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runner, you and md keep me in stitches
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...First to tuck, not everybody believes in the bible........To the condom, I am assuming your comment and question has to do with your belief homosexuality somehow , on its own caused the demise of all the great empires?...wow
......Let us see....Did it cause the demise of the Ottoman Empire..nope.......Persian Empire..nope....The Han Dynasty?...nope......The British Empire....nope.........The Holy Roman Empire...nope.......The Russian Empire...nope..........The Great Mongol Empire......nope not there either..........I believe you might find much of their problems arose over harsh rule, greed and an inequality in just about everything between classes of people.................Happy Holidays to all................. :12224
You make the incorrect assumption that I had any issue against interracial marriage in the first place.dazed&confused wrote:The Federal Gov't made it law in all states to ban poll taxes, civil rights abuses, and outlaw slavery. I'm not against states deciding on their own how to handle this question. But they should not discriminate against those homosexuals couples who desire to marry. If they do, it becomes legitimately a Federal issue as they are citizens. There were once state laws against interracial marriage. How do you feel about that now?
If the Mayan Apocalypse doesn't destroy the USA, then 20 years from now our values will be destroyed according to your timeline.NYBuckeye96 wrote:20 years from now, it will be legal in all 50 states. There will be no "revolutions" as all those who would fight in such a revolution will have died off by then.
Even young conservative Republicans already show support for marriage equality. This will no longer be an issue 20 years from now.
I never made it personal with you. But I have an opinion and my belief is that there is no difference between interracial marriage and same-sex marriage. We just differ in that and probably will so can we agree to disagree without threatening blood in our streets?Kentucky Trojan wrote:You make the incorrect assumption that I had any issue against interracial marriage in the first place.dazed&confused wrote:The Federal Gov't made it law in all states to ban poll taxes, civil rights abuses, and outlaw slavery. I'm not against states deciding on their own how to handle this question. But they should not discriminate against those homosexuals couples who desire to marry. If they do, it becomes legitimately a Federal issue as they are citizens. There were once state laws against interracial marriage. How do you feel about that now?
I dated a Filipino girl off and on for 9 years so you are talking to the wrong guy about that. I also dated a girl from Ethiopia in college.
I am waiting for the day when it becomes a Federal issue. I am glad that you brought this up.
I hope that somebody makes this a Federal issue now because this wedding took place on US Government property at West Point.
Kentucky Trojan wrote:If the Mayan Apocalypse doesn't destroy the USA, then 20 years from now our values will be destroyed according to your timeline.NYBuckeye96 wrote:20 years from now, it will be legal in all 50 states. There will be no "revolutions" as all those who would fight in such a revolution will have died off by then.
Even young conservative Republicans already show support for marriage equality. This will no longer be an issue 20 years from now.
Kentucky will not budge on this issue. I guarantee that!!!!!
Agree in spirit 96. But a lot of that hatred never did die off. It is still there today.NYBuckeye96 wrote:Kentucky Trojan wrote:If the Mayan Apocalypse doesn't destroy the USA, then 20 years from now our values will be destroyed according to your timeline.NYBuckeye96 wrote:20 years from now, it will be legal in all 50 states. There will be no "revolutions" as all those who would fight in such a revolution will have died off by then.
Even young conservative Republicans already show support for marriage equality. This will no longer be an issue 20 years from now.
Kentucky will not budge on this issue. I guarantee that!!!!!
And the south did "budge" on the issue of civil rights in the '60s? Nope. They were forced by the federal government to change and then those that hated that died off and things gradually improved for the better over time.
A lot of the civil rights victories have been won in courts...............but a lot have also been won by having older generations die off. That's a fact.
Oh, I agree 100%. But that hatred is nothing like it was 20, 30, 40 years ago.dazed&confused wrote:Agree in spirit 96. But a lot of that hatred never did die off. It is still there today.
Kentucky Trojan wrote:Again, it is inevitable that those of us who are watching our country be destroyed from within will not allow this "decay" to occur much longer!!!
Young evangelical adults stand apart from elders on same-sex marriage
Published: Thursday, September 01, 2011, 11:40 AM
It’s not news that young people are more liberal than their elders on matters touching on sexuality and public policy -- issues like same-sex marriage, adoption and so forth. But a non-partisan poll released this week charts how that split carves deeply into even the white evangelical community, the most socially conservative major group on the American religious landscape.
The poll by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 44 percent – nearly half – of young evangelicals between the ages of 18 to 29 favor allowing gays and lesbians to marry.
Nearly half that generation is outside the evangelical tent on that issue.
By contrast, the white evangelical community as a whole, even counting those relatively liberal young adults, is solidly opposed to same sex marriage, by slightly more than 80 percent.
That’s a generational split in conservative communities that include Southern Baptists and hundreds of independent evangelical churches that identify themselves as simply Christian.
The researchers don’t offer much in the way of explanatory insights, which are left to others.
But clearly, the power of culture, perhaps the experience of gay and lesbian friends and other factors are in collision with younger evangelicals’ understanding of Scripture.
More broadly, the poll found “at least a 20 point generation gap between Millennials (age 18-29) and seniors (65 and over) on every public policy measure in the survey concerning rights for gay and lesbian people."
That was true for religious young adults and those who do not consider themselves religious.
It even includes young Republicans. Nearly half, 49 percent, favor allowing gay and lesbian people to marry, the research found.
The poll demonstrates again why it’s unwise to assume that a person’s religious affiliation, if any, predicts his or her stance on sexuality issues.
Young evangelicals offer one caution. So does this: The research found that a slight majority of all Catholics, 52 percent, favor same-sex marriage, despite the energetic teaching of their church to the contrary.
Finally, and perhaps least surprisingly the Public Religion Research poll confirmed findings from other polls that since 2006 the American public has come to a tipping point on the issue of same sex marriage – either equally divided or slightly in favor.
The PRRI poll measured the split at 47 percent for and 47 percent against.
"This is the first year that support for allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry is not a minority position," said Dr. Robert P. Jones, CEO of Public Religion Research Institute.
"Overall trends, and the strongly supportive attitudes of the Millennial generation suggest that we will look back on 2011 as the year marking a sea change in American attitudes on gay and lesbian issues."
i doubt it to be that high in this case....... since neither of them is playing with a full "deck".Dinocrocetti wrote:They got a 49.3% chance just like all marriages