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thegreekdog wrote:Interestingly, the bigots I was referring to in my post a couple above this one were atheists who are bigoted towards religious people. Do you find that sort of religious bigotry a curious mental state?
thegreekdog wrote:I didn't say persecuted. I said bigoted. Jackass.
crispybits wrote:You said that atheists were being bigoted towards religious people. It's not exactly a huge leap of logic to reword that statement maintaining exactly the same meaning to say that religious people are being persecuted by atheists.
crispybits wrote:And just for the record, I don't know of very many atheists who show disrespect or intolerance of the religious people themselves. What most atheists show disrespect and intolerance for is the religious concepts or ideas.
Phatscotty wrote:crispybits wrote:Quick answer - the governor gets to CHOOSE whether or not to support same-sex marriage. The gay couple don't get to CHOOSE whether they are attracted to members of the same sex.
What is the evidence that gay people are born that way? Are you saying it can't be learned?
And the issue isn't about attraction, it's about being an intolerant bigot and fascism. The hairdresser decided because someone doesn't think the same way about an issue, he can refuse to do his job and dish out punishment to anyone who disagrees. Andy and the hairdresser are mad they didn't get their Jim Crow laws through that would enforce their values on everyone else.
mrswdk wrote:Interesting imaginary distinction you have managed to create there. Oh well, at least your particular brand of open intolerance is definitely not 'thought policing'.
crispybits wrote:would you care to point to anywhere in the western world where a law has been proposed banning people from believing in God?
crispybits wrote:Criticism of an idea or concept is not the same thing as imposing an idea or concept on those who disagree by rule of law or by threats of eternal damnation.
crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Interestingly, the bigots I was referring to in my post a couple above this one were atheists who are bigoted towards religious people. Do you find that sort of religious bigotry a curious mental state?thegreekdog wrote:I didn't say persecuted. I said bigoted. Jackass.
You said that atheists were being bigoted towards religious people. It's not exactly a huge leap of logic to reword that statement maintaining exactly the same meaning to say that religious people are being persecuted by atheists.
And just for the record, I don't know of very many atheists who show disrespect or intolerance of the religious people themselves. What most atheists show disrespect and intolerance for is the religious concepts or ideas. I can't think of a single time in the history of the western world where someone has tried to pass a law saying that nobody is allowed to have any faith in God. Thought policing is pretty much exclusively the domain of the religious.
(inb4 new mexico forced a wedding cake maker to go against their religious principles for a gay wedding - that wasn't an atheist imposing a no-faith sanction, that was a gay couple suing for equality of service when they were illegally discriminated against because of a protected characteristic - the proactive/reactive distinction is key)
Basically, if you wanna live in a deluded state you go for it - the reaction you (in general, not you personally) get is when you try to impose the rules of your deluded state upon everyone else. Is it a coincidence that the rise of "militant athesm" almost perfectly correlates with the rise of the religious right trying to impose their religious rules upon the entire population regardless of anyone else's religious, spiritual or ethical beliefs?
mrswdk wrote:Executive summary: crispybits needs a hug.
mrswdk wrote:Would you first care to point to anywhere in the western world where a law has been proposed banning people from being an atheist? Otherwise we risk running round and round in circles discussing a big, fat straw man.
crispybits wrote:I'm not trying to have an atheism vs religion discussion TGD - you were the one that brought atheism into this by calling us bigots to try and somehow defend pro-religious homophobia.
crispybits wrote:I'm saying that you can have as much religious freedom over YOUR OWN life as you want. But critically you don't get to choose how much religious freedom others have in theirs, more specifically you don't get to enforce your religious rules on the population at large regardless of their religious beliefs (or lack thereof). It's that simple. That's not atheist vs religion, that's freedom vs the kind of christian theocracy a large section of right wing america would seemingly love to impose...
crispybits wrote:Ovo I agree - I get riled only when some religious loon starts spouting off about something being against their religion and therefore it should be banned, or tries to spread wilful disinformation. If the religious lot just kept themselves to themselves and let everyone get on with living their own lives their own way, and stopped telling lies about what science says and does in an attempt to discredit the fact that their fairy-tales have been shown to be inconsistent, illogical and plain old impossible, then you'd not hear a word from me about religion except that I personally think it's a massive waste of time, money and energy.
crispybits wrote:mrswdk wrote:Interesting imaginary distinction you have managed to create there. Oh well, at least your particular brand of open intolerance is definitely not 'thought policing'.
