, they might sit on some strategic mineral crucial to making cancer drugs - but that can be taken from them if need be.

    5. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I suppor your end position in regards to Card - Your arguement has problems - you are comparing cure for cancer ( BIG FREAKING IMPORTANCE) to go see movie ( no importance )
      Would I forgive Al Queda their violent actions to get the cure for cancer, I don't know - it is a very big issue. I would like to think I could get their cure for cancer without fogiving them their other actions.

      Will I forgive Card for his position to go see his movie - No. Will I go see his movie? No, because it enriches a person who hold views that are not merely intolerent but one who acts against the rights of others because he thinks they are less than human. I have friends who are intolerent - they don't like gay marriage, they don't want to talk about gay marriage, they don't want to participate or see a gay couple get married, they don't want to see gay couples force churches to marry them against the doctrines of the religion ...... but they will not deny nor allow others to deny gay couples the right to being a legal binding couple in the eyes of the law. It is ok to say "I don't like this, but you have a right to this I will fight to protect" - it might make you intolerant - but it doesn't equate to Card's position "I don't like this and will fight to keep you and others like you as less than me and other's like me"

    6. Re:Poison fruit by Binestar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?

      Just as we accepted the medical knowledge unlocked by the nazi's during WWII http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/NaziMedEx.html we would use the cure for cancer. The foundation of treatment for hypothermia was all determined through the torture and murder of jews by the NAZI's, and yet we use that information to save lives even today.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    7. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 2

      Actually, this very question has been applied non-hypothetically to the body of research done by Nazi scientists utilizing experiments done on their prisoners.

      Didn't take long to Godwin the discussion, now did it? You must be proud. But more seriously, as long as we're on the subject many of those experiments were done on homosexuals. People remember the Holocaust as being about the Jews, but far more died as political prisoners -- a significant portion of which were homosexuals. Specifically, look up Carl Vaernet who tried to "cure" homosexuality with some highly unethical experimentation. But let's not cast stones in glass houses -- The British did the same thing to Alan Turing and many others, as did the Americans, etc.

      There's very little moral high ground here; Countries have long been experimenting on their prisoners or engaging in unethical medical practice. If you think the Nazis were the last to do it, you are severely mistaken. As recently as 1979, it was common practice to sterilize prisoners thought likely to reoffend in the United States... and officials are still trying to get around the laws today. As recently as a few years ago, a case made headlines in California where women were being coerced or manipulated into signing medical documents to get themselves sterilized because the prison wardens thought they were likely to reoffend.

      The issue is far from settled, and though your attempt to Godwin the discussion is laughable, the reality is that unethical human experimentation continues to this day under color of authority throughout most of the Western world.

      I'm sure Google could turn up a few YEARS worth of reading on the subject for you, because it isn't a simple matter at all.

      I'm sure a great many people have endeavored to make the matter complicated -- if you can't make it simple, you can always make it complicated to confuse the hell out of your detractors. But I see no moral ambiguity here with which to justify the maiming and murder of innocents. We have had medical ethics for some time, and doctors the world over have sworn oaths to "do no harm." Regardless of which government or country you're a part of, the ethical mandates there at least are clear.

      I do not feel they are any more ambiguous when it comes to the treatment of homosexuals; They are as human as you or I, as deserving of the same freedoms. This is not an assailable position to me, or the majority of my fellow Americans or other enlightened souls throughout the world. We cannot, in good conscience, support bigotry and intolerance for our own profit. And ultimately, that's what this story is about -- it's about a man who is selling us entertainment in exchange for cash he'll use to promote a reprehensible and vile repression of a political minority.

      As a society, we cannot condone such actions and then later claim that we are an enlightened people. Mr. Card has a right to say whatever he wants and I'll have words with anyone who disagrees... but I also have the right to tell him to lick a sugar coated fuck off my dick for being a bigoted asshole... and I will encourage anyone who will listen to do the same.

      The time for this kind of intolerance has past. It's time we evolve as a society and as a people. It's time to learn from this mistake for the last time, and leave it as nothing more than a footnote of some dark and forgotten age when people didn't treat one another with decency and respect.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    8. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      Just as we accepted the medical knowledge unlocked by the nazi's during WWII http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/NaziMedEx.html we would use the cure for cancer. The foundation of treatment for hypothermia was all determined through the torture and murder of jews by the NAZI's, and yet we use that information to save lives even today.

      That doesn't make it right, nor does it justify a furtherance of those policies. And you're making a false equivocation -- an apples to oranges comparison. There's quite a bit of difference between human experimentation and entertainment. If you can't see that, you should really have your vision checked out. But thank you for playing the Let's Godwin This Because I Don't Want To Deal With the Real Issue game!

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    9. Re:Poison fruit by Binestar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's quite a bit of difference between human experimentation and entertainment.

      STOP RIGHT THERE. I wasn't commenting on entertainment. I was commenting on exactly the portion of his post that I QUOTED. Nothing more, nothing less. If you can't see that, you should really have your vision checked out. While technically a Godwin's law effect, the step was from one reprehensible group having data that helps society to another reprehensible group with the same. You may not like it, but the comment was on target, even though it included the Nazi reference (because his hypothetical HAS happened in the past and to forget it is a disservice).

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    10. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      STOP RIGHT THERE. I wasn't commenting on entertainment. I was commenting on exactly the portion of his post that I QUOTED. Nothing more, nothing less. If you can't see that, you should really have your vision checked out. While technically a Godwin's law effect, the step was from one reprehensible group having data that helps society to another reprehensible group with the same. You may not like it, but the comment was on target, even though it included the Nazi reference (because his hypothetical HAS happened in the past and to forget it is a disservice).

      That's roughly equivalent to saying that buying a house and buying a doughnut are the similar because they both involved an exchange of money. And frankly, that's retarded.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    11. Re:Poison fruit by Binestar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're either trolling or being obtuse, and I'm not sure which. You gave the example of Al Qaeda getting the cure for cancer. I gave the example of Nazi's figuring out viable treatment methods for hypothermia. Sorry boss, but they aren't as dissimilar as a house and a doughnut. Go back and read and think on this without an agenda. I'm on your side in the human rights department, but frankly, your trolling is retarded.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    12. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is also why I do not eat at chick-fil-a and chew out my girlfriend when she does.

      Good, it's always crowded there anyway. One less person to get in the way of my Chick-fil-A!!

    13. Re:Poison fruit by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer I'm sure we would use it, but I doubt we would pay them for it.

      AC hits the nail on the head. The analogy is: "would you give money to Al Qaeda in exchange for cancer treatment?" It is not: "would you use a treatment for cancer developed by Al Qaeda?" This is not hair-splitting, it's money.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    14. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Didn't take long to Godwin the discussion, now did it? You must be proud.

      GP didn't Godwin the discussion since he didn't compare one side of the argument with Nazis. Please do read up on the definition of the Godwin Rule.

      GP was likely referring to Nazi-run experiments on hypothermia where they put prisoners into freezing water and recorded data until the prisoner died. This data still exists. There is a strong opposition to any use of this data because of how it was obtained. The people holding this view argue that it's irrelevant whether or not this data could save lives; it must not be used at all.

      It's a perfectly on-point comparison to the Al-Qaeda cancer cure question.

    15. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it that hard to Godwin this discussion? My first thought on reading your initial analogy was to an episode of Babylon 5 whose premise basically boiled down to "What if Hitler invented an immortality serum, would you want it?"

    16. Re:Poison fruit by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make it right, nor does it justify a furtherance of those policies. And you're making a false equivocation -- an apples to oranges comparison. There's quite a bit of difference between human experimentation and entertainment. If you can't see that, you should really have your vision checked out. But thank you for playing the Let's Godwin This Because I Don't Want To Deal With the Real Issue game!

      Binestar was on topic in brining up the Dachau experiments so Godwin's Law doesn't really apply here since the comparison wasn't inapproprate. I supose that Unit 731 could have been used as well, but the usefulness of their research wasn't quite as extensive as what was being done in Germany at the same time. If we wanted to look at something "closer to home" you could use the Tuskegee syphilis experiments but again, the research was not nearly as useful and thus the controversy was colored in a different light. If you ever take a course in bioethics this topic gets discussed at length and the use of the Dachau experiments was the canonical point of discussion.

    17. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      You're either trolling or being obtuse, and I'm not sure which. You gave the example of Al Qaeda getting the cure for cancer. I gave the example of Nazi's figuring out viable treatment methods for hypothermia. Sorry boss, but they aren't as dissimilar as a house and a doughnut. Go back and read and think on this without an agenda. I'm on your side in the human rights department, but frankly, your trolling is retarded.

      Maybe you need to go back to the original point of this thread, rather than having derailed it and then, when I said your logic was busted, cried a river. I gave a contemporary example of something that had a benefit acquired without a drawback -- namely that the cure for cancer just dropped in Al Qaeda's lap, and asked if paying for that cure would be worth it since we know what the money would be used for. You replied with an example of mass murder and genocide, with the product being a treatment for a medical condition, and have been insisting they're alike.

      I don't give a flying fuck through a rolling doughnut whether they are or not -- the point was whether it's morally justified to trade for a good or service with someone who wants to harm others for political reasons. You're the one that went full Godwin and then started breathing fire and stomping about angrily when someone said you're making false equivocations, and now you're trying to label your opponent a 'troll'.

      I don't know what's worse -- that you're getting modded up for this, or that you're making logical fallacies at the rate of about 1 per 15 words.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    18. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you are going to be this abusive to people then you really need to make sure you are very clear exactly what your position is,

      Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit? Many a work of science fiction has been around the theme of asking how high of a price are we willing to pay. It is the age old question of whether the ends justify the means.

      You made no indication of how socieity gets the cure from Al Qaeda, you just said that they had one which leaves a lot of ground as to how society would get the information from them. If you had asked if we would be willing to pay them for the cure this conversation would likely be much different and likely closer to your orginal intent.

    19. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?"

      As an 'enemy entity,' we would deny their patent and someone else would produce the medication/equipment needed. People would be able to be cured of cancer, and we wouldn't be handing money to people who wanted to cause us harm.

    20. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the complication is in whether or not to condone unethical medical research. I think the complication is in whether or not to use that research or to burn it, when it occurs. Undeniably, it was wrong to conduct the experiments and they should never be repeated. They cannot, however, be undone. What should be done with the results of those experiments, though?

    21. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank science you chew her out for not meeting your beliefs that someone can't eat a good meal because someone else that owns some the chain does not agree with you either. Is there another chicken place that serves chickens that are only the product of gay relationships? or is it ok for animals to be born from opposite sex parents as long as the farmers are gay? What if the food transportation warehouse workers and truck drivers are only bi?

    22. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it would indeed be stupid to not do so after-the-fact, nobody can undo the horrors these people went through, but we can at least use what was learned for good so their suffering was not completely wasted.

    23. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      You made no indication of how socieity gets the cure from Al Qaeda, you just said that they had one which leaves a lot of ground as to how society would get the information from them. If you had asked if we would be willing to pay them for the cure this conversation would likely be much different and likely closer to your orginal intent.

      Hey, it's not my fault the GP made an assumption... All I said was Al Qaeda had the cure. I said nothing about how they got it. But whatever.. it's not like the slashmods will recant and return my karma I burned trying to undo the Level 99 Godwin he made.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    24. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We cannot overlook this man's desire to force his own morality on others for our own... entertainment.

      HAVE YOU NOT SEEN ANY MOVIES/TV LATELY??? They are nearly all pushing their agendas! You must not have seen avatar because of it's tree hugger message. You must have skipped lorax for the same reason. If you don't see how Hollywood uses it's platform for it's political message CONSTANTLY, then you are clueless.

    25. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to be kidding. You can't claim that a Nazi medicine comparison was out of left field when you presented as an example a different group of hated mass-murderers curing cancer.

      The error is so egregious that you're either trolling, incredibly bad at thinking, or you just need to lay off for like a week or something because your brain isn't working. You were practically begging for the Nazi medicine comparison. I thought you did it on purpose until you accused this guy of Godwining.

    26. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Al Qaeda cured cancer, we'd use the cure and not pay them. So I guess you are saying that we should pirate the movie? Otherwise the analogy doesn't make sense.

    27. Re:Poison fruit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      You are kind of a moron if you don't understand that the use of german research in WWII is very relevent to the grandparents post. There is a large literature in ethics on the debate if research should be used if it was obtained unethically, and the most prominant example was research by the Natzi's.

      "It's just Godwin'ing the thread" is a moron's view.

    28. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Um, you were the moron that compared a man's personal beliefs and willingness to do more than sit around bitching on forums about them with Al Qaeda.

      Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit? Many a work of science fiction has been around the theme of asking how high of a price are we willing to pay. It is the age old question of whether the ends justify the means.

      And yes, calling you a moron is an ad hominem, but if the shoe fits ...

    29. Re:Poison fruit by Binestar · · Score: 1

      I've held off a few hours answering to give you time to cool off. I hope you have used it wisely. Breathing fire and stomping angrily? Really? You're delusional. Have a nice day.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    30. Re:Poison fruit by Binestar · · Score: 1

      Assumption? Why would I assume we paid for it? You said nothing of cost, why would I assume there was cost? Level 99 Godwin. I'm pretty sure the mem is OVER 9000 Godwin.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    31. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Binestar, girlintraining spends a LOT of time on slashdot, enough that even though an AC like me only skims the site once in a while, I see those turd comments and her name often enough. Total narcissist whackjob. I think a normal person posts under that name once ina while too, but its mainly the schizoid whackjob...

    32. Re:Poison fruit by hey! · · Score: 1

      I dunno. I'm pretty liberal myself, and I've supported same sex marriage since even before it was legal here in Massachusetts. I see no reason to boycott an author *just because I disagree with him*.

      Now I could perhaps see some point in it if it were ten years ago, and I'd be sending money to an anti-gay marriage activist who would turn around and spend it on perpetuating an injustice. But as Card says, it's a moot point now. Opposition to gay marriage has been defeated with stunning rapidity, and as the change is implemented people will discover that dire predictions for the institution of marriage won't come true. In twenty years young people will wonder what all the fuss was about.

      So the only point of a boycott NOW is to punish Card for being wrong. I suppose there's something in that, but I can't get all that excited about it; it smacks of being a bad winner. And if we punish people on our right for being wrong, shouldn't we also punish people on our left? Shall we boycott Frederik Pohl for being a former communist? Granted, he's not really much to *my* left, but I've never advocated nationalizing private businesses, I think that's morally wrong.

      Now I don't care a bit about the movie, it can sink without a trace as far as I'm concerned, but to be totally consistent in the Jihad Against Card we'd *also* have to target the book; to shame people who buy the book and stores that sell the book. Against the value of stroking our righteous indignation against Card for his past misdeeds, we have to set the loss the the public of what is a landmark literary work. It's hard to name a science fiction novel in the past thirty or forty years of greater literary importance. Perhaps THE DISPOSESSED, GATEWAY, THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS, DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP, or TAU ZERO. Just a handful, and few of them are as accessible as ENDER'S GAME, which can be read as a straight up adventure story or bildungsroman. Accessible it may be, but ENDER'S GAME does something very interesting and ambitious: it explores the very nature of moral responsibility.

      If there is a moral imperative to make the ENDER'S GAME movie into a commercial failure, then why wouldn't the *same* imperative must apply equally to the novel? And if we forced ENDER'S GAME out of the bookstores, we'd be depriving those future people (who have no idea what the fuss about same sex marriage was about) of an important science fiction novel.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    33. Re:Poison fruit by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      Assumption? Why would I assume we paid for it? You said nothing of cost, why would I assume there was cost? Level 99 Godwin. I'm pretty sure the mem is OVER 9000 Godwin.

      Achievement Unlocked: Missing The Point
      Level: 99

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    34. Re:Poison fruit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you girlintraining!!

      I have just one question for Mr. Card and his apparent fellow travelers in this forum:

      WHERE WAS HIS TOLERANCE FOR ALL OF THE YEARS LEADING UP TO HIS MOVIE BEING RELEASED?

      The issue is certainly not moot. I still can not marry my partner here in Oregon. Mr. Card has not recanted his views and I am sure that he still donates money to efforts like imposing the death penalty for homosexuality in places like Nigeria. He still sits on the board of N.O.M. They are still fighting against my rights to simply enjoy my life peaceably with the one I love.

  13. Eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    laws that treated certain people as less than human?
    curtailing the human rights of others?
    cowards and bullies?

    Well this one sure got objectivety written all over it.

  14. I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre but by Diss+Champ · · Score: 1

    I will go to the theatre and watch this one. I don't want to see good books not be turned into movies because someone disagrees with the politics of someone involved in the project. Art should be judged on its merits. If the movie is good, I will encourage friends to go see it as well. If it turns out to suck, well then I won't mind so much if it does poorly at the box office.

  15. Read the book - didnt like it. by Servaas · · Score: 1

    It was a fairly simple book to be honest. And I did not appreciate the "twist". Even if the movie doesn't bomb I don't see this getting sequels.

    1. Re:Read the book - didnt like it. by TWiTfan · · Score: 1

      It's juvenile literature. Any adult still thinking Ender's Game is good science fiction really needs to grow up and read some serious modern adult science fiction (a good place to start is Gardner Dozois' "Year's Best Science Fiction" series)

      --
      The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    2. Re:Read the book - didnt like it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read the book(s) as a kid, I've been waiting almost 30 years for the movie, I will be seeing it. Loved the books as a youngster, re-read them recently, all of them.

      For more grown up works, I like his twist on America becoming an empire - very good reads.

      Tales of Alvin Maker, also good reads from my younger years.

      Whether I agree or disagree with his personal choices and statements is beside the point. I like his works, and therefor will go and see the movie.
      That is tolerance.

    3. Re:Read the book - didnt like it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the last science fiction movie for which the script wouldn't be classified as "juvenile literature."

      Hollywood doesn't really go for deep plots. They don't market well. Explosions, action sequences with gratuitous violence, and scantily clad hero(ine)s are where the money is at.

    4. Re:Read the book - didnt like it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Awww, did his personal opinions hurt your little feelings...

  16. Popehat nails it again by ultraexactzz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ken White over at Popehat seems to have nailed everything I would have said, and done it much better than I would have.

    http://www.popehat.com/2013/07/09/ive-decided-to-give-orson-scott-card-the-benefit-of-the-doubt/

    --
    Never underestimate the potential of Human stupidity. -Heinlein
  17. less than human? by gandhi_2 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How many authors (or chicken restaurant owners) would treat polygamists as "less than human" by supporting laws against plural marriage?

  18. PR stunt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All he's doing is drawing attention to a project that's not making enough news. He's going to make a shit load of money from it should it perform well. When you can use PR to create friction, you generate a lot of coverage. That's free advertising.

  19. Boycott all the things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Open sourcerers tend to be progressive politically - so that seems like a good reason why those on the right should simply boycott it. If it's find to boycott Ender's Game on the basis of Card's politics, it's fine to boycott Linux on the basis of Torvalds and Stallman's politics.

    1. Re:Boycott all the things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's find [SIC] to boycott Ender's Game on the basis of Card's politics, it's fine to boycott Linux on the basis of Torvalds and Stallman's politics.

      Yes. Now you're starting to understand.

  20. Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

    "less than human" You're a walking hyperbole aren't you?

    1. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by similar_name · · Score: 1

      I don't think he was arguing for equality or that homosexuals are more than human. There's only one other option.

    2. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

      No human has the same rights as any other human, much like no human has the same permissions allocated to them, that doesn't mean that either person or user is of lesser or greater worth.

    3. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by similar_name · · Score: 1

      No human has the same rights as any other human

      What rights differ between black humans and white? What rights differ between myself and my father? Between males and females? . There is age of consent by which adults have more rights than children, but what rights differ among adults? The only thing I can think of is women having a right to an abortion that men do not. Although, technically, a man does have that right were he ever to get pregnant.

    4. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

      Identity for one. I could identify as black or as a woman, but I would look and sound pretty silly doing so with pale skin and the wrong organs. It's my right to say that I am a black woman. Nobody else is going to agree with me that I am though.

    5. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by similar_name · · Score: 1

      How does having individual identity convey different rights? Does one have different rights depending on what their name is? At this point, I can't agree that different identities means different rights.

    6. Re:Way to misrepresent the Card's views subby... by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

      And we have reached the point of current affairs.

  21. From Ender's Game by korbulon · · Score: 0

    To ender of gay marriage.

  22. lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He is obviously too obsessed with homosexuality not to be a homosexual himself.

    Enders Game is a great book, Enders Shadow is better, and the rest are just bleh. IMO

    If you really want to live in a free society stop trying to control other people.

    1. Re:lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're generous with your 'bleh' comment. By the time I got to book 6, I was ready to start cutting myself. I forced myself to finish the series. I have no idea where I put the books, and I don't care if I never see them again.

    2. Re:lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing you went that far. The Ender saga lost me when i was introduced to "piggie" people. By the third book of the Shadow series i was just reading words on paper, for the sake of reading words on paper.

  23. Re:Last time I checked... by Cenan · · Score: 5, Informative

    its a christian ceremony

    The fuck it is, and a few milliseconds of research would have told you as much, but I guess that is implied in the "last time I checked", which would be, never?
    a source from the top of the hit list on Google, that you would have found had your bother to search

    While the institution of marriage pre-dates recorded history, many cultures have legends concerning the origins of marriage.

    --
    ... whatever ...
  24. Re:less than human? SPOILERS by halexists · · Score: 2

    Also his series involves some of the most twisted and intricate alien reproduction methods ever described. I can see the campaign speech now: "Sex should be between one man and one woman... or one tree and one piggy... or some grass and insects..." I guess it's consistent with the view that sex is for reproducing, regardless of your species' method.

  25. Re:Last time I checked... by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Marriage is not a "human right"...

    Being equal under the law, on the other hand...

    its a christian ceremony. Between a man and a woman.

    Maybe you should rethink that statement. Marriage predates recorded history. Unlike Christ.

    I mean... Mary and Joseph... Were quite married, you know?

  26. Re:Last time I checked... by Surak_Prime · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Marriage" predates Christianity. You're describing Holy Matrimony, Batman.

    --
    :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
  27. Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'll go see a better movie by a better screenwriter instead, and I will enjoy the fact that I didn't contribute anything to that festering asshole's bank account all the same.

    I'm glad he was dumb enough to remind people what a cunt he is.

    BTW, his work is overrated anyway.

    1. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by sageres · · Score: 1, Funny

      Funny.. I have all Mr. Card's books, and re-read Ender's Game at least once a year, because it is a quality work that deserves to go down in history as one of the classics of American literature. In the future people will forget about Stephen King (the author of toilet-paper level trash), but they will remember Twain, Hemingway, Poe, Fitzgerald, Emerson, Hughes, Hawthorne, Whitman, Poe, Thoreau, Melville, Dickinson, Bradbury and Card.

    2. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by i_ate_god · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ender's game is a good book, but if any sci-fi author will be regarded as one of the american greats, then it will be Frank Herbert for Dune.

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    3. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by sageres · · Score: 1

      I agree he would be in the list.

    4. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Sparticus789 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No love for Asimov?

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    5. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by 605dave · · Score: 2

      Let the endless, pointless debate begin... now!

      --
      Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a difficult battle. - Plato
    6. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I disagree. Ender's Game is a great coming of age novel, but it's by no means anything other than pulp sci-fi. Philip K. Dick, on the other hand...

    7. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Nukky+Cisbu · · Score: 1

      I think that actually started with the article being posted.

    8. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by FluffyBob · · Score: 1

      Its a great short story. It is pushing it as a novel. It certainly isn't bad, and is an engaging read, but a heavy in in the literary world? Really? You are kidding right?

    9. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Man you forgot P. K. Dick and Asimov

    10. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by sageres · · Score: 1

      I should have mentioned them too. But can we also claim Asimov being Russian as well?

    11. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by orthancstone · · Score: 1

      Ender's Game will be remembered as a great book. Additionally, anyone who read the follow up books will remember EG as being the last Sci Fi book Card wrote that wasn't garbage.

    12. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Lets separate the art from the artist. Let's not pay for OSC's works until he stops and apologizes for the homophobic screeds, or dies.

      BTW Shakespeare's works, while he was alive, had the same reputation that Stephen King's works do now.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    13. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Enjoy your walled garden of material only created by people whose thoughts you approve of.

    14. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      that festering asshole's

      You're apparently not aware that 'asshole' is similar to 'faggot' in that it is a classical anti-homosexual slur.

    15. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Minwee · · Score: 1
    16. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, shut the fuck up, it is not...
      an asshole is an asshole, NO sexual orientation involved...
      (go look in the mirror for an example, asshole...)

    17. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by sageres · · Score: 1

      I actually mentioned Bradbury.

    18. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      EG was my favourite thing of his, but it has to be accepted that Speaker for the Dead is often considered better by critics (I don't have stats but I've seen that claim often enough). The later ones, not so much.

    19. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Good point. In fact, you better go attend some KKK meetings to make sure you're not walling yourself off from ideas that are different from yours.

      Your implicit argument is based on the assumption that they haven't already been exposed to Card's ideas. In reality, they have been, and have rejected them. They haven't built a wall around their mental garden, but they have revoked Card's access to it.

      Hitler was a painter. If he was still alive and had an art exhibit, can you honestly say that you would consider going, knowing that the money you pay would most likely fund his antisemitic campaigns?

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    20. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. Dune is up there with Tolkien's Middle Earth work in world creation. Not just one of the great pieces of American SF, but one of the great pieces of SF, period.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    21. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by SpaceManFlip · · Score: 1
      Frank Herbert writes pretty boring books, IMO.... Dune was cool and all, and then I tried to read The White Plague and was like "blah" Side note, did you know that David Lynch turned down the opportunity to direct STAR WARS to instead direct the movie adaptation of Dune?

      Robert Heinlein. The Dean of Science Fiction.
      he predicted everything

    22. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by loufoque · · Score: 1

      In fact, you better go attend some KKK meetings to make sure you're not walling yourself off from ideas that are different from yours.

      I'm not sure this is sarcasm. I assume it is.
      While it is probably not a great idea to waste time and energy going to KKK meetings if you're not particularly interested in their ideology, I believe it is a genuinely good idea to document yourself and possibly exchange with that kind of people to try to understand them (do not try to evangelize them or whatever, just understand) and broaden your view of life.

      Your implicit argument is based on the assumption that they haven't already been exposed to Card's ideas. In reality, they have been, and have rejected them.

      They've read the headline of a newspaper, or maybe an opinion piece by a zealous activist. That's not quite the same thing as reading all the work that he has written, where is opinions barely transpire, if not at all.
      Only once you've read all of his work can you say that you reject it.

      Hitler was a painter. If he was still alive and had an art exhibit, can you honestly say that you would consider going, knowing that the money you pay would most likely fund his antisemitic campaigns?

      My understanding is that he was a bad painter, which is why he turned to politics instead. He probably wouldn't have killed anyone if he could have been a successful artist. Moreover, funding a war takes quite more than what any painter could earn from an exhibit, so I wouldn't really make any sizeable contribution to the antisemitic campaigns.
      Those technicalities aside, I certainly wouldn't mind paying to see good art, even if the artist had been diabolized to arbitrarily high levels by society.

    23. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by denmarkw00t · · Score: 1

      Right???

    24. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Lets separate the art from the artist. Let's not pay for OSC's works until he stops and apologizes for the homophobic screeds, or dies.

      These two sentences are mutually exclusive.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    25. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by bmearns · · Score: 1

      Bold statements. I won't argue any more on this point, we'll just agree to disagree. But just to summarize: you think it's a good idea to hang out with neonazis in order to "broaden your view of life", that you can't judge an artist until you've experienced every last drop of their work, and that you wouldn't have qualms about paying money to Hitler because it probably wouldn't make that much of a contribution to his efforts at exterminating the Jews, besides which he's been demonized by society.

      --
      Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
    26. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that OSC's anti-gay efforts shouldn't impact anyone's opinion of his art, just whether they're going to financially support him. I'm not saying to separate the moral implications of supporting the artist from the act of paying for their works.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    27. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the future people will forget about Stephen King (the author of toilet-paper level trash)

      Toilet paper level trash? Really? I don't personally go for horror stories, but King is a hell of a writer despite his chosen genre. Get hold of a copy of The Green Mile; it isn't horror although there's a few nasty scenes in it; it's about a Depression-era death row, a magic mouse, and a giant black man with a "gift" who was wrongly accused of a truly horrible rape and murder of two white children. I read it after seeing the Oscar-winning movie it was taken from (and the movie is very faithful to the book, all the way down to the casting). The book is even better than the movie (but books are always better than movies; you can't smell the burning flesh watching the movie, but you can reading the book).

      If he's such a hack, why has he garnered so many awards? Compare his list with Card's.

      I tried to find this comment when I was home for lunch and logged in so I'd be able to see your response to this, but couldn't find it. I'm curious, what are your credentials for being a critic? Do you perhaps hold a PhD in literature? Were you even a literature major as an undergrad? Or do you, like me, just not like the genre? You can answer here since I can't seem to find this comment while logged in.

