Posted on 05/08/2009 4:28:43 AM PDT by steve-b
Believe it or not, often I can see the other side of an argument. I know that tough gun control laws save lives and make our communities safer, for example, but I also see clarity in the Second Amendment. I support affirmative action, but I realize that providing opportunity to some worthy individuals can mean denying opportunity to others. Thinking about some issues involves discerning among subtly graded shades of gray.
On some issues, though, I really don't see anything but black and white. Among them is the "question" of granting full equal rights to gay and lesbian Americans, which really isn't a question at all. It's a long-overdue imperative, one that the nation is finally beginning to acknowledge....
Favoring "civil unions" that accord all the rights and benefits of marriage -- but that withhold the word marriage, and with it, I guess, society's approval -- amounts to another dodge. I'm concerned here with the way the law sees the relationship, not the way any particular church or religious leader sees it; that's for worshipers, clergy and the Almighty to work out. Marriage is not just a sacrament but also a contract, and the contractual aspect is a matter of statute, not scripture.
Obama took the "civil unions" route during last year's campaign and has stuck with it. While I see the political calculation -- that was basically the position of all the major Democratic candidates -- I never understood the logic. If semantics are the only difference between a civil union and a marriage, why go to the trouble of drawing a distinction? If there are genuine differences that the law should recognize, what are they?...
Er, what’s the problem? Suppressing Asian Cinema requires “some government”, but not all that much.
SISTERS OF THE GION (Japan 1936): Legendary director Kenji Mizoguchi had a fascination with prostitutes...Sexcrime, anti-gun propaganda, cradle-robbing old pervs, more sexcrime, and I barely got a quarter of the way through the list before giving up in revulsion. Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?STRAY DOG (Japan 1949): Film noir style police movie about a stolen gun used in a crime spree....
EARLY SUMMER (Japan 1951): A very traditional Japanese family seeks to marry their daughter (the always sweet Setsuko Hara) to an older man....
THE LIFE OF OHARU (Japan 1952): Kinuyo Tanaka stars as an aging prostitute....
The falseness of an opinion, said Nietzsche, is not for us any objection to it.... The question is, how far an opinion is life-furthering, life-preserving ... When such pragmatism begins, Nihilism passes into the Vitalist stage, which may be defined as the elimination of truth as the criterion of human action, and the substitution of a new standard: the life-giving, the vital; it is the final divorce of life from truth. [Nihilism, p. 50].
In the Vitalist stage of society, people deliver themselves over to an unending search for sensation and excitement, for the exotic and the experimental, for ever-greater freedom and satisfaction of desires, for the riches of diversity, for the transforming energy that is produced by a society in constant change and motion—and with all these things being seen as, even explicitly promoted as, a substitute for any inherent truth and goodness in existence.
As Vitalism reaches its peak, the final stage of Nihilism starts to appear. This is the Nihilism of Destruction, a rage against creation and against civilization that will not be appeased until it has reduced them to absolute nothingness.
It strikes me that with the Massachusetts decision legalizing homosexual marriage, our society may be passing from the Vitalist stage of Nihilism to the full-blown Nihilism of Destruction.
Why stop with just the one perversion ? How about pedophiles, necrophiliacs, bestiophiles ? If I want to marry a kid, a corpse, my sister or my dog that's my right, isn't it ?
Despicable. Trying to say "gay marriage" equals real marriage is like trying to say zero equals one.
In your dreams. That's like imagining that you would spend a couple hours in the ring with Muhammad Ali in his prime.
I'll leave you with this. It's a repost of something Lawrence Auster wrote
It reads like the sort of twaddle cranked out by totalitarians' kept scribes in order to justify the liquidation of the latest Enemies Of The State.
In any case, you are quite correct in saying that there's no point in your continuing to argue, and not merely because you have the far weaker case. You have already retired from the field, by ceding to the State the power to shape culture. I have not made any such concession, and the result is that I find myself engaged with a self-disarmed opponent. Hardly challenging, or even entertaining.
BTW, you should watch some of these films. They’re very good, though I also include a few “guilty pleasures” that are merely fun. :-)
Indeed. Social “conservatives” who fed the beast of government so that it would do work that they ought to have done themselves now find the beast loose and snarling at their throats. I had hoped that my facetious comments on an imagined case of the poster’s particular ox (Asian Cinema) being gored would have made that clear.
A society of unlimited freedom does not exist and cannot exist. There has to be some accommodation of culture. This is where the libertarians always fail. They can't understand that people aren't individual autonomy units totally divorced from any societal influence. Thus, when leftists demand the "liberation" of homosexuals (as one example) they jump on the bandwagon, not realizing that liberated homosexuals will demand a government far bigger than the relatively mild laws and social restrictions placed on homosexuals historically.
When that happens, the only defense the libertarian has is to demand that government get out of the marriage business, or out of the education business, as if that would even be considered in a world in which homosexuals have political clout. You can't scale back government in a socially liberal society for any number of reasons.
First, the people empowered in such a society are homosexuals, feminists, Third World oriented racial minorities, and other groups which are non-competitive in our culture. In a true free market, based on competition, they'd fail. Second, the behavior of many of these groups creates a plethora of social problems which lead to more government (disease, illegitimacy, crime....).