Let me try to put this another way - ever heard the expression "your freedom to swing your fist ends at my nose"? As in you are free to do or think or believe or speak out for anything you like that only affects you. Nobody is trying to take away that freedom. What the pro-equality side of this debate is saying is that "your freedom to act on those beliefs ends when it negatively affects a single other person without their consent".
crispybits wrote:I'm not trying to have an atheism vs religion discussion TGD - you were the one that brought atheism into this by calling us bigots to try and somehow defend pro-religious homophobia.
I'm saying that you can have as much religious freedom over YOUR OWN life as you want. But critically you don't get to choose how much religious freedom others have in theirs, more specifically you don't get to enforce your religious rules on the population at large regardless of their religious beliefs (or lack thereof). It's that simple. That's not atheist vs religion, that's freedom vs the kind of christian theocracy a large section of right wing america would seemingly love to impose...
(Again, using "you" in the general sense not in the personal sense)
Ovo I agree - I get riled only when some religious loon starts spouting off about something being against their religion and therefore it should be banned, or tries to spread wilful disinformation. If the religious lot just kept themselves to themselves and let everyone get on with living their own lives their own way, and stopped telling lies about what science says and does in an attempt to discredit the fact that their fairy-tales have been shown to be inconsistent, illogical and plain old impossible, then you'd not hear a word from me about religion except that I personally think it's a massive waste of time, money and energy.
thegreekdog wrote:crispybits wrote:I'm not trying to have an atheism vs religion discussion TGD - you were the one that brought atheism into this by calling us bigots to try and somehow defend pro-religious homophobia.
First, I brought up religious bigotry, not atheism. And you are a bigot if you're an atheist. You have no tolerance for religion. That's okay. No one cares.
BigBallinStalin wrote:crispybits wrote:mrswdk wrote:Interesting imaginary distinction you have managed to create there. Oh well, at least your particular brand of open intolerance is definitely not 'thought policing'.
Let me try to put this another way - ever heard the expression "your freedom to swing your fist ends at my nose"? As in you are free to do or think or believe or speak out for anything you like that only affects you. Nobody is trying to take away that freedom. What the pro-equality side of this debate is saying is that "your freedom to act on those beliefs ends when it negatively affects a single other person without their consent".
Yeah, the negative externality argument. I don't buy it. It can be used against your own argument: your being an atheist influences the children of theists away from the Light; therefore, the belief and act of believing in atheism negatively affects others without their consent.
It's pretty much impossible to do anything without harming others. What matters is the nature of the exchange which delineates duties to others.
(This is why I find the gay couple suing the bakery to be despicable. They're trying to get the state to bludgeon people into selling whatever to whoever. That's totally unnecessary; they can simply be civilized and use their words to convince others not to shop at bigoted places).
crispybits wrote:The point is TGD that I'm not intolerant of them. If you want to believe certain things I'm not trying to stop you. I disagree with them sure. I'll argue with them and criticise them sure. But to be intolerant of them I'd have to be actively doing something to you against your will to prevent you holding them, or in some way abusing some form of authority to materially disadvantage you as a punishment for holding them. This is the distinction you don't seem to see between someone who is against something and someone who is intolerant of something. There is a world of difference between a critic and a bigot.
And that's why I jumped to persecution, because in my mind to act in a bigoted way does mean to persecute someone for whatever reason. When you use that term, what you are saying isn't that I disagree with whatever you say I'm bigoted against, but that I'm actively working to punish/disadvantage/whatever people who support that same thing. It doesn't matter if that's one person or a whole society, and it doesn't matter if the target feels persecuted or not, when someone acts in a bigoted way they invariably persecute whoever they are acting bigoted against.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:crispybits wrote:I'm not trying to have an atheism vs religion discussion TGD - you were the one that brought atheism into this by calling us bigots to try and somehow defend pro-religious homophobia.
First, I brought up religious bigotry, not atheism. And you are a bigot if you're an atheist. You have no tolerance for religion. That's okay. No one cares.
That doesn't follow. Atheism is not a stance on religion, it is a stance on belief in god. I can believe there is no god and simultaneously be tolerant of religion. Disagreeing with someone doesn't inherently mean I can't tolerate them.
crispybits wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:crispybits wrote:mrswdk wrote:Interesting imaginary distinction you have managed to create there. Oh well, at least your particular brand of open intolerance is definitely not 'thought policing'.
