Working from home today
Sep. 2nd, 2004 11:01 amYay for motivation < /sarcasm>
So there will be much posting as I get border.. bo.. more bored.
But first, a caveat.
These are my opinions and under no circumstances am I expecting you to adopt any of them. I also encourage you to tell me your opinions. I may be enlightened, I may not. I will listen to anything anybody has to say. What I won't abide is nastyness. You're entitled to your opinion, I'm entitled to mine, I wanna hear all of the opinions but nastyness will not be tolerated.
So...
Homosexuality. Or Bisexuality. Or anything that's not "the norm". Fun topic for this morning, huh? A bit out of character perhaps?
tigermorph had a link in her journal to Sheri Dew and it got me thinkin'.
Again, it's all about choices, isn't it. And it's my opinion that your choice is just that. YOURS. It ain't mine or anybody elses. If I don't like your choice, as long as it's not hurting me, then I have no right to kvetch about it.
Here's a thot tho. And this is where I expect rebuttal. I *do* think, in the whole biological scheme of things, that a man is meant to be with a woman. That's how BABIES are made. Having a man with a man or a woman with a woman is not the way it *should* be. Now SIT DOWN. Hear me out. I mean this in a strictly biological way. I mean that a man and a man can't make a baby. I DO NOT mean that a man and a man cannot love each other. So, yes, homosexuality is not "the way it's supposed to be" BIOLOGICALLY, but emotionally, there it is. Another thing. I also believe (as many do) that homosexuality is not a choice. That being the case it can also be boiled down to a biological factor. However, so can having 6 toes. That's not a choice either, rather a deviation from the norm. Just because you have 6 toes doesn't mean your bad or evil or anything, it just means you're different from the majority of the rest of the population.
But having said all that, the above refers strictly to biology. STRICTLY to biology. It has nothing to do with emotion (and if anyone argues that emotions are chemical and therefore biological, I will whap you with this flame resistant salmon pink push-up bra that
tigermorph loaned me.
If we're talking emotion, then yes. I believe that a man can love a man. I *know* a man can love a man. And if that's his choice, then I celebrate that. I will gladly dance at the wedding of anybody who invites me - be they straight, gay, or bisexual.
Now, some semantics.
Speaking of gay marriage.
I think that a religious institution should have the right to perform (or not perform) whatever ceramonies they believe is in accordance with their doctrine. I think if the Catholic Church does not "believe" in gay marriage, it's their right, and therefore their right to not perform them, just as it is the right of any other religion not to have to perform Catholic rituals. (And I'm just saying Catholic because it popped into my head first, I'm not picking on any religion/denomonation in particular). I think that if The Church of the Holy Foozeball Table wants to perform gay marriages, sobeit.
Now, here's the next thing. I think a religious wedding ceramony should have absolutely NOTHING to do with how the government or any other formal body (legal, whatever) sees a couple. I think a religious ceramony is just that. A time when a couple should be celebrating in front of the diety of their choice.
But it goes both ways. Just because you've been married in the Church of the Holy Foozeball Table doesn't mean that legally you should be deemed "a couple".
There should be different laws for that all together.
And they should have nothing to do with the church of your choice at all.
For that matter, they should have nothing to do with your sex, your religion, your age, anything. That, in my opinion, is completely discriminatory.
What I think, however, is that you should be able to call your "partner" any old person you choose. If you choose to call your child your partner, great. If you choose to call your roomie your partner, sobeit. Remember, this is your LEGAL PARTNER, it has nothing to do with your emotional ties, more along the lines of your financial ties.
For example.
If you are a single mother with a child, regardless of age, then you and the child are deemed to be "a couple" (or a unit, or something else, the name is irrelevant). And as "a couple" you are entitled to all the rights that currently married people enjoy. Benefits, Tax incentives, whatever. The majority of these "units", I suspect, will be married couples. But I don't think it should stop there. I don't think that "love" should be a basis for a tax write off. This could even apply to roommates, for example.
However, *this* is where you should be required to get the equivalent of a marriage licence, and there should be guidelines in place for what consitutes a "couple" You have to live together for more than a year? You have to spend at least so many hours under the same roof... whatever. But again, emotions should not be the basis of benefit eligability.
Church and state need to be divided.
In my scenario anybody who wanted to celebrate their unity in front of the diety of their choice could do so. You would not be restricted to the fundimental (little f) Judeao/Christian idea of marriage (not that that idea is a bad thing, it's just if it's not *your* thing, you're more than welcome to do your own thing!)
In this scenario, the 24 year old college student who is living with his 65 year old mother would also enjoy the same benefits that married couples do. Life insurance, benefits, tax deductions... whatever.
As for adoption - gay or otherwise, if you're a fit parent, who the hell should care if your partner happens to be the same sex. As long as he/she is a fit parent there should be no restrictions. Its PEOPLE who make good parents. These people should be judged by their committment to each other and to their family, not what they do behind closed doors.
Now, wouldn't that just be nice? Do I hear a motion? Anybody? Anybody?
And by the way. This is a long post and I can't be bothered to spell check, since LJ's spellcheck is a pain in the ass. This is my spelling. I am not ignorant, just a really bad speller.
