Author Topic: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry  (Read 104265 times)

Aruntraveller

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1325 on: May 15, 2020, 11:32:13 AM »
I’m having my life regulated or attempted regulation all the time. You sound lucky that it’s just the church in your case.

I think you will find, when you've calmed down, that I never claimed it was only the Church.

I accept that others have the right to regulate what I do, otherwise I'd be outside not practising social distancing like so many young people hereabouts are intent on doing.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1326 on: May 15, 2020, 11:40:49 AM »
Vlad,

By people who were voted for. The point here is that "the church" enjoys an entirely unwarranted position in daily life for all of us for reasons of tradition only. Religiously-affiliated schools (primary in particular), guaranteed media access, seats in the HoL etc. Get rid of all that (and more) and treat them as private members' clubs and then - but only then - would you have point.   
These things are historical Hillside.
Vis a vis guaranteed media access, not a lot and certainly not proportional compared with other folk guaranteed media access. Food sellers, crap sellers.etc.

Why are atheists not standing on their ability to set up free view channels? Answer atheist Raison d’etre namely the undermining of religion more than handled by the overwhelming presence of secular broadcasting.
deter

Roses

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1327 on: May 15, 2020, 11:41:47 AM »
You wouldn't know reasoning if it jumped up and bit you on the bum, LR sweetie.

Stop talking about yourself, it is getting boring. ::)
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Owlswing

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1328 on: May 15, 2020, 11:43:00 AM »

That religion is the motivator behind war crimes and homophobia and slaughter is just antitheist spin.


No it is NOT! War Crimes - the total annihilation of the Mayans and the Aztecs, 90,00o murdered as witches, thousands killed by venerial disease due to the Catholic Church'se ban on contraceptives. Stop talking "antitheist spin" bollocks!

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How many were killed in God free soviet Russia or by the god free Khmer Rouge?


Those deaths were political NOT religious you idiot!
« Last Edit: May 15, 2020, 11:51:26 AM by Owlswing »
The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

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Outrider

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1329 on: May 15, 2020, 11:43:57 AM »
You seem to be saying here that people who want to change the definition of marriage aren’t themselves lecturing the populace on what should or shouldn’t be legal. That is just laughable.

I didn't say they shouldn't be allowed to have their opinion, I said they should be prepared to have people push back against it, and its sources.

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That religion is the motivator behind war crimes and homophobia and slaughter is just antitheist spin.

I'm sure the ongoing tension in the Middle-East has absolutely nothing to do with the Abrahamic religions... ::)

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How many were killed in God free soviet Russia or by the god free Khmer Rouge?

Did anyone suggest that religion was the ONLY source?

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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1330 on: May 15, 2020, 11:44:22 AM »
I think you will find, when you've calmed down, that I never claimed it was only the Church.

Thank you........I’ve stopped hyperventilating now.

Owlswing

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1331 on: May 15, 2020, 11:47:03 AM »

I don't think that's clear.

Isn't that a bit like saying if you disagree with church don't attend one. People round here aren't following your logic since they are here publicly complaining about church and in some extreme manifestations openly expressing a desire to eliminate religion from the public forum. Why don't they just shut the fuck up and not attend church, following your logic?


I agree 100% with the first three words of the post quoted above!

The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1332 on: May 15, 2020, 12:09:00 PM »
Vlad,

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These things are historical Hillside.

This morning I was listening to the Today programme on Radio 4 and was treated to the Thought for the Day slot. Then I took the dog for a walk and went past St Mary’s Primary CofE School. Then I read an article about the possible reopening of schools, schools that are still required by that little thing called the law to have a “daily act of collective worship”.   

In what sense do you think these things are “historical” exactly?   

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Vis a vis guaranteed media access, not a lot and certainly not proportional compared with other folk guaranteed media access. Food sellers, crap sellers.etc.

Deliberately evasive? Whenever there’s a big issue of moral import for some reason the main media outlets all seem to think it’s appropriate to invite a cleric to opine on the matter. Why do you suppose they have a season ticket right to this kind of access when, say, professors of moral philosophy don't?

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Why are atheists not standing on their ability to set up free view channels? Answer atheist Raison d’etre namely the undermining of religion more than handled by the overwhelming presence of secular broadcasting.
deter

Irrelevant gibberish. Why should "atheists" have to set up their own channels when the BBC, ITV, Sky etc exist already? 

