Are We Too Quick To Act On Social Media Outrage?
RedK writes: Connie St-Louis, on June 8th, reported on apparently sexist remarks made by Sir Tim Hunt, a Nobel prize winning scientist, during an event organised for women in sciences. This led to the man's dismissal from his stations, all in such urgency that he did not even have time to present his side, nor was his side ever offered any weight. A leaked report a few days later suggests that the remarks were taken out of context. Further digging shows that the accuser has distorted the truth in many cases it seems. This is not the first time that people may have jumped the gun too soon on petty issues and ruined great events or careers.
THAT's your complaint? In this time and age, with terrorism and an economy in the dump, your problem is that fags can marry?
Dude, get your priorities right. Or, in terms that you can understand, Matt 7,3.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Every single one of your 'concerns' arises in cases of divorce, too. But there was no well-financed national campaign to maje divorce more difficult. Nobody tried to amend any Constitutions to ban no-fault divorce. No, it was the numerically small, historically persecuted minority that got that kind of attention. I think the true priorities are pretty clearly seen from the actions taken.
PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
Who even said anything about raising kids? Marriage is not about kids. It used to be, granted, but these days, marriage is about taxes, inheritance, renting, who gets to visit whom in hospitals and a load of other things that are very different whether you're married or not.
Not to mention the whole "love" thing...
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.