Second, you're going on record that prohibiting sex with animals is "contrary to reason?"
Third, and most importantly, you didn't provide any evidence of anything. I asked you to show that people X did action Y for the reason you said they did, and you responded with "People do all sorts of stuff because they're fanatical." That's like a judge saying to a prosecuter, "Can you show that the defendant shot the victim for his money instead of self defense" and the prosecuter says, "Well, violence on TV is bad for kids."
Can you back your accusation up or not?
Only the judgment of history provides the evidence, - as Arthur Koestler once commented :
"-- The continuous disasters of man's history are mainly due to his excessive capacity and urge to become identified with a tribe, nation, church or cause, and to espouse its credo uncritically and enthusiastically, even if its tenets are contrary to reason, devoid of self-interest and detrimental to the claims of self-preservation. We are thus driven to the unfashionable conclusion that the trouble with our species is not an excess of aggression, but an excess capacity for fanatical devotion. --"
First, you take the name of Paine, the guy who wrote in The Crisis of the "summer soldier and the sunshine patriot," yet you say that our problems spring from excessive identification "with a tribe, nation, church or cause." Gee, no contradiction there...
Indeed, there isn't.. -- Paine was writing about the fanatical English who were bound up in their "excessive identification with a nation, church and cause." -- Their 'cause' was empire..
Second, you're going on record that prohibiting sex with animals is "contrary to reason?"
Prohibiting most anything is contrary to 'reasonably regulating' .. We protect life, liberty, property in the USA by using due process of constitutional law to regulate sin. -- Writing and enforcing prohibitional type laws violate due process.
Third, and most importantly, you didn't provide any evidence of anything.
I admitted that only our history can provide that evidence. Our Constitution is an excellent source for researching that history.
I asked you to show that people X did action Y for the reason you said they did, and you responded with "People do all sorts of stuff because they're fanatical."
Yep, guarding peoples rights from fanatics is a big part of our history.
That's like a judge saying to a prosecuter, "Can you show that the defendant shot the victim for his money instead of self defense" and the prosecuter says, "Well, violence on TV is bad for kids." Can you back your accusation up or not?
Not to you I'd guess.