Anyway, the point you dodged remains: “the church” still enjoys huge, unelected access to the daily lives of all of us and it’s barely commented on. Your call just to ignore what they do behind closed doors misses this point entirely – if they kept it behind closed doors no-one would care much. That’s not what they do though is it.     
« Last Edit: May 15, 2020, 12:12:47 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1333 on: May 15, 2020, 12:13:17 PM »
I agree 100% with the first three words of the post quoted above!
Can I refer you to words 4,5,6,7 and 8 of the last sentence of the post you are referring to.

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1334 on: May 15, 2020, 12:45:04 PM »
Gabriella,

Who was it who said, “I’m sorry I’ve written such a long letter, but I didn’t have time to write a shorter one”? You have a rambling, discursive style so it’s hard to know what points you think you’re making sometimes but I’ll respond to what I think they are at least.

As it was my point I think I’m entitled to decide whether you’ve missed it, especially when I explain it to you again. Don’t you?

We’ve also evolved to have morality about all sorts of non sex-related activities too. As other species don’t have morality at all (except perhaps in some cases in proto forms) what point do you think you are making?

Zeitgeists vary across societies, yes. How does this relate to anything you think you’re replying to?
My point is that since humans have evolved to assign moral values to sexual behaviour, and since different societies differ on where to put the cursor, create social norms or legislate and these changing decisions come about through discussion between the different people and stakeholders who make up each society, it’s a good thing that different and often opposing ideas around humans’ evolved capacity to hold beliefs about abstract concepts, religious influence, morals, social constructs and rituals are all being openly discussed on this forum and in society. Same sex marriage is just another issue to be discussed as it’s a social construct so is open to regulation by society.

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Except so far as I’m aware homophobes don’t apply the same moral judgment to those who wish to marry but not to have children. It’s a stupid rationale for determining moral status in any case (not least because childless couples also play an important role in genomic success), but if someone did want to use it nonetheless then they should use it consistently – gay people, infertile people, pensioners, people who wish to have only non-procreational sex etc. should all be “not on a par” in their opinion.

That’s not what homophobes say though is it. Why do you think that is do you suppose?
I think there are different views on the issue but I can tolerate you labelling all the different views as homophobic. Trent raised the same point a few posts ago and I responded as to why delineating by statistical probability of procreation rather than by exhaustive time-consuming medical tests on fertility was more practical. Alternatively, the criteria or definition of marriage could be historically based or something else - it’s all up for discussion as stakeholders have the capacity to influence the zeitgeist and lobby to change legislation - as we saw when civil partnerships and same sec marriage legislation was passed by Parliament.

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I have no idea what point you think you’re making here but clearly it doesn’t work. Should my “individual freedom” to kill my neighbours be “tolerated” for example?
Obviously not as the discussion was about holding different moral values whereas actual behaviour is regulated by legislation
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What you’re edging toward here so far as I can tell is a spectrum – total individual freedom at one end and total control at the other. Different societies at different times and places have put the cursor at different places along that spectrum. Again, so what though?
As above, I think it’s useful that given this moral plurality in societies, it’s useful that we continue to discuss moral values openly, including same sex marriages.

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Can you identify anyone who’s been “hysterical” or are you just poisoning the well with pejorative language?
Sorry - not playing that game. This forum and this thread is riddled with pejorative language so the well was poisoned long before I wrote my post.

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That’s called a non sequitur. No-one has denied you that freedom, and nor is your “sub-conscious preference” to be homophobic been denied to you. You are though to some degree a thinking being, and you should conceptually at least be able to understand why it is homophobic when the reasons are explained to you.
You too are a thinking being so should be able to grasp that being called homophobic by posters on here during a discussion is an irrelevance to me.

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You’ve misunderstood. A highly complex system like consciousness is essentially a feedback arrangement. I might have a firm moral view about something, but when my reasons for justifying it are shown to be wrong then I have the opportunity to think, “actually I was wrong about that” and so my opinion changes. That’s what happens in an open system that acquires data from its environment.
No, I’m aware of the feedback arrangement- the feedback is interpreted by the brain based on nature/nurture.