Let me try to put this another way - ever heard the expression "your freedom to swing your fist ends at my nose"? As in you are free to do or think or believe or speak out for anything you like that only affects you. Nobody is trying to take away that freedom. What the pro-equality side of this debate is saying is that "your freedom to act on those beliefs ends when it negatively affects a single other person without their consent".
Yeah, the negative externality argument. I don't buy it. It can be used against your own argument: your being an atheist influences the children of theists away from the Light; therefore, the belief and act of believing in atheism negatively affects others without their consent.
It's pretty much impossible to do anything without harming others. What matters is the nature of the exchange which delineates duties to others.
(This is why I find the gay couple suing the bakery to be despicable. They're trying to get the state to bludgeon people into selling whatever to whoever. That's totally unnecessary; they can simply be civilized and use their words to convince others not to shop at bigoted places).
First you have to show why a minor influence on any given person to believe in atheism is negative. There's a big difference between that kind of influence, and trying to assert a religious tenet through force of secular law.
I think the gay couple with the wedding cake went too far too - I haven't supported that at any point - just like if someone got punched and punched back I wouldn't defend their act of violence as acceptable. I'd also criticise the guy who threw the first punch though...
BigBallinStalin wrote:So, you're against the imposition of religiously influenced law, but you're in favor of imposing what kind of normative beliefs on others?
crispybits wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:So, you're against the imposition of religiously influenced law, but you're in favor of imposing what kind of normative beliefs on others?
I'm against the use of religion to justify why a law is needed. If a law is necessary then there must be some sort of significant and measurable harm being done to society by people who are breaking the rule the law would establish. If this harm does not exist, then there is no need to have the law in the first place.
If this harm exists, then there is no need for religious justification, because you can point to the harm and say "this is what the law is for".
Being distasteful or offensive cannot be considered significant in this context, otherwise we go down a slippery slope where if one person is offended by something then that caused harm and should be banned. On the bright side, if we did do that, at least Bieber would be long dead by now for death penalty crimes...
thegreekdog wrote:Why do you think the gay couple went too far? I think they did what was permitted under the law and I'm okay with what they did (I'm not sure what the harm is in going to a different baker/photographer/venue to get married or whatever, but what do I know?). The point is not necessarily what the gay couple did, it's what the law says.
crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Why do you think the gay couple went too far? I think they did what was permitted under the law and I'm okay with what they did (I'm not sure what the harm is in going to a different baker/photographer/venue to get married or whatever, but what do I know?). The point is not necessarily what the gay couple did, it's what the law says.
It's more a political strategy thing. I don't disagree they had every right to go down the route they did, I just think that there were potentially several more optimal things they could have done for the long term benefit of their political position. It's given the fundies something to point at and say "we were forced to do that!!!" and while it's hardened an important principle in law which is a good thing maybe the softer approach would have moved the entire debate along more effectively than the all guns blazing one. Maybe I'm wrong, I don't claim to be an expert on that kinda stuff, but that's my gut feeling.
thegreekdog wrote:Okay, so here's the question. Do you think a law permitting gays to sue businesses for discrimination is needed? I would say yes. The next question is, do you think a law permitting gays to sue businesses for discrimination should have an exception where the discrimination was done for valid religious reasons? I have no idea.
crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Okay, so here's the question. Do you think a law permitting gays to sue businesses for discrimination is needed? I would say yes. The next question is, do you think a law permitting gays to sue businesses for discrimination should have an exception where the discrimination was done for valid religious reasons? I have no idea.
"Valid" religious reasons?
First question - answer yes. And not just gays, but gender, age and race should also be protected. These are things none of us has any control over and anyone discriminating on any of these things is a douche imo.
Second question - how can I put this (remember I'm jumping between a few different theads of this argument so bear with). If someone has a religious rule that says "don't be gay" then a valid religious reason for not providing a service would be that "providing that service would force me to be gay". An invalid reason for not providing that service would be "because the recipient of the service is gay". Just like the religious rule "don't eat pork" is not broken by being a religious waiter who takes a plate of pork sausages to someone in a restaurant, only by the religious person being paid to eat pork (struggling to think of when that would happen but meh...)
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