    28. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Not bold, just pragmatic.
      An action that would be bold is one where I would take a risk. Being seen associating with demonized people could negatively impact my standing in society, and would therefore constitute a risk; I was replying to your questions assuming my association with those people wouldn't be made public.

    29. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Ender's Game will be remembered as a great book.

      No, a good short story. The book-length version was boring.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    30. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But can we also claim Asimov being Russian as well?

      Of course we can, he emigrated at age three. He was raised here and educated here. I had an old friend (he was 86 when he died) who, like Asimov, came here from Russia as a child. His parents were German, moved to Russia to escape WWI and then moved here, when Ralph was six. Ralph's first day of school they sent him home with a note pinned to his shirt saying that they couldn't teach him because he only spoke German.

      Ralph was in the US Navy in WWII (and had some great war stories). Like Asimov, he was a US citizen, raised here, taught here, and was every bit as American as I am, and I was born here.

    31. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by geoskd · · Score: 1

      In the future people will forget about Stephen King

      Like Card, King has some excellent works, and some not so good works. Read the Bachman books. He was near his prime then, and he wrote them under a pseudonym because he wanted to know if people were buying his books because they were good, or because of the name. Turned out they were some really good books. The Long Walk was as close as I ever want to get to understanding death, and for a good mind-fuck, read Rage. It leaves you almost believing you can understand what is going on in a kid like Adam Lanzas head.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    32. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      OK, time to dig up dirt on Frank Herbert so that we can boycott his stuff. Isn't there any pure of heart and unblemished author out there?

    33. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      This is true I think People's opinions about an author will greatly affect how they also feel about the works. Ie, I suspect there are people who really liked Card's books and read them multiple times, but then when told he was a Mormon opposed to gay marriage they suddenly say "oh I never really liked his books". Similar to how some people will say that Wagner's music wasn't all that great.

      Even with financial support there is a sort of group mentality going on. Ie Card is a public person with a publicly stated position, therefore a boycott. However many of these boycotters probably are earning money for people with similar positions, maybe a major stockholder of their employer is opposed to gay marriage, so are those boycotters also going do investigate all these people and be prepared to resign their jobs if dirt is turned up? I doubt this will happen. It's easy to boycott the public person where people around you are also joining into the boycott.

    34. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by Too+Much+Noise · · Score: 1

      if any sci-fi author will be regarded as one of the american greats, then it will be Frank Herbert for Dune.

      Together with Roger Zelazny for This Immortal, obviously :-)

    35. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      Followed by William Gibson for Neuromancer - which basically invented the cyberpunk genre.

    36. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      Asimov's writing was great, but his characters a tad too wooden for modern tastes. If he's remembered for anything it will be his fabulous pop-sci fact writing.

      And for being a contemporary of Bradbury, of course.

      --
      That is all.
    37. Re:Tolerate whoever you like by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      Let the endless, pointless debate begin... now!

      Ender's Game is a good book if read at a young age where the reader can identify with the main character as a child of great potential who is being mistreated as some sort of wish fulfillment. Usually for boys, as girls read something like Twilight which has a similarly non-descript lead that the reader can interject themselves in as with little effort. As an adult, its a fairly simple, predictable, and fast read of no real great merit.

  28. It's a Matter of Consent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    And everyone here who is against marrying goats right now will be labeled a bigot.

    It's a matter of consent. You can't marry plants or animals because they cannot legally consent to marriage because they cannot understand it. Adults of sound mind who consent to marriage can have it, regardless of their sex you ignorant bigot. Of course, keep parroting your tired and flawed arguments against gay marriage ... you've had your chance to read up on it, now you're just embarrassing yourself.

    1. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 2

      Many societies prevent marriage between mentally healthy adults because they are too closely related. (To prevent in-breeding, but also people have an ick-factor to this, and will draw the line at differing places. First cousin marriage is legal in some places, illegal in others) A response to this could be that homosexual pairings will not result in in-bred offspring so the justification for restriction does not apply. But you can't claim that meaningful consent is the only generally accepted criterion. (Also, I couldn't marry my sister even if I volunteered to be castrated first. Though might be an indication of less than good mental health :-))

    2. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For now. Rules change all the time.

    3. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Many societies prevent marriage between mentally healthy adults because they are too closely related.

      Which I don't believe is right.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    4. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You are not correct. You misunderstand the concept of consent. As a concept, it ceases to exist when applied to non-sentient things. Consent is concept which only exists if the entities involved are considered to be sentient. I like to make a point of this partially from an academic interest, but it is critically important to understand the concept if you are to justify any legal premise which concerns interactions between entities.

      Why is it important to realize that you cannot use consent as an argument for/against laws concerning the interaction between a sentient and non-sentient? You use the example that you cannot do something to a plant, because the plant cannot legally consent. Such an argument sounds plausible, but in reality it is nonsense. If imposition of a sentient's will on a non-sentient required consent, then you would never be able to interact with the non-sentient at all. You might argue that consent is only required when the interaction might be harmful, but that would be nonsense as well.

      We don't require the consent of wheat to harvest it. We don't even require the consent of animals when we decide to kill them. The reason is that when it comes to property, consent is a concept which simply doesn't exist.

      You can argue that something isn't property(the current benchmark is sentience), you can argue that property must be handled in a particular manner (animal cruelty laws for example) but you can't argue that actions taken against property is subject to the concept of consent.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    5. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason for this is that we have found inbreeding to not be too healthy in the long run, so even if you and your sister is fine with that, any possible children (grandchildren etc) may have to suffer (the cutting off of parts not-withstanding) - almost all laws will be (of at least feel) unfair to some (usually small) group of people for what we (as a society) consider the greater good (ofcourse "we" can be wrong, but that is besides the point). and you can always find examples where you would think its not hurting anyone - but laws are inclusive like that.

    6. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Feel the hate. Just because someone doesn't agree with you doesn't make them a bigot, actually come to think of it, you're comment comes across as uh... bigoted. Imagine that...

    7. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by Quila · · Score: 2

      Adults of sound mind who consent to marriage can have it

      Brother and sister? First cousins? Some states still prohibit in-law and step-relation marriage although there's only a social, and not a genetic, relation.

      How about a man with a wife or woman with a husband looking to marry #2?

    8. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      Your notion that other mammals (such as goats) are not sentient is both specious and speciesist. You clearly need a cat, or, if you have one, he/she needs to be watching their human more carefully.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    9. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      Generally people are psychologically unattracted to other people that they were raised with, this works as a safeguard against inbreeding in human populations and helps to counter the natural impulse to mate with people who are similar to you. Studies actually report strong attractions between brothers and sisters (or half-brothers and sisters) who never met each other previously and only came together by chance later in life without knowing their blood relationship. A pop culture example of this can be seen in the TV Series "Sons of Anarchy" where one character experiences intense physical attraction to the half-sister he never knew about.

      At any rate, congenital defects are significantly higher in sibling breeding, only roughly double with first cousins, and negligible relative to complete strangers in 2nd cousins and beyond. There's a strong argument for society to ban sibling unions, a fairly weak but plausible argument for denying first-cousins, and no scientific basis for banning 2nd cousins or beyond.

    10. Re:It's a Matter of Consent by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      There's a strong argument for society to ban sibling unions

      I disagree. For one thing, it is by no means certain that the children that result from inbreeding will have genetic defects. There's also the fact that the number of people who would do such things is probably rather small. Society won't collapse because some people breed with close family members.

      Then there's the fact that freedom is, I believe, simply more important than security. So there is only a strong argument if you're anti-freedom.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  29. persecution of the dissent by sageres · · Score: 1

    The persecution of the dissent is not unique to the gay community (after all, they have been persecuted a lot longer, and now, I guess, after gay marriage is won it is time for "payback").

  30. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So Muslims don't get married?
    Jews don't get married?
    Buddhists don't get married?
    Hindu's don't get married?
    Wiccan's don't get married? ...

    And whilst I'm not an American and I'm not completly aware of the specifics, but I'd imagine the fact you have a seperation of church and state and yet marriage affects tax would go some way to show YOU'RE TALKING OUT OF YOUR ARSE.

  31. When Will You Learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When will you Gay Rights Activists learn that there is room on the spectrum for EVERYONE'S OPINION???!!! Just because someone doesn't agree with gays, gay marriage, gay lifestyle, etc does not necessarily mean that they automatically want to "round em' up and shoot em' down".

    Christ.

    I swear you people LOVE painting with such broad brush strokes, yet when someone does it to you, you get your panties in a nice tight bunch. You're Gay, congratulations. Go live your life and do your thing. There *are* plenty of people out there that don't fucking agree with your choice (or lack thereof) that are MORE than happy to let you do exactly that. But you continually cram your agenda down everyone's throat. Give it a fucking rest already.

    Go ahead, lump yourselves in with Blacks, Latinos, Women and a ton of others that have been disenfranchised, oppressed, etc. That's beyond despicable and beyond ridiculous that you elevate yourselves and your cause to that level. What you call human rights or Civil Rights, others call a choice. Still others call it a genetic predisposition. Others call it 100% natural. Regardless of what you call it, it is not, and never will be, viewed as the "same" as or on the same level with, what Blacks, Latinos, Italians, Irishmen and damn near every other ethnic or religious group out there has gone through in this country.

    Everything to you fucks is "hate speech" these days. Anyone that dares to disagree, for whatever reason, is automatically a "hate monger". The argument of weaklings and cowards indeed. You can't even have a civilized discussion on the issue. There's no room for negotiation or diplomacy. It's your way, or the highway. Real "forward" thinking of you guys. Way to fucking go.

    You refuse to meet in the middle. I'm going to shock and awe you with a big surprise, I'm a Conservative. I know many, many others who feel the exact same way as me and that is, if Gays want to get married, it should ultimately be left up to the states individually to decide. If a state decides it's legal, hooray for them. If they decide it's illegal, that's their choice. Whoop-dee-fucking-doo.

    What's so hard to understand about that? Does that constitute "hate speech" to you fucks? Of course it does. This is the problem with the Gay Rights movement. EVERYTHING has to be crammed down everyone's throat. Dare to disagree, for any reason, and you're screwed.

    Like I said, real forward thinking and progressive to basically lock out the discussion and dialog.

    It's about revenge. It's about a need to "get even" or correct some historical injustices. Gays have been marginalized and discriminated against, therefore we're going to smugly show YOU how powerful we are, we're going to show YOU!!! Gimme a fucking break. For a supposedly "enlightened" group of people who seem fixated on the future of their movement, they sure are stuck being fixated on the PAST and what's happened to them here, there or anywhere.

    1. Re:When Will You Learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You caring so much to write all that is evidence of your inability to understand what tolerance is. Im sure people have been telling you to "practice what you preach" your entire life.

    2. Re:When Will You Learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's hilarious. Maybe in your world the definition of "Tolerance" is putting up with things you agree with. In the real world, Tolerance is about putting up with things you DON'T agree with. That goes BOTH ways - people who disagree with Gays (on any level) should be free to disagree with them. They're not being rounded up. They're not being hunted. There are already innumerable laws on the books protecting them and their lifestyle (choice or not). All part of being tolerant.

      Yet in the other direction, anyone that isn't waving a rainbow flag, is an automatic bigot.

      Nice hypocrisy.

    3. Re:When Will You Learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish you had logged in to post, I would have 'friend'ed you. Posting anon for the same reason you did.

  32. Does Card get Royalties? by Danathar · · Score: 1

    A lot of posters elsewhere are using as their reasoning that they don't want their ticket money or any part of it going to Card.

    Is there any evidence that he is getting any portion of ticket sales? Usually book rights are sold outright, so if that is the case he may not be getting ANY percentage of ticket sales.

    1. Re:Does Card get Royalties? by TheP4st · · Score: 2

      there any evidence that he is getting any portion of ticket sales?

      He is listed as producer of the movie so it is very likely that he will get a cut of the ticket sales.

      --
      "I have downloaded hundreds and hundreds of records, why would I care if somebody downloads ours?" Robin Pecknold
    2. Re:Does Card get Royalties? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      A lot of posters elsewhere are using as their reasoning that they don't want their ticket money or any part of it going to Card.

      Is there any evidence that he is getting any portion of ticket sales? Usually book rights are sold outright, so if that is the case he may not be getting ANY percentage of ticket sales.

      Even if he sold the property outright, a successful movie makes another deal more likely. A flop makes it less so.

      But at any rate, I can not buy anything from anyone for any reason -- or no reason at all. That action requires no justification except to myself, if that. It does not make me intolerant to choose how I employ my limited resources.

      BTW, the anti-gay crowd is certainly not above boycotting those they consider "supporters" of same-sex marriage or any other issue they oppose. Just google "Million Moms" for examples of that. They, too, are exercising their rights to not buy something from someone they don't like. This action -- not patronizing one's perceived opponents -- is not intolerance. They may be intolerant in other ways, as may be some of Card's detractors for all we know, but a boycott is not an example of intolerance.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  33. Won't read him either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been petty enough not to read his books. Won't miss not seeing the movie either.

  34. Re:Last time I checked... by halexists · · Score: 1

    ...and a Hindu ceremony, and a Buddhist ceremony, and a Jewish ceremony, and a... oh, maybe in fact it's a human institution that's been blessed by various faiths around the globe then? Something humans seek to do regardless of their creed?

    Seen in that context, marriage is whatever people want it to be, and it's been that way for a LONG time. Legislating it to conform to Christian ideals is theocratic.

  35. Re:What did Card do besides have an opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Replace "Card" with Adolf Hitler, Charles Manson, or Pol Pot. Your "logic" still works.

  36. intellectual dishonesty by sageres · · Score: 1

    Did anyone actually read the essay that Mr. Card wrote with clear and open mind? He is right in many aspects. Simply dismissing him as a "bigot" is rather intellectually dishonest.

    1. Re:intellectual dishonesty by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I've read a few of his...articles, and as far as I can tell they really are just angry bigoted rants with very flimsy reasoning.

      You know the saying about your mind not being open enough for your brain to fall out? Well I guess mine isn't open enough for a bull to take a dump in.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:intellectual dishonesty by similar_name · · Score: 1

      I'm curious. In what aspects do you believe he is right?

  37. Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by pla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as we as a society accept that people have the right to pick whatever fucked up religious beliefs they want, then we as a society have to deal with the consequences of real live modern humans expressing all the petty tribal prejudices of the past few thousand years, simple as that. Racism, misogyny, suicide bombers, birth control as a goddamned (no pun intended) presidential-race-changing issue... The crazy comes as a package deal, you don't get to pick and chose from God's Law (and spare me the "why don't you obey all of Leviticus" rhetoric, we already agree completely on that).

    So yes, those calling Card out as a hypocrite on this do indeed express intolerance. He sincerely believes that his personal storm-god objects to homosexuality. You (and I) happen to believe that consenting adults should have the right to do whatever the hell they want with each other. Both of those express nothing but an opinion, with the one no more valid than the other. We would argue that we have the "right" to choose. He would argue that yes, we do, but one of those ways gives you a complimentary handbasket for your trip downstairs.

    See the movie or don't, but we'd all do better to leave the politics out of whether or not we enjoy the movie.

    1. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by emagery · · Score: 0

      Well said

    2. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by serviscope_minor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So yes, those calling Card out as a hypocrite on this do indeed express intolerance.

      That's crap.

      If they were saying he should be locked up or silenced, or tried to prevent him from him expressing his views then you'd have a point.

      But merely calling someone a hypocrite is not intolerance.

      we'd all do better to leave the politics out of whether or not we enjoy the movie.

      That's your opinion and I'm going to claim that it's misguided. But that doesn't make me intolerant either. It's not like I'm calling for you to be modded down (I'm not).

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    3. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as we as a society accept that people have the right to pick whatever fucked up religious beliefs they want, then we as a society have to deal with the consequences of real live modern humans expressing all the petty tribal prejudices of the past few thousand years, simple as that. Racism, misogyny, suicide bombers, birth control as a goddamned (no pun intended) presidential-race-changing issue... The crazy comes as a package deal, you don't get to pick and chose from God's Law (and spare me the "why don't you obey all of Leviticus" rhetoric, we already agree completely on that).

      So freedom of expression implies that I have to pay for others to express themselves? No thanks, that's not how it works.

    4. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by pla · · Score: 1

      So freedom of expression implies that I have to pay for others to express themselves? No thanks, that's not how it works.

      Pay for it? No.

      Actively ignore it (as opposed to having some mythical "right" not to hear the likes of Fred Phelps spewing his crazy)? Yes.

    5. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      Card hasn't just 'expressed an opinion' on homosexuality (or specifically, homosexual behaviour), he has advocated that it should be made illegal, those engaging in it should be punished by the state, and the government should be overthrown 'by any means necessary' in order to achieve this.

      That is a horse of a different color.

    6. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would if he would. However, the money he gets is going straight into the anti-gay political agenda. I may watch it, but you better believe I'm not paying to watch it.

    7. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as we as a society accept that people have the right to pick whatever fucked up religious beliefs they want, then we as a society have to deal with the consequences of real live modern humans expressing all the petty tribal prejudices of the past few thousand years, simple as that. Racism, misogyny, suicide bombers, birth control as a goddamned (no pun intended) presidential-race-changing issue... The crazy comes as a package deal, you don't get to pick and chose from God's Law (and spare me the "why don't you obey all of Leviticus" rhetoric, we already agree completely on that).

      So yes, those calling Card out as a hypocrite on this do indeed express intolerance. He sincerely believes that his personal storm-god objects to homosexuality. You (and I) happen to believe that consenting adults should have the right to do whatever the hell they want with each other. Both of those express nothing but an opinion, with the one no more valid than the other. We would argue that we have the "right" to choose. He would argue that yes, we do, but one of those ways gives you a complimentary handbasket for your trip downstairs.

      See the movie or don't, but we'd all do better to leave the politics out of whether or not we enjoy the movie.

      No, we don't allow ANY belief in the name of religious tolerance and we never have. "Your right to swing your arms ends just where the other man’s nose begins."

      If my religion tells me that I need to strap explosives on my body and blow up infidels, do you think that the constitution of the United States gives him the right to practice that particular religion (radical Islam)?

      The right to marriage between two consenting adults is not the same as the right to not be murdered by a suicide bomber, but it is also one that our government needs to protect from those who wish to interfere in other people's lives.

      No one is forcing Card to gay marry his bishop. We're just saying that he doesn't have the right to stop other people from getting married.

    8. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The fallacy he employs here — that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others — is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies, and a way of evading responsibility for the impact of their words and actions."

      the fallacy - You are free to say what ever you want so long as the powers that be approve...

      hate-speech - People are no longer to express an idea, explore an idea much less think an idea that the powers that be do not approve of...

      cowards and bullies - who is name calling now?

      evading responsibility - He obviously wants his work to stand on its own merits... Where has he ever said "don't judge me" The author of this article has obviously never created anything in his life or he would understand this.

      Agree or disagree with the guy... but forcing them to shut up and not discuss these things in a "positive manor" only makes things worse...

    9. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      The crazy comes as a package deal, you don't get to pick and chose from God's Law

      This is going to cause a lot of societal stress over the next few decades.

      If your religion's foundational documents contain a story that's in conflict with what we know about biology and cosmology, and you don't want to reject evidence-based knowledge in favor of religious tradition, you can dismiss the story as poetry intended to credit it all to God.

      But if your religion's foundational documents state flat out that homosexuality is a 'sin', and science shows that it's a biological outcome no different from (say) being left handed, that's a lot harder to dismiss. Plus, clinging to it makes you condemn a whole class of people to hell for their biology.

      From a sociological perspective, this is going to be very interesting to watch.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Bull pussy. He crossed the line from just expressing an opinion, which is all our right, to actually trying to attempt change by criminalizing being gay and jailing those that are. He is actually in those kinds of groups, man. A million other posters here have all the cites you'll need. So yeah, he can sit there and call them fags all day but actually trying to make it a crime to be one? Hell no, we'll push back as we should! Those advocating gay rights would indeed be hypocritical intolerant asshats like him if we wanted to opress him for being straight, but that's not what's being advocated by us. LBGT groups want exactly the same rights as him, no more, no less. That is not intolerance.

    11. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orson Scott Card has actively tried to deprive people of life and liberty by his actions. My act of pointing this out and suggesting that people not support him and his work is not intolerance. It is an act of survival!

    12. Re:Pot, quit calling that kettle b**** by pla · · Score: 1

      My act of pointing this out and suggesting that people not support him and his work is not intolerance. It is an act of survival!

      Don't kid yourself, kid. No one seeing that cares in the least about Card's - Or your - Personal politics.

      They want 90+ minutes of numbness that doesn't involve breaking any controlled substance laws. Nothing more, nothing less.

  38. Already not seeing it by OzPeter · · Score: 1

    I saw the preview trailer and based on that there was no way in the world I was going to spend money on it. Politics has nothing to do with that decision. But my having 2 lesbians and a transexual in my extended family means that I think OSC's point of view is misguided in the very least.

    --
    I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    1. Re:Already not seeing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But my having 2 lesbians and a transexual in my exended family

      My condolences, sounds like you are part of a really duff gene pool :-/

    2. Re:Already not seeing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      having 2 lesbians and a transexual in my extended family means that I think OSC's point of view is misguided in the very least.

      He's messed up because his views don't fit with your world? Isn't that pretty much the textbook example of bigotry?

  39. Nothing says you can't have it both ways by smchris · · Score: 1

    In these things, protesting just means waiting a while. Buy a used copy.

    1. Re:Nothing says you can't have it both ways by Zynder · · Score: 1

      Fuck that! If you are gonna waste neurons on that piece of shite, then just torrent it. Every pirated download is a lost sale so claimeth the MPAA.

  40. Torn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    On the one hand, Card is a Bigot and I've asked my wife to stop buying his new books until he's dead because that would fund his bigotry directly.

    On the other, he's not the only one that made his movie; and beyond that, once a work is out of a person's brain it belongs to the public and is open to the public's interpretation. A poem in 1744 once wrote, "He raised his plastic arm." Modern audiences today might take that to mean robot even though it meant no such thin in 1744. Similarly, the Xenocide story is actually a very warming story about acceptance of the "other". And while Card did not intend for it to be a parallel to the plight of gay people or other people who he chooses to persecute, it can be taken that way and likely will be in the future when this man is dead and buried.

    I'm not sure if I want to punish everyone else involved and possibly contribute to burying the very works that might best undo Card's words and actions. I have a feeling I will see the movie and simultaneously make a donation to the LGBT cause and simply split the baby.

  41. Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are people who disagree strongly on the subject of gay marriage. Only recently did this become an issue. Orson Scott Card holds a view that many others hold. Since Card is a Mormon, it is not surprising that he holds this view. Opposition to gay marriage is a religious view. Are we screening out what we read because of religion? "I can't watch a movie by a Jew or a Catholic or a Mormon because they hold views I disagree with." Sounds like intolerance to me. Are we suggesting returning to the black listings of McCarthyism?

    I recently read the book and am going to watch the movie. It's not like the movie demonizes gays. In fact homosexuality isn't even mentioned. I did not become a Mormon after reading the book and I am not going to become one after watching this movie. I don't really care what Card's views on gay marriage are. They have nothing to do with my enjoyment of Ender's Game.

  42. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you should check again, To say that it is a Christian ceremony between one man and one woman is just a small part of the concept of marriage. The early church didn't exactly like marriage at all, they adopted it later on. Marriage has never been defined as one thing forever and ever. Many cultures have had different kinds of marriage traditions, and many religions have been involved, or not involved. One man and one woman is just one of many. What about when women were merely property changing owners? Or how about bigamy/polygamy? Same sex marriage is not new to the modern western world, it has been done before by other cultures. Religions are not always involved at all. In some countries the required part is entirely secular, and you can add your own ceremony to that.

    I expected less ignorance from the Slashdot readers.

  43. actual quotes from card by nimbius · · Score: 1

    from the googles, not hard to find most of these. For the record, as a gay man, there is absolutely no future tolerance for a person or group of people who have systematically enacted legislation and perpetuated stereotypes and outright lies to justify my existence as a second class citizen. Its like after the 1964 civil rights amendment, you issue a statement calling for tolerance and respect of the view that interracial marriage is an abomination. Not surprisingly, Card is a member of the National Organization for Marriage, a group thats equated gays to the downfall of organized religion and government, and largely bankrolled californias proposition 8.

    "Regardless of law, marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage..."

    "The first and greatest threat from court decisions in California and Massachusetts, giving legal recognition to "gay marriage," is that it marks the end of democracy in America. "

    "And if you choose to home-school your children so they are not propagandized with the "normality" of "gay marriage," you will find more states trying to do as California is doing -- making it illegal to take your children out of the propaganda mill that our schools are rapidly becoming."

    "in another column I will talk seriously and candidly about the state of scientific research on the causes of homosexuality, and the reasons why homosexuality persists even though it does not provide a reproductive advantage."

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  44. Messages of Enders game by caffiend666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One of the messages of Ender's game series is about tolerance, another is about bullying. Even someone who is intolerant can have beautiful things to say about tolerance. Just as a peacenic can talk about war, or someone who is themselves racist can have very profound things to say about race. Responding to someone with controvertial beliefs by harrasing, insulting, and boycotting them is not only itself intollerant, but is also bullying. Ender's Game is a case where an authors words are important, rather than their beliefs. Jefferson, Franklin, MLKing were all filandering hypocrites, it is their words which are important rather than their beliefs and actions.

    --
    Here's to losing my Karma Bonus again....
    1. Re:Messages of Enders game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except in Ender's Game series:

      Its the mutant, test-tube side-character who is doomed to an early death after evading infanticide by the legal authorities thats the tolerant one (Bean)
      The natural born main protagonists who end up saving 'everyone' in the end who are the psychopaths/mass murderers/'xenocide' (Peter/Ender)
      And the establishment/leadership type/legal authorities characters who are the bullies (Bonzo/arguably Graff and those in control of Battle School)

      The Ender's Game may have had a message about tolerance and bullying, but it ENCOURAGED and LEGALIZED bullying instead of encouraging tolerance.

      (Spoiler: Earth effectively wages WWIII against itself as soon as Ender wins the war against the Buggers. How about that human tolerance eh? /sarcasm)

    2. Re:Messages of Enders game by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Ender's Game is a case where an authors words are important, rather than their beliefs. Jefferson, Franklin, MLKing were all filandering hypocrites, it is their words which are important rather than their beliefs and actions.

      Card also wrote other words.
      Those words support his intolerant beliefs and actions.

      What was your point again?

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Messages of Enders game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so, the message is to hurt, maim and kill, in public - in order to instill fear stronger than hate and then people (terrorists?) will leave you alone. So as you say this boycott is a form of bullying, you advocate for Cards to go out on the streets and start kicking ass. gotcha.

    4. Re:Messages of Enders game by Zynder · · Score: 1

      What the hell!!!! +5 for this shit? Dude, the age old saying goes "Actions speak louder than words." You claiming you don't believe that is the case? He can, indeed, talk about it all he wants. His actions though are leading political groups to get legislation passed to make being gay illegal and subject to punishment. How is this message in anyway important?

  45. Good write up about a whiner. by fredrated · · Score: 1

    He trashes others, now he whines that others may trash him. I think I will skip the movie.
    I read the book and enjoyed it, except the part where the protagonist always advanced by kicking others in the balls (as my fading memory recalls). There is an irony here somewhere.

  46. Oddly enough... by emagery · · Score: 1

    the remainder of the series after Ender's Game deals with coming to an understanding with and realizing that the 'bad guys' weren't actually bad... which kinda IS a message of tolerance. Sounds like he's a conflicted and confused person, to me... just as the rest of us are on one topic or another.

  47. Every gay opposing plural marriage is a bigot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have not heard any reason for allowing same-sex marriage that will not apply to all forms of plural marriage. Personally I think government should butt out of the marriage control business completely. Thanks for reminding me to go see the movie.

    1. Re:Every gay opposing plural marriage is a bigot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's against the Constitution:

      Plural Marriage -> Multiple In-laws -> Cruel and Unusual Punishment.

  48. Wow, did he ever call it: by Orgasmatron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From 2004:
     

    And we all know the course this thing will follow. Anyone who opposes this edict will be branded a bigot; any schoolchild who questions the legitimacy of homosexual marriage will be expelled for "hate speech." The fanatical Left will insist that anyone who upholds the fundamental meaning that marriage has always had, everywhere, until this generation, is a "homophobe" and therefore mentally ill.

    --
    See that "Preview" button?
    1. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Surak_Prime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So he's able to see the common sense in the situation ahead of time, but not actually able to practice it. Not sure if that makes him a visionary, an idiot, or both.

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    2. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the exact same thing could have been called regarding Jewish people post Hitler. That doesn't make any of the rest of his trash better.

    3. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by girlintraining · · Score: 2

      So he's able to see the common sense in the situation ahead of time, but not actually able to practice it. Not sure if that makes him a visionary, an idiot, or both.

      Neither; It makes him a bigot.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    4. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      There are plenty who support gay marriage who are also opppsed to government institutions like schools expelling people for hate speech (or giving them a second chance after a forced re-education camp).