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Who has had an “emotional rant” here, or is this more poisoning of the well? What’s actually happened is that the homophobes have been told why they’re homophobes, but also they’ve been dealt with in very firm terms. Shall I tell you why? It’s because they (and now you) are trying to sanitise some very nasty opinions that have even nastier real world consequences. I’m not suggesting for one moment that Spud or Steve or you will wander the streets at night looking for young men to beat up, but other people do. It happens. And where do you think these people find succour and support for their actions? Yes, from authority figures like clerics who assert flooding to be caused by the legalisation of equal marriage, from sweaty men in pubs who make anti-gay jokes, from mealy-mouthed ever-so-‘umble contributors to message boards who try to justify their contemptible views – in other words, from all the people who contribute in their various ways to the Zeitgeist. You may want be part of that but I don’t, and I see nothing wrong with saying so in no uncertain terms.
You are free to be as firm on this forum as you think is necessary, within the forum rules. We will have to agree to disagree on whether certain posts come across as hysterical responses or not. I am not aware of any evidence that firmly dealing with posters on here that people disagree with has any positive impact on real world consequences. Nevertheless, if people are enjoying themselves I can see the point of tolerating it.

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No it doesn’t, and the point remains that people of the same sex are having hanky panky in bedrooms all the time – what possible business is that of yours, let alone to think it’s something to be “tolerated”? If the sound is coming through your wall on the other hand (whether the sex is gay, straight or anything else) then the thing to be tolerated is the disturbance to your right to peace and quiet, not the fact of which bits are going where on the other side of the wall.
Actually the point remains that marriage is a public ritual with historical significance that has widely and openly been practised in societies, unlike you playing the bagpipes in your bedroom.
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Owlswing

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1335 on: May 15, 2020, 01:43:50 PM »

Can I refer you to words 4,5,6,7 and 8 of the last sentence of the post you are referring to.


Another demonstration of your total inability to accept criticism of any sort  from any source - In other words your monumental arrogance!

The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

ippy

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1336 on: May 15, 2020, 02:53:29 PM »
My point is that since humans have evolved to assign moral values to sexual behaviour, and since different societies differ on where to put the cursor, create social norms or legislate and these changing decisions come about through discussion between the different people and stakeholders who make up each society, it’s a good thing that different and often opposing ideas around humans’ evolved capacity to hold beliefs about abstract concepts, religious influence, morals, social constructs and rituals are all being openly discussed on this forum and in society. Same sex marriage is just another issue to be discussed as it’s a social construct so is open to regulation by society.
I think there are different views on the issue but I can tolerate you labelling all the different views as homophobic. Trent raised the same point a few posts ago and I responded as to why delineating by statistical probability of procreation rather than by exhaustive time-consuming medical tests on fertility was more practical. Alternatively, the criteria or definition of marriage could be historically based or something else - it’s all up for discussion as stakeholders have the capacity to influence the zeitgeist and lobby to change legislation - as we saw when civil partnerships and same sec marriage legislation was passed by Parliament.
Obviously not as the discussion was about holding different moral values whereas actual behaviour is regulated by legislation As above, I think it’s useful that given this moral plurality in societies, it’s useful that we continue to discuss moral values openly, including same sex marriages.
Sorry - not playing that game. This forum and this thread is riddled with pejorative language so the well was poisoned long before I wrote my post.
You too are a thinking being so should be able to grasp that being called homophobic by posters on here during a discussion is an irrelevance to me.
No, I’m aware of the feedback arrangement- the feedback is interpreted by the brain based on nature/nurture.
You are free to be as firm on this forum as you think is necessary, within the forum rules. We will have to agree to disagree on whether certain posts come across as hysterical responses or not. I am not aware of any evidence that firmly dealing with posters on here that people disagree with has any positive impact on real world consequences. Nevertheless, if people are enjoying themselves I can see the point of tolerating it.
 Actually the point remains that marriage is a public ritual with historical significance that has widely and openly been practised in societies, unlike you playing the bagpipes in your bedroom.

Just playing the bagpipes anywhere when we no longer have the option of capitol punishment?

ippy.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1337 on: May 15, 2020, 03:04:36 PM »
With regards to morals and sexuality I thought it was obvious that we don’t want Hector nor Auntie Frances to appear where it isn’t appropriate.

Roses

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1338 on: May 15, 2020, 03:21:46 PM »
Vlad must have had a huge amount of spirits poured on his cornflakes this morning! :o
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Owlswing

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1339 on: May 15, 2020, 10:06:14 PM »

Vlad must have had a huge amount of spirits poured on his cornflakes this morning! :o


That would explain about 97.5% of his posts!
The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

Roses

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1340 on: May 16, 2020, 08:43:16 AM »
That would explain about 97.5% of his posts!

