Saturday, November 23, 2013

The Moral High Ground

It is immoral and counterproductive for the government to take money by force from one person or group of people and give it another unless the recipient is performing a Constitutionally assigned function or the function is otherwise a Constitutional mandate. - Personal Declaration of The Playful Walrus

Leftists want everyone to believe that people like me want poor people to die painful deaths in the streets, because people like me oppose unconstitutionally expanding federal government powers, higher income and capital gains tax rates, and paying for new programs with either increased debt or printing more money (which devalues the dollar).

Charity can't do it all, our Leftists friends say. But the fact is, this side of eternity, nobody can do it all.

Private, voluntary efforts could certainly do a lot more if the government eased up on micromanaging and let people keep more of their own earnings. With just about anything, private, voluntary efforts are more efficient than federal government. This is why the Constitution gives the federal government limited powers, and tells the federal government what it can do, not only what it can't do. Want a huge new federal program to fight "poverty", despite the spectacular failure of those that came before? Pass a Constitutional Amendment. The Constitution isn't there just to make sure you can pee all over The Bible and call it art.

Our Leftist friends what to confiscate, with guns draw if it comes to that, that for which people have worked, and give it to people who choose not to work, or to make unwise decisions about finances. That is immoral.

I want to help the needy. That is why I give to voluntary efforts. More of my Leftist friends could do the same if they worked harder and were better with what they earned. Leftist Billionaires can already give their money away, to charity or the U.S. Treasury, if they want to.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

With Ambassadors Like These...

Do you consider yourself a Christian? A follower of Christ? Do you believe the Bible to have Divine inspiration? If so, then you should know that we are called to ambassadors for Him. With that in mind, consider the following comment left by Anonymous after my entry responding to a popular perception of Evangelical Christians...

(Anyone who follows the true Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior is born-again and a Christian, so the terms are redundant.)

In your eyes. As usual, the evangelical think they are the saved ones, they are the true Christians, they are the ones who have the 'real' word of God. Everyone else is hell bound. My father's family was pentecostal evangelical, my mother's family was Mormon. The Mormon family NEVER ONCE put down my evangelical family. My Mormon family NEVER ONCE made me feel less than, unholy, going to some hell, and all the other crap the evangelicals did EVERY time I saw them. Yes, every time we got around the pentecostals they berated my Mormon family, told us they, the Mormons were hell bound, itchy ears, etc. The Bible says by their fruits you shall know them. If that's the case the Mormons are going to heaven and will be near to God and the pentecostals will burn in that hell that they LOVE sending others to who do not think like them. My Mormon family members had more love in one little finger than all the pentecostals put together. My parents didn't take us children to church, and when we went to see the pentecostals we were treated with quiet contempt and they didn't like us around our cousins. When we visited the Mormons we were loved, cherished and made to feel so very welcome. Never once did the Mormons make us feel less than. To this day I avoid the pentecostals for their hatred and judgmental attitude that stinks to high heaven. Oh, I forgot, don't touch my anointed. THAT is what the pentecostals will see when they read this. They are so stuck on themselves they truly think they are the ones in line with God. I spent years as an adult in the evangelical churches and it was the grace of God that DELIVERED me from ALL OF THAT and I will never sit foot in one of those churches again. Ever. I would rather burn in the hell they send us all to then go near them again. And, of course, they are saying, then so be it, hell is where you will go. Idiots. 
Thank you, Anonymous, for your comment. I think it is a very important one, expressing feelings that have been felt by many people.

I'm going to assume your perceptions and memories are accurate. I have no reason to think otherwise, and I apologize for the treatment you received by people misrepresenting Christ.

I stand by my statement: Anyone who follows the true Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior is born-again and a Christian.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Priorities

I wonder how many members of PETA support a legally-protected "right" to rip apart innocent human beings in abortion mills? I can't take anyone seriously who cares more about injuries and quality-of-life for orcas and elephants than protecting innocent human beings who are not posing a serious threat to anyone else from being slaughtered by the thousands, legally, every day.

I have priorities.

End elective abortions, then come back to me with your pleas to let the orcas and elephants deal with natural disasters on their own, without vet care.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

A Stinking Cup of Joe

Fascism thrives on propaganda, and there's no shortage of propagandists for homofascism. Most people who engage in homosexuality are not fascists, but plenty of homosexuality advocates behave like fascists.

