XemnasXD wrote:keep up with me...
I'm way ahead of you, if you're implying I'm slow.
I never said that saying prop 8 keeping marriages traditional was ignorant.
Now, to clarify whether or not prop 8 was about traditional marriage we must define what the terms "traditional marriage" and "gay marriage" are and also define what prop 8 is.
I define them as the following :
"Traditional marriage" is marriage between a man and a woman.
"Gay marriage" is marriage between a gay couple.
Prop 8 added a line to the law that said marriage is between a man and a woman.
Essentially, prop 8 does "keep marriage traditional" and that is what it is about. It certainly does not support gay marriage. Is this not logical?
Im not going to keep repeating myself so im going to clarify this once though i didn't think it needed clarifications.
Good for you.
If the sole purpose of your Yes vote on Prop 8 was made under the assumption that prop 8 was all about keeping marriage traditional then you are ignorant. Gay marriage is not about traditional marriage and that is a misconception that many many people often make.
I believe your definition of "traditional marriage" is different than the majority of those ignorant voters as well as mine. Traditional marriage is the mirror opposite of gay marriage so in a twisted sort of way it is related. This is where the problem lies.
I don't care about what you breeders want to do with your wedding rings, vows, picket fences, and 2.5 children.
Nor do I.
Gay marriage or the right for a man/woman to marry another man/woman is about getting that union acknowledged by the state and federal Gov't.
Why bother? Traditional marriage between a man and a woman wasn't acknowledged by the state and federal gov't until they added it in with prop 8. Everything ran fine with or without it. Why have government tell us who we can or cannot marry?
NEWS FLASH - Gay people have been getting married for years, since the 70's and probably further. All you need is a priest and BAM ceremony over, marriage official.
Exactly. It's been going on, we don't need the government involved in this process.
The problem is that many of the legal and civil rights that heterosexual couples have are not granted to gay couples. Leaving money, property, making a will, receiving benefits, etc ALL of that becomes muddled and messed up.
This is true.
Why a religious institution affects state and federal business is unknown but it certainly violates separation of church and state.
There is no such thing as separation of church and state in the Constitution. Marriage has intrinsically religious roots and should not have been managed by the government in the first place.
That is why voting on prop 8 to keep marriage traditional is a vote in ignorance because gay marriage has nothing to do with traditional or non-traditional marriage at all.
Please read above.
This is about legal and civil rights being denied on religious grounds.
For those who voted based on religious grounds, this is correct. I would not say it was the sole reason tho.
So if you went to the polls that day to fight a culture war you are ignorant....yeah your entitled to your opinion and blah blah blah but if your vote for prop 8 was simply to keep marriage traditional with no more though behind it then you missed the whole point.
Please read above. Logic makes a direct connection between prop 8 and traditional marriage.
I'd be willing to bet my life that most of the people who voted yes on prop 8 that day didn't even think about any of the above issues mentioned. All they thought was "Gays getting married, oh hell no." /yes and that was the end of it....
That is exactly what people were thinking because that is what it was about. We're arguing semantics here while saying the same thing. No gay marriage = we are taking away rights from a group of people.