 ;D
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1341 on: May 16, 2020, 08:48:02 AM »
Vlad must have had a huge amount of spirits poured on his cornflakes this morning! :o
You say that as though it were a bad thing.

Roses

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1342 on: May 16, 2020, 09:05:05 AM »
You say that as though it were a bad thing.

Alcohol for breakfast could never be a good thing. :o
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Aruntraveller

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1343 on: May 16, 2020, 10:15:02 AM »
Alcohol for breakfast could never be a good thing. :o

Not on it's own perhaps, but occasionally as an added extra it can be delightful.
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Roses

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1344 on: May 16, 2020, 10:18:25 AM »
Not on it's own perhaps, but occasionally as an added extra it can be delightful.

NO THANKS. :o
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1345 on: May 16, 2020, 12:46:25 PM »
Gabriella

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My point is that since humans have evolved to assign moral values to sexual behaviour, and since different societies differ on where to put the cursor, create social norms or legislate and these changing decisions come about through discussion between the different people and stakeholders who make up each society, it’s a good thing that different and often opposing ideas around humans’ evolved capacity to hold beliefs about abstract concepts, religious influence, morals, social constructs and rituals are all being openly discussed on this forum and in society. Same sex marriage is just another issue to be discussed as it’s a social construct so is open to regulation by society.

So far as I can see, no-one has said otherwise. Sometimes though the arguments are racist, homophobic etc when that happens and it’s legitimate to say so.   

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I think there are different views on the issue but I can tolerate you labelling all the different views as homophobic.

I’ve done no such thing.

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Trent raised the same point a few posts ago and I responded as to why delineating by statistical probability of procreation rather than by exhaustive time-consuming medical tests on fertility was more practical. Alternatively, the criteria or definition of marriage could be historically based or something else - it’s all up for discussion as stakeholders have the capacity to influence the zeitgeist and lobby to change legislation - as we saw when civil partnerships and same sec marriage legislation was passed by Parliament.

No. “Marriage should be only for people who produce children” is arbitrary, irrational, discriminatory, socially divisive and unpleasant. The point you missed or avoided though is that that’s not what homophobes say – rather they say it only in respect of gay people. That’s what makes it homophobic. 

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Obviously not as the discussion was about holding different moral values whereas actual behaviour is regulated by legislation

But you were talking about “personal freedom” remember? Are you now suggesting that gay people should be free to feel attracted to other gay people, but not to act on their feelings? What?

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As above, I think it’s useful that given this moral plurality in societies, it’s useful that we continue to discuss moral values openly, including same sex marriages.

Again, no-one has said otherwise. “Discussing openly” though also includes explaining why some arguments are wrong, arbitrary, bigoted etc.   

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Sorry - not playing that game. This forum and this thread is riddled with pejorative language so the well was poisoned long before I wrote my post.

You were the one who threw out a general claim of “hysterical” behaviour, presumably to poison the well. If you now want to resile from that claim though then fair enough.

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You too are a thinking being so should be able to grasp that being called homophobic by posters on here during a discussion is an irrelevance to me.

Why is the identification of your homophobia (and the explanation for why it is homophobic) irrelevant to you? Imagine if I were to post some racist comments, you explained why I was being racist and I replied “being called racist by posters on here during a discussion is an irrelevance to me”. It may be an irrelevance to you, but it probably shouldn’t be.

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No, I’m aware of the feedback arrangement- the feedback is interpreted by the brain based on nature/nurture.

Then I’m at a loss to understand why you posted something that suggested you didn’t understand that at all.

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You are free to be as firm on this forum as you think is necessary, within the forum rules. We will have to agree to disagree on whether certain posts come across as hysterical responses or not. I am not aware of any evidence that firmly dealing with posters on here that people disagree with has any positive impact on real world consequences. Nevertheless, if people are enjoying themselves I can see the point of tolerating it.

Why have you completely ignored the point that was made to you, namely that low-level homophobia (or racism for that matter) is part of a continuum with gay (or black) men being beaten up (or worse) at the other end it? If left unchecked each layer legitimises the next one to some degree at least, so they all contribute to the Zeitgeist. That’s why some people will confront you or Steve or Spud when you try to legitimise or sanitise homophobia, and it’ll happen whether or not you find the argument “irrelevant”.     

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Actually the point remains that marriage is a public ritual with historical significance that has widely and openly been practised in societies, unlike you playing the bagpipes in your bedroom.