Notice that for many years, homosexuality advocates touted the importance of "tolerance". They've largely stopped doing that, because now they they've gained so much power, they don't plan on tolerating anyone who does not publicly cheer private homosexual behaviors. What tolerance really means is allowing for disagreement. You don't tolerate things you like or agree with. You tolerate things you disagree with or don't like instead of trying to force eradication of those things. The way homosexuality advocates used the word was quite different - they used to mean liking, promoting, or celebrating homosexual behavior. They portrayed any disagreement with homosexual behavior or any conviction that homosexual behavior was qualitatively different than heterosexual behavior in any way other than superior as being akin to murdering people.

One popular and acclaimed homosexuality propagandist is this Dog My Joe! character. I want to point out exactly how he operates. Quite often, he'll use unflattering images of his targets along with the twisted text, and use disparaging, childish nicknames as well. He headlined an entry at his blog today as such:
Tony Perkins: Gays Should Not Be On TV
Now, is that really what Tony Perkins said? As you'll see, it is not. Truth doesn't seem to be important to Joe, however.

He ran this quote by Perkins:
"When Gallup asked people to guess how many Americans were homosexual, most said 25%. Turns out, they were about 22% off. And while gays and lesbians make up about 3.4% of the population, they seem to get 100% of the consideration when producers write and cast new television shows. The debate over same-sex 'marriage' has been perfectly scripted by Hollywood. Television shows are full of lovable gay characters, whose dangerous lifestyle is just another funny footnote. Unfortunately for America, those make-believe people are having a real-life impact. It's no accident that almost 20% of Americans credit television with changing their minds on same-sex 'marriage.' It's time for families to let networks know that what they gain by being pro-homosexual doesn't compare with what they'll lose. And that's viewers."
Where did Perkins say that gays should not be on TV? He didn't. Perkin accurately describes the reality of television these days. By the data presented by established, respected mainstreamed homosexuality advocacy organizations, homosexuality is overrepresented on television, and portrayals of homosexual behavior or people who identify as homosexual are overwhelmingly sympathetic, positive, and present Leftism and marriage neutering advocacy as the expected priorities of such people. You'd never know from watching television that there are homosexual people with principled opposition to the neutering of marriage, or at least doing so by judicial activism (Joe, to his credit, does run quotes by homosexual people who oppose marriage neutering). You'd never know that homosexuality correlates to higher rates of domestic violence, substance abuse, STDs (at least with males), or mental illness.

You'd also never know what many homosexual people have noted, that general fascism and homosexuality have had a symbiotic relationship. So none of this is merely a coincidence. Homofascists are part of a movement that pushes to sexualize children as early as possible, and part of the Leftist tendency to make everything political. Note I did not say "homosexuals are pedophiles". Of course, some are, just like some heterosexuals are pedophiles. I'm talking about an activist movement. Homofascists take statements by individuals, often made in response to questions by proxies of homofascists if not homofascists themselves, that extol the ideal of uniting a bride and groom (marriage), or saving sex for marriage, or modesty, or decorum, as unacceptable utterances making that person and their business, employer, enterprise, livelihood the targeted or relentless attacks.

Joe attributes the quote this way:
- Hate group leader Tony Perkins, via email.




"Hate group"? Where has Perkins or his organization ever promoted hated? Ah, but there's a Leftist victicrat group that has labeled them as such. You see how that words? A Leftist group pronounces those who disagree with them as haters. Other Leftists run with name-calling, as if the Leftist group's name-calling makes it true.

Here are the tags Joe attached to this entry (remember, it is his language, not mine):

assholery, bigotry, Christianists, crackpots, FRC, hate groups, religion, television, Tony Perkins
Fascists like to portray opponents as extremists or insane. They also like to portray anyone complaining about their tactics as whiners.


Friday, October 11, 2013

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Getting Hairy in Hendersonville

Todd Starnes has a column at Townhall about an apparently lack of separation of mosque and state:

A Tennessee high school has decided to revise its field trip policy after a group of freshmen were taken to an Islamic mosque where they were given copies of the Koran and while a student who opted out of the trip was given a worksheet that alleged Muslims treated their conquered people better than the United States treated minorities.

