Celebrity News...
  1. Longoria Parker & Beil Both Issue Pregnancy Denials.
  2. Maclachlan's Struggle To Have Children.
  3. Garth's Six Months Of 'Hell'.
  4. DNA Tests Prove Spade Is The Dad.
Entertainment...
  1. Eva Mendes Doubts She Will Settle Down.
  2. Kate Hudson's Fickle Taste In Men.
  3. Bow Wow: 'I'll Be Back After Two Years'.
  4. Miley Treats Herself To A New Mercedes.
Latest Music...
  1. Ironik’s New Single Stay With Me
  2. The Best Of Creedence Clearwater Revival
  3. Black Kids New Album Partie Traumatic
  4. Paul Heaton New Album The Cross Eyed Rambler
Movie Reviews...
  1. Katyn
  2. Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired
  3. The Heckler
  4. Cinema's Action Women


Female First Forum Forum Index
This 'right' for gays is an injustice to children
Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 13, 14, 15  
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Female First Forum Forum Index -> Politics
Author Message
jinjin
FemaleFirst Guru


Joined: 11 Oct 2006
Posts: 82174


PostPosted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 2:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.
Back to top
Guest







PostPosted: Fri Dec 07, 2007 4:13 pm    Post subject: Re: This 'right' for gays is an injustice to children Reply with quote

. wrote:
ShortLived wrote:
Western societies have, in recent decades, undergone a radical change in their attitudes to homosexuality. What was once regarded as an intolerable vice is now regarded as an "orientation", no different in kind, though different in direction, from the inclinations that lead men to unite with women, and children to be born. This radical change began with the decriminalisation of homosexual conduct, and with a growing readiness not just to tolerate homosexuality in private, but to talk about it in public. We saw the emergence of the "public homosexual", the flamboyant propagandist for that "other" way of life who, like Quentin Crisp, tried to persuade us that "gay" is after all the right description. There followed the movement for "gay pride" and the "coming out" of public figures —to the point where it is no longer very interesting to know whether someone is or is not of the other persuasion.

For the most part, the people of this country have gone along with the changes. They may not be comfortable with its more demonstrative expressions, but they are prepared to tolerate the homosexual way of life, provided it keeps within the bounds of decency, and does no violence to fundamental norms. However, this attitude does not satisfy the activists. For to tolerate is to disapprove. It is only when conduct offends you that you need to exercise your toleration, and the activists want people to treat homosexuality as normal. Through the slippery notions of discrimination and human rights, they have used the law to advance their agenda. Homosexuality is now treated by the law as a tendency comparable in almost every way to heterosexuality, so that any attempt to distinguish between people on grounds of their "orientation" — whether as applicants for a job, or as recipients of a privilege — is regarded as unjust "discrimination", comparable in its moral heinousness to discrimination on grounds of race or sex.

On the whole we have accepted that laws against discrimination might be needed, in order to protect those who have suffered in the past from hostile prejudice. Every now and then, however, we wake up to the fact that, although homosexuality has been normalised, it is not normal. Our acceptance of the homosexual lifestyle, of same-sex couples, and of the gay scene has not eliminated our sense that these are alternatives to something, and that it is the other thing that is normal. This other thing is not heterosexual desire, conceived as an "orientation". It is heterosexual union: the joining of man and woman, in an act which leads in the natural course of things not just to mutual commitment but to the bearing of children, the raising of a family and the self-sacrificing habits on which, when all is said and done, the future of society depends. The propaganda that has tried to rewrite heterosexuality as an "orientation" is really an attempt to persuade us to overlook the real truth about sexual union, which is that it is, in its normal form, the way in which one generation gives way to the next.

advertisementThis truth is recognised by all the great religions, and is endorsed in the Christian view of marriage as a union created by God. This explains, to a great extent, the reluctance of religious people to endorse gay marriage, which they see as an attempt to rewrite in merely human terms the eternal contract of society. To put it in another way, they see gay marriage as the desecration of a sacrament. Hence the growing conflict between the gay agenda and traditional religion, of which the current dispute over "adoption rights" is the latest sign. According to the Christian perspective — and it is one that is shared, I believe, by Muslims and Jews – adoption means receiving a child as a member of the family, as one to whom you are committed in the way that a father and mother are committed to children of their own. It is an act of sacrifice, performed for the benefit of the child, and with a view to providing that child with the normal comforts of home. Its purpose is not to gratify the parents, but to foster the child, by making him part of a family. For religious people that means providing the child with a father and a mother. Anything else would be an injustice to the child and an abuse of his innocence. Hence there are no such things as "adoption rights". Adoption is the assumption of a duty, and the only rights involved are the rights of the child.