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    5. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by intermodal · · Score: 1

      you don't succeed as a novelist by being unable to see where things are headed.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    6. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by T.E.D. · · Score: 3, Interesting

      People who oppose interacial marriages are branded as bigots too. It doesn't exactly take a gift of prophecy to predict that someone who "regards or treats the members of a group with hatred and intolerance" will be branded as a bigot, since that is the English word for that exact activity.

      Mentally ill is a bit of a stretch though. Perhaps there's someone out there who feels that all people who nurse unreasonable hatreds are metally ill, but the sad truth is that this is a common human behavior.

    7. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only bigots I see are the people who support the perversion of Marriage and have no respect for those who hold differing opinions. Marriage is about children, self sacrifice and is the basic building block of a society. It's not about satisfying whatever lustful whim you are experiencing at the moment.

    8. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      No offense, because I don't mind a Godwin when it is appropriate, I just want to use you as an educational tool -

      To the person who accused me elsewhere in the conversation here of Godwinning: THIS is a Godwinning. And a winning Godwinning, at that. :-D

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    9. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      The only bigots I see are the people who support the perversion of Marriage and have no respect for those who hold differing opinions. Marriage is about children, self sacrifice and is the basic building block of a society. It's not about satisfying whatever lustful whim you are experiencing at the moment.

      So I assume then that if hetero couples don't get their bang on the night of the wedding, their marriage is anulled? I assume you were in the front rows of the "Sanctity of Marriage" walk to boot Brittney Spears and so many other celebrities from your ranks? I also suppose then that couples that are sterile and choose to adopt actually won't have the choice to adopt, because we feed all the children into a meat grinder instead? Because if we're going to go there, buddy, let's fucking go there.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    10. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by clarkn0va · · Score: 1

      Because he can't possibly have good reasons for the beliefs that he holds.

      The bigot is you.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    11. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually read his blog, and he's relatively articulate, intellegent, and makes a lot of great points on many issues, even if there are many I disagree with.

      He is certainly better than facebook PAC scene, and this endless dribble of rhetoric, smears, logical phalacies, and conspiracies about your neighbors, and small issues blown out of proportion to make you think your neighbors are inreconcilbles.

    12. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Maow · · Score: 1

      From 2004:

      The fanatical Left will insist that anyone who upholds the fundamental meaning that marriage has always had, everywhere, until this generation, is a "homophobe" and therefore mentally ill.

      Nailed it except for the part about marriage having some fundamental meaning, everywhere, until this generation. That is fiction unless it's about procreation, in which case it wasn't necessarily then and isn't now.

      And the part about wanting equal rights is an aspect of "the fanatical Left", unless one is so far right that they can't see the centre anymore.

    13. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except interracial marriage is still a man + a woman and therefore a fundamentally different concept.

      Whenever I see posts like yours, I just remember this is the internet and IRL there's still plenty of guys who believe in the Biblical definition of marriage. Doesn't really matter if it becomes legal eventually since we're not supposed to want our ideals forced on the country, but hopefully the US in general will stop treating this like a serious issue. Gays in America != blacks in America, that is a fact and I dare you to claim the two groups have been persecuted equally. There was never any legally-sanctioned persecution of gays.

    14. Re:Wow, did he ever call it: by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      there's still plenty of guys who believe in the Biblical definition of marriage.

      That's true. We call them "polygamists".

  49. Easy solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read Ender's Game many years ago (before I knew the kind of bigoted asshat Card is), and thoroughly enjoyed it. Based on that, I do want to watch the movie.

    On the other hand, I don't want to make a financial contribution (however small) towards him, because of his views and actions which I find abhorrent.

    I guess I'll just have to pirate it then :)

  50. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Marriages shouldn't have any government benefit. Government benefits should only be awarded for behaviors that benefit society as a whole. All marriages (same sex or not) are completely useless to society.

  51. I bet the studio... by babymac · · Score: 1

    LOVES the fact that Card chose to open his mouth on this immediately prior to the movie's release!

    --
    "War makes me sad." - Me
    1. Re:I bet the studio... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If by immediately you mean 4 months before the release, then yes, immediately prior to the release.

      http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1731141/?ref_=sr_1

    2. Re:I bet the studio... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that really hurt Chick-fil-a.

  52. Just ban all marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't worry about the film, lets just get the government out of ALL marriage. Marriage is a disgusting, filthy practice that is sexist oppression by itself, so OSC's problem shouldn't be that he objects to gay marriage but that he doesn't go far enough in objecting to marriage at all.

  53. Re:One day we'll be allowed to marry goats by fredrated · · Score: 1

    Enjoy your goat wife, we know you want one.

  54. Oh, that's the problem? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    Not the fact that he belonged to a church that taught that people of African descent were cursed by God?

    Hypocrite much, liberal crusaders?

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:Oh, that's the problem? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Oh that, I know about that, but their leaders had a "revelation" that changed things.

      In other words they got together and said "Our bigotry is costing us respect from everyone else so lets just say the Heavenly Father told us to change the rules."

  55. lol wat? by SemmiZamunda · · Score: 1

    All I heard was Orson Scott Card say, "PLEASE SEED ENDERS GAME AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE." Isn't that what everyone else heard?

    1. Re:lol wat? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Sounds right :-)

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  56. Nobody cares by Kungpaoshizi · · Score: 1

    Nothing to see here, except the movie, move along. I wish morons would quick bickering about someones past remarks, if everyone was under the spotlight, we would all be screwed. I have a feeling those who call out other peoples intolerances (but by doing so they ARE intolerant) in fact need to look inward, perhaps there lies the problem.

    1. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Just because Dahmer ate someone last week, doesn't mean he's inclined to do it again. So you really should accept his dinner invitation.

    2. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      our moronic remarks are in the past when you commented on it - i wish you would stop commenting on someones past comments!

      Also, calling out intolerance is very far from being intolerant. i dont become a duck by saying "look over there, its a duck" - ofcourse i _could_ be a duck, but it is not a given.

  57. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Art should be judged on its merits.

    If you don't count the author in its merits I'd say you have a shallow and pedastaled concept of "art".

  58. Re:What did Card do besides have an opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, of course, ordering up mass murder is morally equivalent to publishing deadly dull novels about traditional marriage.

  59. Slashdot Garbage by NandGate1 · · Score: 1

    While I've seen tons of garbage posted here on Slashdot, this one takes the cake.

    1. Re:Slashdot Garbage by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      It:s advertising for a nascent political position and/or produce.

      Now imagine a picture of Willy Wonka saying you must be new here.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  60. Enders Game was overrated by TWiTfan · · Score: 1

    I'm not going to see the movie, not because of the author's political causes, but because the source material is, and always has been, grossly overrated. There are a lot of geek obsessions that I share, but also a lot that I've never really understood. Frankly I always thought that both Card and Robert Heinlein (and L Ron Hubbard too, for that matter) wrote rather juvenile-level science fiction. There are *tons* of MUCH better science fiction writers out there, and why the geek community fixate on these mediocre writers is beyond me.

    I also don't eat at Chick-Fil A, not because of their anti-gay activities, but because their chicken is dry and the novelty shape of the waffle fries doesn't impress me.

    So AFAIC, feel free to protest on the side of whatever cause you wish. But don't give me a mediocre writing or dry chicken if you want my business.

    --
    The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    1. Re:Enders Game was overrated by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Frankly I always thought that both Card and Robert Heinlein (and L Ron Hubbard too, for that matter) wrote rather juvenile-level science fiction. There are *tons* of MUCH better science fiction writers out there, and why the geek community fixate on these mediocre writers is beyond me.

      Because they read Ender's Game or Heinlein's "juveniles" when they were kids. So it's all "Ender's game was AWESOME" or "Starman Jones was AWESOME"... and become fanboys for life, ignoring Card's dick behavior (like the villian in Lost Boys playing D&D), or Heinlein having Lazarus Long fuck his mother...but it's okay since Tertius is one big poly family.

    2. Re:Enders Game was overrated by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      What was juvenile about a world government that was formed on the idea that elected leaders should have to serve their government as soldiers in order to gain the full rights of citizens? Starship Troopers was based on the idea that the politicians sending young men to war should have been young men going into war themselves. Nobody understands how terrible a thing war is unless they have lived it themselves. That idea is hardly juvenile.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    3. Re:Enders Game was overrated by skyraker · · Score: 1

      While I would never put Ender's Game at the top of my 'best science fiction' list, it is a lot deeper than any 'juvenile-level' science fiction book I ever saw. Considering it won a Nebula and a Hugo, I'm thinking I'd rather go with those opinions over yours.

  61. Forgive Card? {Spoiler Alert] by 3leggeddog · · Score: 1

    If I ever manage to forgive Card for killing Ender I may manage to develop interest in his politics.

  62. State Marriage is a privlage not a right by trout007 · · Score: 2

    Like most political problems it seems neither side recognizes what can be a right. A right has to be universal and non contradictory. This removes all "positive rights" because they contradict the rights of the people forces to provide for it. So take marriage. The parts of two or more people living together and having sex and pledging some sort of common ownership of property etc are all rights. They require nothing of other people but to but out and leave them alone. But when the state starts granting special privlage a like tax benefits and inheritance without taxes this is a special treatment. This requires forcing other people to subsidize it.

    This is the heart of the problem. Instead of granting more people special privileges we should work to remove them all so we are all treated equally and all of our rights as individuals (the only consistent basis for rights) are respected.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    1. Re:State Marriage is a privlage not a right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was quite upset with the decision of the supreme court. Not because they allowed gays to get married, but because they didn't recognize the true problem. The US constitution confers no rights to the federal government to regulate marriage. The ruling should have been "This law is unconstitutional because the Federal government has no rights to regulate marriage, and shall be ruled unenforceable by the state because the will of the majority can not be used to restrict the rights of the minority."

      I personally think the idea of 2 dudes rubbing their junk on eachother is absolutely disgusting, but I have absolutely no right to do anything about it (unless they're doing it in public, but that has nothing to do with there being 2 dudes.) I can talk all day about how it's foul and perverse (I don't really care as long as I don't have to watch it,) and I retain my right to religious wackery and tell them they're going to hell; but nothing says they have to give me money for my products to not be intollerant.

    2. Re:State Marriage is a privlage not a right by muridae · · Score: 1

      "The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men." From the ruling on Loving v. Virginia, 1967

  63. Re:Last time I checked... by KiloByte · · Score: 0

    I mean... Mary and Joseph... Were quite married, you know?

    With Mary being 13 at the time. Because, you know, biologically adult humans are equal but only if they cross a magic age, just like alcohol magically stops being harmful after one of your birthdays.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  64. fuck tolerance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know what, FUCK Tolerance. Purge the world of everything that goes against your personal petty preferences and wage all out war against everyone that challenges what you WANT.. you either get your every wish or none of them.

    Here's a tip Einstein, both outcomes will be a living hell.
     

  65. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last time I checked...

    Which you promptly demonstrate to be "Never", at least from any reputable source.

  66. Re: Last time I checked... by sabbede · · Score: 0
    Maybe it shouldn't be legally defined. Civil unions all around, leave marriage to religion.

    But you bring up the benefits. Is marriage about love or government benefits? If the latter, then the entire issue is just homosexuals being greedy. If the former, what's the problem?

  67. This is sad, on many fronts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the boycotting website to statements from Wired like: "...he's been working ceaselessly for the last decade to make sure gay people don't get basic human rights.", it's clear this has turned from being an intellectual discussion to one of mudslinging and logical fallacies. Another example: the main blurb refers to him as a "coward and a bully". Ad hominem much? Since when did slashdot become Reddit?

    The Skip Ender's Game website has crap like: "...fear-mongering and religious bullying. We will not pay him to demean, insult, and oppress us" written on it. Give me a break! Both sides are full of rhetoric and bandwagon crap, and it's becoming harder and harder to see what the real issues are because we are attacking the players instead of their proposals. Instead of making reasonable points, it sounds like gay people are prisoners or slaves. When was the last time there was a good write up on anti-marriage legislation and how to get involved fighting it?

    If you're really mad that he is anti-gay marriage, okay...that's your opinion, so do something about it and take the high road instead of sinking down to the level of those who DO rant and rave. Get informative and appeal to people based on logic and reason.

    1. Re:This is sad, on many fronts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calling someone a "coward and a bully" is NOT an ad hominem. An ad hominem is not simply name-calling. It's using insults to call into question the veracity of what someone is saying. Calling someone an idiot because you think what he's saying is idiotic is NOT an ad hominem. Saying something like, "what does he know, he only has a BS degree" is an ad hominem.

    2. Re:This is sad, on many fronts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to get that exactly backwards.

  68. He can have my tolerance. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That doesn't mean I have to give him my money, though.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    1. Re:He can have my tolerance. by tgd · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean I have to give him my money, though.

      Why even give him your tolerance? He's a douchebag. There's nothing wrong with being intolerant of douchebags.

      The irony is, tolerance of the intolerant just empowers them.

    2. Re:He can have my tolerance. by skyraker · · Score: 1

      Wrong, and wrong. Intolerance of the interlerant only breeds more intolerance. It also breeds violence. Tolerance doesn't mean agreement.

    3. Re:He can have my tolerance. by Flere+Imsaho · · Score: 1

      I wonder, does OSC get a percentage of the box office, or was he paid up-front for rights to the story? If it's the former, I'll take great delight in watching a torrented copy a few months after the movie is released. If he was paid up-front then I'll go see it at the theater.

      --
      It gripped her hand gently. 'Regret is for humans,' it said.
    4. Re:He can have my tolerance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget sequels...

  69. Re:Last time I checked... by Bigbutt · · Score: 1

    Awesome. Let's do something about separating that 'Christian Ceremony' and the government, shall we?

    Ok? Thanks. Bye.

    [John]

    --
    Shit better not happen!
  70. Re:Last time I checked... by sageres · · Score: 1

    I know. I think I will never be able to call a gmarried couple "husband and husband" or "wife and wife"... this just goes against my religious believes.

  71. taking it apart by tverbeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ender’s Game is set more than a century in the future and has nothing to do with

    The controversy is not – and never has been – about the content of the story. It's been about the author's political activities, which have been funded in part by the money he received for this film, and which will continue to be funded by additional income which he'll get if it's a big hit (e.g. a sequel).

    political issues that did not exist when the book was written in 1984.

    Legal recognition of lesbian/gay marriage was already an issue in 1984. Couples had sued for the right to a civil marriage as early as 1971. Not that this is relevant, but it just shows that Card is either lying or doesn't know the history.

    With the recent Supreme Court ruling, the gay marriage issue becomes moot.

    No it hasn't, and as a National Organization for [sic] Marriage board member, he knows this well. He unquestionably intends to keep fighting it. After the movie comes out.

    The Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution will, sooner or later, give legal force in every state to any marriage contract recognized by any other state.

    This is probably correct; it depends on the Supreme Court. A bit baffling that this hasn't already happened, but that's the legal system dragging its feet, waiting for society to catch up.

    Now it will be interesting to see whether the victorious proponents of gay marriage will show tolerance toward those who disagreed with them when the issue was still in dispute.

    Don't worry, Orson. No one is going to force you to get gay-married.
    This is part of the Christian right's persecution complex, in which they view their declining dominance over American culture as an indication that they are about to become (and the more delusional among them thinking they already have been) a persecuted minority. Begging for "tolerance" of their intolerance is a tacit admission (whether they admit it or not) that they expect others to do to them as they've done to others.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    1. Re:taking it apart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how many gay-interrest movies this OSC have been watching? or if he thinks this "watch my movie or you are intolerant" only works one way.

    2. Re:taking it apart by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      This is probably correct; it depends on the Supreme Court.

      The Supreme Court has already set the precedent with what's termed the rational basis test: see Romer v. Evans, for which Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion in 1996.

      The nuts and bolts of the ruling are that government cannot make a law specifically designed to deny rights to a certain class of individuals.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    3. Re:taking it apart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, Orson. No one is going to force you to get gay-married.
      This is part of the Christian right's persecution complex, in which they view their declining dominance over American culture as an indication that they are about to become (and the more delusional among them thinking they already have been) a persecuted minority. Begging for "tolerance" of their intolerance is a tacit admission (whether they admit it or not) that they expect others to do to them as they've done to others.

      You know that "Gay Married" is not what he is worried about. He is worried about his right to his opinions. That it will become wrong to in any way think or behave like being gay is wrong, even if you personally disagree with it.

      As far as tolerance... It is probably a fair worry of the Christian right to worry about persecution because it has happened to other groups before. For example lets look at the white male. There recently was a lawsuit because a college (Columbia: http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national/2013/05/columbia-white-scholarship/65277/) had a white male scholarship.

      Wait it is illegal to promote white people with scholarships? Apparently, yes, yes it is. But not black people or hispanics, or asians or brown people or native americans or females. You can have a scholarship for just about any color, or thing other than being a white male.

      There are many other examples of religious, racial, or ethnic swings of this nature happpening throughout history and throughout the world.

      Think about it, and then don't put the bridle in your teeth in run. Do feel free to disagree of course, but act smart my friend tverbeek.

    4. Re:taking it apart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This doesnt change anything with my arguement, but forgive me, because I remembered the scholarship as both gender and race, but rereading this article it looks like it was race only.

    5. Re:taking it apart by volmtech · · Score: 1

      You are very astute. Society is not so much "catching up" but being dragged into it. No one will be forced to gay marry but soon they will have to "demonstrate" acceptance.

      Children in the Amazon jungle fight over the tastiest termite queen while mothers here scream and slap a child that tries to eat a bug. Our parents teach us what things we are suppose to think are disgusting. If children are exposed to sexual contact of all sorts and no one around them says any thing about it nothing will be "unnatural". Imagine the creche in "Logans Run". The book, not the movie.

  72. Re:Last time I checked... by tverbeek · · Score: 1

    Christians didn't invent marriage.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  73. big deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if the movie's good, it'll get watched.. it'll get bought.. it'll get rented.....

    even by many of those who are crying 'boycott' today.

    1. Re:big deal. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      You don't get the concept of a boycott.....

    2. Re:big deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what he does get is the total lack of conviction of most people. People with convictions are all wackjobs & bigots like Card.

  74. Re:Last time I checked... by Thanshin · · Score: 2

    Marriages shouldn't have any government benefit. Government benefits should only be awarded for behaviors that benefit society as a whole. All marriages (same sex or not) are completely useless to society.

    Society disagrees. Not religious society, mind you, society in general.

    Couples are economically better than single parents. Trios would be even better, but our own psychology limits us somewhat from having stable three person interdependent relationships.

  75. The way to go is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a consumer I affect within my means: I vote with my wallet (and feet).

  76. 'Petty' isn't what I would call it. by tornado261 · · Score: 1

    I forget where I heard this, so I can't attribute it to anyone. It's a paraphrase anyways. "A good author tells a story about his characters. A bad author tells a story about himself." One thing that I've seen in this whole mess about Card is that people love his books but hate him as a person. That's because he's a good author, who keeps his (unpopular) opinions out of his works (for the most part). I don't agree with his opinions, but that wont stop me from seeing his best work finally make it to the big screen.

  77. Boycotting the movie by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't boycott the movie because I disagree with the artist's personal views, or I'd have to boycott a lot of art.

    I'd boycott the movie because I love the book, and the movie will likely piss me off. Spoilers below:

    The movie apparently doesn't have Ender killing Bonzo because they didn't want to show youth violence or bullying. There is no fantasy game. The "kids" are much older and practically adults. Locke and Demontheses are completely cut out of the story.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    1. Re:Boycotting the movie by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      The movie apparently doesn't have Ender killing Bonzo because they didn't want to show youth violence or bullying.

      Locke and Demontheses are completely cut out of the story.

      OSC political views are something I do not care about. But Ender killing Bonzo was Ender's turning point, and Locke and Demontheses were full of intellectual irony. The pacifist rallying the troops and the sociopath calling for peace. That may make me skip the movie.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    2. Re:Boycotting the movie by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      Locke and Demontheses are shock jocks in a sense. Kids create these puppets and have them say outrageous things to stir up populist movements and gain political power. Orson Scott Card basically predicted the internet, blogs and our current media.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    3. Re:Boycotting the movie by dywolf · · Score: 1

      This.
      Boycotting the movie over someone only tangentally (sp?) attached to it (considering the myriad huge departures fromt he book) is silly. he gets almost nothing, if anything, of your dollars. It's also hypocritical if you dont also boycott every other movie over someones views, and i garuntee you it applies to -EVERY- movie.

      that said, like most book/movie projects, if I see it, I'll try...very hard...to judge it on its own merits and not on the departures from the book. That said, a lot of the changes basically gut the story and its impact, so i'm not exactly optimistic.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    4. Re:Boycotting the movie by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I fully expected Locke and Demosthenes to be cut from the movie. They weren't in the short story form of Ender's Game. They were only added to the novel. I didn't know Bonzo's death was eliminated, but I predicted it in comments years ago, when news the movie had finally moved beyond the optioned stage hit Slashdot. I have my own problems with just how far the movie apparently deviates from the book, so I won't be seeing it either.

      Boycott it for Card's ideas if you like. Me, I'll boycott it 'cause it's bad art.

    5. Re:Boycotting the movie by youngatheart · · Score: 1

      Of all the comments and passion I've seen on this story, this is the first time something got to me and made me actually sad.

    6. Re:Boycotting the movie by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      Locke and Demontheses were full of intellectual irony.

      This is why they cut out Locke and Demosthenes from the movie. The alt-text says it all:

      Dear Peter Wiggin: This letter is to inform you that you have received enough upvotes on your reddit comments to become president of the world. Please be at the UN tomorrow at 8:00 sharp.

      Not that I blame Card for it in the book. In 1984/85 it would've been next to impossible to foresee exactly how the net would shake out. His scenario seemed vaguely plausible at the time.

    7. Re:Boycotting the movie by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      I perceive it a bit different in that they became influential bloggers.

      Mike and Jerry made dicks jokes on Penny Arcade, and in turn made Time's Most 100 Influential people list and now run the Penny Arcade empire with a gaming expo more relevant than E3.

      And Peter Wiggin didn't become a world leader by receiving Reddit upvotes as it were. He had puppet writers creating propaganda and support for his real persona. He was brother to the most famous man in the world, who was now removed from the equation. Celebrity can be parlayed into political power.

      The point of Locke and Demontheses was two-fold:

      1. The Human/Bugger war stemmed from our innate desire for conflict and war. The moment the threat was removed, we looked for new enemies (human again)
      2. Public support for these conflicts could be generated by fear mongering and propaganda.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  78. short-sighted by Warhawke · · Score: 1

    I find it interesting so many people are ready to boycott a movie based on a single high-profile participant's personal beliefs. (See also Tom Cruise) Do you think everyone else working on that movie believes the same? Should their livelihoods be hurt because they associated with a bigot? How many bigots do you work with? Do you know? Would you boycott a movie because the key grip was anti-Semitic? Or do we only care about the opinions of rich people?

    1. Re:short-sighted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except there is a difference between unknowingly working with a biggot and working with a very vocal biggot (and there are ways to work with a biggot but still be open about your disagreement). not that it matters much, people have the right not to go see the movie for any reason they can come up with, and interrest groups are free to suggest boycots on anything they please - i am not aware of any laws stating otherwise.

    2. Re:short-sighted by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Actually you should care about the opinions of rich people far more, because they are far more powerful, because they have far more money. If your hot dog vendor is a homophobe, the money you gave him will go towards a shitty little sign he'll hold up at a political rally and hosting his shitty little hate blog, which will be safely ignored. If you pay to see the Ender's Game movie, it will contribute to MILLIONS of dollars in funds that OSC can use on political lobbying to effect actual political change.

      So yeah an anti-semitic key grip is far, far less important than an anti-semitic producer or lead actor.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  79. Re:Last time I checked... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Marriage has always been a public commitment to each other. Government insinuated itself to enforce cultiral standards as to what this meant.

    It's ironic gay people could get married in a religious ceremony, but not get to take advantage of the government aspect of this. Religious folk, is it the government piece you consider as the important piece?

    How bizarre, and sad, if you do.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  80. ridiculous by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    "laws that treated certain people as less than human"
    Wow so in America it's no longer even allowed to have an opinion that gay marriage is wrong. Anyone holding that opinion is automatically seen as some horrible nazi or something. You know, there's a difference between disapproval and cross burning and hate speech on posterboards.

    1. Re:ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      He's not being given money to remove the rights of others that, in his opinion ONLY, are not natural, and wants them imprisoned for their difference.

      So how come he's not having to tolerate these others, but we have to give him money as indication of tolerating him?

    2. Re:ridiculous by Velex · · Score: 1

      You're exactly right, and Card's crossed that line between disapproval and hate speech on posterboards. In fact, I support the right to burn crosses or flags on one's own property. If one has a billboard, I think anybody should be able to say anything they want. That's free speech.

      (Also note, if you trespass on my property to erect a cross, whether or not you burn it, I will be calling the police and pressing charges.)

      As others have pointed out, however, Card's even gone beyond that. He actively uses his money to lobby for discriminatory marriage laws and anti-sodomy laws. If that's not crossing a line, I don't know what is.

      If somebody was a brilliant science fiction writer (not saying Card is, but I would need to finish reading Ender's Game to give a complete opinion on that) and was also bankrolling laws that were discriminatory against Jews... well, you're the one who Godwined it already.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    3. Re:ridiculous by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      As others have pointed out, however, Card's even gone beyond that. He actively uses his money to lobby for discriminatory marriage laws and anti-sodomy laws. If that's not crossing a line, I don't know what is.

      Really? You can't think of anything more extreme than him lawfully donating money to causes he supports? ;-)

      I don't agree with Card's extreme views, but you're basically saying it's ok for people to have an opinion but that it's not ok for them to engage in any sort of advocacy for that opinion. People lobby for and fund causes you and I disagree with all the time. We don't have to like those causes, but it's hardly crossing any lines - it's a part of our society, and you trying to shut that down would be an example of intolerance. Just let him do his thing and either ignore him, or engage in counter-advocacy of your own.

    4. Re:ridiculous by Enigma2175 · · Score: 1

      "laws that treated certain people as less than human"

      Wow so in America it's no longer even allowed to have an opinion that gay marriage is wrong. Anyone holding that opinion is automatically seen as some horrible nazi or something. You know, there's a difference between disapproval and cross burning and hate speech on posterboards.

      Yes, there is a difference and Card has crossed the line to the cross-burning side of that difference. When you advocate jail time for homosexuals or overthrowing the government if they pass laws that enable gay marriage it is certainly beyond "having an opinion"

      --

      Enigma

  81. Re:Last time I checked... by OptimalCynic · · Score: 1

    No it damn well isn't. One of the biggest cons that Christianity has pulled is pretending it owns the marriage ceremony. It's only in the last few hundred years that the Church has got involved in the marriages of normal people (as opposed to the aristocracy). Historically, marriage as a Christian ceremony is an aberration that we're in the process of moving back away from.

  82. False premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many authors (or chicken restaurant owners) would treat polygamists as "less than human" by supporting laws against plural marriage?

    Please explain how laws against plural marriage treat polygamists as "less than human." What rights are being denied polygamists that are being granted to other humans?

    1. Re:False premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many authors (or chicken restaurant owners) would treat polygamists as "less than human" by supporting laws against plural marriage?

      Please explain how laws against plural marriage treat polygamists as "less than human." What rights are being denied polygamists that are being granted to other humans?

      The right to marry. And don't even say "oh they can get married, just to ONE other person", that's the same as Card saying gays can get married, just to someone of the opposite sex. Anything beyond treating marriage as a simple contract made valid by informed consent is simply favoritism for your own social group.

    2. Re:False premise by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Polygamy isn't a sexual orientation. There aren't people who find single partners unattractive and can't form relationships with them in the same way that gays find people of the opposite sex unattractive and can't form relationships with them.

      Saying "a polygamist can still marry one person" is different from saying "a gay person can still marry someone of the opposite sex" because the polygamist *would* want to marry one person, it's just that that's only a subset of the marriages he'd actually want.

    3. Re:False premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying "a polygamist can still marry one person" is different from saying "a gay person can still marry someone of the opposite sex" because the polygamist *would* want to marry one person, it's just that that's only a subset of the marriages he'd actually want.

      And a gay person can get all the economic and political benefits of marriage with civil unions. Yet we consider civil unions instead of arrangements that use the word "marriage" to be a denigration of their rights. Heck, you also don't even have to be married to form a life-long pair bond. Why bother with civil unions then? They still get a subset of the marriage they want.

      It's a spectrum, and you can't just draw a line in the sand and say that one group should be limited to a subset of the rights they want while another should be given everything without some better justification than "I don't like that one as much." It's just an arbitrary line.

      Personally, I don't like polygamy. There are several important societal reasons why creating social tiers of marriage "haves and have-nots" would be disastrous (as the history of fundamentalist LDS sects amply demonstrate). But if we want to talk about liberty, then there's absolutely no difference between being denied what you want because of in-born orientation or because of religious upbringing. Liberty isn't about why someone wants something. It's about the natural rights they deserve to have.

    4. Re:False premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right to marry whomever they want.

  83. Boycott != Censorship by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    But a boycott isn't censorship or refusal to engage. If someone disagrees with a work's message, they can (a) not buy it, and (b) encourage others not to buy it. This is nothing like 'refusing to listen to any argument against what you believe in'. No one's saying Card can't sell his book or make his movie. They're just saying they don't want to spend their money on it, and encouraging others to avoid spending money on it, too.