The students were in an honors world studies class at Hendersonville High School and the field trips to the mosque as well as a Hindu temple were part of a three-week course on world religions.

But some parents objected to the trips and wondered why the school would tour a mosque but not a Christian church or a Jewish synagogue.

Because there is a war against Judeo-Christian values.
During their visit to the Hindu temple, students engaged in meditation.
Prayer in school?

Taxpayer-funded schools run by "secular" government might have made sense back on the day when we had more homogenous, isolated communities and we didn't have the networked, interactive communications systems we have now. It is a different world now, and instead of the federal government taking a larger and larger role in education, we need saparation of state and school. This is just one of many reasons why.

I'm an evangelical Christian. I have no problem with the idea of students visiting a mosque and getting a Koran. EXCEPT, we KNOW the ACLU and the like would freak out of the students were taken to a Christian church and given Bibles. But quibbling about these things is like arguing about the deck chairs while the Titanic sinks. Take your children out of the government schools, and vote against funding them.

Monday, September 9, 2013

When A Murderer, Rapist, or Molester Commits Suicide

So Ariel Castro, who kidnapped and held three young women for many years, raping, beating, and otherwise terrorizing them, killed himself.


Ideally, he would have:
  • realized the enormity of his evils
  • accepted blame
  • repented
  • thrown himself on the mercy of the Lord
  • begged forgiveness from Jesus, the victims, their families, the greater Cleveland area, and the State of Ohio
  • spent the rest of his days doing everything he could to "repay" his victims & helping law enforcement figure out how to prevent crimes like his and find/rescue victims sooner.
But... killing himself was the second best outcome.

I know there are people who think we should not be anything but saddened that he killed himself, but those people have screwed up priorities and a deficient grasp of reality.

I generally oppose suicide, but for someone who murders, rapes, or attacks children, it is better that they kill themselves if the alternative is more crime on their part or being cared for by taxpayers


Friday, September 6, 2013

A Do-Nothing Congress?

A Pew poll said that this Congress is one of the "least productive" in history. You may have heard the GOP, which has the majority in the House of Representatives, referred to as the "party of 'no'."

Ideally, Congress should reduce spending, reform the federal taxation system, roll back government intrusion into our lives, simplify federal law while removing contradictions, and keep a check on the Executive & Judicial branches.

If we can't get that, I'd rather they "do nothing" than make things even worse.

The role of Congress is spelled out in the Constitution. They should do no more than what they are assigned in that document.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

I Am a Sinner

I invoke the Bible, moral standards, etc. in some of my writing. I often describe ideals, or the way things should be.  Never do I mean to imply that I haven't messed up big time at different times in my life. The Bible calls followers of Christ to the holiness of God.

The thing is - nobody but Jesus has maintained that level of holiness as a human being. I sin.

Is the solution to reject moral standards, and call whatever I do right, and even fight to change laws that discourage or punish things I do that are wrong?

No.

The solution was provided by Jesus - living the perfect life and dying on the cross for my sins. Through Him, I am forgiven, and I can turn to Him whenever I go astray… tell Him I’m sorry, and ask for His help to get me back on track and to keep me from straying again.

So when I blog about some decline or deficit in society, I’m not excluding myself from that. I do screw up.  But I will do my best not to allow that to prevent me from calling for right and denouncing what is wrong.

Do I think everything that is wrong should be illegal? No way. On the flip side, though, I am reluctant to agree that people have a right that should be protected by law to do what is wrong.

Would I like to see everyone follow Jesus? Yes. But using government force to attempt to bring that about is not an option. Forced Christianity is an oxymoron. Nor do I think that people should be punished by the government for not being Christian. A truly Christian nation will protect the freedom of religion that is expressed in our First Amendment. So long as your religion does not promote actions that violate the rights of others, you should be free to practice it.

If you know you are a sinner and aren't assured of your standing before God, I invite you to read through a modern translation of the Bible, such as the NIV, NASB, NKJV, or ESV. The Gospels, Romans, Hebrews are good books to start. I can't offer any better advice than to embrace Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. He's defeated sin and death, and will transform your life. I still sin, which is why I titled this post "I Am a Sinner." But He has paid for my sins. All to Him I owe. I am His servant, and I can't think of a better Master to follow.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Does the Christian Left Bear False Witness?

