Moderator: Dictators in Training
Zanchief wrote:Lyion wrote:It has nothing to do with religion and everything to do with societal mores.
I can't believe that an intelligent person could actually believe that.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Diekan wrote:I'm still amazed that this country is still more focused on gay marriages than it is about the more important issues that doing us more damage.
The union of a man and a woman is the most enduring human institution, honored and encouraged in all cultures and by every religious faith
Marriage cannot be severed from its cultural, religious and natural roots without weakening the good influence of society.
Today, I call upon the Congress to promptly pass and to send to the states for ratification an amendment to our Constitution defining and protecting marriage as a union of a man and woman as husband and wife.
I am mindful that we're all sinners, and I caution those who may try to take the speck out of their neighbor's eye when they got a log in their own. I think it's very important for our society to respect each individual, to welcome those with good hearts, to be a welcoming country. On the other hand, that does not mean that somebody like me needs to compromise on an issue such as marriage, And that's really where the issue is heading here in Washington, and that is the definition of marriage.
lyion wrote:I stick to my point this is not a civil rights issue. That's an insult to those who indeed fought for them. This is merely a way for alternative activists to change the defintion of marrage from man and wife, to man/man and woman/woman also.
Until recently, DOMA was effectively unchallengeable by the individuals subjected to its stigma. . . . Now the time is ripe for a constitutional challenge to DOMA. . . . DOMA violates principles of equal protection and due process. A strong case can also be made that DOMA abuses the Full Faith and Credit Clause and contravenes fundamental principles of federalism. A successful equal protection or due process challenge, however, is likely to have the farthest-reaching implications for the future of same-sex marriage in two respects. First, if DOMA is found to violate equal protection or due process, the state DOMAs are likely to fall on the same grounds. And second, it is difficult to imagine how the Court could find excluding same-sex couples from the definition of marriage unconstitutional without creating a constitutional requirement that same-sex couples be allowed to marry
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