This is why the left has spent so much time promoting social liberalism. Once they get that, all other areas of society will become liberal by default. Chuck Schumer isn't promoting the homosexual agenda because he believes in freedom, but because he doesn't.
I see us becoming more like Europe, which in turn is becoming more like the old USSR. Conservatives in Europe now refer to the EU as the EUSSR. Out of the ashes of the West's decline, something new will arise but without Christendom it won't be anything like our founding fathers created. It'll be an authoritarian Asian model, or a totalitarian Islamic model. The left imagines a secular totalitarian leftist EU and a similar regime here, but the very diversity the left has promoted in these regions will kill that as the parasites feed off the hosts.
I'm afraid that libertarians who imagine a "live and let live" world in which homosexuals respect and tolerate Christians, in which Muslims respect and tolerate Christians & Jews, in which racial minorities agree to compete on an equal basis without government preferences, in which the schools and other things are privatized to allow the above to flourish, is a wild fantasy that can never be. As just one example, homosexuals have more political clout in California and in the New England states than elsewhere in America. Those areas are also more secular. Does anyone imagine a legislature in any of those states abolishing public education? If anything, they'll be the first to outlaw home schooling.
Your post is very good, by the way. Well-written and well-argued. I hope we can agree to disagree, if indeed we do!
God sets the idea, as amplified by Jesus, that He recognizes marriage only between a male and female. Yet even He recognized the many wives of King Solomon, a situation that many find revolting. (lest we allow Mormon plural marriage today)
I observe the real Sabbath, the one in the Bible, not the one imposed by the Roman Church many centuries later on Christianity. Those who observed Sunday as a day of rest (gradually becoming the hour of rest), did not hesitate to use the armed agents of the State to force stores to be closed on Sunday for many generations. Would anyone here want to give me the same power of the State to force stores to close on my day of rest? I don't think so.
A good start on this topic is to consider what aspects of the present tax system allow government to define things that government should not be defining. Who my heirs are should be none of government's business, except they need to know so proper taxes can be levied. Who my wife is none of government's business either! We only have to know so we can properly exempt some income from taxation.
The Fair Tax leads us away from this mess and towards more liberty and privacy. (so a caution here in how the “prebate” is structured!)
This is a wonderful topic for as we wrestle with it, the concepts of liberty can once again be brought to the fore and back into the public’s conscious. (hey! the left is always talking about “consciousness raising”! Let's do some of our own.)
The history of the Mormons presents a perfect example of how the "relatively mild laws"* excuse fails. Once the power of the State takes a side, brutality up to and including unpunished lynching may readily be brought to bear against the disfavored group.
*The other alternative -- "social restrictions" -- does not fall within the scope of this debate, unless and until agitators translate them into law so that they can palm off onto the State the work of upholding them.Those who observed Sunday as a day of rest (gradually becoming the hour of rest), did not hesitate to use the armed agents of the State to force stores to be closed on Sunday for many generations. Would anyone here want to give me the same power of the State to force stores to close on my day of rest? I don't think so.
And, I gather, you do not want any such power. If so, that speaks well of your wisdom and morality, and shows that you have what it takes to lead by persuasion and example. Once the State is called upon, those qualities decay in the same way, and for the same reason, that the work ethic of habitual welfare dependents does.
The Fair Tax leads us away from this mess and towards more liberty and privacy. (so a caution here in how the "prebate" is structured!)
A simple per capita prebate avoids most potential problems, since it requires only information (how many citizens live where) that is legitimately needed for electoral purposes and is generally obvious public knowledge anyway.
Since that liberty includes the freedom to speak in the public square, I hope to persuade others that there indeed are long term benefits to observing the Sabbath. Even so, I realize that each person must accept this truth as a matter of free will.
This is why it is essential that we get our children out of the government run indoctrination centers. Aside from their high costs, fewer and fewer are able to get away with teaching Biblical values. More and more, values that are hostile to those found in the Bible are advocated, and reinforced by peer pressure.
This also extends to both the accreditation apparatus, where a school must be given approval by the very libertine and progressive edu-crat establishment who firmly control the public school system.
Yes, liberalism in the modern progressive sense, is at war with Judeao-Christian values. Those who treasure and understand the later must take away every advantage their opposing forces have.
Happily, the present administration's high level of spending has scared a lot of nominal leftists. Maybe now is the best time in a generation to press for the case of smaller government. This worked for me, for in a conversation with an advocate of big government who got scared by the deficits, I remarked that being able to print an borrow an unlimited amount of money allows governments to go to a war that the public does not support. He almost jumped out of his chair, almost yelling, “that illegal war!”, by which he meant Bush and Iraq. I almost could not contain my laughter, for finally a big spending progressive saw the danger of big government.
It is time to restrain Leviathan, for even those who normally are glad to see the beast intervene for causes they cheer are getting nervous about the cost of feeding the beast.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/09/AR2009040904063.html
War has been declared on our faith, our traditions, our culture, and our institutions.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.