The Christian Left, eh?

Oh, yes, how could I have missed it all of these years?!?

The Gospel of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ According to St. Karl, Chapter 5 Verse 1:

And Jesus said, "Go convince the Romans to take a percentage, whether 15 or 35 percent, from the more wealthy half of the people, from the faithful and unfaithful alike, and have the Romans keep a portion for themselves, then have them distribute the rest to other people for their foor purchases, both those who honor their bodies and those who abuse their bodies alike, those who have saved and those who have not, those who have worked and those who have chosen not to." - (NLV - New Leftist Version)

Hey, doesn't the Bible say something about bearing false witness? Of course, that is assuming the "Christian Left" actually cares what the Bible says.

There are no children starving in the United States of America as a result of Congress refusing to raise taxes on "the rich", who are being taxed plenty.

The fact is, most of the "poor" children in this union are fat. Plenty are obese.

If there are any starving children here, it is entirely because their parents or guardians are neglectful. That is not the responsibility of Congress. We have various taxpayer programs already, including school meals (breakfast in addition to lunch) and many private charities that provide food.

It is not Congress' responsibility, either Constitutionally or morally, to make sure every kid is getting fed (and the kids are getting fed.)  But Jesus did tell His followers to care for the poor directly. He didn't tell them to go strip other people of their money.

The Christian Left is spending spending money on all sorts of things, like getting this image out, that they could be giving to starving children. I happen to know that the person who reposted this picture for me to see spends a lot of money on booze and entertainment. Every dollar they have spent on those things, and the computer, etc. they use could have gone to feeding a starving kid.

When "the rich" can invest and donate their money, rather than sending it down the federal government drain, they help more of the poor eat well, and rise up from being poor so that they, in turn, can help others.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Let People Break Laws Because: Lawbreakers

So much for hiding in the shadows. People who are breaking laws by coming or staying here illegally are again demanding we change how we do things to accommodate them. Look, pal, I welcome legal immigrants with open arms and a big smile and congratulations, but I still expect them to adapt to the Union, not have the USA adapt to them. We sure as heck shouldn't change a darn thing to make life any easier for someone who didn't follow the rules to begin with.

Kate Linthicum has the article at the Pink Transgendered Lady, which only allows you so many clicks per months before they want $. So keep that in mind if you are thinking about clicking through.

This is how the article is headlined:
Immigrants Rights Groups Urge Changes in Car Impound Policies
Activists persuaded the LAPD to amend its policy on unlicensed drivers, and the number of cars impounded last year fell 39%. They hope the Sheriff's Department and other police agencies follow suit.
An immigrant is someone who comes here and stays here legally. A foreigner who is here illegally is an illegal alien. Calling these people "Immigrants Rights Groups" is dishonest.
A 2011 state law requires police at drunk-driving checkpoints to give unlicensed drivers the chance to call someone with a license to take the car before it is towed.

They dropped the provision where the police were also required to offer them taxpayer-funded sex change operations.
But that law does not apply to routine traffic stops, and activists complain that unlicensed drivers across the county are losing their cars after being pulled over for minor infractions, such as making a wrong turn or driving without a seat belt. In many cases, the cars are impounded for 30 days at a fee of more than $1,000.
That's because they aren't supposed to be driving in the first place. What is the point of having a license if it doesn't allow you to do anything that someone without the license can do?

Activists say impound policies unfairly target immigrants here illegally, who cannot obtain licenses in California.

Yeah, you know those bank robbery laws unfairly target people who want money that isn't theirs.

At a news conference Wednesday held by a group called the Free Our Cars Coalition, Mexican immigrant Alma Castaneda said she and her husband have had their cars impounded five times for unlicensed driving
By "immigrant" the paper probably means illegal alien. In what other country would someone stand up at a press conference and admit to breaking federal law, and then complain that they were caught breaking state law five times?
That is how [whiny illegal aliens] persuaded the Los Angeles Police Department to make major changes to its impound policy, said Zach Hoover, a Baptist minister who leads an alliance of religious and community groups called LA Voice.