    Are you saying people shouldn't be allowed to say, "I don't think people should spend money on this"?

    I mean, sure, I'm okay with "letting the KKK talk". Does that mean I have to pay admission to hear them? Am I not allowed to say, "I don't think you should bother paying admission to that KKK rally"?

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    1. Re:Boycott != Censorship by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      But a boycott isn't censorship or refusal to engage. If someone disagrees with a work's message, they can (a) not buy it, and (b) encourage others not to buy it.

      That is true, but I thought that part of the reason this is being discussed is because the message people are trying to boycott isn't in 'Ender's Game'. So you aren't disagreeing with a work's message, you are disagreeing with the politics of the IP owner of the work.

      Even though I disagree with Card's politics, I don't think we should be so eager to attach political baggage to creative works unless that creative work is intentionally political.

      As a society, that's dangerous because we will end up with publishers favoring one work over another because of the potential loss of profit associated with the politics of the author and not the actual merits of the work itself. There was recently discussion about how the lack of female POV characters in video games is due to publisher fears that it won't maximize the potential market.

      Consider the political opinions of George Orwell. Do you think the world would be better if he was unable to get his stories to market because the publishers feared a boycott?

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    2. Re:Boycott != Censorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm with you on the ability of people to boycott ...as long as the message is communicated honestly. Calling him names and trashing him isn't honest...he isn't 'anti-gay'...he accepts them just fine. The issue is homosexuals want to change the definition of the institution...Card and many others are saying no. That's not being a bigot or treating anyone as less that human...it's saying ..."I like the current institution just fine and please leave it alone". If you want to institution to change, fine, I respect that you want change...I'm not calling you a bigot...a hater but you are the one telling everyone now and prior that likes they institution as it is that THEY are wrong. A little clarity please.

    3. Re:Boycott != Censorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clarity indeed!

      There's nothing bigoted about saying you don't want everyone to have the same rights as you because you think two dudes fucking is icky or because some idiot in a robe told it to you in Church, you just like the idea of marriage being between one man and one woman, the way it's been for...well not really all that long in human history, actually. But hey, the important thing is that you feel better because you have something others can't have, and if everyone had it then you'd have to get that smug sense of satisfaction by systematically fucking over another social/economic/ethnic minority.

      But hey, thanks to decades of neglect in our educational system, most people are now stupid enough to believe their vague, undefined notions of "freedom of speech" and "democracy" includes HAVING to listen to every ignorant, hateful and xenophobic opinion and stance out there, because otherwise it'd be censorship. This wasn't accidental: keeping everyone divided on as many issues as possible saps our collective energy and keeps us from paying too much attention to the big picture.

    4. Re:Boycott != Censorship by Wookact · · Score: 1

      I do not want my money going to someone who may use that money against causes I support. I will not support anything that will funnel my money to that person.

      That is a reasonable position to hold, and I am well within my rights to refuse to support those causes no matter how indirect. Get over yourself.

  84. Both Wagner and Beethoven were said to be d*cks! by Alejux · · Score: 1

    Having said that, it doesn't lessen my love for their work one tiny bit. I don't see why OSC's personal views on marriage should influence people's perception of his work when it's not even mentioned in it.

  85. Not sure why he bothers by argStyopa · · Score: 0, Troll

    Seriously - asking the Left to be open-minded or tolerant is silly.

    The Left has a fascist agenda that they want to jam down people's throats, in the EXACT same sense that the Right does, they've just been far better at packaging it.

    "No, no, WE are about freedom and human rights. THEY are about repression. See how clear that is?"

    Think I'm joking?

    Check with your local Leftist activist friend. They are militantly in favor of the rights of homosexuals. Fair enough, it's a good point. Mention that people against the rights of gays are backwards hicks that should be completely ignored and shunned by anyone with a brain, you'll likely get firm agreement...as long as you're talking about (white) Republicans/Evangelicals.
    If you change the context, and mention that conservative Muslims should likewise be completely shunned from consideration because they are even more homophobic, MURDERING gay men for their choices, suddenly culture and context is an exonerating factor.

    Back to the OP, though, OSC needs ot understand that the Streisand Effect is at work here. The media is against him, so any attention called to the subject will generate only negative publicity.

    He needs to shut up, and understand that the spirit of McCarthy is live and well here in the US, he's just wearing a "YES WE CAN" t-shirt this year, and drives a Prius.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:Not sure why he bothers by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Seriously - asking the Left to be open-minded or tolerant is silly.

      Tolerance does not mean you have to give pass to actions of others that seek to purposefully and negatively effect your life and those of others. Being tolerant and open-minded also have little to do with the fact that people can choose to or choose not to go see someone's movie.

    2. Re:Not sure why he bothers by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Really? Because I pretty much found the Left conveniently silent when Bush sent our forces to war to fight in Afghanistan or Iraq - two groups that had SPECIFICALLY said they want to harm the life of Americans.

      Face it: both the Right AND Left are hypocrites, cheerfully campaigning on whatever issue suits their POLITICAL goals and clothing it in moral righteousness BUT likewise ignoring parallel situations in which that same logic might apply, but doesn't suit their political agenda.

      --
      -Styopa
    3. Re:Not sure why he bothers by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Really? Because I pretty much found the Left conveniently silent when Bush sent our forces to war to fight in Afghanistan or Iraq - two groups that had SPECIFICALLY said they want to harm the life of Americans.

      What I saw was the opposite. None of the "leftists" I know or ever talked to during that period were supportive of it and many were quite vocal in opposition.

      Face it: both the Right AND Left are hypocrites, cheerfully campaigning on whatever issue suits their POLITICAL goals and clothing it in moral righteousness BUT likewise ignoring parallel situations in which that same logic might apply, but doesn't suit their political agenda.

      Sure, both extremes are asshats and hypocrites. Either way, Card is just having his own tactics turned against him so I have little sympathy.

    4. Re:Not sure why he bothers by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      If you change the context, and mention that conservative Muslims should likewise be completely shunned from consideration because they are even more homophobic, MURDERING gay men for their choices, suddenly culture and context is an exonerating factor.

      Hi. Liberal here. And no, it's absolutely not OK for Muslims in Muslim countries to be doing that, in my opinion.

      But my opinion doesn't hold much weight in Muslim countries because I don't live in a Muslim country. I live in the United States of America. And in my United States, "Other countries are behaving even worse" is not an excuse to deprive other American citizens of the rights and privileges I have the good fortune to have been blessed with by virtue of my birth.

      My United States doesn't set its standards based on the actions of other nations. My United States sets its standards based on the ideals upon which it was founded. If your country doesn't hold itself to a similar standard, then congratulations, you're part of the problem.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    5. Re:Not sure why he bothers by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Yes there are people who took the whole "tolerance" thing to an illogical, even detrimental extreme. Some of them ran PBS, for a while. I've noticed that's been walked back quite a bit. Sesame Street isn't quite so insane about preaching outright acceptance of everything.

      As a liberal, I don't give Muslims any extra credit vs (white) evangelicals. The fact that their gods have different names doesn't make any difference. They're both dangerous, and for the same reasons.

  86. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couples are economically better than single parents.

    You don't have to possess a silly title in order to be a couple; it's just somewhat common that couples do.

    but our own psychology limits us somewhat from having stable three person interdependent relationships.

    Well, some people have managed it...

  87. "deserve tolerance" by demon+driver · · Score: 1

    Who demands tolerance for those who fight tolerance and propagate intolerance, has to be absolutely clueless about what tolerance really is, and what it is good for.

    1. Re:"deserve tolerance" by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Who demands tolerance for those who fight tolerance and propagate intolerance, has to be absolutely clueless about what tolerance really is, and what it is good for.

      And has to be good at parsing complex sentences in order to understand your point.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  88. Tolerence has to go both ways, or it doesn't exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Period.

    Want people to tolerate your crazy behavior (in their eyes), you have to tolerate theirs (in your eyes), period, end of discussion.

  89. Why boycott over this? by Kingkaid · · Score: 1

    After seeing the trailer I think they gave away the plot twist right at the beginning... that is a reason not to see it ;)

    1. Re:Why boycott over this? by loufoque · · Score: 1

      If you have at least a tiny bit of education, you already know the plot twist anyway.

  90. On tolerance by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    I will quite readily accept OSC's right, or anyone else, to watch the movie. Doesn't mean I have to. Nor does it mean I'll force anyone else to do so or not to do so.

    That's all tolerance is.

  91. TL;DR by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Please seed!!!!1!

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  92. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couples are economically better than single parents

    That's totally irrelevant. Government benefits should be awarded for behaviors that benefit society as a whole not for behaviors that benefit individuals. Marriage is beneficial to them, better for them, it's not beneficial to society therefore society shouldn't subsidize it.

  93. Not just a speech issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people are saying it is not okay to be intolerant of his intolerance. That by boycotting the movie it somehow shows a person doesn't support Card's free speech. That is completely without basis. By not seeing the movie I am not, in any way, preventing Card from stating his opinion. He is able to keep on being a bigot all he wants. What I am doing by not seeing his movie is refusing to __fund__ his bigotry.

    I am all for people getting to say what they think. Card, like anyone, is welcome to throw their two cents into the public discussion. But I'm not going to pay his campaign bill.

    Think of it this way, if the KKK had a bake sale, would you buy their cookies?

    1. Re:Not just a speech issue by koan · · Score: 1

      Thankfully you're in the minority.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  94. Vonnegut by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 1

    You forgot about Kurt.

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    1. Re:Vonnegut by turp182 · · Score: 1

      So it goes...

      --
      BlameBillCosby.com
    2. Re:Vonnegut by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Tick tock tick tock.

      --
      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
    3. Re:Vonnegut by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      He's Sci Fi because they couldn't figure out where else to put him, not because they were anywhere close to "pure" sci-fi.

  95. Re:Last time I checked... by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

    Marriage is not a "human right"... its a christian ceremony. Between a man and a woman.

    Okay, how about a car analogy: "Only Fords are cars. You can call Toyotas anything you want, just not a "car". I've only had Fords, the way the maker intended."

    --
    I am not a crackpot.
  96. Hate the artist, love the art by mblase · · Score: 1

    My mom is a huge opera fan, and my brother goes along with her often when he can. It's not my thing, but I respect the history of the art form and I don't hate the music.

    As a German-American family, perhaps, they're especially fond of the Ring Cycle. When they get a chance, they buy tickets to all four productions and go see them one after the other.

    This is despite the fact that everybody who knows anything about opera knows that Wagner was a *huge* anti-Semite.

    They both know this, and reject his point of view. But that doesn't stop the music from being great.

    Now, it's a bit different when the artist is still alive and making money off his work, I'll grant you. But all the same, I have a hard time judging Card's work based on his personal points of view.

    Yes, his Mormon-influenced views about people marrying young and as virgins and then having at least three to five children are a prominent influence on his plots. But I don't remember seeing anything anti-gay in his stories, either. He seems to keep that in a separate compartment from his creative life.

    I'll go to see the movie, and judge it based on its own merits.

    1. Re:Hate the artist, love the art by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      HOLD UP, Wagner died over 200 years ago. Are you funding antisemitism by seeing operas with his music in it? I don't think so.

      Now OSC's alive, actively writing hateful screeds and funding anti-gay-marriage lobbies. If you pay to see the movie, you're funding that. See the difference? This has nothing to do with the merits of his work.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Hate the artist, love the art by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      D'oh, morning brainfart, 1 key right next to 2, take your pick...

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  97. Funny thing about polygamy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's always a man marrying many wives. Not a gay man marrying many husbands. Or lesbians marrying many lesbians. Or a woman marrying many men.

    Moreover the reasons for wanting marriage are all legal constructs that cannot be made appropriate for polygamy since the legalities would require many volumes to cover.

    If you just want to shack up with multiple partners, do so. Don't call it marriage and we're all fine.

    Or marry one but have an "open relationship" so that the legalities are clear and open, and again we're all fine.

    But before you demand marriage to many people, work out how the legalities required of marriage (taxes, inheritance, power-of-attorney, divorce, alimony, medical visitation, conjugal rights in prison, etc) will work out FIRST.

    Otherwise you're doing no more than saying "Just let us live on a Moonbase!" and ignoring how the hell one is going to work.

    1. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      You're right. If a woman marries many husbands, it is not polygamy.

      It's polyandry.

    2. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by Thugthrasher · · Score: 3, Informative

      Polyandry is still polygamy.

      Polygamy - more than two partners, no matter the sexes
      Polygyny - 1 man, multiple women
      Polyandry - 1 woman, multiple men
      I have no idea if there is a term for multiple men and multiple women that is more specific than polygamy.

    3. Re: Funny thing about polygamy by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      They had that in Battlestar Galactica... Between 3-4 males and females.

    4. Re: Funny thing about polygamy by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      Or the Alien Doctor Flox from Enterprise.

    5. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      "I have no idea if there is a term for multiple men and multiple women that is more specific than polygamy."

      If there is, I've never heard it, and I've been part of the poly community for almost 20 years. But, there IS another set of terms, so long as we are creating a glossary ;-), that is applicable:

      Triad - three people of any mix of genders, all in a relationship with each other.

      V - three people of any mix of genders, where two of them are in relationships with the third, but not with one another.

      (I don't mean to generalize - I'm sure there are people in perfectly honorable, up-front Vs - but in my experience, the V is frequently what happens when one part of a couple cheats and then convinces the other part that they're really doing some high-minded new-age thing, instead - talking them into staying and being miserable, at least for a while.)

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    6. Re: Funny thing about polygamy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heinlein was big on that too... and on nailing his mom... and on nailing clones of himself.

    7. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There wasn't, so we had to create one: Polyamory.

    8. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by Surak_Prime · · Score: 1

      I get why you're saying that, but that word still applies to other mixes of polygamists, too, aside from the one the poster above was asking about. The difference between polygamy and polyamory is that the first applies to marriage and the second applies to love - and hopefully for most people those go together just like the opening to 'Married With Children' said. ;-)

      --
      :::The Spear in the heart of the Other is the Spear in the heart of You; You are He - Surak of Vulcan:::
    9. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I have no idea if there is a term for multiple men and multiple women that is more specific than polygamy.

      Polyamorous would probably work, but is not limited to a group that are all associated with each other in a single social contract.

    10. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by anyGould · · Score: 1

      I have no idea if there is a term for multiple men and multiple women that is more specific than polygamy.

      Fun at parties?

    11. Re:Funny thing about polygamy by steelfood · · Score: 1

      a term for multiple men and multiple women that is more specific than polygamy.

      Orgy.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  98. Summary by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    TFS would make a lot more sense if it mentioned Orson Scott Card is the author of Ender's Game instead of just some random nut.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    1. Re:Summary by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      TFS would make a lot more sense if it mentioned Orson Scott Card is the author of Ender's Game instead of just some random nut.

      Some random nut penned Ender's Game??? Thank-you for telling me that! It all makes perfect sense now!

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
  99. That's not the half of it by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0

    That's only the start. If you dig a little bit in Orson Scot Card's back catalog of hate and bigotry, you'll find a lot of gems.

    Here's the money shot from one of Orson Scott Card's angry screeds against gays:

    âoeLaws against homosexual behavior should remain on the books, not to be indiscriminately enforced against anyone who happens to be caught violating them, but to be used when necessary to send a clear message that those who flagrantly violate society's regulation of sexual behavior cannot be permitted to remain as acceptable, equal citizens within that society

    Well, dig that. Orson wants the sodomy laws to be used against anyone who "flagrantly violate(s) society's regulation of sexual behavior "

    Say, where can I go to find those "regulations" that "society" has put on sexual behavior? And which "society"? The Mormon Church? By now, we all know about Mormon's "regulation" on sexual behavior, which includes sex with 13 year olds and younger. As the Angel Moroni said, "If they're old enough to bleed..."

    Sonfabitch. I wonder what happens to make someone as damaged as Orson Scott Card? Well, no sweat off my back. The Ender movie looks like a turkey anyway.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:That's not the half of it by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I just thought about what might happened if someone with beliefs like Orson's ever got hold of the ubiquitous surveillance of the government. Picture someone with such strong beliefs about "sending a clear message to those who flagrantly violate society's regulation of sexual behavior" having control over the NSA.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    2. Re:That's not the half of it by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I give it two years. Three at the outside.

      Shit, we already had such a nutbar as Attorney General of the United States. The results weren't as overt as people imagine, but there were consequences. It will be the same again, only more so, with a mature (expanded!) NSA surveillance state to work with.

      I notice Nehemiah Scudder was already mentioned on Slashdot this week. I'm mentioning him again. He's coming. I don't have a lot of hope that the moderate majority can prevent it.

  100. tit for tat by byeley · · Score: 1

    Even if we assume that Card is a condemnable bigot (which I find hard to do in earnest given his obvious ability to separate his political views from his literary works), people never seem to understand that answering hate with hate just entrenches both sides further. Ironically, a little turning of the other cheek would go a long way towards dissipating the caustic atmosphere, especially with people like Card admitting defeat.

    If you decided to boycott the work of everyone who's ever held a discriminatory view, you'd be left with a very small library.

    1. Re:tit for tat by loufoque · · Score: 1

      He's clearly not a bigot. Even the quote they give of him which is supposedly condemnable is a perfectly sensible argument and could be a reasonable implement in today's society, if people choose this is the direction they want to take.
      It's purely a matter of whether you believe the government should enforce a certain societal model and discourage deviation from the norm or whether you think the government should let people do whatever they want to do.
      Both ideas are valid and have their own merits. Refusing to accept this as fact is just proof of narrow-mindedness.

  101. Re:Bigotry? What about religious tolerance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a wonder excuse. I'm not a bigot. I'm just deeply religious! Disgusting.

  102. Re:Last time I checked... by chris.alex.thomas · · Score: 1

    wrong, marriage existed long before the christians started to use it.......

  103. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    No I mean someone who wants to use the force against a group of people who are not harming him in anyway.

    The simple rational thought here is that gays getting married do not impact him one bit, so he should be quiet about it.

  104. Re:What did Card do besides have an opinion? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

    Actively campaigned and funded groups seeking to deny rights to others. As such many people do not want to patronize a film that will give him more money to do so. He's more than free to say and do all he wants and he is not having his freedom of speech abridged because I and others choose not to go see this movie.

  105. Orson Scott Card = Loonball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's ideas are not worth listening too. Of course that soapy shower scene in the all boy's academy in the book makes you think he's got a little something to hide.

  106. A small comparison: by Hartree · · Score: 1

    I know someone who changes the channel or switches stations when either a Jane Fonda movie or a Barbara Streisand song comes on.

    I think it's silly.

    Guess what I think of this?

    So, the Scientologists think gays are low toned. So, I should not watch anything with Kisty Alley, John Travolata, or Tom Cruise in it?

    Sorry, but even though Yusuf Islam made some less than stellar statements about Salman Rushdie (and then backtracked, apparently) , I still listen to my Cat Stevens albums.

    This certainly doesn't mean authors/actors/performers can't be strongly criticized for what they say. And things like The Turner Diaries are certainly worth criticizing as heavily as possible. But boycotts aren't on my list for creative works that themselves aren't hateful.

    And it often hits others involved who haven't really done anything.

    I'm sure boycotting Ender's Game will really show that darn Ben Kingsley.

  107. Re:Last time I checked... by jsepeta · · Score: 0

    If you're a Christian, then you realize that Islam is a false religion, and thus their marriages are neither holy nor legitimate.

    --
    Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
  108. Funding your enemies? by intermodal · · Score: 1

    For me, the enemy is the MPAA.

    I see all these posts on here attacking OSC and it's clear to me that he's a target of convenience for certain political views, but in the end, he's of no significant consequence. Sure, he's loud, but he's preaching to the choir. Those who agree with him will nod, and those who disagree will yell.

    The MPAA, on the other hand, has the ear of lawmakers, law enforcement, treaty-signers, and judges.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  109. Oh, That's Right by TheEyes · · Score: 1

    Frankly, I had forgotten how vocally anti-gay Orson Scott Card is these days. Good thing he reminded me; otherwise I probably wouldn't have remembered to boycott his movie.

    Gotta love the Streisand effect

  110. Re:Last time I checked... by stdarg · · Score: 1

    Being equal under the law, on the other hand...

    That has nothing to do with gay marriage because marriage in general already violates equality before the law. Two unmarried people are treated differently than two married people, gay or straight. Divorcees and widows/widowers are also treated differently from never-married people.

    Equality before the law is a great concept and I support it, but using it in this argument is pure hypocrisy. You're using equality before the law to promote laws that reinforce non-equality before the law.

  111. I won't be inviting Card to dinner. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I just bought two of Card's books. The first in audio form for a trip. The second because I like the first one. I too want to defend the rights of all to marry whomever they please but after reading the comments I am convinced that I can enjoy the books/movies without worrying about the authors sociology-political viewpoints. I just might not invite him to dinner.

    1. Re:I won't be inviting Card to dinner. by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Why not? Are you that afraid to have a discussion with someone you might not agree with?

  112. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    I meant to say the force of law. I am not accusing Mr.Card of using the force to strangle homosexuals or government officials.

  113. Haters gonna hate by codeButcher · · Score: 1

    Because as soon as someone is called a hater, there is no recourse to any rational discussion or compromise on an issue.

    --
    Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
  114. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 2

    No, by "bigot" we mean the very dictionary definition of the word:

    a person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices;

  115. Freedom of expression? On Slashdot? by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    What is so horrible about letting people believe what they want, and feeling free to speak one's mind either in agreement or disagreement?

    Imagine that someone with an opinion contrary to mainstream Slashdot thought were to speak up in a post. People here would of course treat that person with respect, and would never stoop to calling him a bigot and worse.

    Oh, wait.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
    1. Re:Freedom of expression? On Slashdot? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      He's allowed to express any beliefs he likes. He's not allowed to use my money to do it.

      Why is this so hard to understand? 600 posts in this thread, and here you are, mouthing off like you know something, and all you've managed to do is echo the same dumb comment already posted 10 times before.

      But far be it for me to forbid you to sound dumb. Just don't expect the world to give you a free pass for doing it.

    2. Re:Freedom of expression? On Slashdot? by The_PS4_Will_Fail · · Score: 1

      What is so horrible about letting people believe what they want, and feeling free to speak one's mind either in agreement or disagreement?

      Who is stopping him davide? If someone says something I find offensive, are you saying that I have no right to want to avoid lining their pockets? What exactly is the point you're getting at?

      --
      lik-sang.com
  116. Liberal left is bigoted by Tora · · Score: 1

    Because OSC had the gall to speak out, he is being lamblasted, mocked, taunted, boycotted and frankly many of the things people claim are hate crimes are being enacted upon him.

    Everybody says it is because of his actions.

    So effectively, what you are saying is if he just kept his opinions to himself, it would be Okay. Hypocritical?

    What I am hearing is it is okay to speak out, boycott, make a big stink, as long as it aligns with the liberal left. But if it is in disagreement, then you are blasted for being an ignorant, religious uneducated fool.

    I think Tolerance is exactly what is needed here. People need to understand that our society is founded on disagreeing and allowing disagreements. Why are people trying to stifle somebody's opinion that disagrees with them?

    --
    tora
    1. Re:Liberal left is bigoted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true bigot.

    2. Re:Liberal left is bigoted by Tora · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand what that means.

      You make the point exactly. if somebody disagrees with your view, you mock and curse them.

      You are not a model of tolerance, you are a model of intolerance.

      --
      tora
    3. Re:Liberal left is bigoted by rthille · · Score: 1

      Tolerance of intolerance is idiocy.

      Unless it's tolerance of intolerance of intolerance.

      Got it?

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    4. Re:Liberal left is bigoted by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      He actively campaigned to deprive people of equal treatment under the law, and things gay people should be imprisoned just for being gay.

      Those ARE his actions, and those are why I exercise my rights to choose where my money goes - and it will NOT go to supporitng his bigoted actions (and yes, they are bigoted - they exactly fit the english definition of the word)

  117. Re:Easy solution -Yes, we will. by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    This is /., we were all going to pirate it anyway. The discussion is just to give people an opportunity to bitch about something instead of writing code.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  118. Boycott will backfire by Danathar · · Score: 1

    It will backfire because

    1. Controversy drives people to see what people are complaining about

    2. When people unfamiliar with Ender's game see the film and don't see any anti-gay homophopbic craziness they'll conclude it was a whole bunch of stupidity on the part of those picketing out front.

    Picketer outside of theater

    "Don't see Ender's game. It's written by a homophobic religious nut who calls for gays to be imprisoned for trying to marry!"

    Movie goer:

    "Really? I'll have to see this film! I bet it's filled with crazy anti-gay stuff!"

    Movie goer after the film:

    "What a crock of crap! There wasn't ONE instance of anti-gay stuff in that film!"

     

    1. Re:Boycott will backfire by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      You forget we live in the United Apathetic States. We'd get around to officially changing the name of the country, but we don't care.

      There will be picketers in San Francisco. Maybe New York. Nobody will bother anywhere else.

  119. You know what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck him.

  120. Re: Last time I checked... by crashcy · · Score: 1

    I really wish the government would just rename all marriage, as it applies to government recognition, to civil unions and allow anyone to apply for one. I'm sick of this whole debate. If the majority of society have defined marriage as a religious institution, than the government shouldn't be protecting their particular religion's interpretation of that institution.

  121. Seperating Artist and Art by chewie2010 · · Score: 1

    It creeps me out to hear Orson Scott Card say these mean things. Especially in 2013. It's kinda sad. I mostly feel sorry for him because he has a lot of anger being channeled into his hate and it is affecting our community. That being said: I still really want to see the movie with Harrison Ford. It looks cool. Pretty much every artist I am a fan of has said something stupid or totally ignorant. News flash: most of Hollywood biggest stars never bothered to earn a GED. I am OK with Orson Scott Card pleading ignorance. Hopefully he will be exposed to a more enlightened view after all this.

  122. Tired of this hyperbolic rhetoric by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

    >His concern, ostensibly, is that someone might be petty enough not to see his movie simply because he spent years lobbying for laws that treated certain people as less than human.

    Really? Less than human? Because you get taxed differently and don't have visitation rights at a hospital? It's an insult to victims of real humanitarian crises like genocide and slavery to talk about this relative first world problem in such terms.

  123. Nice bit of bullshit by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others â" is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies

    Expressing opinions is a basic human right; therefore there is no such thing as hate speech, only speech. If you are seeking to silence someone because you don't like their ideas, its you who are curtailing rights!

    Until Card is actually using using force to deny someone something, he isn't curtailing anything. Labeling an idea hate speech is basically the same thing as an ad hominem argument. If you think his ideas are wrong, tell us why! Attaching a politically charged label to them without any facts, or defined philosophical argument just makes your position look so weak it cannot withstand a real debate.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    1. Re:Nice bit of bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I do believe he is attempting to use force through his non profits to actually criminalize being gay and punishing them for it. Please reposition your goal posts and try again. Apologist troll is fail troll.

  124. I'll go see it anyways. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone who is going to punish all the actors, writers, and crew who made a film because they don't like the original author's actions has the mind of a child.

  125. The point of art by sjbe · · Score: 1

    That's the point of art. If it doesn't have a message, what's the point?

    Beauty. Entertainment. Financial gain. Preserving a moment. Art does not have to have a message though it certainly can have one - good art frequently does. Sometimes the artist isn't trying to communicate any message but the viewer of the art may create their own "message" based on their own life experience. Sometimes a picture is just a picture to the person creating it. Frankly I think "artists" who think the only purpose to art is to communicate some sort of political pandering are rather tiresome and rarely very clever. This especially includes those who use their artistic fame to communicate some message outside of their art. They have every right to do it but it's usually pretty pathetic.

  126. Hubbard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we can judge Battlefield Earth on its [lack of] merits without considering the author, we can do the same with Ender's Game.

  127. Set the record straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    F'ing really??!?!!? The intolerance here is clearly one-sides from soulskill/interval1066! Anti-Gay? where? Card in the link for Anti-gay that you posted says nothing anti-gay...and even if it did...what do you mean by anti-gay? In your opinion, if someone doesn't accept that it's a lifestyle that should be encouraged or promoted then they're anti-gay? If so, then I see nothing wrong with the stance. Card clearly isn't an advocate of swallowing the liberal 'pro-listen to what we want cause it's politically correct' agenda. Sorry to see that the many of us who fought for true tolerance and accepting of gays in the 70's not are being told we also have to promote gay-marriage....which is sheer BS! And puh-leeze...tolerance means allowing others to live in peace...not giving them special rights. Many people accept that gays are good people and shouldn't be persecuted or subjected to meanness, spite, or degradation (which is truely anti-gay)...but the current demands are that they are a special class that should be allowed to change the definitions of institutions that have had their definitions written in stone since the beginning of mankind. If you want civil unions that give the same privileges as marriage...fine but no matter what you do or say from a 'legal' standpoint...try as you might marriage, the institution, has always been between a man and woman. Don't step onto the scene and tell me that well...you demand that the definition change. You are the one that is demanding change...you are the one that is intolerant and want's everyone else to see you in a different light...you want to force the issue down people's throats and if anyone makes a peep stating something otherwise...you want to try your damndest to ostracize them...make them the "different". Card has simply spoken his mind against gay marriage you but you sir are lying to distort the truth.