I assume that you’re being deliberately evasive here. The point I was making was that you don’t get to “tolerate” things when they don’t inconvenience you (eg homosexuality) – ie, there’s nothing to be tolerated – but you do when those things do affect you (eg bagpipes being played next door). If you want to tell me that you “tolerate” homosexuality for example, my response is “who the hell do you think you are to presume to be in a position to tolerate that?”. It’s simple enough.   
« Last Edit: May 16, 2020, 01:00:40 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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jeremyp

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1346 on: May 16, 2020, 03:34:33 PM »
You enable Spud by your twee homophobia. Laughing at Trent's post just makes you look creepy
did you read Trent's post that he was laughing at? I'm pretty sure Trent was playing for laughs.
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The Accountant, OBE, KC

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1347 on: May 16, 2020, 11:02:44 PM »
Gabriella

So far as I can see, no-one has said otherwise. Sometimes though the arguments are racist, homophobic etc when that happens and it’s legitimate to say so. 
Of course. This is a message board where people are  free to exchange opinions within the rules. There is no rule stopping posters from labelling any post racist, homophobic, transphobic, anti-Semitic, Islamophobic etc etc so you go ahead. It happens in real life too - people try to discuss something and someone somewhere starts labelling them phobic or racist or some such thing while other people disagree with the label. The labels are so overused they’ve become meaningless a lot of the time.
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No. “Marriage should be only for people who produce children” is arbitrary, irrational, discriminatory, socially divisive and unpleasant. The point you missed or avoided though is that that’s not what homophobes say – rather they say it only in respect of gay people. That’s what makes it homophobic.
Glad we’ve got onto a discussion about the arbitrary social construct called marriage. It can be arbitrarily defined any way society chooses to define it. Currently there is an arbitrary rule that it should only be between 2 people. In the future this arbitrary rule may change. I personally do not think it Islamophobic that legally marriage in Britain is restricted to only 2 leaving a small minority of Muslim wives who are in a polygynous marriage unprotected by legal matrimonial rights. I also do not think it Islamophobic to say polygyny is morally wrong or to discuss possible reasons why someone would consider it morally wrong. It’s a religion and ethics board so it would be kind of boring if these things cannot be discussed openly. But that’s just the way I choose to use this forum. If someone else wants to start playing the race card or the Islamophobic card in response to discussions that’s up to them.

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But you were talking about “personal freedom” remember? Are you now suggesting that gay people should be free to feel attracted to other gay people, but not to act on their feelings? What?
Yes when it comes to civil marriage. Though I suppose it depends on what you mean by “suggesting”. I am repeating points made by people in society as arbitrary social constructs make for an interesting discussion  - if that is what you mean by saying I am suggesting it, then yes, I am suggesting it and being called ....Xxxxxxphobic (fill in the blank) is a small price to pay to continue a discussion. If you meant that I support a particular definition of marriage then I personally don’t care how civil marriage is defined - I think it’s up to elected MPs, lobby / pressure groups (well-funded or otherwise), voters and other stakeholders in society to make those decisions in a democracy - whether it’s about same sex or polygamous marriages.

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Again, no-one has said otherwise. “Discussing openly” though also includes explaining why some arguments are wrong, arbitrary, bigoted etc.
You have fun with that.

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You were the one who threw out a general claim of “hysterical” behaviour, presumably to poison the well. If you now want to resile from that claim though then fair enough.
No. If I wanted to name specific posters, I would have.

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Why is the identification of your homophobia (and the explanation for why it is homophobic) irrelevant to you? Imagine if I were to post some racist comments, you explained why I was being racist and I replied “being called racist by posters on here during a discussion is an irrelevance to me”. It may be an irrelevance to you, but it probably shouldn’t be.
See above

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Then I’m at a loss to understand why you posted something that suggested you didn’t understand that at all.
I didn’t. As I pointed out, the feedback is interpreted by different brains differently, depending on the individual brain’s nature / nurture. So my point was that the information derived from reasoning is not the same for everyone, hence different people will take that reasoning and arrive at different conclusions due to subjective perceptions, filters and understanding.

