![]() |
|
|
#1156 |
|
"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13·89 Posts |
I'm still unclear, are you saying that "race" for whatever definition you are claiming for that word (and assuming I agree that it has more value as a definer of rights than hair color--which I'm pretty sure I don't) has been justifiably used to grant more rights to one individual over another?
Notice that I use the adverb justifiably. Last fiddled with by chappy on 2014-03-01 at 18:46 Reason: question marks end sentences that are questions. |
|
|
|
|
|
#1157 |
|
"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
100100001012 Posts |
https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0200210100
Social Security Administration: GN 00210.100 Same-Sex Marriage - Benefits for Aged Spouses |
|
|
|
|
|
#1158 |
|
May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
Sorry I wasn't more clear. In my opinion, race has been justifiably given more protections than hair-color only because historically race has been the source of major persecution whereas hair-color has not been the source of such acts. If people started acting in a similar manner towards hair-color, then it would probably become a protected classification as well.
Similarly, historically religious belief has been the source of extreme persecution, but being a platonist has not. One of the founding principles of the United States was to protect the right to believe as you wish without government interference. I view this in a more comprehensive way as protecting the right of conscience (which would include your philosopher). This is, of course, just one of many reasons to protect the right of conscience. Last fiddled with by Zeta-Flux on 2014-03-01 at 18:56 |
|
|
|
|
|
#1159 | ||||
|
"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
Quote:
Why should it not have the same status as race in regard to discrimination? Quote:
Quote:
(Laws against theft don't require anyone to give up a belief that theft is okay; they just provide punishment for people who act on that belief by actually stealing.) Therefore, characterization of the proposed bill as being for protection of "religious freedom" is, and always has been, just a sham. Religious freedom was not what was being protected by the proposed bill. Backers who claimed that the bill protected religious freedom were either ignorant or lying. Discriminatory action was what was being protected by the proposed bill. Quote:
What's at question here are acts of discrimination, not beliefs or conscience. The provisions of the proposed bill were plainly aimed at protecting discriminatory actions, not beliefs or conscience. If a businessperson's conscience prevents him/her from treating gay customers the same as non-gay customers, that person needs to find some other way of making a living, or do it in some other legal jurisdiction, ... or examine his/her conscience to determine just what proper and equitable basis there is for discriminating against gays. A religion that teaches discrimination against gays is a religion that deserves no followers. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2014-03-02 at 09:50 |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
#1160 | |||
|
May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
Quote:
In the United States, there are no laws against being homosexual. Those who do persecute to the level of violent acts are punished, and not protected, by the law. Quote:
Quote:
However, on the point that freedom of religion consists only in the ability to believe, but not act, according to the dictates of our conscience, I completely and utterly disagree. A society needs rules to keep the peace, but those don't include forcing a business to support abortion, for example. Or force a wedding photographer to participate in an event that photographer would not consider a wedding. Or to force an artist to create a piece of art against their conscience. If you would consider these acts "discriminatory", then indeed I support the freedom to discriminate, even in business. However, I think most people (including judges) can see the difference between claiming that these actions would substantially burden a sincere religious belief, whereas claiming you couldn't serve someone because they were effeminate would not be a substantial burden, nor motivated out of a sincere religious belief. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#1161 | ||||
|
"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
That was in response to cheesehead, but I can't resist butting in here.
Quote:
Aside from this inaccuracy, why would it matter if gay people had never been discriminated by government or forced by law to be discriminated? Why would that make this discrimination okay whereas racial discrimination needs to be outlawed? Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
#1162 |
|
"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
48516 Posts |
It's true that the last Federal ban on consensual sodomy was repealed all the way back in December of 2013. So I don't know why we are even talking about it still.