    1. Re:Set the record straight by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      "try as you might marriage, the institution, has always been between a man and woman"

      Wrong. Only in the last few hundred years or so. It wasnt even a religious institution until recently

      Ignorant ACs, who would have expected that?

  128. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit. The church actually tried to stop marriages, but only succeeded with its own employees. The singular reason is inheritance. The church has always been an organisation designed to suck up wealth for itself. The plebs that turn up each week are the prospects. Give them a story they believe, and tell them they're going to be tortured forever, and they'll have over wealth in the hope it'll pave their way to the pearly gates.

  129. crushed red velvet bell bottoms by epine · · Score: 1

    Salman Rushdie on Bill Maher discussing "9/11 liberals"

    Maher: I've repeatedly been booed [by liberals] for saying that all religions are not alike.
    Rusdie: It's not us who changed, it's Islam that changed.
    Maher: This is not all Muslims ... clash of civilizations.
    Rusdie: Politically manufactured rage, manufactured for political purposes.

    Basically they boil it down to a problem not with Islam but with clerical Islam.

    Generic old white guy in suit jacket: That's the correct analysis, but the question is how do we respond to it?

    Issuing a Mormon fatwa against the gay lifestyle is certainly one response to a behaviour you don't like, but not one compatible with what we think of as western civilization, of which the close-cropped lawns of Utah reluctantly remain a part.

    In my view the only legitimate way to "sanctify marriage" (if that is your agenda) is to live a good marriage in your own life, and lead by positive example. In a liberal democracy, the self-appointed guardians of God's will must content themselves with extracting the mote in their own eye.

    Majority rule shouldn't become such an oppressive stick that politics by moral recruitment becomes an indispensable battle ground. That's the whole point of liberal democracy: we don't have to engage in divisive politics to shape the majority, because the majority doesn't wield those powers in the first place. Historically, the anti-gay sentiment resembles the anti-Jewish sentiment. If you persecute a population, it will usually succeed in eliciting enough negative behaviour to justify further persecution. The problem is that as soon as society relaxed this persecution, it becomes evident that the persecuted population is just like the rest of us, for better or worse.

    While the anti-majority precept of liberal democracy doesn't stop the train completely, one set of brakes is better than none.

  130. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are single people equal under the law? No. Marriage laws create a two-tiered system.

    Are people who claim to be for equality out there marching for the rights of those engaged in polyamory? No.

    You sure have a funny definition of "equality".

  131. Hypocrites. by Kid+Zero · · Score: 1

    Now I might have to go see it just to piss off the self-righteous and intolerant geeks around slashdot. It's sad most of this conversation will be people intolerant of others intolerance.

  132. Seventh Son and Enders Game both contain nudity by chewie2010 · · Score: 1

    I remember reading Enders Game and thinking it was weird that the little kids slept naked. Then I read Seventh Son and Card managed to have a scene where Alvin Maker wasn't wearing any clothes in bed. I remember red flags going up with both books. Now Orson Scott Card is against same-sex marriage? Anybody else think this is strange? I'm not a psychologist but I play one on the internet.

  133. Tough question by dskoll · · Score: 1

    On the one hand, I don't think people's art should be boycotted because of the artist's personal views. On the other hand, I would hate to see money I've paid to see the art going (in part) to support a cause I oppose.

    I won't see the movie because I'm not an Orson Scott Card fan. However, if I were, I would also donate the price of the admission to a marriage equality organization. In this way, I would in some small measure be counteracting any damage that the price of my movie ticket might do.

    I think positive support for organizations that promote gay marriage is more productive than boycotting Card's work.

  134. Submitter too petty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice to see a submission that isn't biased and presents a story in a even-handed clear-minded light. Oh wait, that's not what I read here. This is the most patheticly biased piece of shit story ever to be published on Slashdot. I will now be going to see the movie no matter what just to spite the submitter.

  135. Wow... by PortHaven · · Score: 2

    Somewhere along the way, some bigot, racist, or what not....helped produced the food you eat. Perhaps, in the same light, you should cease eating and starve.

    Also, realize that this is one person of thousands who made this film.

    1. Re:Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But none of those foods come with a letter from the bigot saying "I hate everything you stand for for, but please keep shopping with my company while i work to make what you do criminal".

    2. Re:Wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps indeed. As I wrote earlier, your purchases are up to you. If you're cool enough with the the makers of product X to purchase their product, that's fine. If not, that's fine too.

      Regardless, your 'you didn't make that' parting comment was wonderfully amusing - thank you.

  136. I'm not inviting the guy to dinner by Crypto+Cavedweller · · Score: 0

    But I enjoy the art of many people I wouldn't invite to dinner. Norman Mailer stabbed his wife. Mel Gibson is kind of a psycho if he gets a buzz on. For all I know, Shakespeare was a jerk. I don't require the artist to be a good person to enjoy their art, and I'll see the movie.

  137. Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by sideslash · · Score: 1

    ... in comparison to the fundamental right to life for late term fetuses and victims of partial birth (or even post-birth) abortion. A lot of the people casting stones at Card for not obsequiously leaping to redefine the word "marriage" (despite its pretty much universal hetero meaning for all of recorded history) give a collective yawn as babies are butchered. They even have the gall to call anti-abortion activism a "war on women" despite overseas abortions literally slaughtering young women by the millions so families can instead have a male child. Civil rights leaders line up to defend abortion in America despite it being (both by original intent and unarguable effect) a massive ethnic cleansing operation to cull babies of color.

    Throw that black baby on the trash heap, but O! the Horror! if you don't let John and Steve play a little game and pretend (by absurdly borrowing hetero nomenclature) that they are a fundamental unit of the biological continuation of the human species.

    Civil rights issue, my behind. The sickening irony of the modern liberal mindset makes me mad.

    1. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Abortion is wrong, but as long as there are fetuses so malformed they're going to kill the mother, and as long as there are rapists impregnating women against their will, abortion must be legal. It should be rare, but in order for the necessary abortions to happen safely (in all senses of the word, medical, legal, and societal), abortion must remain legal.

      There would be fewer abortions if contraception was available to poor women (and were, historically). Not just poor women "of color" as you so quaintly put it, but white as well. Abortion rates were trending downward for 30 years, until the asshole evangelicals started campaigning against and cutting funding for contraception. Restore contraception funding and availability and the abortion rate will plummet. Few women want an abortion. Very very few. Those who get them do so to avoid suffering for themselves and the potential child, for lack of economic ability to support a child. Want to reduce abortion rates to near zero? Make contraception available and radically expand welfare.

      But no, can't have that. Sane social policy is anathema to people who fanatically believe in six impossible things before breakfast. Evangelicals and their policies are the direct cause of the rise in abortion rates since 1990. Anti-abortion activism IS a war on women. So is anti-contraception activism. So is anti-welfare activism.

      China's habit of aborting female fetuses could force an interesting change in Chinese culture. Maybe the radical imbalance in the sexes they've managed to impose on themselves will actually teach them to value women. Chinese culture will be the better for it.

      So why do you hate women?

    2. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by sideslash · · Score: 1

      So why do you hate women?

      I dunno, I guess I was just born with an innate hatred of the female gender. I wake up each morning wondering how I can beat them down just a little bit more, and guarantee that the glass ceiling suspended over their heads will just tantalize and torture their suppressed spirits.... Or maybe you're just an idiot who is trolling? Yeah, I guess the latter.

      P.S. I am entirely in favor of using contraception, and anybody who thinks it's hard to get in our country is misinformed. It's cheap and widely available, which is good.

    3. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by rthille · · Score: 1

      So, you support free access to birth control, including RU-486?

      Because that's the best way to avoid abortions.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    4. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Contraception is in general a good and helpful thing. Abortion of late term fetuses equates to infanticide, and should be legislated as such.

    5. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by rthille · · Score: 1

      I always figured that abortion should be legal until viability. And at the point of viability, the woman can choose to have it out (delivery) and those who cry about abortion with 7 billion people on the earth can pay to keep the "infant" alive.

      Put your money where your mouth is.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    6. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by sideslash · · Score: 1

      So why not drive through the inner city slums and leak clouds of some highly toxic gas with a short half life in order to reduce that portion of the population that seems to be a drain on society? All that's required is that people don't want to keep paying for them, right? No moral qualms need be considered in deciding whether it's OK to murder people, just whether somebody volunteers to pony up and write a check to cover their living expenses?

      Welcome to the world. It's a complicated place that defies simplifications. Sometimes you have to do (or legislate) the right thing even though it is messy and complicated.

    7. Re:Gay marriage isn't a major civil rights issue by rthille · · Score: 1

      So at the point where $10K/day will rent you an artificial womb and a fetus is 'viable' at 2 weeks, is an abortion at 21 days infanticide? Do you force the woman to carry baby to term, since even though it's only been 21 days it's now viable and can't be aborted? Or do you allow the woman to have it out, but force her to pay for the life thru to the age of majority or until she can find someone else to take it on?

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  138. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to nitpick, but nobody believes alcohol stops being harmful at 18 - we just believe you`re mature enough to know better than to irreversably harm yourself with it.

  139. Laugh by koan · · Score: 1

    No boycott is going to slow this juggernaut down.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  140. Card is overrated... by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    Twain, Hemingway, Poe....Bradbury and Card.

    It is psychotic to put Card in that company. Anyone who knows anything about literature knows this.

    Even if 1,000,000 people agree with you, you'd still be wrong. You are definitely entitled to your ignorant opinion, just as I can say that, IMHO, Windows Vista, Linux Gentoo, and Unix are the most important OS's in history and people will only remember them in the future...

    These 'future people' you speak of will certainly be able to access information easily about virtually every author ever, including the author of yours and my posts on this site.

    My point is, your misunderstanding of what 'people' find to be influential and/or classic literature is rooted in a fundamental misunderstanding of both 'people' and 'literature'...

    'great literature' is like 'art'...it's virtually impossible to define but has a fuzzy meaning that virtually everyone agrees on...

    'literature' as you are trying to use it indicated works that subject matter experts and especially **a consensus of other writers** consider definitively influential in some capacity to the art of writing letters for entertainment/edification

    No one, and I mean not one serious critic or writer of literature would talk of Card's work in this context.

    Yes, YOU have a right to an opinion on literature, even though you have no idea what it is, you just know what **you like** and what you've **heard others like**

    So you can still have your opinion...and I can point out how stupid it is

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:Card is overrated... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      These 'future people' you speak of will certainly be able to access information easily about virtually every author ever, including the author of yours and my posts on this site.

      I wouldn't count on that.

      'great literature' is like 'art'...it's virtually impossible to define but has a fuzzy meaning that virtually everyone agrees on...

      Actually, both are alike for the opposite reason: There's an elite cadre of people who focus on the subject who all agree that certain works are great, and the vast majority of the public looks at their choices in bewilderment and mild contempt.

      More so for Art than Literature, since Literature has mostly veered away from the semi-incoherent examples of Joyce and Pynchon and still appreciates accessibility on some level, whereas Art has wholeheartedly embraced the notion that True Art is Incomprehensible to the masses.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  141. Yeah, it's odd about libertards, innit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you have a legitimate gripe about some company or commercial business that even they admit is valid, it's all "Well, vote with your wallet and don't buy it!". This is encouraging others not to buy the product.

    However, when people actually say they will vote with their wallet and not buy it, and encourage others not to, then the same retards will whine about "It's censorship! You're not allowed to tell people not to buy it!!!".

  142. What about when an author is a political leader? by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 2

    That is true, but I thought that part of the reason this is being discussed is because the message people are trying to boycott isn't in 'Ender's Game'. So you aren't disagreeing with a work's message, you are disagreeing with the politics of the IP owner of the work.

    Well, actually, I'm not all that fond of the messages in Ender's Game either.

    But even if I thought Ender's Game was an important movie with positive moral lessons in it, I would, in fact, be boycotting it because I "disagree[] with the politics of the IP owner of the work".

    Card isn't just a random bigot. He actually joined the board of directors of the main lobbying organization against same-sex marriage, and publicly advocated the overthrow of the government if same-sex marriage were made legal. (Of course, now it's "moot".)

    Some works can be separated from their authors, or excused as having flaws endemic to the time they were created. But there's a continuum between that and profiting a leader of a movement you disagree with deeply. I don't know where the line is - there probably isn't a bright sharp line anyway - but Card is way past that line.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  143. PKD by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    you could remove Card and insert Phillip K. Dick...that would be about right.

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  144. really? Re:Really?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    unless you follow the deviation of restricting yourself to just one partner, you go to prison in most countries.

    I don't think so. Even if you are married and have multiple partners, violating your marriage vows, there is no criminal penalty and you do not go to prison.

  145. Agree to disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I support your right to speak freely, as long as I agree with you.

  146. The LGBT community is out for revenge by elabs · · Score: 1

    It seems pretty hypocritical of the LGBT community to demand tolerance and acceptance of their point of view and then seek revenge on anyone who differed in opinion. Why can't they accept that people disagree and leave it at that?

    1. Re:The LGBT community is out for revenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems pretty hypocritical of the LGBT community to demand tolerance and acceptance of their point of view and then seek revenge on anyone who differed in opinion. Why can't they accept that people disagree and leave it at that?

      There is a huge difference.
      Card tried to shot down laws that would have benefited the LGBT community making the US stay in the middle ages.
      The LGBT are not outlawing Card's movie or the right of Card to having a straight marriage, just telling sympathizer not to go and watch said movie because the writer of the book is an idiot.

    2. Re:The LGBT community is out for revenge by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      Not revenge, just pointing out he isnt entitled to your money.
      Or are you saying he IS entitled to your money, just because?

  147. I loved the book by MpVpRb · · Score: 1

    ..and I think the author is a prick

    I can easily separate the art from the artist

  148. Cowards and bullies? Please. by s0nicfreak · · Score: 1

    He doesn't like homosexuals because they are homosexualls.
    We don't like him because he's bigoted against homosexualls.

    It is pretty much the same*, and I don't see how it is a "bullying tactic" to say so. The cowards are the ones that are afraid of the truth.

    *The difference is one is based on biology and one is a learned behavior. But the bigotry was learned by him and now is so ingrained that he can not choose to stop being bigoted any more than a homosexual can choose to stop being homosexual. He can pretend to not be bigoted, he can hide it, but asking him to do that is just as bad as asking a homosexual to hide their homosexuality, and it won' t make it go away..

    Not that I'm saying you should pay to see his movie because of this; as others have said, there's a difference between tolerance and financially supporting. I'm just saying that yes, if you are intolerant of him then you are doing the same thing he is doing - being intolerant of others - and it does not make me a coward nor a bully to say the truth.

    1. Re:Cowards and bullies? Please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, he has friends that are homosexuals. He LIKES those friends. He just sees marriage as between a man and a woman. Accusing someone of bigotry or hatred when it doesn't exist isn't bullying, but it is incorrect and wrong. He has a different political viewpoint. Just like you do. This does not constitute bigotry.

    2. Re:Cowards and bullies? Please. by s0nicfreak · · Score: 1

      bigot: someone who, as a result of their prejudices, treats other people with hatred, contempt, or intolerance

  149. Re:Last time I checked... by Raul654 · · Score: 1

    Marriage is not a "human right".

    Wrong. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 16, section 1:
    "Men and women of full age, without any limitation due to race, nationality or religion, have the right to marry and to found a family."

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  150. How DARE Orson Scott Card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...agree with a majority of California voters?

  151. Missing several distinctions by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

    Calling him names and trashing him isn't honest...he isn't 'anti-gay'...he accepts them just fine.

    Actually, he's just not as bad as some bigots. He argued in favor of keeping homosexuality illegal, until that was overturned. (Became "moot"?) Then he backtracked, and now says, essentially, that he's not in favor of re-criminalizing it. But 'not wanting to make something illegal' is rather short of 'accepting' something.

    As to "homosexuals want to change the definition of the institution" - there are a lot of definitions of the 'institution'. For example, Catholics don't accept that marriage can be divided. Divorce is not possible in the Catholic church. But they don't argue that divorce be made illegal - they don't argue that non-Catholics can't get divorced.

    And there's the key distinction - between religious concepts of marriage and the actual legal arrangements. There's already a significant different between legal marriage in the U.S. and the Catholic definition of marriage. Couples that are legally divorced are still considered married in the eyes of the Church.

    What 'homosexuals' - and, demonstrably, a fair number of straights and others - want to change is the legal framework of marriage. Mormons like Card are free to have lots of additional restrictions about marriage - must be between a man and a woman, they have to wear special undergaments during the ceremony, whatever, I don't know or care - for the members of their church. But they don't get to force everyone else to marry like their religion says.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  152. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A teenager is not biologically adult, even if they can rear children. Biologically, they have not finished developing.

  153. Voting vs Drinking Age by Dareth · · Score: 1

    Ever seem odd that you are not considered responsible enough to drink at 18, but are allowed to vote.

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
  154. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    Is supporting the adaptation of sci-fi books to movies worth funding the oppression of the whole LGBT community? I don't think so. Comic book movies flopped hard in decades past but they're half of what comes out of Hollywood these days. Let this one flop.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  155. Re:Last time I checked... by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

    "Marriage" predates Christianity. You're describing Holy Matrimony, Batman.

    That really depends on how you date Christianity. IfThe statement "Marriage" predates Judaism is harder to prove. In fact I presume Card would argue that it goes back to "Adam" and "Eve". Is Card a creationist?

  156. lets see now..... by kallen3 · · Score: 1

    He is not politically correct......check
    He is not socially correct........check
    He has opinions that many find suspect.....check
    His opinion is protected as free speech......check
    He is a writer that many find enjoyable to read.....check
    Just because his opinions does not matches yours you will not read or view movies based upon his works? Now has anyone find this to be disturbing? Because he has opinions which differs from the current world view he needs to be shunned and ignored?
    So who really has the closed mind and narrow point of view? Does it not work both way?

    Oh wait no it doesn't, it only works for those with the biggest bat, so who is really the bully here?

    1. Re:lets see now..... by kallen3 · · Score: 1

      >>He is not politically correct......check
      This should had been "politically incorrect"

  157. Been there, done that by aepervius · · Score: 1

    "Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?"

    Why don't you ask the NASA about their early rocket program about poisonned fruit ? Like about "Von Braun". Or ask if we burned down all the research result mendele did. In both case the answer is : we swallowed the poisonned fruit ignoring what the persons did.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  158. Re:Last time I checked... by Holi · · Score: 1

    The hell it is. There is nothing Christian about marriage. Now stop trying to take all the worlds rituals. Marriage predates Christianity. (How the fuck do you think Jesus's parent got married you fucking moron)

    Sorry but your an ignorant troll and need to be treated as such.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  159. Re:Last time I checked... by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    You don't stop developing until shortly after your death.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  160. I'll see it, in spite of OSC's politics by RyuMaou · · Score: 1

    I wish Orson Scott Card was right, that the equality issue was now "moot". It's far from that, but momentum is building in what I think is the correct direction. But, in spite of his homophobic and other offensive views. Why? Because, I agree with Stephen Brust about blacklisting him setting a dangerous precedent. Also, in spite of his other BS, I like the story. I find it engaging and interesting and the movie looks like it will be well done and worth seeing.

    --
    Oh, the trials and tribulations of a network geek! Read about them at: http://www.ryumaou.com/hoffman/netgeek/
    1. Re:I'll see it, in spite of OSC's politics by rthille · · Score: 1

      So will I. But I'll pay for the showing of a different movie, so he won't see a dime of my ticket price.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  161. Re:What did Card do besides have an opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody is suggesting he be imprisoned or punished by the government.

  162. How about him simply _APOLOGIZING_? by Dr.+Crash · · Score: 1

    I hear a lot of words coming out of Card's mouth (or his keyboard;
    little the difference).... and strange among this is that none of them
    contain a simple _apology_.

    An apology says:
      1) I was wrong
      2) I am sorry for what I did
      3) I will try not to do it again.

    And ALL THREE of these parts are missing. He wants forgiveness,
    but he's not willing to admit that maybe he was wrong, sorry for what
    he did, or that he won't do it again!

    Therefore, I will boycott Ender's Game, and encourage others to
    do so as well. When it becomes available in a format that does
    not put money into Card's (or his compatriots) pockets, such
    as Netflix, then perhaps I'll see it.

    Or perhaps not. I don't know yet, and I don't care.

  163. Is boycotting "intolerant?" by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    If I boycott something, am I not just expressing *my* point of view?

  164. Shows how good books can become bad movies by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Dune was a good book, but made a crappy movie.

    The same could be true of "Ender's Game"

    1. Re:Shows how good books can become bad movies by clarkn0va · · Score: 1

      Dune was a great movie. Maybe I wouldn't feel that way had I read the book first, but the movie is a timeless masterpiece in its own right.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
  165. Grammar aside this is a very insightful post. by Chrisq · · Score: 1

    I sympathise with this view entirely. If people are leaving you alone and harming nobody while behaving differently, then just leave them alone.

    Like Muslims, you racist bastard?

    Leaving you alone and harming nobody doesn't sound like a muslims to me

    Grammar aside this is a very insightful post. In fact Islam teaches Orson Scott's views taken to the extreme:

    Allah Most High says: "Do you approach the males of humanity, leaving the wives that Allah has created for you? But you are a people who transgress" Koran (26:165-66)

    "The Prophet (saws) said: (1) "Kill the one who sodomizes and the one who lets if be done to him." (Tirmidhi, a sahih (authentic) hadith)

    "May Allah curse him who does that Lot's people did." (Ibn Hibban, sahih (authentic))

    "Lesbianism by women is adultery between them." (Tabarani, sahih)"

    This in practice means that homosexuals are often killed in Muslim countries

  166. Verbage Content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is by far one of the most seething, partisan, vindictive excerpts I have seen on slashdot. I can disagree with a man's politics but still appreciate the work that he creates. While I disagree with many of Card's politics, I applaud him for fiercely advocating for them. Without discourse from both sides the country would fail more so politically than it already is. I don't give two shits whether card is for or against gay marriage. All I care about is if the movie is better than the three hollywood stinkers that have come out this summer.

    May I also point out that many times in history society has punished people for believing something that would later become a widespread belief (Sun centered solar system). While this analogy runs poorly with civil rights of marriage, it is still an important from the point of tolerance.

  167. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by similar_name · · Score: 1

    I vote with my dollars. I don't shop at stores that don't treat their employees well. I don't do business with places that differ from my politics. We live in a capitalist society and if you're not voting with your dollars, you're not voting.

  168. Re:Bigotry? What about religious tolerance? by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

    A missionary, by definition, is someone trying to sell you their religion. Not only that, but he wants you to give up your religion. This is based on his unshakeable belief that his religion is the correct one, and that all other religions are therefore wrong. Most missionary efforts also include some sort of charitable works, such as building schools or digging wells or whatever, but the proselytizing is always part of it.

    No missionary ever has considered that maybe, just maybe, his religion is not the "true" one, and that by converting people of other religions to his, he is maybe, just maybe, taking them away from the "true" faith, and thereby doing harm to their immortal souls.

    --
    None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  169. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True, but there is very significant development in your teenage years, especially in the brain. Look, why don't you find a doctor and go argue with them, and tell me what the outcome is? It's a medical fact that teenagers are not biologically adult, and I'm astonished that there are people who disagree with that.

  170. His intolerance of gays is understandable... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to wikipedia he is a "Latter-day Saint (Mormon)" & "served as a missionary" for his church. For those of you who don't know what that really means, it means he & a fellow LDS male spent 2 years living, eating, & proselytizing together, in his case in Brazil. IIRC, associating with the opposite sex in a romantic way is discouraged while they are on their missions.

    Now consider the scenario in the movie "Brokeback Mountain".

    You put 2 & 2 together...

  171. Tolerate me or I will defame you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People always seem to call for others to be tolerant. Then they feel free to attack the others view point as they are the only ones who could possibly be right. Examples:
    Evolution: Christians should be Tolerant of atheists, but atheists call Christians idiots for believing in a God. All over this country the national parks service has portrayed the atheist view of how geological formations are formed without a Christian side point. Wherever there is a cross at a grave there is an atheist law suit. However atheists still don’t have all the facts. They take as much blind faith that the laws of enthalpy and entropy can be bent to allow energy/mass to exist forever as someone believing there is a God. They go on to support evolution and I have yet to see an answer of were the flat footed platypus comes from.
    Athiests are just about the first to support Gay Rights. I find that ironic as “Darwin’s Survival of the Fittest”, aka Evolution, would imply that advanced humans should not be Gay as there is no survival mechanism.
    The gay movement somehow thinks that calling homosexual activities wrong is calling them sub human. On the other hand, calling someone a racist or bigot is ok. They ask for tolerance, but do not tolerate when people think differently. I do things that are wrong frequently. That doesn’t make them any less wrong. I have had multiple gay roommates and got along well with them. As for “Gay Marriage”. The word Marriage comes from the Christian religion and the government does not have any right to force a religious acceptance of anything. The solution is to eliminate government recognition of Marriage, and allow for civil unions between any 2 people of sufficient age for knowledgeable consent.

  172. Categorical imperative on supporting assholes by marquisdepolis · · Score: 1

    You cannot legitimately be aware of the sellers intentions with the proceeds of the sale prior to a purchase. Whether your baker is selling crack cocaine on the side, or Orson is a bigoted gay-bashing asshole who supports anti-gay parades, it should be divorced from content. Otherwise, normatively, we are placing an insurmountable burden on ourselves of ascertaining people's intentions and morality prior to any commercial transaction. Question is, once you know their intentions, should you re-evaluate the purchase. And the answer is, obviously yes! If you're talking about economic sanctions, and that's what a boycott is, it needs to be directed against the core of this bigotry. If you legitimately believe that your contribution to Card via the movie is primarily going to lead to increased anti-gay activity, and that is reprehensible enough to you, then screw it. However if you think that out of your ticket cost, the tiny portion that goes to Card, and the tinier portion that goes towards his activism, is a worthwhile price to pay for the pleasure of watching the movie adaptation of a truly awesome book, the answer is less clear cut. Therefore, my position: YMMV. I personally will watch the movie - because the short sum that goes from my ticket to Card is easily offset. Doesn't work from a categorical imperative perspective, but as I often say, fuck Kant!

  173. Re:Last time I checked... by N1AK · · Score: 1

    Not sure if troll, ignorant douché or both.

  174. Card Asking for tolerance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Card asking for tolerance simply means he wants money.

    How about Card giving a sincere apology and tolerance to others first.

  175. A society that's "more fair"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems quite fitting to me that gay right's activists have gotten used to the world bending over backwards to agree with them.

  176. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by Diss+Champ · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm going to vote with my dollars that I think voting against this movie is not a net good. I am capable of enjoying products made by people that I disagree with, and don't want to discourage them from producing more. I felt the same way about Armikrog and contributed significantly more to the kickstarter than I would have if people hadn't tried to make creating a good game a political issue.

    With Chick-Fil-A, enough people felt the same way that their profits increased rather than decreased from the boycott, and they managed that without my involvement one way or the other (my use of Chick-Fil-A did not increase or decrease).

  177. Typical misunderstanding of free speech by LoLobey · · Score: 1

    I see this all the time. People think freedom of speech means freedom from the consequences of speech. You're only (relatively) free from consequences from the government for your speech (at least in U.S.).

    --
    We have nothing to fear but fear itself! And Spiders!
    1. Re:Typical misunderstanding of free speech by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      Wrong. If there are "consequences" to the exercise of free speech then we, as a society, don't really have freedom of speech.

      The fact that we have attempted to prohibit government from imposing these consequences is laudable. It's unfortunate that we don't embrace the same idea in a cultural sense.

  178. Re:Last time I checked... by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    Quoting Wikipedia: "Biologically, an adult is a human being or other organism that is of reproductive age (sexual maturity).".

    You're confusing adulthood (a biological term) with age of majority (a legal concept).

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  179. Re:Both Wagner and Beethoven were said to be d*cks by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    It shouldn't influence anyone's perception of his work, but it should influence whether they're willing to support him financially, especially considering that we're talking about far more than personal views - he contributes to anti-gay-marriage lobbying organizations.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  180. Re:One day we'll be allowed to marry goats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    baaaaaa means no.

  181. I agree with him, sort of by neminem · · Score: 1

    I certainly don't agree with any of his opinions on politics, philosophy or morality. I do, however, agree that one can love an author's work even while hating what else the author stands for. If Hitler himself had written Ender's Game, it would not have made the book any less good. I'm not going to boycott the movie solely because it was based on a book written by an increasingly disgustingly crazy person. (Though I no longer buy his *new* books without checking the reviews, as he has, in fact, gotten increasingly crazy.)

  182. Oh, please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is "the Cider House Rules" okay, when it openly and explicitly advocates for abortion-on-demand with arguments that are at best tendentious and one-sided, okay, but Ender's Game is not because you don't like the politics of the person who wrote the book it's based on?

