Quote from: ZoeM on July 08, 2014, 09:40:12 PM
Equal rights means everyone's basic rights are equal. And - sorry, but that includes freedom of religious belief and expression.
Zoe what's happening here is that LGBTO people are trying to make this a reality; they want to be treated as though everyone's basic rights are equal. Including their own right to freedom of belief and expression.
I'm confused by your position.
You appear to be arguing that it's wrong to try and interfere with the beliefs of others whilst defending a group of people who are attempting to circumvent the rule of law in order to impose their own beliefs in place of another's (,as though theirs somehow had greater value,) and to deny others their rights to freedom of belief and expression.
Your right to your beliefs (religious or otherwise) should not nullify another's right to their own beliefs. If applied inequitably then this "freedom of religion" is a farce.
The only reason that another's beliefs (and the exercising thereof) should be curtailed is when they cause harm (not mere offence) to others.
Quote
But it's not for us to judge
It is the responsibility of each person to judge for themselves the difference between right and wrong according to their conscience.
Quote
we have to just learn to get along. Side by side. Together. As equals.
This is what the LGBTQ community is trying to achieve, through non violent and legal procedures.
Your position in this baffles me where you make arguments for a comparable middle ground between equality and bigotry and describe the goal of one side (equality) as the desired meeting-place between the two...
Quote
They don't infringe on our lives or livelihoods, and we don't infringe on theirs.
Attempting to make it legal to refuse to employ people based upon their gender or sexual orientation impacts neither their life nor their livelihood?
How is this morally different than attempting to make it legal to refuse to hire ethnic minorities, or say, women?
Quote
Yes, That means there will be Christian wedding bakers and LGBT-friendly wedding bakers. But that's okay, 'cause there's still cakes for everyone and everyone can be happy.
If it becomes legally sanctioned and accepted practice to refuse "cake" to LGBTQ people then it would allow all businesses to do so with little opportunity for recourse. You don't think there's a possibility that people who challenged the rule of law would attempt to pressure other businesses to operate under similar guidelines? The promise that the "cake" will still be available indefinitely may turn out to be a lie.
Quote
Except the folks who want one side to be right and the other to be wrong, of course.
When one side is peacefully pursuing legal equality whilst its members are being murdered and the other side is trying to deny that equality along with basic human rights then it couldn't be clearer cut which side is in the wrong.
Were the many people who lost their lives during the American civil rights movement on equal moral footing with the bigots who wanted to deny their self-worth?
If the Confederate States had turned around and said "ending slavery is against our religious beliefs!" should Americans have just left them to it?
Religious freedom should not supersede the basic human rights of others.Article 23 of the universal declaration of human rights states that:
(1)
Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.(2)
Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.(3) Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.
(4) Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
Quote
It's on an equal playing field to the LGBT movement, and trying to get rid of it or downgrade it to "win" is not only morally wrong (in my eyes and the eyes of at least half the nation, probably much more), but contrary to the laws on which America was founded.
This isn't about a group of people trying to protect their religious freedom. This is about people treating religious freedoms as the freedom to impose their religious beliefs on those who don't share them. They're effectively claiming that their religious freedoms trump yours, along with your human rights.
The freedom of religion was put in place to prevent the imposition of religious beliefs upon others, not to sanction this immoral practice.
I feel that that religious oppression is undeniably immoral. Killing people with bombs in the name of religion is wrong. Stoning people to death in the name of religion is wrong. Mutilating infants in the name of religion is wrong. Treating women as inferior second class citizens in the name of religion is wrong. Refusing the fundamental human rights of LGBTQ people on the basis of religion is wrong.
If you disagree would you please explain why?
As for being contrary to the laws on which America was founded,
Article XIV of the US constitution
1: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
It seems pretty clear to me that no state shall pass a law which allows citizens of the united states to discriminate against others or to remove privileges or protections for any reason. All people are citizens and should be treated as such.
Does this not make the discrimination against LGTBQ people "contrary to the laws on which America was founded."?
Whatever happened to the idea that all men were created equal?