Against that argument the appeal to "anti-discrimination" laws is surely irrelevant. The purpose of adoption is not to gratify the foster parents but to help the child. And since, on the religious view, the only help that can be offered is the provision of a real family, it is no more an act of discrimination to exclude gay couples than it is to exclude incestuous liaisons or communes of promiscuous "swingers". Indeed, the implication that adoption is entirely a matter of the "rights" of the prospective parents shows the moral inversion that is infecting modern society. Instead of regarding the family as the present generation's way of sacrificing itself for the next, we are being asked to create families in which the next generation is sacrificed for the pleasure of the present one. We are being asked to overlook all that we know about the fragility of homosexual partnerships, about the psychological needs of children, and about the norms that still prevail in our schools and communities, for the sake of an ideological fantasy.

To oppose homosexual adoption is not to believe that homosexuals should have no dealings with children. From Plato to Britten, homosexuals have distinguished themselves as teachers, often sublimating their erotic feelings as those two great men did, through nurturing the minds and souls of the young. But it was Plato who, in The Laws, pointed out that homosexuals, like heterosexuals, must learn the way of sacrifice, that it is not present desires that should govern them, but the long-term interests of the community. And it is surely not implausible to think that those long-term interests are more likely to be protected by religion than by the political ideologies that govern the Labour Party.

• Roger Scruton is a writer and philosopher. His website is www.roger-scruton.com


Clap
Back to top
el lissitzky
Guest






PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 4:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

jinjin wrote:
x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.


The quoted writing is an opinion piece. The writer makes clear that he is expressing his viewpoint.

Is the validlity of an opinion determined solely by whether it expresses a "secular viewpoint"? Only a narrow-minded person would think so.
Back to top
GayandProud
FemaleFirst Guru


Joined: 06 Dec 2007
Posts: 3836


PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 2:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

el lissitzky wrote:
jinjin wrote:
x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.


The quoted writing is an opinion piece. The writer makes clear that he is expressing his viewpoint.

Is the validlity of an opinion determined solely by whether it expresses a "secular viewpoint"? Only a narrow-minded person would think so.


in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle
Back to top
el lissitzky
Guest






PostPosted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 2:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

GayandProud wrote:
el lissitzky wrote:
jinjin wrote:
x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.


The quoted writing is an opinion piece. The writer makes clear that he is expressing his viewpoint.

Is the validlity of an opinion determined solely by whether it expresses a "secular viewpoint"? Only a narrow-minded person would think so.

in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle

By your own admission, therefore, you are an ignorant person not worth listening to.
Back to top
Fred75
FemaleFirst Guru


Joined: 04 Oct 2007
Posts: 7470


PostPosted: Thu Dec 20, 2007 4:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

GayandProud wrote:


in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle


You should move to China.
They have a wonderful secular government!
Back to top
Guest







PostPosted: Thu Dec 20, 2007 11:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Fred75 wrote:
GayandProud wrote:
in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle

You should move to China.
They have a wonderful secular government!


or North Korea
Back to top
GayandProud
FemaleFirst Guru


Joined: 06 Dec 2007
Posts: 3836


PostPosted: Fri Dec 21, 2007 10:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

el lissitzky wrote:
GayandProud wrote:
el lissitzky wrote:
jinjin wrote:
x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.


The quoted writing is an opinion piece. The writer makes clear that he is expressing his viewpoint.

Is the validlity of an opinion determined solely by whether it expresses a "secular viewpoint"? Only a narrow-minded person would think so.

in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle

By your own admission, therefore, you are an ignorant person not worth listening to.


go and stick your bible where the sun dont shine baby, I dealt with you yesterday where you made it perfectly clear your creaky old brain is wearing out.
Back to top
Guest







PostPosted: Fri Dec 21, 2007 12:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

GayandProud wrote:
el lissitzky wrote:
GayandProud wrote:
el lissitzky wrote:
jinjin wrote:
x-xcutiex-x wrote:
not true and very narrow minded

I agree. The writer is extremely biased and fails to present a secular viewpoint on the topic. However, I do have some hope that the church will continue to move in the right direction and not discriminate against God's creation.

The Vatican wrote:
They [Homosexuals] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.


The quoted writing is an opinion piece. The writer makes clear that he is expressing his viewpoint.

Is the validlity of an opinion determined solely by whether it expresses a "secular viewpoint"? Only a narrow-minded person would think so.

in my view only secular viewpoints are reasoned and worth listening to Whistle

By your own admission, therefore, you are an ignorant person not worth listening to.

go and stick your bible where the sun dont shine baby, I dealt with you yesterday where you made it perfectly clear your creaky old brain is wearing out.

Merry Christmas. Very Happy
Back to top
Guest







PostPosted: Tue Jan 08, 2008 2:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

and a Happy New Year Drunk
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Female First Forum Forum Index -> Politics All times are GMT
Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 13, 14, 15
Page 15 of 15

 


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
terms and conditions Latest Posts


---