    I, for one, will be seeing Ender's Game. Not because I necessarily agree with Card's politics, but because the worst sort of censorship is that which we impose on ourselves. I am sick unto death of American Conservatives who wont attend to the arguments of liberals, and American liberals who wont attend to the arguments of conservatives.

    And, by the way, whether you like it or not, twenty years ago the position you now find so offensive was the standard position for almost all Americans. Card has, in his fiction, dealt with issues of homosexuality in fairly sensitive ways (Songbird leaps to mind, but there was also a sympathetically portrayed gay character in the Memory of Earth series -- and the prejudice against this character was dealt with and condemned.) You may not like the way he portrays it, but I would argue that his interpretation is probably closer to true-to-life than the idyllic portrait painted by the gay rights movement.

    1. Re:Oh, please. by nylrym · · Score: 1

      And, by the way, whether you like it or not, twenty years ago the position you now find so offensive was the standard position for almost all Americans.

      No. It was not. Twenty years ago, the standard position for almost all Americans might have been that gay marriage should not be allowed. If that was all this was, I might even see the movie. The issue I have is with this.

      I will act to destroy that government and bring it down, so it can be replaced with a government that will respect and support marriage, and help me raise my children in a society where they will expect to marry in their turn.

      That's Orson Scott Card saying that if gay marriage is ever legalized he will act to the best of his ability to destroy the US government.
      You misunderstand by thinking that I think all bigotry is equal.
      I don't care how sensitive his fiction is, if he essentially threatens armed revolt over the issue I have issues with supporting him in any way. As far as I know, he's never retracted those sentiments.
      This also makes his "it's moot" statement ring all the more false, because it's at this point he would (if his prior article is at all honest) begin using his resources for really dangerous and objectionable things.

    2. Re:Oh, please. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      And, by the way, whether you like it or not, twenty years ago the position you now find so offensive was the standard position for almost all Americans.

      Or, restated for an era not long gone by:

      And, by the way, whether you like it or not, sixty years ago hating Jews was the standard position for almost all Germans.

      Or farther back:

      And, by the way, whether you like it or not, 150 years ago approving of owning slaves was the standard position for almost all Americans.

      Same shit, different day. Just because the majority did it, doesn't make it right.

      And what's with this obsession with abortion lately... It's popped up even in Snowden threads. It's bizarre.

    3. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      And what's with this obsession with abortion lately... It's popped up even in Snowden threads. It's bizarre.

      The right to life debate stays on the front burner because it involves innocent people being killed everyday (late term babies). Happy to clear that up for you.

    4. Re:Oh, please. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      And war doesn't? Yet it falls off the front burner all the time. We've always been at war with Eastasia.

      When you come up with a way to save all these babies you care so desperately about that doesn't sound like slavery for women, then we'll talk. No, that's not hyperbole. Being forced to bear a child against their will is precisely what happened to slaves.

    5. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      I commend you for recognizing the moral depravity of warfare in general, but I can't agree that a few months of inconvenience justifies killing an innocent human being.

    6. Re:Oh, please. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Two words: maternal mortality. Look it up sometime. Pregnancy is not merely inconvenience.

    7. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of abortions are not about maternal mortality. In fact, it's very, very rare that aborting a baby is medically indicated to save the life of the mother. So you're OK with banning abortion except to save the life of the mother? That sounds good to me, let's do it. We'll go ahead and schedule a two person march on Washington tomorrow.

    8. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      When you come up with a way to save all these babies you care so desperately about that doesn't sound like slavery for women, then we'll talk. No, that's not hyperbole. Being forced to bear a child against their will is precisely what happened to slaves.

      The concept of disallowing abortion as slavery for women is kind of interesting, and I've been thinking about it some more. So who would be the slave owner in this case? Presumably the baby? Gotta say they are the cutest little slave drivers I've ever seen, and they really need to work on their intimidation skills.

      If you say that the government would be the slave owner by banning late term abortion, then I guess all of us are slaves of the government, because the government bans murder as a general rule. For example, I'm forced to not kill my kids by the government. Waaaaah, I'm a slave!!! (Actually, just kidding of course; I love my kids.)

    9. Re:Oh, please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what's with this obsession with abortion lately... It's popped up even in Snowden threads. It's bizarre.

      The right to life debate stays on the front burner because it involves innocent people being killed everyday (late term babies). Happy to clear that up for you.

      And what does that have to do with spying on everyone in the country?

      It'd make far more sense in a thread about Bradley Manning, since at least he exposed video of innocent people being shot. Not sure *what* Snowden has to do with innocent people being killed every day.

    10. Re:Oh, please. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Nope, I'm not OK with banning any abortions, specifically because abortions to save the life of the mother must be legal. If there are legitimate exceptions to a ban, there must be no ban, otherwise those exceptions will fail to be granted, because fanatics will see to it that getting an abortion at all is so difficult that it no longer happens.

    11. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Nope, I'm not OK with banning any abortions, specifically because abortions to save the life of the mother must be legal.

      - Nope, I'm not OK with banning any shootings, specifically because shootings in self defense must be legal.
      - Nope, I'm not OK with banning any industrial pollution, specifically because personally exhaling carbon dioxide must be legal.
      - Nope, I'm not OK with banning any sexual assault, specifically because consensual S&M must be legal.

      Millions of murdered infants thank you for your thoughtful and reasonable approach to this issue.

    12. Re:Oh, please. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Nope, I'm not OK with banning guns, specifically because shootings in self defense must be legal.

      Isn't that the argument?

      So what's the difference? Someone dies there too.

      Oh right. The difference is your precious manhood is assaulted if a woman decides to kill your potential offspring. That must be prevented at all costs. Slaver.

    13. Re:Oh, please. by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Nope, I'm not OK with banning guns, specifically because shootings in self defense must be legal. Isn't that the argument? So what's the difference? Someone dies there too.

      No, that is what is known as a reading comprehension fail. Maybe look again?

      Oh right. The difference is your precious manhood is assaulted if a woman decides to kill your potential offspring. That must be prevented at all costs. Slaver.

      Ha ha ha ha, I love hearing liberals whine. Pretty sure it's the natural vocalization of their species. "Waaaa, I can't kill my baby, so I'm being repressed!" (Of course I'm just being mean, I have liberal friends who engage in rational, adult debate, pretty much exactly like we are not doing.)

  183. Re:Tolerence has to go both ways, or it doesn't ex by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    If you tolerate intolerance, you allow it to thrive, nearly rendering the cause pointless. Intolerance isn't just "subjectively crazy," it's objectively harmful.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  184. Tolerance by onyxruby · · Score: 1

    Tolerance is not someone with 'progressive' values (which are well over a century old by the way). Tolerance is someone that has a set of values, whatever they are and accepts people into their daily life who have diametrically opposing values. If your a flaming gay and can't accept anybody that supports gay marriage your not a tolerant person. If your a straight person and keyed the car of the guy with the gay marriage bumper sticker your not tolerant.

    Tolerance is about accepting people in your life who's values are different from your own, and that's what so many people nowadays seems to fail to understand. It doesn't have a god damn thing to do with your political or religious beliefs. It doesn't matter where you live, what you believe in or anything else. The only thing matters is your willingness to accept others into your life that don't share your values.

    I've known people that were firmly opposed to gay marriage yet were still friends with gay people and were perfectly comfortable going into a gay bar. Likewise I've known gay people that were militant and intolerant of anyone that did not have a hard line radical view.

  185. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by HuffMeister · · Score: 1

    No, by "bigot" we mean the very dictionary definition of the word:

    a person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices;

    Are you sure that's not under the entry for Slashdot Reader? ;)

  186. Good excuse to go see it by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    I'm not a huge fan of OSC, but now I'm going to go see the film just to express my support for the idea that people shouldn't be financially persecuted for having unpopular opinions.

    1. Re:Good excuse to go see it by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

      As a board member of the National Organization of Marriage, Card has organized many boycotts of businesses that he say as being pro-gay. So maybe you don't want to support him for this idea.

    2. Re:Good excuse to go see it by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Mouthbreathing moron number 851793. Keeping my money is not financial persecution of anybody. It's keeping my fucking money.

      Why is this so hard to understand?

    3. Re:Good excuse to go see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not for having "unpopular opinions", but well, being on the board of an organisation that is trying to make those "unpopular opinions" into law means that at least some of the money you give him by seeing the movie based on his book will go to supporting that agenda. That is in my mind a rather persuasive argument for withdrawing support.

  187. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forgive me, I meant adult in the societal definition. Okay, let's go back to your original post here:
    "With Mary being 13 at the time. Because, you know, biologically adult humans are equal but only if they cross a magic age, just like alcohol magically stops being harmful after one of your birthdays."

    The implication being that having an age of consent is bogus in the same way that having a drinking age is bogus. It is a biological fact that the brain still develops significantly after reaching biological adulthood, which is why kids in that age group are not considered legal adults. So no, biologically adult humans are not considered equal before the law before an age where their brains have had more time to mature.

  188. I could watch very few movies by Quila · · Score: 1

    Most of Hollywood believes in violating the right to keep and bear arms. If I went by the right-supporting stance of writers, producers, directors or actors, my movie viewing would be extremely limited.

    Hollywood even does this while representing gratuitous gun violence by the heroes in their films. At least Card doesn't have this element of hypocrisy.

    1. Re:I could watch very few movies by nylrym · · Score: 1

      1) Feel free to organize a boycott of those writers, producers, directors and actors. If that limits your viewing options, that's the price you pay. People boycotting Card are willing to pay that price.
      2) Card's call for 'tolerance' after his intolerance (advocating revolution over the legalization of gay marriage can hardly be viewed as tolerant of gay people) has a definite element of hypocrisy.

      Personally, I think his use of the word 'tolerance' in this instance was purely a rhetorical ploy, but still hypocritical one.

    2. Re:I could watch very few movies by Quila · · Score: 1

      Feel free to organize a boycott of those writers, producers, directors and actors

      Thus my point, most of Hollywood believes in violating rights. There wouldn't be much left to watch.

      Card's call for 'tolerance' after his intolerance (advocating revolution over the legalization of gay marriage can hardly be viewed as tolerant of gay people) has a definite element of hypocrisy.

      No hypocrisy at all. Gays want him to respect their view, he wants them to respect his. He believes marriage has a cultural definition, and they don't fit that.

      Hypocrisy is Hollywood glorifying firearms while simultaneously campaigning against the rights of the people to own them, and also while pushing for exemptions in the firearms laws for themselves.

  189. Isn't this similar to the 1950's "blacklist" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have posted elsewhere that as much as I might disagree with Orson Card's personal views, his creative work should not be judged based on that.

    So many liberals or progressives (including me) feel that the Hollywood "blacklists" of the 1950's era were very wrong, yet all of a sudden it is O.K. to turn around and try to attack a creative work because its author has some very conservative beliefs.

    If you want to have tolerance or free speech, then you have to support it even when it encourages things you do not agree with.

    - Tom in California
       

  190. Enders Gane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am still going to see the movie - Do I care about his views, no. If you boycotted everything that had a view that offended their would be NO movies shown.

  191. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for that definition so by obstinately or intolerantly being devoted to the promotion of homosexuality and the suppression of alternative opinions many posters here are bigots... by definition.

    BTY, I don't necessarily agree with Card, I am just pointing out the equal lack of perspective many people have on the other side and the danger of suppressing anyone freedom of expression. If someone’s beliefs are so dangerous and absurd the world doesn’t need forum vigilantes to protect us from accidental exposure them. We can figure it out for ourselves, especially since I don’t think very many posters have even read his blog. There not as bad as they are made out to be. The man is not Hitler. He may be wrong but he has spent a great deal more time thinking about this issue that most of the loudmouths posting here. And I have more respect for that and being part of shallow vigilante justice.

  192. aw c'mon man... by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    you made two fouls...you made a sentence fragment/hotlink as a 'response' and you babbled incoherently making points that are parenthetical at best...

    but you brought up Pynchon and so at least that's a reference point...see, his work is 'literature'...and I don't even really like it...but it is 'literature' in the definition GP was attempting to use

    you could insert the works of Pynchon or, IMHO, K.S. Robinson (Mars Trilogy) for Card in that list...or Phillip K. Dick...he's the obvious choice

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:aw c'mon man... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      First of all, it's not parenthetical. My post was a direct refutation to the notion that "great literature" is something that "that virtually everyone agrees on" and that the GP was crazy for asserting that Card's work should be counted as such. It was also a refutation to the assertion that everything written today will be available in the future, when there's clear indication that it will not be. If we can't even keep works around for future generations, why do you expect commentary on said works to be available?

      However, if you'd like me to address your argument more directly, then if you want to define literature as you did above, you should probably be aware that "Ender's Game" won the 1985 Nebula and the 1986 Hugo awards for Best Novel, and its sequel "Speaker for the Dead" won the 1986 Nebula and the 1987 Hugo. He also received recognition by the American Library Association in 2008 for contributions to young adult literature for "Ender's Game" and "Ender's Shadow." By your own criteria, his works are ones that "subject matter experts and especially **a consensus of other writers** consider definitively influential in some capacity," unless you want to pull some sort of "No True Scotsman" on the Nebula and Hugo awards process.

      Lastly, I think you're the last person to have a leg to stand on to criticize my grammar.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  193. Swollowed Religeon Like a Big Penis by BrendaEM · · Score: 1

    Lesson: Don't believe everything you hear and read.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
  194. Marriage is not a Human Right by ryanmc1 · · Score: 1

    I think we throw around the term 'Human Right' a little to flippantly. The last time I looked Marriage is not a Human Right. It is a government granted privileged, and what the government gives they can take away.

    We need to calm down a bit on this whole Human Rights issue.

  195. Silencing other opinions with hate speech claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Defending marriage as it has been practiced for thousands of years is not "he spent years lobbying for laws that treated certain people as less than human". I support an equal recognition of marital status by the State, and as an atheist the right of the religious to defend what they believe without being accused of H8.

  196. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Umm. Up until about 20-23, the brain is still actively developing. There's a fair amount of research to indicate that the damage done by alcohol during this period has greater reprecussions that the damage done later. So it isn't so much it stops being harmful, it is more like the harm is significantly less.

    Yes, I'm sure you want citations. I suggest google for "brain development alcohol". Most of those hits will, in turn, cite the research papers.

  197. it is an usual bigot tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And we all know the course this thing will follow. Anyone who opposes this edict will be branded a bigot; any schoolchild who questions the legitimacy of slavery will be expelled for "hate speech." The fanatical abolitionist will insist that anyone who upholds the fundamental meaning that slavery has always had, everywhere, until this generation, is a "racist" and therefore mentally ill.".

    You can have fun for hours with that game. It is usually the second "base" of defense of the bigot, the cry of persecution against their belief. Fact : Ender's game is about Hitler and forgiving hitler. You might not like it, but some of us refuse categorically to support financially a bigot by watching a film on forgiving hitler. (and before somebody point out this is not about hitler but ender, read VERY carefully the biography of hitler and read again the one of ender. Do it very very carefully. There are som many parallel it can't be an accident).

  198. Re:Tolerence has to go both ways, or it doesn't ex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    eh... wrong answer..

    Tolerance does not mean agreement. Tolerance does not mean they cannot express their disagreement.
    Tolerance means that they don't try to change you, or force you to their point of view.

    Your statement is intolerant to their viewpoint.

    You want to ban anyone who doesn't agree with you, it's a good thing you're not in charge, and never will be.

  199. The Koran and Bible are NOT hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Orson Scott Card is pleading for tolerance? That's rich.

    "Male-male marriage" is what we should tolerate?
    Ten thousand years of history has shown what we can see today:
    1. It lowers the birth rate below replacement
    2. It creates new diseases
    3. It increases social strife.

    Did America become a death cult? If this is "freedom" why am I not free to speak against it?

    1. Re:The Koran and Bible are NOT hate speech by AdmV0rl0n · · Score: 1

      Why not tolerate it?

      Let me put a few things in argument.

      Regarding 1. The human race long terms needs to lower at least part of the populace to be birth rate lower than replacement. Yes. It does. And as the population keeps climbing, the sooner this happens, the better. I'll add another angle. Maybe its meant to happen. Maybe the brutal fact is that as humans evolve, and as our resources dwindle, maybe this is inate that our species has self limiting procreation. If not, we are looking at lemmings off a cliff population collapse in the long term. In the short or medium term, America to cite your example is upward trending population. Off setting that is an important query that has to be answered.

      Regarding 2. No, new diseases would be a by-product of life. Blaming a grouping or culture specifically won't stop diseases and the evolution of disease, bacteria, or viruses. And if we're really going to talk about this - the church can always cease its claims in Africa - which are an absolute lie - that condoms cause AIDS.

      Regarding 3. No, I don't think so. Its much more likely to be a settled social structure at peace with itself, unless someone is going to go outside the social norms and start being violent against a grouping who frankly only wish to live free lives.

      And yes, the Koran and Bible are full of hate speech, and the groupings that bash the books and want to get out of hand about it need to be firmly reminded, no, put firmly in place that in the west, we removed the teeth from religion and became free and secular in spite of both, and with help from neither. Fundamentalist religion poses far greater problems than people who want to enjoy the freedom and liberty our society promotes and generally moves toward, and which religions in the form of the Islam and Christian faith frequently seem to spend extreme efforts to meddle against.

      --
      We`re all equal .. Just some of us are less equal than others.
  200. Revenge rarely fixes the problem... by Yaddoshi · · Score: 1

    ...it just creates new ones.

    The moment I read Orson Scott Card's article for The Mormon Times, he became dead to me as an author, which is unfortunate. I had enjoyed his fictional works up until that point, but I could not in good conscience continue reading work created by someone with such monstrously skewed views regarding equal marriage rights. Marriage rights is one of the least of the world's issues, and certainly not worthy of his call to overthrow the government. From that point forward I understood that Card was an individual so caught up in the tenets of his belief system that he could not bear the thought of that belief system being changed, even though we are supposed to be living in a country with a separation of Church and State (and let's not go off on to that tangent right now or we'll be there forever).

    I have made a personal choice to avoid this man's work because I consider it to be contaminated with his personal views. However, I believe his statement regarding tolerance has some merit, not because he said it, but rather because punishing an adult by doing something to them that they have done to someone else rarely changes that adult in ways that are beneficial. There is a distinct difference between justice and revenge. "We should ruin him because he said hateful things," is in itself a hateful thing to declare.

    That said, here is nothing wrong with stating the following: "Look at what Orson Scott Card wrote. I disagree with what he said. What do you think?"

  201. Logical fallacy- false equivalence by MiniMike · · Score: 1

    You are committing the logical fallacy of false equivalence. You list those disparate groups together, making them seem equivalent, when they are not. Some are seeking to expand freedom, or to support a political system, while others have a goal of removing freedom from others. Some groups spread oppression and hate- why should they deserve tolerance? I'm ignoring the 'crazy' modifier you've attached to each group, including the groups where it's not redundant.

    Also, a boycott is not a form of an ad hominem attack. An ad hominem attack is more like "You're wrong because you're a jerk!" A boycott is not part of a logical argument, although they may result from one.

  202. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, you're saying gay activists are bigots?

  203. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by bmearns · · Score: 1

    Ah, but there's always more than one definition of a word. From https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bigoted

    [...] strongly prejudiced; forming opinions without just cause.

    The key there is "without just cause". Card forms opinion based on a very general attribute of the person without checking his assumptions about that person. Those of us who have judged Card to be a prick have done so based on his own comments and actions. Yes, we are obstinately devoted to our opinion that he is a prick, but it's based on judgement of his actions, not prejudgement based on unfounded assumptions about him.

    Seriously, I know it's linguistically sticky, but can we all get past this pedantic nonsense that being intolerant to intolerance is some kind of contradiction?

    --
    Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
  204. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So Orson Scott Card is a grade-A asshole. We all know this.

    But is everyone on /. really going to boycott this movie? I mean, we are talking about Ender's Game, right? One of the most beloved scifi books of the last 50 years?

    And if this movie flops, you are not just voting with your wallets against Card's politics. You're also voting with your wallets against Hollywood doing serious scifi adaptations.

    1. Re:Really? by neminem · · Score: 1

      Quoth: "As hollywood used to say, 'If you don't like it you know where the knob is'."

      Presumably that was half of the statement, and the second half was, "and you're looking at him"?

  205. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I speculate that we are nearly all bigots given this definition of the word; presuming, each of us holds onto some value that, despite evidence to the contrary (or even evidence *for*), we are unwilling to be swayed to the contrary, thus making us obstinately devoted to that particular opinion.

    While I most certainly do not agree with OSC's viewpoint, I personally will avoid using words such as "bigot", that I feel are quite loaded, and personally choose words found in its definition. "Obstinately opinionated" more accurately conveys my thoughts on his writings.

    As an exercise of my own free speech, I will not see this movie; I am very mindful of the fact that my opinions are equally strong to the contrary of OSCs beliefs on homosexuality and are not going to change.

    - Anonymous Bigot

  206. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

    Yes, and you and I agree. I was not claiming that anyone criticizing Card was a bigot nor was I saying his views should be tolerated. I in fact in my posts have stated the opposite repeatedly. You misunderstood what I was saying.

  207. double standards, anyone? by handofpwn · · Score: 1

    So, its OK for him to be an intolerant bigot when it comes to being gay or jewish, but we are expected to tolerate his intolerance? I guess this some how makes sense in his messed up head. After all, we are talking about a guy who believes magic underwear will save him from demons.

    If he wants tolerance, he will need to show some tolerance himself first.

  208. Re:Both Wagner and Beethoven were said to be d*cks by Luthair · · Score: 1

    Both Bach and Wagner are long dead, receive no royalties thus consuming their content doesn't fund their behaviour.

    By consuming Card's works you both indirectly fund his activities attacking equal rights and by making him more successful you add to his ability to push his homophobic viewpoint at more people.

  209. you're wrong interval1066 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing Mr. Card said is hate-speech he very calmly and inoffensively expressed a difference of opinion on a political issue. Graciously acknowledged defeat and pleaded with everyone to accept the courts legal opinion and move on. This is how opposing sides in a civilized society should behave.

    The problem here, and the only hate-speech being expressed, is in your response. Your radicalism and intolerance of the views of others is what is harmful to individuals and society. The appropriate response from you would have been to thank him for accepting the courts ruling and dropping the matter as he has.

  210. He's not a science fiction writer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, at least I'd assume that a SF writer has a passing familiarity with ... science. From one of his screeds,

    In fact what evidence there is suggests that if there is a genetic component to homosexuality, an entire range of environmental influences are also involved. While there is no scientific research whatsoever that indicates that there is no such thing as a borderline child who could go either way.

    Awww, hell, he lives in a fantasy world,

    The dark secret of homosexual society -- the one that dares not speak its name -- is how many homosexuals first entered into that world through a disturbing seduction or rape or molestation or abuse, and how many of them yearn to get out of the homosexual community and live normally.

    The guy's a douche. A major league douche.

    The real irony, however, is that the most vocal, articulate group in the US fighting for marriage ... is gays.

  211. I'm going to watch it by Keleon · · Score: 1

    I love Card's books, I think most people do. The reason I'm going to see this movie, not only because it's my favorite movie, but because there were no anti-gay sentiments in his books. If anything he's shown tolerance in his book. I remember reading one part in the Mithermages saga where the main character expressed his view on homosexuality as not for him, but it didn't bother him. Therefore I don't feel obligated to boycott his books or movies. I'm still excited to see it in theaters.

    Almost a third of my friends are gay/lesbian, and even a few of my family members. I don't tolerate people being anti-gay in my presence, but everyone's entitled to their opinions. I don't like Card's view on the subject, but there will always be people like him, he's no different than those other people. As long as he keeps it out of his books, I can keep enjoying them.

    1. Re:I'm going to watch it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      never read Card's book, so all of this noise is rather funny. I have no clue if his writing is decent or crap. I also have no clue if the movie is good or bad, but going by the trailer I'll skip it.

  212. Marriage by stoploss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree with the conceptual basis for your statement, but I disagree with your overall point. Well, specifically I agree with you that I am against the existence of civil unions.

    However, I am also against the existence of marriage as a state-regulated legal construct for anyone.

    What difference does it make what the government called it?

    Exactly. Having the government involved in defining this most intimate of interpersonal relationships is a horrible idea. If labels really matter to people, then let them choose a religious/group affiliation that will give them a ceremony/label for their relationship. However, none of these labels should carry the force of law. You could therefore get your heterosexual-only marriage at the Catholic church, or your het/homo marriage at an Episcopalian church.

    In case you were wondering if this is an instance of Poe's Law: I practice what I advocate. My partner and I decided we wished to have a lifelong exclusive commitment but we did not want the government to define our relationship for us. So, we setup health care powers of attorney, durable powers of attorney, wills, etc, and then gave each other a ring.

    Oh, and we're heterosexuals living in a non-common-law marriage state. Not that it matters.

    What difference does it make what the government called it?

    I agree with you: let's not allow gay marriage under law—in fact, let's not allow any legal concept of marriage at all. Sounds like you would be fine with that, because no one will be able to force your chosen religion to violate its tenets to label any nonadherents as "married". And if some people are really desperate for the government to define the parameters of their relationship for them, then I suppose that allowing the legal concept of civil unions might be an option (for both gays and straights).

    But no marriage under law.

    1. Re:Marriage by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      I quoted a couple of your points here, but realized that I was pretty much quoting the entire thing.

      Bingo!!! Marriage is a religious rite. Government has no business regulating or even recognizing a religious rite. However, there is a purpose to the government recognition of marriage, specifically taxes, shared property ownership, power of attorney, inheritance rights and so on, and I completely support gay couples gaining the same rights as straight couples. Those necessary results of government recognition of marriage could just as easily and equally be obtained if government recognized "civil unions" "legalized finger banging" or "neibersplat evernijula" or "hebeeshleebee itzu cowpoo". Does a rose by any other name not smell as sweet?

      Like you said, I just don't like government redefining what has been a religious concept a thousand years before western culture, much less America or American law.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    2. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But no marriage under law.

      Because you don't want it, others aren't allowed to have it. Did I read that right?

    3. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage is the only institution that gives kids a right to be raised by their biological Moms and Dads.

    4. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it odd when Mormons complain about "sanctity of marriage" issues. They are all up in arms about how others define marriage.......why? Mormons already have a separate type of marriage by special ceremony. It's called a "Temple Marriage" this is their definition of "real marriage" and requires significantly more than heading down to the courthouse. Marriages other than that (any that occur outside a Mormon temple) are not "real" by their definition.

      So why would you care if more people go out and have more "sham" marriages; how does that affect you?

      only likely against is argument is Sodom and Gomorrah so clearly anyone choosing that argument wants to forcibly stop anything that isn't reproductive............silly

      and,.... oh yeah stop having irresponsible amounts of children. Having twelve kids that are automatically screwed up based on the environment you provide is not "gods will"
      are you listening mom and dad ......your dogma sucks.

    5. Re:Marriage by stoploss · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Marriage is a religious rite. Government has no business regulating or even recognizing a religious rite.

      Well, that's how it should be and that's how it has been marketed politically; however, the truth really comes out when one considers the following situations:

      1) If two people have a marriage ceremony in a church without a marriage license, are they married? (no)
      2) If two people obtain a marriage license and then have an irreligious solemnization ceremony with a justice of the peace, are they married? (yes)

      Like you said, I just don't like government redefining what has been a religious concept a thousand years before western culture, much less America or American law.

      I agree entirely, but the concept of marriage got hijacked by the state hundreds of years ago (to varying degrees, culminating in what we have today)—the "redefinition" happened long before we were born. Now, the government just allows the window-dressing of an optional religious ceremony (for those who desire it) in order to placate those who mistakenly believe modern marriage is a religious rite.

      The fundamental problem with a legally-recognized union is that the government is allowed to change the terms after the commitment is made. Married/unioned individuals delegate to the state the ability to define (and redefine at whim) what the individuals' responsibilities are to one another, whether their interpersonal contractual agreements are enforceable, etc.

      It was an epiphany to me when I realized that my only reticence to a permanent, exclusive commitment to my partner was due to these considerations. I had zero concerns about spending the rest of our lives together, better/worse, forsaking all others, etc, etc. However, I wouldn't agree to any other type of significant contract where another party has the ability to unilaterally change the contract after I had signed, so why would I allow this with the most important relationship in my life?

      Besides, it's just offensive that the state implicitly wants to be a third party in our relationship. So, we rejected that notion entirely.

      However, there is a purpose to the government recognition of marriage, specifically taxes, shared property ownership, power of attorney, inheritance rights and so on

      There are very few "features" of a legal union that cannot be replicated via individual contractual agreements. Inheritance, property ownership, power of attorney, etc are all trivial to handle (this makes sense, because you can elect to partner/delegate these to *anyone*). Joint filing of taxes is the main unresolvable issue, but that is a flaw in our legal system: why should two people in a relationship have a substantially different tax treatment than two individuals?

    6. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage is the only institution that gives kids a right to be raised by their biological Moms and Dads.

      Yes. God knows that if an unmarried woman gives birth then government agents are standing by to confiscate the child and immediately place the child in foster care until they reach age 18.