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Why have you completely ignored the point that was made to you, namely that low-level homophobia (or racism for that matter) is part of a continuum with gay (or black) men being beaten up (or worse) at the other end it? If left unchecked each layer legitimises the next one to some degree at least, so they all contribute to the Zeitgeist. That’s why some people will confront you or Steve or Spud when you try to legitimise or sanitise homophobia, and it’ll happen whether or not you find the argument “irrelevant”.
Firstly, I disagree with the generalised idea of a continuum that legitimises the next layer. Sometimes these people may feel legitimised but sometimes they don’t- so I don’t think it’s a given. I think many people who engage in criminal violence will find a way to do that regardless of the reason, if they sense weakness and have an opportunity where they have power over someone- whether that is by being in the Armed Forces serving in a foreign war or being in a gang or at a football match.  I am not suggesting that people cannot be engaged in discussions about their various moral outlooks and if it helps you feel better to label them (something)phobic or racist, be my guest. But as I am fairly liberal when it comes to free speech I can tolerate hearing uncomfortable views and I can tolerate people calling other people (something)phobic.

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I assume that you’re being deliberately evasive here. The point I was making was that you don’t get to “tolerate” things when they don’t inconvenience you (eg homosexuality) – ie, there’s nothing to be tolerated – but you do when those things do affect you (eg bagpipes being played next door). If you want to tell me that you “tolerate” homosexuality for example, my response is “who the hell do you think you are to presume to be in a position to tolerate that?”. It’s simple enough.
I think you’re being deliberately evasive. The point I was making was about the public institution of marriage. If you want to discuss people having sex, you’ll have to find someone else to discuss it with - maybe someone who watches porn. Trying to picture other people having sex just seems weird regardless of the sex, genders, numbers involved. It’s as weird as trying to think about my parents having sex. I feel like I am intruding on people’s privacy.
« Last Edit: May 16, 2020, 11:07:33 PM by Gabriella »
I identify as a Sword because I have abstract social constructs e.g. honour and patriotism. My preferred pronouns are "kill/ maim/ dismember"

Quite handy with weapons - available for hire to defeat money laundering crooks around the world.

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1348 on: May 18, 2020, 11:43:24 AM »
Gabriella,

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Of course. This is a message board where people are  free to exchange opinions within the rules. There is no rule stopping posters from labelling any post racist, homophobic, transphobic, anti-Semitic, Islamophobic etc etc so you go ahead. It happens in real life too - people try to discuss something and someone somewhere starts labelling them phobic or racist or some such thing while other people disagree with the label. The labels are so overused they’ve become meaningless a lot of the time.

That flat surface in front of you supported by four legs that has a cup of tea on it: do you “label” it “table”? You’re trying to imply that “labelling” is the problem, but sometime the labels – ie, the descriptions – are appropriate. Here for example if someone wants arbitrarily to assert marriages that can’t produce children to be “not on a par” with those that can, but then relates that to gay marriage but not to other types of non-procreational marriages then he’s pretty much providing a textbook example of homophobia: he’s selected one criterion for parity (albeit spuriously) and then applied it just to one sub-set of the various groups within that category.     

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Glad we’ve got onto a discussion about the arbitrary social construct called marriage. It can be arbitrarily defined any way society chooses to define it. Currently there is an arbitrary rule that it should only be between 2 people. In the future this arbitrary rule may change. I personally do not think it Islamophobic that legally marriage in Britain is restricted to only 2 leaving a small minority of Muslim wives who are in a polygynous marriage unprotected by legal matrimonial rights. I also do not think it Islamophobic to say polygyny is morally wrong or to discuss possible reasons why someone would consider it morally wrong. It’s a religion and ethics board so it would be kind of boring if these things cannot be discussed openly. But that’s just the way I choose to use this forum. If someone else wants to start playing the race card or the Islamophobic card in response to discussions that’s up to them.

No-one has, and you’ve missed the point again. Discussion about which types of marriages are “on a par” with other types is one thing; having decided that though, selecting just one-sub-set that (supposedly) fails that test is discriminatory. If you want to decide that non-procreational marriages are not on a par with procreational ones, the former must include not only gay marriages but marriages of infertile couples, of pensioners, of people who choose not to have children etc.

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Yes when it comes to civil marriage. Though I suppose it depends on what you mean by “suggesting”. I am repeating points made by people in society as arbitrary social constructs make for an interesting discussion  - if that is what you mean by saying I am suggesting it, then yes, I am suggesting it and being called ....Xxxxxxphobic (fill in the blank) is a small price to pay to continue a discussion. If you meant that I support a particular definition of marriage then I personally don’t care how civil marriage is defined - I think it’s up to elected MPs, lobby / pressure groups (well-funded or otherwise), voters and other stakeholders in society to make those decisions in a democracy - whether it’s about same sex or polygamous marriages.