So there will be much posting as I get border.. bo.. more bored.
But first, a caveat.
These are my opinions and under no circumstances am I expecting you to adopt any of them. I also encourage you to tell me your opinions. I may be enlightened, I may not. I will listen to anything anybody has to say. What I won't abide is nastyness. You're entitled to your opinion, I'm entitled to mine, I wanna hear all of the opinions but nastyness will not be tolerated.
So...
Homosexuality. Or Bisexuality. Or anything that's not "the norm". Fun topic for this morning, huh? A bit out of character perhaps?
Again, it's all about choices, isn't it. And it's my opinion that your choice is just that. YOURS. It ain't mine or anybody elses. If I don't like your choice, as long as it's not hurting me, then I have no right to kvetch about it.
Here's a thot tho. And this is where I expect rebuttal. I *do* think, in the whole biological scheme of things, that a man is meant to be with a woman. That's how BABIES are made. Having a man with a man or a woman with a woman is not the way it *should* be. Now SIT DOWN. Hear me out. I mean this in a strictly biological way. I mean that a man and a man can't make a baby. I DO NOT mean that a man and a man cannot love each other. So, yes, homosexuality is not "the way it's supposed to be" BIOLOGICALLY, but emotionally, there it is. Another thing. I also believe (as many do) that homosexuality is not a choice. That being the case it can also be boiled down to a biological factor. However, so can having 6 toes. That's not a choice either, rather a deviation from the norm. Just because you have 6 toes doesn't mean your bad or evil or anything, it just means you're different from the majority of the rest of the population.
But having said all that, the above refers strictly to biology. STRICTLY to biology. It has nothing to do with emotion (and if anyone argues that emotions are chemical and therefore biological, I will whap you with this flame resistant salmon pink push-up bra that
If we're talking emotion, then yes. I believe that a man can love a man. I *know* a man can love a man. And if that's his choice, then I celebrate that. I will gladly dance at the wedding of anybody who invites me - be they straight, gay, or bisexual.
Now, some semantics.
Speaking of gay marriage.
I think that a religious institution should have the right to perform (or not perform) whatever ceramonies they believe is in accordance with their doctrine. I think if the Catholic Church does not "believe" in gay marriage, it's their right, and therefore their right to not perform them, just as it is the right of any other religion not to have to perform Catholic rituals. (And I'm just saying Catholic because it popped into my head first, I'm not picking on any religion/denomonation in particular). I think that if The Church of the Holy Foozeball Table wants to perform gay marriages, sobeit.
Now, here's the next thing. I think a religious wedding ceramony should have absolutely NOTHING to do with how the government or any other formal body (legal, whatever) sees a couple. I think a religious ceramony is just that. A time when a couple should be celebrating in front of the diety of their choice.
But it goes both ways. Just because you've been married in the Church of the Holy Foozeball Table doesn't mean that legally you should be deemed "a couple".
There should be different laws for that all together.
And they should have nothing to do with the church of your choice at all.
For that matter, they should have nothing to do with your sex, your religion, your age, anything. That, in my opinion, is completely discriminatory.
What I think, however, is that you should be able to call your "partner" any old person you choose. If you choose to call your child your partner, great. If you choose to call your roomie your partner, sobeit. Remember, this is your LEGAL PARTNER, it has nothing to do with your emotional ties, more along the lines of your financial ties.
For example.
If you are a single mother with a child, regardless of age, then you and the child are deemed to be "a couple" (or a unit, or something else, the name is irrelevant). And as "a couple" you are entitled to all the rights that currently married people enjoy. Benefits, Tax incentives, whatever. The majority of these "units", I suspect, will be married couples. But I don't think it should stop there. I don't think that "love" should be a basis for a tax write off. This could even apply to roommates, for example.
However, *this* is where you should be required to get the equivalent of a marriage licence, and there should be guidelines in place for what consitutes a "couple" You have to live together for more than a year? You have to spend at least so many hours under the same roof... whatever. But again, emotions should not be the basis of benefit eligability.
Church and state need to be divided.
In my scenario anybody who wanted to celebrate their unity in front of the diety of their choice could do so. You would not be restricted to the fundimental (little f) Judeao/Christian idea of marriage (not that that idea is a bad thing, it's just if it's not *your* thing, you're more than welcome to do your own thing!)
In this scenario, the 24 year old college student who is living with his 65 year old mother would also enjoy the same benefits that married couples do. Life insurance, benefits, tax deductions... whatever.
As for adoption - gay or otherwise, if you're a fit parent, who the hell should care if your partner happens to be the same sex. As long as he/she is a fit parent there should be no restrictions. Its PEOPLE who make good parents. These people should be judged by their committment to each other and to their family, not what they do behind closed doors.
Now, wouldn't that just be nice? Do I hear a motion? Anybody? Anybody?
And by the way. This is a long post and I can't be bothered to spell check, since LJ's spellcheck is a pain in the ass. This is my spelling. I am not ignorant, just a really bad speller.
no subject
Date: 2004-09-02 01:27 pm (UTC)