    7. Re:Marriage by Teancum · · Score: 1

      I agree entirely, but the concept of marriage got hijacked by the state hundreds of years ago (to varying degrees, culminating in what we have today)—the "redefinition" happened long before we were born. Now, the government just allows the window-dressing of an optional religious ceremony (for those who desire it) in order to placate those who mistakenly believe modern marriage is a religious rite.

      A problem with this view is that it really hasn't been that long since "the state" co-opted the religious ceremony you are talking about. It hasn't been a state-operated enterprise even in America for all that long, and it is people screwing around with things like income tax and creating thousands of exceptions in the tax code for social engineering that the need for homosexual people to even be involved was something to even consider. Those "hundreds of years" could really be boiled down to less than a hundred years at most. It was after the Woodrow Wilson administration (who signed in the current Internal Revenue Act) that started the slow process of pushing for marriage as a state-licensed enterprise.

      In most of Europe, the church was "the state", as they were basically indistinguishable. Even now, most of the record keeping for when marriages happened is in churches, with only in the latter half of the 20th century that organizations like county governments or national governments even bothered to do that sort of record keeping. Heck, even birth certificates are a fairly new invention. For instance, I got my Social Security card by presenting my hospital certificate (at the time considered a valid form of ID and it wasn't that long ago either.) I could have presented my christening certificate as valid ID as well and it was an option at the time.

      Don't think for a minute that the current state of affairs is how it has always been or that it is an ancient custom, because it isn't. As for if this encroachment by the government upon what should be religious affairs, it really goes back to having the government get involved in a whole bunch of things they never were involved with previously. If you look upon it over the course of a decade or so, you barely notice it, but this change has been huge and on the time scale of a lifetime it has changed substantially.

      BTW, it used to be considered (again... until quite recently and it was definitely true at the beginning of the 20th century) that it didn't matter if you were recognized in a civil ceremony so much as if you were properly married by a religious leader. The civil ceremony was for crazy atheists and screw-ups who "did something" to piss off the local clergy. An affidavit from a local clergyman that you were married was more than sufficient to convince a judge that you were married, regardless of what the county clerk may have said about the topic.

    8. Re:Marriage by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Bingo!!! Marriage is a religious rite. Government has no business regulating or even recognizing a religious rite. However, there is a purpose to the government recognition of marriage, specifically taxes, shared property ownership, power of attorney, inheritance rights and so on, and I completely support gay couples gaining the same rights as straight couples.

      Frankly, I think we'd be better off getting rid of special treatment of married (or whatever) couples for taxes, property ownership, power of attorney, inheritance, and so on.

      Any of those things can be better accomplished in some other way. If you wan to give somebody power of attorney, just sign an agreement to that effect (certainly no more effort to do that then to go to a wedding). Ditto for every other thing on your list except taxes. I don't get why married couples should be treated differently for taxes - just file head-of-household or whatever when you have dissimilar incomes, or just file separately.

      Since so many people live together unmarried the government already has laws to deal with every contingency that comes up (out-of-wedlock kids, disputes over property when couples split up, etc). It seems like an official state of marriage complicates things more than it helps.

      I think marriage made more sense back in the day when fathers wanted to get proper value when they sold their daughters, and husband-to-be's wanted to make sure that their bride couldn't run off on them right after they were paid for. In a society where we actually treat women as the equals of men it makes more sense to let couples have the freedom to define their own relationships and the government can just deal with enforcing contracts. No doubt churches will come up with form contracts that represent their vision of what marriage is supposed to be, and twist the arms of their congregants to sign them. As long as slavery and indentured servitude aren't in the terms and there is reasonable consideration people can sign whatever they want to.

    9. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a basic factual error that invalidates your argument, there is evidence that Marriage pre-dates religion. So its more a case that religion hijacked human coupling and sort to control it rather than the state taking over marriage. Religions don't own the concept of marriage or love and thus one religions interpretation of what a marriage is should not effect anybody who does not follow that religion.

      If you believe an a religion you are free to do so, but not inflict you religion on other.

    10. Re:Marriage by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I agree entirely, but the concept of marriage got hijacked by the state hundreds of years ago (to varying degrees, culminating in what we have today)—the "redefinition" happened long before we were born.

      I would disagree. Marriage is a civil concept that got hijacked by religion hundreds of years ago (for Western civ), turned over to the church mainly for ease of recording since they were more ever present than governmental offices and a major social center of the community. This is made harder in that hundreds and thousands of years ago, there was less of a distinction between state and religion. Even in more recent "atheist regimes" there was still marriage. Marriage is a concept and practice that went between religions, cultures, and people, for which each religion jut appended its own rules.

    11. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until I want to get on the ambulance with my lover and I am denied because a contract is not the same same as married...

    12. Re:Marriage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) If two people have a marriage ceremony in a church without a marriage license, are they married? (no)
      2) If two people obtain a marriage license and then have an irreligious solemnization ceremony with a justice of the peace, are they married? (yes)

      Actually, #1 is correct only if the church is registered with the state as a 501(c) non profit organization. As a government approved entity, they must abide by state rules and regulations and require the marriage license. If this occurs in what is called a free church, one that has not subjected itself to the government, then the law will recognize the marriage, provided the ceremony date is recorded in the family bible by the pastor.

  213. Michael Jackson? by abies · · Score: 1

    Somehow I find it strange that people who have not boycotted music done by Michael "let's cuddle young boys" Jackson are asking to boycott movie done based on book written by guy who doesn't like homosexuals. Despite the OSC bigotry, he was right that these days being homophobic seems to be a bigger moral crime than being a pedophile.

    Political correctness becomes ultimate censorship power. Gender, religion, race, sexuality - somebody will shout 'hate speech' and you will get banned/fired/shunned. It is heresy of XXI century - in middle ages you could get burned for saying bad things about God, today you will get 'burned' for hate speech against other people. And same way as in medieval times people were centering their lives around pretending to follow Church, today people are putting mask to match political correctness expectations...

    I'm going to see the movie. I like some of Michael Jackson songs. Artist does not 'taint' the work of art. Boycott is just an ultimate form of bullying by stronger group.

  214. Re:Last time I checked... by Quila · · Score: 1

    There you go, men and women. Not men and men or women and women.

    Face it, up until recently, all Western cultures prohibited gay marriage, and many even prohibited homosexuality. This idea that gay marriage is a right is very new.

  215. does it matter how sausage is made if its tasty? by r2kordmaa · · Score: 1

    The book is good - one of the best scifi out there. You can bet anything i will be watching the movie. I could not possibly care less about the authors views one way or other. The story is awesome, thats about all that matters here.

  216. Re:Last time I checked... by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

    Most people, including those that have studied the effects, wouldn't get behind that statement.

    The question of whether homosexual marriage provides the same social benefits is unknown, but should be reasonably expected, assuming that the relevant aspects of heterosexual marriage holds true for homosexual marriage. What those are, no one has really defined, but I suspect love and monogamy are strong factors. It doesn't seem like homosexual marriage precludes those.

  217. Re:Last time I checked... by Quila · · Score: 1

    A family member of mine recently got married using the Persian wedding ceremony, and that historically was for everybody. Of course, that's from a country that currently executes homosexuals.

  218. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

    Card's freedom of expression doesn't force me to go see his movie.
    Your freedom of speech doesn't keep me from calling you an asshole.
    If you consider that the same thing as "suppression of alternative opinions", then you're advocating a worse sort of thought-police nanny-state than any Democrat.

    Also, how is being a bigot for a long time more respectable than being a bigot for a short time?

  219. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    I'm not clear. Is the claim "Card is a homophobe" not correct?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  220. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by bmearns · · Score: 1

    My apologies. You're right, I did misunderstand what you were saying.

    --
    Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
  221. boycotting this movie is not intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is not intolerant to dismiss this movie based on the author's views. Doing so is the person dismissing the movie expressing their views.

  222. Re:Last time I checked... by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

    Being equal under the law, on the other hand...

    This infers that "gay rights are civil rights" is an unquestionable corollary/fact to build arguments off of.

    Marriage predates recorded history. Unlike Christ.

    Not if Christ was the same god/person/deity as the god of the Old Testament, which my particular vein of Christianity believes is the case. If they're one and the same, then Christ (under the name Jehovah/Yahweh in the OT) does go back to the beginning of the Bible (which is pretty dang close to the beginning of "recorded history") and predates it.

  223. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Marriage is not a "human right"... its a christian ceremony. Between a man and a woman.

    Congratulations. That may be the dumbest comment ever posted to Slashdot. Step out of the shadows, AC, and claim your trophy!

  224. Political Correctness is anti-Freedom by SpaceManFlip · · Score: 1
    I concur with the above statement. Fuck political correctness.

    Also, marriage is not a right for anyone. Campaigning for gay marriage is not a "crusade for equal rights" in any sense of the scale of what racial minorities have gone through. Having said that, I will say that there should be no laws against anyone getting married, as marriage is more of a personal/spiritual function than a state function. Having said that, I will even say that I advocate that the State just go on and get the fuck out of everyone's personal lives completely.

    Now, regardless of any of the above, including what I or anyone else have said, I think the movie is going to be awesome and I look forward to it. I don't let politics enter my personal entertainment preferences. If I did then I couldn't listen to Rage Against the Machine, Soundgarden, or Audioslave anymore - they are all too happy with Obama's bullshit.

  225. Re:Tolerence has to go both ways, or it doesn't ex by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    Tolerance means that they don't try to change you, or force you to their point of view.

    I argue that millions of OSC's lobbying dollars amount to an attempt to force his point of view.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  226. doesnt matter by Xicor · · Score: 1

    we watch movies because they are entertainment. when i go to a movie theater or look up what movies i want to watch, the political orientation of the producer or the author or some actor is totally irrelevant to me. im not going to not watch a good movie because i dont agree with someone who was part of its production

  227. 2 issues with the boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    1) Are you planning on boycotting the movie, but have already bought and read the book? Then it's too late, you enriched him. While I don't know the details of his ownership stake in the movie, typically ip holders are paid a flat fee for the movie script. He also likely got some salary/compensation for his work as a producer, although he's far down the producer list so he's not doing the heavy lifting. So boycotting it most likely will not stop him from earning money for his work.

    2) Do the actors such as Asa Butterfield, Harrison Ford, and Abigail Breslin support anti-gay policies? I suspect not; Butterfield and Breslin are a bit too young to be too involved in Politics, and Ford is a left leaning centrist. What about Gavin Hood, the director and screenwriter? Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, the producers? What about the good people at Lionsgate? All of those folks are just trying to produce a movie of a well loved book. Do they deserve to be punished for Card's politics?

    This boycott is a more or less emotional response with strong collatoral damage that mostly does not achieve what those supporting the boycott want it to achieve. Card is still wealthy, and will remain so. He's already been paid for the movie. He's not likely to make another movie again from his material, as none of his other works have the appeal of Ender's Game. Frankly, this just won't accomplish anything.

  228. Fundamentalism by another name by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    This pro-homosexual marriage summary is entirely fundamentalist in its approach: there is only one authority; there is only one correct point of view; dissent is forbidden; anyone who disagrees is a sinner (against society), and deserves to be shunned.

    Such rigidness of thought richly deserves to be mocked.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  229. Mind gaming kids into committing genocide. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ender's Game was messed up.

    Yes, on one level it was a rousing adventure story about a geek who defeats bullies by being clever, but that's just punching our internal emotional power fantasy buttons. Many sci-fi readers are affected by this in predictable ways, and so they miss the deeper message which is...

    The normalization of genocide. The main thrust of the story revolved around the complete destruction of an intelligent race, (fear of the other, as if that were a valid reality, which it ain't), by manipulating children so that they become killers.

    Look at the pathology of the child guerrilla forces seen in third world nations. It's very, very messed up.

    Not cool. At all.

  230. That clinches it by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    I only got one chapter into Ender's Game before I learned what an a-hole Card is.

    To the barbeque! And *never* to this movie.

  231. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The idea that Christianity started with the human birth of Christ is wrong. Christianity predates the creation of the earth because Christ predates creation.

        John 1:1-3
        1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
        2 The same was in the beginning with God.
        3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.

        John 1:14 Which explains who the Word is.
        14 And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.

    That His work of redemption was in fact accomplished in God's sight before the world was created, yes that is a mind blowing concept that Christ paid for the sins of mankind before man was created.

    Revelation 13:8
      8 And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.

    That God instituted marriage between a man and a woman in Genesis 2:24
      24 Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.

  232. Wait, how many people die of cancer v. terrorism? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    Let me sum up my position on this by example; If Al Qaeda came up with a cure for cancer, would we as a society start using it, or reject it as poisoned fruit?

    An interesting, if deeply flawed example. For one, this only matters if al-Qaeda would receive financial compensation for the cure; the most probable result in this case would be that their intellectual property claims would be denied, or if accepted their assets seized to be paid to those they have wronged.

    But ignoring that, I'm kind of shocked by the conclusion you draw in parallel to that example.

    Granted, this is only a work of entertainment, but his pleadings for tolerance are not dissimilar from this theme; We are being asked to set aside our morality in exchange for some good or service.

    Wait. So are you saying that if al-Qaeda did hold the keys to a cure for cancer, you wouldn't take it? I mean, roughly 40% of Americans will get cancer at some point in their life, and roughly 20% will die of it. The harm done by al-Qaeda in pursuit of their unpopular Islamic caliphate pales compared to the good that could solve. I mean, world-wide, we're talking about the lives of over a billion people that you'd rather see die than see a bunch of terrorists get some money and prestige.

    Man, this is a terrible analogy. I hope.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  233. Lying for the Lord by obtuse · · Score: 1

    This is a known tactic. He can say anything he wants, as long as it serves what he perceives as serving a higher purpose. Look up "lying for the lord". See also Mittens Romney.

    I can tolerate him, but I don't ever have to give him money or listen to him again. I'm not asking that he be jailed for his treason. That's pretty tolerant.

    --
    Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
  234. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But why should *your* religious beliefs in anyway have an impact on *their* right to marriage?

  235. I don't know a good title for this by novasharp · · Score: 1

    Personally, I don't care what he said. I read a book, not the author's comments. Books & Movies are entertainment. I read Game of Thrones without knowing anything about the author. I still know nothing about him. I read Ender's Game and liked it. The only aspect of Orson Scott Card that I care about is that he is a good author. The movie looks awesome so far and that's all I care about. I don't care whether or not Card believes in Pastafarianism or anything else. To the best of my knowledge, he didn't let his personal views seep into his books, so I don't care what he believes. (In terms of determining whether or not to read his books.)

  236. Stop legally recognizing personal relationships by millertym · · Score: 1

    Traditional marriage, gay marriage, consensual polygamy, man/beast marriage - who cares. Let people have whatever relationships they want with each other. The government shouldn't be involved at all. The only relationships that the government should have any recognition and benefits toward are the kind that is committed to creating children and/or raising children to adulthood in a stable and healthy environment to ensure that the future population of whatever nation the government governs is a healthy, productive one. These legally recognized relationships should only be enterable at the point a child is born or adopted. These legally recognized relationships should have severe financial penalties for breaking before the children are raised to adulthood baring poor behavior of the adults involved in the relationship (violence, promiscuity, other serious destabilizing family environment destabilization). These legally recognized relationships should only be legally binding until the children are raised to adulthood, at which point the legal benefits are terminated.

  237. Card is half right, gov't should not marry ... by drnb · · Score: 1

    Card is half right, the government should not be marrying anyone -- straight or gay. The traditional marriage folks are correct in the sense that marriage is historically a religious institution to a large degree. Government should not perform marriages due to the concept of separation of church and state. What government should do is perform civil unions, straight or gay, and these civil unions should embody *all* legal rights and privileges. Members of the clergy should also be allowed to perform these civil unions, the civil union being implicitly part of a clerical marriage ceremony. However the marriage itself only conveys church rights and privileges, all the civil stuff comes from the implicit civil union. Now regarding gay marriage, that is now a church issue. If its OK with church doctrine its a go, if not its a no go.

    Everyone has the same civil rights. Every church if free to interpret marriage according to their culture.

    Sadly this would deprive both sides of a favorite political wedge issue.

    1. Re:Card is half right, gov't should not marry ... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      If you're saying that marriage should be a superset of civil unions, where the difference amounts to religious icing on a legal cake, then that's the most sensible thing I've ever read or heard on the subject.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:Card is half right, gov't should not marry ... by emilper · · Score: 1

      Card is half right, the government should not be marrying anyone -- straight or gay.

      +1 damn right

  238. Anti Gay "Marriage" by SmittyVonSmitSmit · · Score: 0

    Bigoted anti-gay.

  239. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by similar_name · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm going to vote with my dollars that I think voting against this movie is not a net good.

    And you should. That's the point. You're voting with your dollars because you want to offset the other people voting with their dollars that disagree.

    I am capable of enjoying products made by people that I disagree with, and don't want to discourage them from producing more.

    Personal opinions vary. For some, however good the end product is, it's not justification for everything the producer does/believes. Why would I give my money to someone I disagree with. It's just a movie.

    To be clear, I never read the books. I don't have any intention of seeing the movie for that reason. Had I been a big fan, I probably would go see it. The issue doesn't effect me personally, and it's not a topic I champion. I've just never understood why people have a problem with boycotts. If I don't like Wal-Mart's practices why on earth would I give them money? If I don't like Orson Scott Card, why would I give him money?

  240. Re:Bigotry? What about religious tolerance? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    Besides, this is America. We're allowed to believe in any crazy thing we want.

    The USA is so enormous, and so numerous are its schools, colleges and
    religious seminaries, many devoted to special religious beliefs ranging
    from the unorthodox to the dotty, that we can hardly wonder at its
    yielding a more bounteous harvest of gobbledygook than the rest of the
    world put together.
    -- Sir Peter Medawar

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  241. In the end.. by houbou · · Score: 1

    when you take such a strong moral stance as Card has, you need to be aware of the repercussions. In this day and age, anybody who sends messages of any form of oppression and/or restriction which makes a person less than an other, clearly, is looking for trouble.

  242. submitter f*ed by sageres · · Score: 1

    " I guess he didn't see this film and the box-office importance of wide appeal coming, did he?"

    Guess what? Majority of the public are not crazy-gay-rights advocates but a normal middle-of-the-road Americans. They could care less of what you think.

  243. Not the story I imagined by HairyNevus · · Score: 1

    When I read the headline my exact thought was "Wow is the movie really that bad?". Totally thought Card was pleading for his fans to give the movie a chance despite a (predictably) botched job.

    --
    You were critically hit for no damage. The bruise will look nice, and maybe the scars will make good party talk.
  244. Interesting to note... by nylrym · · Score: 1

    ...that none of the people arguing that we should see the movie make the case that in supporting Orson Scott Card (who vehemently opposes gay marriage) we would also be supporting Harrison Ford, who supports them.

  245. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You expect I will watch entertainment based upon some voting issue?
    Get a life. I watch what I want to.
    As hollywood used to say 'If you don't like it you know where the knob is'.

  246. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you can't see that what benefits individuals also benefits society, then you are hereby excused from the remainder of this discussion.

  247. Keep Reading by sirwired · · Score: 1

    He's gone a bit beyond just saying that he thinks society is doomed if it accepts homosexuals. He's wrong, of course, but that's not something to get in a lather over. He's gone well beyond that and thinks its also perfectly justified to call for the violent overthrow of the US Government if it makes the mistake of not keeping gay marriage illegal. Yes, you heard that right, gay marriage is apparently a moral issue worthy of wholesale civil war.

    Of course, now that gay marriage IS legal (at least in places), he's saying (due to his upcoming movie) that we should just let bygones be bygones and let the whole thing slide. (Maybe he wants to delay the revolution until after his movie comes out.)

  248. if you love the book, why boycott the movie? by CosaNostra+Pizza+Inc · · Score: 1

    I can freely admit that OSC is a bigot. I've also heard some choice words about him from a friend who supposedly met him in person at a book signing. However Ender's Game is one of the most popular Sci Fi novels of all time and the Ender series overall is pretty good. Also, I don't see any reflection of OSC's personal prejudice in his novels. The fact that he is intolerant has nothing to do with the success and authoring of his sci fi novels. If you liked reading Ender's Game, see the movie. I plan to. I only hope the screen adaption is good.

  249. Bringng the military into this... by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Then the child goes into a home, and probably eventually into the military

    So you're saying that military service is for messed-up youths who were raised in foster homes?

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    1. Re:Bringng the military into this... by lessthan · · Score: 1

      Or he is saying that the military is one of the only options a orphan has to do something. It is a steady job with decent promotion opportunities and a chance to go to college. Provided, of course, you aren't blown up in a desert/jungle somewhere. And if you want to go to college, you better be married to someone with a decent job, because the "living stipend" is anything but livable. But still a decent opportunity, especially for someone with nothing.

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
  250. Re:I presume by bigot you mean... by geoskd · · Score: 1

    No, by "bigot" we mean the very dictionary definition of the word:

    a person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices;

    That describes pretty much everyone I have ever met. The only differences are the actual opinions... As evidence I submit: Washington DC. The entire population meets this definition, the only thing that changes are the D or the R.

    --
    I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
  251. Bullies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The fallacy he employs here — that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others — is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies, and a way of evading responsibility for the impact of their words and actions."

    Anybody, ANYBODY, can be a bully.

    So there are people who look at the biological function of the human reproductive system and form an opinon of what is "normal". Others don't care and have a different opinon of "normal". The issue is very controversial today because of a convergance of many emerging factors, ie. new personal freedoms, advances in biomedical technology, etc.

    The ultimage judge of what is right or wrong will be evolution.

  252. Dude, don't bother by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2

    You really won't win an argument with bigots. They think their positions is RIGHT, as in absolutely right. As such they think everyone has to support it, or those people are wrong. So ya, they feel like you have to give them money, have to let them do as they wish, or you are the problem.

    So just ignore them.

    1. Re:Dude, don't bother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really won't win an argument with bigots. They think their positions is RIGHT, as in absolutely right. As such they think everyone has to support it, or those people are wrong.

      And the other side think their positions is a civil RIGHT, as in an absolute right. As such they think everyone has to support it, or those people are wrong.

      Radicals exist on both sides.

  253. All the more reason to see it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to see it because I am not impressed by the sort of people who call for boycotts.

    We are no longer free to feel uncomfortable about the way other people assert their sexuality, that is unless they are straight males, and thit is a malign result of a hysterical rights culture that organizes people on the basis of their perceived victimhood.

    I'm going to see Enders Game because it looks entertaining and it will be relaxing to spend a couple of hours around people who don't self-identify as oppressed for a change.

  254. Really Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the completely useless biased non-story Slashdot!

    I agree with others on this. It's stupid punishing people for their previous opinions. Especially considering that marriage has always meant a specific thing, that is now suddenly upended. And everybody is expected to hop on your band wagon as it drives by??

    I'm going to the movie the very day it opens. But first, I'll stop by Chick-Fil-A for lunch.

    I really question if "gay marriage" is about equality but actually more about revenge. Gays, you're not advancing your cause (if it's really equality) with things like this.

  255. I'm only tolerant of intolerance to a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry. That's just the way I am. You want me to be more tolerant of intolerance, to the point of giving you money for your work? That's pretty rich. Regardless of the product, yeah, I do think twice about any kind of financial or other support of people who are intolerant. Is that unfair or intolerant of me? I don't see how. I'm not saying he can't have his views. Go ahead. I'll even protect his right to have them. But I'm reserving the right to say I think his views are stupid, and not to read his book or see the movie based upon that if I so choose. It's entirely voluntary on my part if I want to send money his way. I'm not compelled to read his book or see the movie any more than he's compelled to actually participate in a gay marriage. And furthermore I'm not saying people shouldn't go to his movie or read his book if they want. It's their business.

    But I'm still going to call him a bigoted asshole, because I have as much right to my opinion as he does to his. Having a rather harsh opinion of someone else because of their views isn't necessarily intolerant. It's just having a strongly contrary opinion. If I start denying Card his rights based on my disagreement with his views, then he'd have something legitimate to complain about.

  256. Slashdot - Liberal cesspool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys are a bunch of fucking idiots. Fuck gays, fuck straights and fuck you. Take your bullshit agitprop and shove it up your ass.

  257. I'll make a deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about this Mr Scott.

    I'll watch your movies. I'll enjoy them. But I'd be damned if I pay for them.

    I'm going to download them for free. you won't get a cent. I do the same for most hollywood movies, so I can feel better about no supporting celebrities, and greedy RIAA and MPAA execs.

  258. Piracy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This being /. I am amazed I don't see a thread here about the act of piracy of the movie to suborn OSC in some way. Colour me shocked.

  259. intolerance rears its ugly head by khallow · · Score: 1

    The fallacy he employs here â" that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others â" is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies

    Except that here, Card is the one being bullied. I find such bigoted remarks as the above to be remarkably hypocritical.

    If I were to liken you to "cowards and bullies" merely because of your beliefs, ethnicity, etc, would that not be hate speech as it is nebulously defined? Well, that's what just happened here. If interval1066 genuinely wishes to curb hate speech, he can start with his own.

  260. Different kind of tolerance by spamchang · · Score: 1

    My first thought was that OSC was pleading for die-hards to give the movie a chance...because the trailer was so terrible. No...not going to tolerate a crappy adaptation of a beloved childhood book...!

  261. Ummmmmm, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems that the vast majority have never read the actual articles Card has written on his position against gay marriage. In fact he has taken a strong position AGAINST discrimination against homosexuals. His only sticking point is gay marriage, as in the ceremony and title itself, not the attached federal rights. Yet somehow this moderate position has been tagged instantly as homophobic. May I point out that thousands of southern baptists have already indicated their intent to boycott Ender's Game because they believe Card is A PROPONENT OF GAY MARRIAGE. I'm seeing a contradiction here. Actually I'm seeing a witch hunt, driven by pop culture zeitgeist which labels anyone who sticks out their neck as opposed to moral progressivism as intolerant. Yes, there are many actual intolerant homophobic right-wing-nuts out there, but Card is NOT one of them. The tide of "moral progressivism" has turned to the very thing it works against, hate. Intolerance for the sake of Tolerance is still evil and no more justifiable.

  262. Actually if you're progressive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Polygamy can work similiarly, either by a single female taking over maternal duties while the male and other females work, or alternatively by having the male take over maternal duties while all the females work.

    Polyandry having a similiar benefit in regards to child rearing and improved finances for the family as a whole.

    Obviously there are downsides trying to manage a larger family structure like this, but the point being SOME people can make it work, just like many people CAN'T make a monogamous marriage work (Either because they did a lousy job picking out their partner, or because one or the other member is searching outside their relationship for missing emotional/sexual/financial benefits.)

    But hey, what do I know. I mean nobody on slashdot has had a real relationship, right? :-)

  263. That's why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't have a strictly polygamous culture. You support polyandry and maybe even monogamy as well.

    That way if the supply of women starts becoming short guys can team up with/under the same woman, eventually either balancing out, or leading to a shortage of available men such that the next round tends more towards polygamy again.

    Monogamy could exist just fine in such a situation so long as neither partner has a wandering eye.

    The real question being: Whatever familial construct you choose to be a part of, will you still wish to be a part of it in the future, either when you or some facet of the relationship changes (Big issue here: Polygamy, if all the women are straight, what happens when the male becomes no longer able to perform and some or all of the womenfolk still have needs for which their 'sister-wives' are inadequate? Even more pressing of an issue in a polyandrous relationship, especially if the female tends towards limited sexual interest.)

  264. a better argument by almechist · · Score: 1

    That's bullshit. Technically, you're right, since it wasn't a right they ever had, the campaign wasn't to strip the rights.

    But, that's overly pedantic.Ultimately, people don't get married solely because they want to be married, there's a ton of rights that are granted to go along with that.

    As for the 7 wives thing, why is it that bigots keep trotting that out? That, bestiality and pedophilia will never be legalized because there are serious problems with it. Polygamy and Polygny lead to people being unable to get a spouse because all of a sudden you need only a fraction of the partners you needed to to fill the need for women or men, while the remaining men and women are unable to marry.

    In the cast of bestiality and pedophilia, there's no ability of the animals and children to engage in informed consent.

    Completely different from consenting adults getting married.

    There's a better argument against the "bestiality and polygamy will be next" crowd, and that is that unlike homosexuality, no statistically significant percentage of the population is born with an urge to exclusively desire sex with animals or multiple human partners. It's been pretty clear for years that most homosexuals are indeed born that way, that it is a genetic trait rather than a learned behavior. AFAIK nobody is born with a genetic predisposition to molest animals, and while there are many men who would probably prefer to have more than one wife if they could, most are not actively repulsed at the thought of living with just one. Homosexuality should be accommodated equally by the law simply because failure to do so penalizes a significant percentage of the population for something that is completely beyond their control. This is obviously not the case with other types of sexual deviancy, which either affect a vanishingly small number of people, or involve behavior that is non-consensual by its very nature (e.g. pedophilia). Homosexuality is different in that it is affects large numbers of people, involves only consenting adults, and is primarily a condition that one is born with and can't change. That should be the key test, IMO. If a sexual behavior meets these criteria and otherwise causes no harm, then those affected should not be legally discriminated against. And if they want to marry each other, why not let them, since it really doesn't affect the rest of us in any meaningful way.