No – again, I describe something as homophobic when it is homophobic for the same reason I describe racism as racist, ageism as ageist etc. And if you don’t care about how civil marriage is defined, why do you care about how traditional marriage is defined?

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You have fun with that.

I already have. It’s shame you won’t engage with it though.

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No. If I wanted to name specific posters, I would have.

Still missing it. If you want to claim “hysterical” behaviour then to justify the claim you need to provide examples of it (named or otherwise). I haven’t seen it here, and I suspect you haven’t either but you thought it was a useful straw man. It isn’t.   

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See above

Ditto.

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I didn’t. As I pointed out, the feedback is interpreted by different brains differently, depending on the individual brain’s nature / nurture. So my point was that the information derived from reasoning is not the same for everyone, hence different people will take that reasoning and arrive at different conclusions due to subjective perceptions, filters and understanding.

You’ve shifted ground now, but in any case yes of course people interpret things differently but any field of communication – social, scientific, philosophical, whatever – requires commonality of understanding it it’s to function at all. For example you’ve had explained why the example “non-procreational marriage is not on a par with procreational marriage, but I’ll apply that test only to gay couples” is homophobic. You may be “interpreting” that differently but I have no idea why unless it's to avoid engaging with the argument, preferring instead endless evasions and diversions.     
 
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Firstly, I disagree with the generalised idea of a continuum that legitimises the next layer. Sometimes these people may feel legitimised but sometimes they don’t- so I don’t think it’s a given.

That’s a non sequitur. No one said “it always happens”, but your concession to “sometimes” should bother you a lot more than it appears to I’d suggest. How many gay men being beaten up because of societal homophobia is ok would you say? 

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I think many people who engage in criminal violence will find a way to do that regardless of the reason, if they sense weakness and have an opportunity where they have power over someone- whether that is by being in the Armed Forces serving in a foreign war or being in a gang or at a football match.  I am not suggesting that people cannot be engaged in discussions about their various moral outlooks and if it helps you feel better to label them (something)phobic or racist, be my guest. But as I am fairly liberal when it comes to free speech I can tolerate hearing uncomfortable views and I can tolerate people calling other people (something)phobic.

I’m very liberal when it comes to free speech, but free speech does not imply that people can express their various “isms” without being challenged on them. That’s not a denial of free speech – it’s the epitome of it.   

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I think you’re being deliberately evasive. The point I was making was about the public institution of marriage. If you want to discuss people having sex, you’ll have to find someone else to discuss it with - maybe someone who watches porn. Trying to picture other people having sex just seems weird regardless of the sex, genders, numbers involved. It’s as weird as trying to think about my parents having sex. I feel like I am intruding on people’s privacy.

Where the hell did that come from? As you’ve just ducked it again, I’ll give it one more try:

1. For you to “tolerate” something there needs to be something to be tolerated.

2. When something doesn’t negatively affect you, your immediate circle, your society etc then it’s not tolerance-apt. It’s just irrelevant to you except in an abstract sense, so it’s misplaced and presumptuous to decide that you do or don’t tolerate it nonetheless.

3. As somewhere less than 2% of the population identify as gay and assuming that, say, half want to get married that’s around 1% of the population. Assuming they all did, you would go about your business as entirely unaffected by the fact of those equal marriages as you are by the fact of, say marriages between pensioners. What on earth then do you think it is that you’ve being expected to “tolerate” when it has nothing at all to do with you?   
« Last Edit: May 18, 2020, 08:54:13 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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ippy

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Re: Using the Bible as an excuse for bigotry
« Reply #1349 on: May 18, 2020, 02:04:27 PM »
No it is NOT! War Crimes - the total annihilation of the Mayans and the Aztecs, 90,00o murdered as witches, thousands killed by venerial disease due to the Catholic Church'se ban on contraceptives. Stop talking "antitheist spin" bollocks!

Those deaths were political NOT religious you idiot!

You're quiet right Owl, but the trouble is where supporting evidence is required for any of the religions it's so thin on the ground which in turn makes any of these delusional people that have chosen religion tend to fall back on clutching at straws,

You always know it's going to be a gem coming from the lips of a religionist when you hear those tired old words Starlin, Pol Pot and Hitler.

Regards, ippy.