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Santorum is Right
AgapePress ^
| April 25, 2003
| R. Cort Kirkwood
Posted on 04/26/2003 6:24:52 AM PDT by Remedy
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To: 11th Earl of Mar
Sorry, won't wash, Earl. I find the thread quite interesting, some of the vacuous brained defenses of degeneracy are boring, however.
101
posted on
04/26/2003 2:07:50 PM PDT
by
MHGinTN
(If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
To: sinkspur
Something else. My own view is pretty flexible concerning sodomy laws. I believe, however, it is destructive and disgraceful for the Supreme Court to consider overturning long-standing state laws and practices on the basis of political fashion and a whimsical reading of the Constitution.
And I do see a reason for these laws apart from imposing subjective morality on someone who may not agree with it.
If you have a couple of aging homosexuals living together and leaving everybody else alone, I really don't think anybody -- including the law -- should bother them. On the other hand, if they are having a orgy every other weekend featuring anonymous sex they may just be creating a wee bit of a health hazard -- especially if some of the participants go home to their unsuspecting wives and girlfriends. So much for the "gay gene."
And I think a law might be a tool for dissauding an authority figure -- priest, college professor, employer -- from taking home an 18-year-old with a poor self-image and with help from drink and drugs convincing him he really doesn't like girls.
Regardless, the pros and cons should be considered by an elected, changeable legislature, not by unelected, appointed-for-life judges.
To: MHGinTN
You were the one originally objecting to gays on the basis of them being a health hazard, not me.
If you want to outlaw behavior on the grounds of its health consequences then at least be consistent.
LQ
To: sinkspur
Tell me how consensual polygyny or consensual polyandry violates anyone's rights...
Criminalize sodomy, fellatio, cunnilingus, toe licking, etc., ad nauseum???
Sounds dumb. It also sounds dumb to complain about it being criminalized as well. I don't really care...
To: Remedy
Now, let's grab the nettle: Uh, isn't that what gets homos in trouble in the first place?
105
posted on
04/26/2003 4:22:44 PM PDT
by
Bullish
To: MHGinTN
Sorry, won't wash Maybe you should.
By the way, please name ONE credible naitonal conservative who thinks the rest of the conservative movement should be spending time defending what Santorum said and how he said it.
To: 11th Earl of Mar; MHGinTN
By the way, please name ONE credible naitonal conservative who thinks the rest of the conservative movement should be spending time defending what Santorum said and how he said it.
White House backs Santorum; he's 'inclusive'
But other Senate Republicans, including Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee and Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, have affirmed their support for Santorum.
107
posted on
04/26/2003 4:28:29 PM PDT
by
Remedy
To: Bullish
That and their affinity for human excretement, urine,...and associated diseases from playing in the sewer pipe.
108
posted on
04/26/2003 4:31:33 PM PDT
by
Remedy
To: Maelstrom
However, by concentrating on the adultery comments made by Santorum, you've made your argument unique, but have not elevated it above the combination of nit-picking and hair-splitting that it represents. First of all I would like to see the name and story of just ONE person in the United States criminally charged with adultery.
But, regarding the nit-picking... I simply stated that I supported Santorum and his views but thought he did not represent those views very well by what he said here.
And if Santorum had it to do all over again, HE would probably choose different words to better express himself.
To: Remedy
You are telling me that Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and President George Bush think that the rest of the conservative movement should be spending time defending what Santorum said and how he said it?
I can hear them now...
"Hooray!!! Quick!!! Call Tim Russert and see if he will do a whole hour show on the Santorum comments on Sunday! We want Frist, Rove and Hastert on every show they can get on this weekend. And don't let them talk about anything else but Santorum!"
To: Tribune7
If court rules the sodomy law is unconstituional because it involves consensual sex on private property, how can a bigamy or adultery or incest law be constitutional? I don't think the sodomy law should be overturned. I simply think Santorum used a poor choice of words to defend our case.
To: Tribune7
If court rules the sodomy law is unconstituional because it involves consensual sex on private property, how can a bigamy or adultery or incest law be constitutional? And do you really want the government to start prosecuting adulterers?
To: tpaine
- 'Consensual & private adult sex' should be ~ignored~ by government.Public health and safety issues concerning diseases is none of the government's business? People intentionally spreading diseases fully knowing they are infected is a felony.
Sodomy is not sex. In terms of human biological science, it is a perversion of anatomical function and getting off the subject of the original topic...
Reaction to Santorum's commentary is a tempest in a teapot. Myself, I could care less. I support his right to speak what he sees as truth.
I am outraged by the sodomy lobby and their religious fervor in the advocacy of perverts. They are perverts, plain and simple. The "gay" religion....
To: 11th Earl of Mar
I don't think the sodomy law should be overturned. I simply think Santorum used a poor choice of words to defend our case. Okay.
To: 11th Earl of Mar
And do you really want the government to start prosecuting adulterers? A better question might be do I want law enforcement angencies dedicating time to investigating adultery and the answer is certainly not. But I don't object to the law being on the books and I wouldn't object to a prosecution if the matters warranted it.
If someone's affairs are causing a huge amount of public turmoil or real harm to bystanders, a prosecution would be a good thing, I think . It would certainly make others inclined to screw around a little more circumspect.
But the purpose of the prosecution would be public order and not saving souls or making someone good.
To: 11th Earl of Mar
I'm curious, do you catch all those red herring yourself, or do you have someone providing them for you?
116
posted on
04/26/2003 5:05:07 PM PDT
by
MHGinTN
(If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
To: Sir Francis Dashwood
sinkspur:
And should be criminalized?
Should it be idolized?
93 -Sir Francis Dashwood-
Neither, - both obviously & constitutionally.
- 'Consensual & private adult sex' should be ~ignored~ by government.
As sinky says, very weak cases on 'contract' enforcement can be made for state laws on bigamy, adultry, incest, etc, so such 'crime' could safely be resolved by juries informed of their constitutional nullification option.
99 -tpaine-
Public health and safety issues concerning diseases is none of the government's business? People intentionally spreading diseases fully knowing they are infected is a felony.
Sodomy is not sex. In terms of human biological science, it is a perversion of anatomical function and getting off the subject of the original topic...
Reaction to Santorum's commentary is a tempest in a teapot. Myself, I could care less. I support his right to speak what he sees as truth.
I am outraged by the sodomy lobby and their religious fervor in the advocacy of perverts. They are perverts, plain and simple. The "gay" religion.
-SFD-
As you say, spreading disease is already a felony.
Your 'outrage' belies "caring less".. Which is it?
117
posted on
04/26/2003 6:15:07 PM PDT
by
tpaine
(Really, I'm trying to be a 'decent human being', but me flesh is weak.)
To: Tribune7
I could live with that. But I still don't think Santorum's comments were well thought out.
To: 11th Earl of Mar
But I still don't think Santorum's comments were well thought out. Fair enough.
To: 11th Earl of Mar
People have listed several accounts of adultery cases which have been prosecuted.
120
posted on
04/26/2003 8:32:42 PM PDT
by
Maelstrom
(To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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