Originally posted by Art Vandelay
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The Daily Universe -- Defending Proposition 8
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Not the wise thing to say here, bishop."Wuap's "problem" is that he is smart & principled & committed to a moral course of action. His actions are supposed to reflect his ethical code.
The rest of us rarely bother to think about our actions." --Solon
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Is it morbid to think that image is beautiful, or at least awe inspiring?Originally posted by wuapinmon View PostYou might've heard about it on the news:
Dio perdona tante cose per un’opera di misericordia
God forgives many things for an act of mercyAlessandro Manzoni
Knock it off. This board has enough problems without a dose of middle-age lechery.
pelagius
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You know what, LA, you've shown over time to be a reasonable and valuable member of the community, so when I disagree with you I at least know I'm disagreeing with someone that I respect. Red Sox has flung more poo than Cr33|<$+3r'$ avatar since day one on this board, and as a result he's never done anything to warrant or invite my respect. That's why it's hard to be nice to someone like him.Originally posted by LA Ute View PostOh, come now. If you ever disagree with me, I hope you won't tell me, "Get your crap together and then you can start joining discussions with the adults."Visca Catalunya Lliure
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Come on, Tim.Originally posted by Tim View PostYou know what, LA, you've shown over time to be a reasonable and valuable member of the community, so when I disagree with you I at least know I'm disagreeing with someone that I respect. Red Sox has flung more poo than Cr33|<$+3r'$ avatar since day one on this board, and as a result he's never done anything to warrant or invite my respect. That's why it's hard to be nice to someone like him."There is no creature more arrogant than a self-righteous libertarian on the web, am I right? Those folks are just intolerable."
"It's no secret that the great American pastime is no longer baseball. Now it's sanctimony." -- Guy Periwinkle, The Nix.
"Juilliardk N I ibuprofen Hyu I U unhurt u" - creekster
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I haven't followed Red Sox's posts but reflexively admire him because he uses the name Red Sox. How much can really be wrong with such a person?Originally posted by Tim View PostYou know what, LA, you've shown over time to be a reasonable and valuable member of the community, so when I disagree with you I at least know I'm disagreeing with someone that I respect. Red Sox has flung more poo than Cr33|<$+3r'$ avatar since day one on this board, and as a result he's never done anything to warrant or invite my respect. That's why it's hard to be nice to someone like him.
Last edited by LA Ute; 09-07-2010, 09:47 PM.“There is a great deal of difference in believing something still, and believing it again.”
― W.H. Auden
"God made the angels to show His splendour - as He made animals for innocence and plants for their simplicity. But men and women He made to serve Him wittily, in the tangle of their minds."
-- Robert Bolt, A Man for All Seasons
"It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye."
--Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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I actually think the letter hits the mark. I do understand that there are those who believe that there are logically defensible reasons for opposing gay marriage. I think for the most part even most of them will admit those are not arguments that led them to the belief but rather arguments they have adopted to defend what they have been told is the will of God. I don't disrespect that at all. Choosing to believe that someone has the red telephone to God on this issue, so to speak, is fine. But I do think the author is right to ask people to confront the fact that this is the real reason for what they believe. In my opinion (just for me) it is the only logically defensible reason.
Do those of you who tow the party line on this feel any reluctance to admit this? I assume there is a desire for it to be logical in addition to being inspired. I think we LDS have refined sharing anecdotal nonsense with each other (if it supports something we already believe) to an art form. But of course very little in religion is appeals on the logical level the way it does on the spiritual level.
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I won't quarrel with you if you are limiting your view to yourself. That said, anyone who says their view of a hotly-debated issue on which people of intelligence and good will disagree is "the only logically defensible" one has a closed mind, IMO.Originally posted by UtahDan View PostI actually think the letter hits the mark. I do understand that there are those who believe that there are logically defensible reasons for opposing gay marriage. I think for the most part even most of them will admit those are not arguments that led them to the belief but rather arguments they have adopted to defend what they have been told is the will of God. I don't disrespect that at all. Choosing to believe that someone has the red telephone to God on this issue, so to speak, is fine. But I do think the author is right to ask people to confront the fact that this is the real reason for what they believe. In my opinion (just for me) it is the only logically defensible reason.
Do those of you who tow the party line on this feel any reluctance to admit this? I assume there is a desire for it to be logical in addition to being inspired. I think we LDS have refined sharing anecdotal nonsense with each other (if it supports something we already believe) to an art form. But of course very little in religion is appeals on the logical level the way it does on the spiritual level.
I think that even without the request from the FP, the overwhelming majority of Mormons in CA would have voted for Prop 8 because of the Church's beliefs about marriage. This is not all that remarkable, because most religious people who believe in God and who attend church their church, mosque or synagogue once a month voted the same way. What the FP letter did was mobilize LDS people to get out and work for the measure.“There is a great deal of difference in believing something still, and believing it again.”