  265. Re:Last time I checked... by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

    Hell, we have enough problems keeping two people together in a stable configuration. Adding a third person to the mixes triples the number of relationships to maintain and keep stable.

  266. How do you know it's not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems like polygamy is the perfect 'marital structure' for bisexuals, assuming they can find a group of partners who are all mutually compatible.

  267. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty sure it's the 'Or women' part that was added there, and I'm pretty sure regardless of wording, that wasn't the intent of the section.

    If you changed it to 'Men of full age have the right to marry and to found a family.' within the context of the Constitution stating 'All men are created equal.' and lacking that 'or women'. Would you take that to mean it was saying homosexual marriage was okay, but straight marriage was not?

  268. anti-gay link is not a good example of bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assuming this guy is anti-gay, the OP's link to Card's essay does not reflect that. He gives a thoughtful explanation against gay marriage, which the OP does not address, nor do the posts I see. Disagreeing does not constitute being anti-gay.

    Some other links might be more informative, but the OP's link to the Card's essay, only says that Marriage has a value to civilization, independent of the request of gay marriage activists. That the activists want to make use marriage for a different purpose than civilization created it. (although he does get off the rails for a few paragraphs about some psycho-bable that I think is hard to justify.)

  269. Marriage = 1 man + 1 woman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, marriage is 1 man and 1 woman. Just looking at it evolutionarily, it is clearly a heterosexual relationship. Card got it right talking about how anybody who disagrees with marriage (see subject again) would be treated (see earlier comment posts). Card's mistake was the overthrow the government comments, but defending/supporting marriage is a worthy pursuit as Western civilization has depended on it. The last 50 years of sexual and cultural revolution (casual sex, no fault divorce, not taking marriage seriously) mostly against marriage has a result damage to families, and children from all these broken relationships. Redefining marriage to something it is not, isn't helping and just continues the slide the wrong direction.

  270. Indeed it is! by Zynder · · Score: 1

    They propably wouldn't have bothered with Sci-fi(that's not in the bible)

    The regular masses would tell you that you are correct, however, for anyone who has thoughroughly read the Bible, you will find it is indeed full of all kinds of sci-fi! Take a look at The Skeptic's Bible for all kinds of awesome linkage pointing to everything from multiple Gods, giants, UFO's, and all sorts of other stuff. Besides those little known gems though, common themes are giant man eating fish (Job), worldwide floods, people rising from the dead, and have you even read Revelations? It's ALL sci-fi!!!!!

    1. Re:Indeed it is! by Zynder · · Score: 1

      GRRRRR my link didn't come out right. Try again

  271. I can only hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that we make first contact while he is alive, and he can learn that galactic civilization is completely fine with any sexuality which doesnt result in demonstrable harm. I cant imagine any civilization surviving its first forays into the pathway towards a technological singularity without first abandoning its prejudices and desire to control others based on privately revealed knowledge. If they come here, they will either turn us into food/slaves (very unlikely), or more likely, welcome us once we have abandoned evil ideas such as mr cards, and they will make it abundantly clear that we MUST give up such beliefs to be accepted. basically, jesus will come back and he will be very pissed off at Card and his minions for their overweening pride (aka hubris), and will tell them that if it was up to his father, they would be smited. (think "day the earth stood still"). His public advocacy for these ideas is pure evil, and his skill as a writer simply means he is a skilled propagandist, ala goebbels. i see no difference between him and goebbels aside from political power.

  272. Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most humans are hypocrites, but those Christians really do seem to practice it much more devoutly than others!

  273. Just another person with bad views by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sure, if we looked closely into it, we'd find all sorts of wrong crazy views by famous people. Should we boycott everyone? There must certainly be gay people who worked on this film. We are hurting them too if we cause a lack of success.

  274. Wrong word or lip service by Zynder · · Score: 1

    Luckily I didn't have this conundrum back in the 80's when I eagerly purchased his books.

    Luckily? LUCKILY??? You just stated that you do not support his views and that you will not finacially support them now. I am in this camp along with you. It is ok to have bought his books before you knew, it happens to all of us. But now that you do know, you wish you didn't know cause as a kid you really did like it and didn't have a conundrum? If you truly feel that this guy is scum, then you should have said "Regretably I didn't have the conundrum" or sadly or a myriad of other words to choose from but you picked luckily. There is no negative connotations associated with luckily so when you say that you imply that ignorance is bliss and if you didn't find this out today, you'd still happily consume. I will give you the benefit of the doubt that you picked the wrong word in that statement and are not simply paying lip service to a cause you don't truly care about. If you don't care about it that is fine. Say what you mean Sir!

    1. Re:Wrong word or lip service by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      But now that you do know, you wish you didn't know cause as a kid you really did like it and didn't have a conundrum?

      It's been over 2 decades since I read any Orson Scott Card and too much time has passed to really care. It's not like I knew who Card was, I only like his Ender books. It's like my daughter loving Harry Potter when she was young. If you'd asked her who J. K. Rowling was she would only say that she wrote Harry Potter. She wouldn't know her political views and as a kid she wouldn't care.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  275. Re:Last time I checked... by metrix007 · · Score: 1

    Marriage can't predate recorded history. Or at least, you can't prove it does, which makes such an assertion meaningless.

    --
    If you ignore ACs because they are anonymous - you're an idiot.
  276. Oh how horrible! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh how horrible! Someone who actually stands up for traditional American values! If you don't want to see the movie don't, I'll make it a point to see the movie, at least once.

  277. You lost by Zynder · · Score: 1

    Sounds to me like our dollars weren't wasted either. He seems more educated on social issues than you. He is educated in the spirit of the law & the social issues that are relevent to his time. Usually when it is convienient to your side, you'll always go with the spirit of the law and commend the DoJ for agreeing. But when it doesn't suit you? Oh no you switch to a technical reading of document. Which one is it? Oh yeah, whichever one makes you look good and get what you want! Having cake and eating it too. I frown on your shenanigans.

    Are you claiming that the DoI isn't "the constitution or the papers by the framers supporting it."? Thomas Jefferson wrote the damned thing! He had nothing to do with the Constitution? He didn't support it? The DoI wasn't the initial thrust into us becoming the nation that we are? PREPOSTEROUS! Yeah it isn't law, but when your side sees fit, you will scream Federalist Papers this, Thomas Paine that, Don't Tread On Me. But when we do it? Well fuck us, that shit doesn't matter cause only the Constitution is right. I take offense to that and call you out right here. You have not in anyway been able to refute his statements nor furthered your own so you've resorted to Appeals of Ignorance and Ad Hominem. When all you got left is to call someone stupid, YOU. HAVE. LOST.

  278. Re:Last time I checked... by Myopic · · Score: 1

    It's an obvious troll, don't get too worked up about it.

  279. You're a hypocrite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut the fuck up Sparticus. You have been spewing your fair share of hate this thread and the only reason you are patting Captain Obvious here on the back for being so "insightful" is because your side is losing and you got nothing left but to try and flip the argument around and make the victim look like you. Nice try but bullshit always smells like bullshit even when you throw a rug over it.

  280. Re:Last time I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You’re correct, but you’re arguing semantics. The Christian concept of “marriage” is directly derived from the pre-existing Jewish concept, which Jesus recognised and affirmed as recorded in Matt. 19; although he was referring to the culturally-relevant question of divorce, the gender roles are obvious: “He who created them from the beginning made them male and female ... a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife”. Jews, by turns, derived their concept of marriage from the pre-existing cultural concept of marriage, which (they claimed) was instituted by their God in the beginning.

    So really, the Christian concept encompasses the Jewish and cultural concepts of marriage; as far as Christianity is concerned, it’s all the same thing.

  281. Losers gonna lose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boy you are really hard at it tonight. You are just looking for any and every argument you can find to try and justify the fucked position you have maintained this whole thread. It doesn't matter one giant donkey fuck if he doesn't get one cent. SOMEONE is profiting off of his work and we won't stand for it. But just to shoot that ass down, he is listed as a producer. Producers get paid. You're grasping at straws brah, cause you've lost the argument but can't concede defeat.

  282. Dude! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, cowabunga! Surf's up, dude!

  283. Bigotry and Hatred Coming Pro Gay Side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of the comments on this topic, which are Anti Orson Scott Card and surprisingly marked "Insightful", are full of bigotry and hatred. It is the Pro Gay Camp that is the source of the hate here. It amazes me that this escapes, so many of you.

    You dehumanize and vilify a person for their moral beliefs. Where is your tolerance? Your comments are fueled with fear, spite, and hatred. If this were not true, you would just ignore Orson Scott Card's personal beliefs. How much do his beliefs really matter? He's just one man. Like thugs, you force your own morals beliefs on others and if an individual does not share your beliefs, they become the focus of your hate. You are an angry mob.

  284. Re:Last time I checked... by Alsee · · Score: 1

    This infers that "gay rights are civil rights" is an unquestionable corollary/fact to build arguments off of.

    No, that's like saying "interracial rights are civil rights".... which is badly butchering the issue/description.

    It's the that government should not (and cannot) discriminate on the basis of race, religion, or gender. If the government issues driver's licenses the law cannot examine the applicant's race, religion, or gender as a basis to discriminate between acceptable and unacceptable applicants. If the government issues marriage licenses, then it's impossible to write a valid law excluding gay marriage for the exact same reason it's impossible to write a valid law that excludes interracial marriage. That's because there's no way fr the law to implement such discrimination other than explicitly on the basis of the race/religion/gender of the applicants.

    Marriage predates recorded history. Unlike Christ.

    Not if Christ was the same god/person/deity as the god of the Old Testament

    A friendly tip, you might want to think carefully before continuing with "traditional Old Testament marriage" as a foundation of your case.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  285. The new McCarthyism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The original poster has spouted far more malice and vitriol than Orson Scott Card. OSC doesn't hate gay people- he mentions them as friends:
    "Let me put it another way. The sex life of the people around me is none of my business; the homosexuality of some of my friends and associates has made no barrier between us, and as far as I know, my heterosexuality hasn't bothered them. That's what tolerance looks like."
    Only a man and a woman can produce children and, thus a family of generations; marriage is about families. If homosexual couples form a union, it is really only a civil union. They can call it a marriage, but they cannot produce children. This is not hatred. This is truth. The intolerance of the original poster is remarkable not just for it's own narrow-minded condemnation, but because it is exactly as OSC predicted - those who disagree with his political views will condemn them as hate crimes and bigotry.
    Shame on you for allowing this poison-filled post Slashdot - you are fueling the new McCarthyism.

  286. Dislike Card, love Harrison Ford by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    My conundrum is that I want Harrison Ford to keep being in movies, but I don't want a single cent to go to Orson Scott Card.

    Download the movie later and send Ford $2 in the mail?

  287. Songmaster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could someone explain to me how can a person be anti-gay having written Songmaster?

  288. Screw Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just have no fucking interest in Card, or his fucking stories anymore. I used to have a signed first edition of Xenophobia, but that was when I imagined Card was an englightened citizen of the first world. Now that I know he's an ass-backwards neanderthal who would be more comfortable in the 18th century, his work is boring. I don't know where that first edition went, and I could give a fuck less if I ever see it again.

  289. Re:Last time I checked... by Quila · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure regardless of wording, that wasn't the intent of the section

    It was adopted in 1948, a time when homosexual conduct itself was illegal in most Western countries.Alan Turing was convicted of homosexual activity four years after this.

  290. I'll watch it anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really don't care if he doesn't dig the homosexuals. I'm still excited for the movie.

  291. Re:Last time I checked... by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

    A friendly tip, you might want to think carefully before continuing with "traditional Old Testament marriage" as a foundation of your case.

    Yeah, the cultures surrounding the OT style of marriage (polygamy, man pretty much owns everything, etc.) are long gone, so many of the mores addressed in the OT's first five books (the Pentatauch, or Torah) seem a little crazy in modern society.

    "Leviticus says this" arguments, but the short, short version is that the first five books of the OT are the Law of Moses, and a lot of that (handed down by "God" - i.e. Jesus around 1300-1400 BC) was "fulfilled" (i.e. thrown out and/or clarified) by Jesus (as a mortal man) in the NT. Why he did that is a long, unrelated history lesson - but that doesn't mean that his stance on morality changed during that time.

    Again, people who throw that "But Leviticus says..." argument frankly don't know the history, meaning or purpose behind those parts of the Bible. They're just trying to blow off doctrine A in the OT (homosexuality, fornication, adultery, etc.) because doctrine B (don't eat shellfish, etc.) is no longer relevant. That logic isn't sustainable.

  292. Wait, who is practicing bigotry here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK. First off. The first assumption is that if you believe gay and lesbian acts are a sin, you are a bigot. This is not the case. Even lobbying for your beliefs does not make you a bigot. A bigot is someone who would treat a another person rudely, or not give them a job because of some differentiating factor about that person.

    Should gay people be allowed to Marry. I am not going to answer because I didn't come here to comment on that. What I will say is that no matter what choice you take on this question, nobody should be prejudice against your right to believe the way you do.

    So if treating someone differently based on a differentiating factor is bigotry, then I only see bigotry from one side on this one. Sorry, but the prejudice side is the gays being prejudice against Orson Scott Card due to his religion and belief system.

    Let's compare the actions and see who is acting prejudice and who is not:

    Orson Scott Card lobbies legally to try to make laws and makes no attack to any gay person directly, but is a good citizen sharing his beliefs with the government.

    Gays also lobby legally to try to make laws. However, some (not all) gay people aren't fine with going to government to try to make laws. Oh, no. They have to take their belief system and shove it down Orson Scott Cards throat. And they will make a personal war against him, slandering him in many ways (some ways are probably illegal slander not covered under freedom of speech) for daring to have a different opinion than they do.

  293. Some points by ABZB · · Score: 1

    I disagree with the specific beliefs of OSC. However, I do not feel that he is evil, or even causing evil. I feel that he is acting on genuine beliefs that he holds. The only way to change the mind or belief system if an individual is through logical and peaceful discourse. Additionally, it seems to me that a boycott, although personally satisfying, and perhaps capable of accomplishing some financial punishment to OSC, will also harm various others through no fault of their own. On another point, I feel that a compromise solution may be the best way out of this quagmire. I support removing the ability of the government to conduct marriage. By this, I mean that the government would not issue a 'marriage' license. Rather a group of adults who wish to live together as a family unit would register for a 'civil union' license. This would grant the members thereof the various benefits, rights, and conveniences that marriages grant in the secular realm. Marriage would be defined exactly as a religious ritual wholly out of the realm of government. Although this really amounts to wordplay, I feel that it alleviates much of the discomfort and fears of the religious opponents, while granting the ability of forming a family to any group, who can still conduct a marriage ceremony within whatever religious structure is mutually compatible with them. I would like to make a few side points over a few common misconceptions on this subject, the commonality of which irks me. With regard to religions that are inherently 'anti-gay' (I will speak of the Jewish religion with which I am familiar, at least much of it is applicable to the other Abrahamic religions), I must make several points: -Having homosexual desires, etc. is not inherently a sin. The thing which is forbidden is specifically the sexual act itself. -That said, although this is singled out as a 'To'Aivah' -an abomination- from all other sexual sins, it is not correct to focus and disparage those who commit this over ANY other sin, the same level of outrage should be felt against the one who embarrasses his fellow and the one who violates Shabbas- it is wrong to hyper-focus on one sin above all others. -With regard to the argument that mandating any kind of civil union for homosexuals would 'encourage' them, I feel that this is fallacious. -The annoyingly common idea that homosexuality is wrong because it is unnatural is completely wrong- it is simply not a valid argument, nor is its reverse. We see it in nature everywhere - it is not unnatural. It is considered prohibited because God said that it is -no more, no less-. It's commonality among all creation implies NOTHING - it is irrelevant to this argument. -From that point, even if homosexual desires are built in at the genetic level, the religion still demands that that desire be conquered and ignored by those who possess it - just because one wants to does not make it permitted.

  294. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by hakann · · Score: 1
    Does that mean you're also not against buying products made by child labor? Or diamonds sponsoring wars and atrocities? Cause hey, the product is good?

    You might just draw your line somewhere between advocating homophobia and child labor, but some of us prefer to draw it before advocating homophobia.

  295. Oh, how egalitarian -- ARG!! by cundare · · Score: 1
    We should all "tolerate people who have other opinions"? "Crazy Tea Party members deserve tolerance" Good grief. How is that the issue?

    Think about it: If a businessman uses the profits he derives from his business to actively work to deny another person his legal rights, that other person is certainly justified in refusing to contribute to that businessman's source of revenue. If the businessman's profits enable him to pursue activities that a second person finds repulsive, that second person is justified in refusing to purchase that businessman's products and to urge others to do the same, in order to weaken the businessman's ability to pursue those repulsive activities.

    Card doesn't merely have a "different opinion." He used his celebrity and his financial resources to support legal initiatives that would strip gays of existing legal rights, deny them new rights rooted in the doctrine of equal protection, and to promote anti-gay hate groups and lobbyists that justify their agendas with press releases that describe gay people as "sh*t-eating, child-molesting deviants." Screw him and screw you too if you think it's a good idea to enable this guy because he "deserves tolerance." He's consciously acted to make himself a high-profile enemy of gay people and, unlike Disney or Henry Ford, supporting his professional work can still help him hurt real people today.

    And the fact that he's now whining about "tolerance" is hypcritical to the point of being sickening. How would he have responded two years ago if a gay person had asked him for to cease his anti-gay activities out of "tolerance" of gay people's "sh*t-eating"? When Card issues a credible apology and promise to stop participating in activities that injure gay people, then I'd consider rethinking my position. But he went out of his way *not* to make such statements in EW, instead justifying his call for gay support with idiotic claims that "gays have already won; there is no more issue." Holy jumpin jeezus, if you're gonna try to BS me, at least have enough respect for my intelligence to come up with a rationalization not aimed at cretins.

    Unfortunately, based on some of the opinions posted here, it looks like we don't have to worry about a shortage of rationalizations. Or cretins.

  296. Zzzzzzzzzz by gnimblingpin · · Score: 1

    This won't stop anyone who was planning on seeing the movie from going. The threatened boycott is a snoozer. I'll be going, and I think his positions are correct. Don't care even a little bit if that displeases anyone. I have the right to disapprove of their activity, just as they have the right to disapprove of mine.

  297. i don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't really care what Card's politics are. It's a good story. I'll see the movie.

  298. I don't care, it's not an issue. by bitterblackale · · Score: 1

    I'm pro marriage equality, but I really don't care what Card's politics are except that I don't agree with him. Most of my heroes in the creative arts had something I disagreed with/just didn't like. A lot of composers were total loons, but I love their music. He's an author and it's a good story. I'll probably go see the movie, and I'll probably like it.

  299. Re:I wasn't going to see the movie in the theatre by Diss+Champ · · Score: 1

    Child labor- depending on some variables, children are sometimes better off doing child labor than starving. Slave labor I would be willing to boycott, voluntary labor (including where the parent is making the call instead of the child doing the work) is a much more gray area for me, and I'd want a better understanding of a given situation than that children were involved in the manufacture of a product to make a call there.

    Diamonds- personally, I believe that synthetic are just as good as dug-from-the-ground, so stating that I am boycotting diamonds would be rather misleading.

    Incidentally, I find it more offensive to demonize people (i.e. calling them homophobic because they disagree with you on whether the English language needs to be changed by government fiat), than anything I've seen Card say in the snippets I've seen people quote from him on the subject.

  300. Where's the line? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will anger and disturb some people because I am about to step outside of cultural norms - but know in doing so you are responding as sociology said you would.

    Why are we pushing so hard for tolerance and gay rights, but ignore so many other cultural intolerances? For example polygamy and polyandry are still illegal, and yet it is a similar intolerance. So is consensual sex with a minor. I know that the argument is that the minor might not understand, but we both know that when a minor turns 18 they don't have a magical epiphany, and that there is no guarantee that a 21 or 30 year old understands what they are doing either.

    There are other more extreme examples that will for sure seem "just wrong" but REALLY think about them. For example if a company owner wants to hire only pretty people, or only black people. You could make a solid argument that in either case the manager was born to only like pretty people. What about people born with mental disorders like cleptomania. Don't they deserve tolerance? Yes it impacts the owner of the goods, but to a much lesser extent so does peoples choices about their sexual orientation - of any kind. There would be benefits to outlawing sex all together, but then serious downsides too. From a purely science based level, sex is used for reproduction and there are obvious issues with that for anyone who chooses abstinence, so maybe we should make a law people should only have sex for reproduction? I am sure that would go over well.........

    Anyway, the point is think about it. If you are trying to decide whether I am on your side or not here is my opinion even though I know many do not agree with me -marriage should not be managed by the state nor financially beneficial to the couple because the church should be in charge of marriage, as it was originally instituted by the church.

  301. Married? by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Actually, a student receiving GI Bill benefits has less need for a spouse than a student who isn't receiving GI Bill benefits.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  302. Re:Bigotry? What about religious tolerance? by sabbede · · Score: 0

    No missionary ever has considered that maybe, just maybe, his religion is not the "true" one, and that by converting people of other religions to his, he is maybe, just maybe, taking them away from the "true" faith, and thereby doing harm to their immortal souls.

    Of course not! That's how (religious) faith works.

    Actually, I shouldn't say that. My money would be on most people of faith having doubts, or a 'crisis of faith' at least once. Still, the nature of faith defines a set of premises that generates a self validating system of logic. The Gospel is Truth. Literally. That is what gospel means! Starting from a premise like that, how could you end up doubting the correctness of evangelizing the faith?

    Some of the greatest thinkers, logicians and mathematicians in the history of the human race fell prey to this. I think Descartes recognized it, but was unable to say so out loud. If you have read his Meditations on First Philosophy, there is a giant gap in his logic between "cogito ergo sum" and the third meditation, "therefore God". And by 'gap' I mean that the first two steps he takes guarantee the invalidity of the third in a manner so clear I find it difficult to accept that he missed it.

    But I digress.

  303. Food for Thought.... by Mr+Neily · · Score: 1

    sure, I can understand not buying Card's books or wanting to give him any money at all, But, what about the other people involved in the movie, who may or may not share his same beliefs, by boycotting the movie you also affect them as well and they had nothing to do with Card's opinions or actions. If you want to boycott Card, don't buy his books. But boycotting the movie that is simply based on a novel he wrote will affect many more people, some of who may even support the cause Card is against. So now by boycotting the movie you may also be affecting your own cause. Just food for thought.

  304. Artists and correctness by Xylene2301 · · Score: 1

    Consider that Richard Wagner's music was pretty much anthems for the 3rd reich and his position with regard to the Jews was confused at best. The Israelis recently lifted the bans on his works for their philharmonic. I think artists need a little more slack. 'Ender's Game' is good work, maybe not 'Der Ring des Nibelungen' but I'll see it regardless. I'm a fan of his writing not his politics.

  305. tolerance is for people who don't force their view by ender89 · · Score: 1

    I'd be all for tolerance if it just came out that he didn't "believe" in gay marriage (whatever that's supposed to mean), but when you campaign for something people are allowed to "campaign" against it. He needs to man up and understand that when you try to legislate people against their will, they won't like you. And if he wants tolerance, he should try some tolerance first and let people live their lives.

  306. Another lame boycott by JakeBurn · · Score: 1

    Sorry to say, but this boycott is without merit. Marriage is not a right. Its a religious institution that corrupt politicians unconstitutionally applied tax breaks and additional rights to when they shouldn't have. Their greed in wanting votes and the greed of Americans wanting more than they deserved is the only thing that has kept this issue alive. Anyone claiming that gays should have the right to marry are not fighting the right fight. They are simply fighting to allow another group of people to have unconstitutional advantages over their fellow citizens.The laws will always be geared to pander to whoever brings in the most votes at the time the laws are created. The simple response should have been civil unions. Not just for gay and lesbian couples but all couples. A Christian couple wants tax breaks too but has a marriage certificate? So what, go to the courthouse and get your civil union license. Strike the term marriage out of every law and replace it with civil union. Problem solved and no one would have a right to complain. But that would be way too easy and wouldn't allow our politicians to create division among the citizens so that the assholes running the show could paint themselves as fighting for the people and keep the votes coming in.

  307. Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yawn Yawn

    Everybody hates something.

  308. What I'm going to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Orsen Scott Card is a BIGOT!!! The worst kind of bigot....a religious bigot! Some people see the Mormons as nothing more than a cult pushing their beliefs off as a religion. As a tolerant person, and an atheist, I do not hold anything against Mormons or any other religions. However, I am a big Sci-Fi fan. So, I will watch this movie. What I will do is wait for it to come out in DVD or Blu-Ray format and find a friend who actually purchased the movie. I will then watch it at no cost to me. If it's a good movie, I will even rip and burn a copy to watch again when it pleases me. This way I can see the movie and not support the scum-bag bigot who's story it is based on. Of course, I will not be reading any more books by this author, since, I do not support bigots. I am a straight heterosexual and cannot understand the appeal of the gay or lesbian lifestyle, but, that does not mean that I am qualified to judge them. Maybe Mr. Scott should have been a little less critical and a little more tolerant! If I were a religious man, I would pray that his soul would burn in hell!!!

  309. Re:Last time I checked... by Alsee · · Score: 1

    They're just trying to blow off doctrine A in the OT (homosexuality, fornication, adultery, etc.) because doctrine B (don't eat shellfish, etc.) is no longer relevant. That logic isn't sustainable.

    You've flipping the logic backwards.

    Of course "Leviticus says..." is an unsustainable argument.
    The entire point of raising "Leviticus says [shellfish]" is to smack someone over the head with the fact that "Leviticus says..." is an unsustainable argument. If someone wants to cite Old Testament Law as an argument, they need something better than "I personally enjoy shellfish and I personally do not enjoy homosexuality" as a basis for claiming one is a valid God's Law and the other is a "no longer relevant" God's Law.

    Even if we take the Bible as the undisputed word of God, we still have the Old Testament was fulfilled/thrown_out/clarified/whatever_you_want_to_call_it by Jesus. Therefore "Leviticus says [homosexuality]" is an unsustainable argument. Saying "Leviticus says [shellfish]" does not positively establish that homosexuality is fine and dandy, but it does positively refute any "Leviticus says..." argument that homosexuality is any worse than eating shellfish or wearing a poly-cotton mixed fiber T-shit.

    -

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    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  310. Actor politics by brunnegd · · Score: 1

    If our decision to see a movie was influenced by the politics of actors, most of us right thinking people would never never see a movie. Liberals are once again demonstrating their hypocracy on tolerance.

  311. Besides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's gay to be anti gay. So grab your ankles Orson, and cry Jesus.

  312. The difference is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When C.S. Lewis rehashed the new testament, he had two key things going for him; the 'holy' book he was ripping off had been edited into something resembling coherence before its codification by the various canonical councils, and he had enough writerly good sense to be self-aware at times of precisely what he was doing - this latter is especially obvious in 'Perelandra'.

  313. Two Fallacies Don't Make a Certainty by Doctrinsograce · · Score: 1

    Internal1066 wrote, "The fallacy he employs here — that calling out hate-speech is intolerance on par with curtailing the human rights of others — is a favorite fallback of cowards and bullies," ...and the fallacy employed here is called ad hominem.

  314. Confused by Card's anti-gay stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Card is anti-gay? And yet he carefully wrote a scene wherein numerous naked, soaped-up boys are in a communal shower. The fight ensues with lots of grabbing. Card could easily have conjured many different fight scenes. But he did not. He carefully chose a shower. Could his anti-gay stance actually be a cover-up for his true, dark feelings?

  315. An Idea by Dabido · · Score: 1

    Rather late, so it probably won't get modded up.

    Thought of a better idea. Gay/Lesbians are calling on the movie to be boycotted due to OSC's financial and active support of homophobic campaigns. Rather ironic (of OSC) considering the movie is about tolerance. Rather than suffering conscious dissonance or pangs of guilt etc, people who want to see the movie go see it with clothes calling for tolerance of gays and lesbians or anti-homophobia T-Shirts etc ... things like that. Try to make it a media / on-line thing and It might make OSC become more tolerant of gays/lesbians etc. Gays and Lesbians around the world could even turn it into a Gay/Lesbian event, that way the book/movie will always be associated with tolerance of gay/lesbians. Just my two cents.

    --
    Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
  316. Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've read some excellent comments and have no doubt that you are all passionate in your beliefs and I respect that. I would just ask that you consider that in trying to "punish" one individual you are advocating that all of the hard working people who contributed to the making of the film, many perhaps without any knowledge of the author's history, be punished as well by the financial failure of the film.

  317. Did Card lose his shit after 9/11? by Pherdnut · · Score: 1

    Or has he always been an asshole? I loved his books as a kid but post-9/11 was the first time I was exposed to his politics and they struck me as counter to a lot of his themes. Anyway, no. Don't want to see Tom Cruise out of disgust with Scientology and its posterboys, but when it comes down to running an abusive cult that you ultimately still have to sign up for vs. actively persecuting people who have done you no harm, I'm gonna say OSC and anything that earns him a profit can go to Hell where they belong.