QuoteI'm afraid I don't believe that all opinions are made equal. Believing that homosexuality is a sin makes a person a bad person. Because their belief is inherently discriminatory. And making any statements on the grounds of that belief is unquestionably going to cause harm.
I agree that not all opinions are equally valid, or beneficial/harmful. The problem arises when anyone tries to impose
their values onto the
others.Let's say we have a group of people who believe homosexuals and homosexuality is "bad" for people and for society. In a free society, they should be allowed to voice their opinions, and yes, to persuade others to their view. So long as no violence of any sort ensues...they should be allowed to say what they want.
It is our role to persuade people that that view is incorrect, and should not be followed.
The homophobic people, let's say, lose the argument. This doesn't mean they will change, it just means they know they won't have a gay-free country. If that is intolerable to them, they could buy an island or something, and declare their own country.
No one in their country (which was uninhabited at first) is gay. Over time, a gay person (or more than one) surreptitiously enter, and live there until discovered. They are then thrown out of the country.
The neighboring countries have a problem with this, so they attack and force the homophobes to allow gays in their country.
Who is harming whom now? Does "diversity" truly survive when one side forces the other into compliance?
Yes, values have different amounts of worth, depending on if one is "inside" ("us") or "outside" (" them")...
The real question is whether we, as individuals, are allowed to consider different value systems, and then apply elements of those which are better than what we started with.