― W.H. Auden
"God made the angels to show His splendour - as He made animals for innocence and plants for their simplicity. But men and women He made to serve Him wittily, in the tangle of their minds."
-- Robert Bolt, A Man for All Seasons
"It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye."
--Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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The way I see it, there are no GOOD reasons for the government to discriminate against gay people. So starting from the premise that all justifications for discriminating against gay people are bad, I split the bad reasons into two categories: Bad reasons with and without integrity.Originally posted by VikingReally? i thought it was a cop-out argument: some dude in salt lake says it's right so since we believe he talks to god, it must be right
no offfense to TJM...perhaps he does talk to god...just that the letter was generally pathetic, in my view
A bad reason that lacks integrity is one that is outright wrong, and that can be shown on its face to be wrong to anyone with an ounce of reason. Arguments like, "Church's will be required by law to perform gay marriages" are just obviously untrue, and either demonstrate a profound ignorance about the working of law, or they are disingenuous scare mongering tactics. Almost all of the arguments advanced in support of Prop 8 fell into this category.
The letter's author, in contrast, makes a bad argument that HAS integrity. The position that 'we believe in a prophet of God who receives divine revelation to tell us how to live our lives,' well that might be the argument of a religious automaton, but at least it has integrity.Last edited by RobinFinderson; 09-07-2010, 10:30 PM.
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The problem was, very shortly after the church came out in support of prop 8, they published this statement:Originally posted by UtahDan View PostI actually think the letter hits the mark. I do understand that there are those who believe that there are logically defensible reasons for opposing gay marriage. I think for the most part even most of them will admit those are not arguments that led them to the belief but rather arguments they have adopted to defend what they have been told is the will of God. I don't disrespect that at all. Choosing to believe that someone has the red telephone to God on this issue, so to speak, is fine. But I do think the author is right to ask people to confront the fact that this is the real reason for what they believe. In my opinion (just for me) it is the only logically defensible reason.
Do those of you who tow the party line on this feel any reluctance to admit this? I assume there is a desire for it to be logical in addition to being inspired. I think we LDS have refined sharing anecdotal nonsense with each other (if it supports something we already believe) to an art form. But of course very little in religion is appeals on the logical level the way it does on the spiritual level.
http://lds.org/ldsnewsroom/eng/comme...on-of-marriage
that provided a detailed and specific set of reasons for supporting prop 8. The arguments didn't seem particularly compelling and some of the points were flat-out wrong (see Mass. Catholic adoption services anecdote). I would have been more comfortable had they simply said "God says so"."There is no creature more arrogant than a self-righteous libertarian on the web, am I right? Those folks are just intolerable."
"It's no secret that the great American pastime is no longer baseball. Now it's sanctimony." -- Guy Periwinkle, The Nix.
"Juilliardk N I ibuprofen Hyu I U unhurt u" - creekster
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It wasn't the FP that got people to "mobilize," though, it was additional instructions provided by leaders at a lower level than the FP. The FP said nothing about standing on street corners, canvassing neighborhoods, setting up morality police patrols inside the wards to identify those who hadn't donated to the cause, nor taking all of one's savings and sinking it into the campaign (like my sister-in-law's parents did). Local leaders took general words from the FP and layered on much stricter instructions and adminitions.Originally posted by LA Ute View PostI won't quarrel with you if you are limiting your view to yourself. That said, anyone who says their view of a hotly-debated issue on which people of intelligence and good will disagree is "the only logically defensible" one has a closed mind, IMO.
I think that even without the request from the FP, the overwhelming majority of Mormons in CA would have voted for Prop 8 because of the Church's beliefs about marriage. This is not all that remarkable, because most religious people who believe in God and who attend church their church, mosque or synagogue once a month voted the same way. What the FP letter did was mobilize LDS people to get out and work for the measure.Visca Catalunya Lliure
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We just had a brand new church built in our neighborhood and I saw the figures, you are about 7 million high.Originally posted by RedSox View PostI don't know...when there's a $9mm church building on every other block in Utah County, I'd say it may be the governing principle surrounding LDS facilities.*Banned*
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I don't doubt that they would have and I'm not saying my view is the only view. What I am highlighting is that if you had asked most members, or religious people, cold 5 years ago why they opposed it I think the first response you would get would be because God opposes it. That might still be true. If you asked members why they are against heroine use I think you would get answers grounded in experience first and foremost. Maybe I'm wrong about that.Originally posted by LA Ute View PostI won't quarrel with you if you are limiting your view to yourself. That said, anyone who says their view of a hotly-debated issue on which people of intelligence and good will disagree is "the only logically defensible" one has a closed mind, IMO.
I think that even without the request from the FP, the overwhelming majority of Mormons in CA would have voted for Prop 8 because of the Church's beliefs about marriage. This is not all that remarkable, because most religious people who believe in God and who attend church their church, mosque or synagogue once a month voted the same way. What the FP letter did was mobilize LDS people to get out and work for the measure.
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