Of course that same law contained some troubling language that will become more and more meaningless as millennials continue to question the homophobia of their forefathers. You might also remember way back in aught 3, if you are old enough, when the Supreme Court ruled that all the state laws against consensual sex by homosexuals. (my state was one of 4 that said butt sex was okay as long as it's good old fashioned boy on girl action.) At that time 14 states still had laws against consensual homosexual sex. This doesn't even begin to scratch the surface of all the legal rights granted to same sex couples which have historically (and continue to be) denied to same-sex couples. (examples include that a husband can't be compelled to testify against his wife in a court of law under most circumstances (spousal privilege) , visitation rights at hospitals, inheritance, insurance, public housing, etc.) To pretend like the discrimination against homosexuals is a thing of the distant past, or that it wasn't pervasive in all levels of society all the way up to Federal Law is nonsense. |
|
|
|
|
|
#1163 | |
|
"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1164 | |||
|
May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
Brian-E,
Quote:
Of course refusing to support abortion involves discrimination. So does making laws against drunk driving. So does deciding to help a poor neighbor. Each and every one of these acts is an act of discrimination. You make a distinction between two things, and choose one over the other. The only difference between justified discrimination and unjust discrimination is whether or not you think the judgement was made due to the class of people being discriminated against, or whether the decision was made on the merits of the proposition. Take opposition to drunk driving. Your natural response would probably be that this doesn't involve (unjust) discrimination because the merits of the proposition are so obvious to you. Your opposition to drunk driving is not born out of a hatred of people who like drinking--it is born out of a respect of life. Similarly, opposition to stealing is not born out of a hatred of kleptomaniacs. While laws against stealing certainly affect kleptomaniacs more than the average Joe, the laws were not passed with them in mind, or out of any ill intent towards them. Now take abortion. You said it didn't involve discrimination. In the negative sense of the word, I personally agree with you. But there is a major segment of the U.S. population which does not agree. They frame it as a "war on women". Opposition to abortion can only be born out of hatred for women because of a desire to control their sexual lives. I am not joking. That is how they frame the issue. For them, it is one of unjust, hate-filled discrimination. Now, finally, take opposition to gay marriage. There are people who are opposed because they hate homosexuals. We can agree that those people are unjustly discriminating. Then there are those people who are opposed because they believe it will be negative for the marriage culture, and negative for children in particular. [We've gone through the reasoning here, ad naseum. So I'll let the rest of this thread speak on that issue.] Are these individuals discriminating (unjustly)? Are they judging the issue out of hatred for a class of individuals? Are they passing laws only to punish homosexuals? Or could it be that while homosexuals are indeed a large class affected by this restriction (but perhaps not even the biggest, if you include bisexuals, etc...) the opposition had nothing to do, per se, with any individual's personal sexual preferences? It is sometimes difficult to separate one's proclivities from the actions taken due to those natural propensities. And some people think that indeed this separation cannot be done. If you discriminate against a behavior you are automatically discriminating against the class of people prone to said behavior. Thus, if you are against abortion you are automatically against women who choose abortions. If you choose not to support gay marriages you are a homophobe. Indeed, there have been numerous judicial rulings recently in the U.S. that say opposition to gay marriage could be motivated by no other possible motive than hatred. Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#1165 | ||
|
"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
Thanks for the reply, Zeta-Flux. My impression now is that we really need to understand what we all mean by discrimination if this discussion is to be meaningful from now on.
Discrimination, to me, is arbitrarily treating a particular group of people differently from the rest of the population on the basis of an identifying characteristic of those people. That is the definition which I was using. Being anti-abortion is not discrimination under this definition. No group of people is being arbitrarily discriminated and treated differently than the rest of the population. The attitude you describe at length above seems to refer to the idea of someone disapproving of abortion because that person discriminates against women generally. Thinking that no woman should be allowed an abortion is then the result of an idea that women are men's property and men therefore get to say what women may and may not do with their own lives. Being anti-abortion can sometimes, therefore, be a manifestation of a person's sex-discrimination, but it is not discrimination in itself, and very often it does not have anything to do with sex-discrimination anyway. It is quite possible to be a feminist and to believe that all abortions should be illegal. Quote:
Quote:
Last fiddled with by Brian-E on 2014-03-03 at 10:27 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#1166 |
|
"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2×3×1,693 Posts |
Bravo!
|
|
|
|
![]() |
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Patient Rights | R.D. Silverman | Soap Box | 25 | 2013-04-02 08:41 |
| Marriage and Civil Partnerships: what is the ideal situation? | Brian-E | Soap Box | 53 | 2013-02-19 16:31 |
| Gay Marriage: weekly alternating viewpoints | Brian-E | Soap Box | 46 | 2008-11-09 22:21 |