I won't hold my breath for the paper to run an editorial criticizing Hoover for trying to put religion into the law.
The new rules drew lawsuits from the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents rank-and-file officers, and from a national group called Judicial Watch that said the policy is unfair to taxpayers. California State Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris issued an opinion that the LAPD's impound policies were legal.



What does the law matter to Harris? She encourages lawbreaking.

If it is so difficult to live here as an illegal alien, then tough. I understand why people prefer the USA, especially over Mexico. However, they're going to have the deal with our laws, at least until they get as much political clout as marriage neutering advocates, who can simply ignore laws. We need to protect everyone, not just make things easier for illegal aliens.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

HRC on ENDA

The [Homosexualilty Advocacy] Campaign, which calls itself the Human Rights Campaign, which doesn't support rights for polygamous people (so much for equality), as been advertising on behalf of passing "ENDA", which could force employers to let people dress inappropriately on the job along with a bunch of other things.

Here's a statement they have been using:
There’s no state law protecting LGBT workers in 33 states! Sign our petition to Congress to pass ENDA!
That first sentence, of course, is FALSE. There are many laws protecting workers in every state, and LGBT people are not excluded from those laws. Taking their statement at face value, I could note that perhaps 50 (or all 57) states have no state law protecting heterosexual workers! What HRC is trying to do is further erode freedom of association, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, free enterprise, and property rights, by further intruding into the hiring, firing, promotion, demotion, and other decisions of employers.

They want people to get upset that there's no specific law in 33 states that prevents an employer from saying, "I don't want to hire you because you're a man who has sex with men" or "I don't want to hire you because you're a man who is dressed as a woman." However, there's no law against an employer saying :I don't want to hire you because you're heterosexual." That's right. There's also no law againt an employer saying "I don't want to hire you because you're ugly", "I don't want to hire you because you're an introvert", "I don't want to hire you because you like to watch Honey Boo Boo", or a million other things, but the HRC doesn't seem to care about any of that. They have a very narrow focus of wanting to force people who do not approve of homosexual behavior or crossdressing to hire people who do those things anyway, and create whole addition class of potential lawsuits, as in "The reason I didn't get promoted is because I'm bisexexual!" when perhaps the reason was poor performance.

I think employment decisions should be up to a mutual agreement between an employer and a potantial employee (or their chosen representatives), not anyone else.

Of course, the homosexuality and crossdressing advocates will try to liken this to civil rights laws meant to stop discrimination against people based on their skin color or ethnicity, but there's a difference because those things are more readily apparent and are not behaviors. There was also a history in this country of enslaving people, denying them basic human rights, and publicly torturing and lynching people with impunity in well-attended festive events based on their skin color. Finally, a lot of people think it is time to drop the laws about racist discrimination, too, rather than increasing restrictions on employers.

You know what protects LGBT workers? The same thing that protects heterosexual workers: making your employer's job easier in a way it wouldn't be if they didn't have anyone at all for that position or had to go through the trouble of finding someone else. Being a good employee is an employee's protection. If someone doesn't keep or doesn't promote an employee who should be kept or promoted, it is the employer who loses out the most, especially of that employee goes elsewhere.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Opportunity

I haven't been updating this blog much lately because I'm busy rioting, looting, and beating up people for no reason, whining about some imaginary racist conspiracy.

Friday, July 12, 2013

We're Freaks - We Want a Decent Education For Our Kids

Have you ever noticed that homeschoolers are portrayed as freaks for homeschooling?

Yeah, I'm a freak.  I'm a freak because my wife and I are homeschooling our kids.


I'm a freak because I think it is better for my children to be educated and supervised by an R.N. who is smart as a whip, loves them more than anything else in the world, and can immediately and effectively discipline them without red tape. We don't want them sitting in a room with a teacher who is a pervert, or burnt out, or powerless, overwhelmed and a captive to a union, or worse yet, believes all of the junk the union promotes and hasn't been fired because of the union. We don't want them sitting a room with a bunch of disruptive kids who have no parental supervision and were "raised" by hired help, such as a "day orphanage", or have chaotic home lives involving stepparents, stepsiblings, or a revolving door of their parents' lovers.

We want our kids to be "socially retarded", by denying them the opportunity to fornicate in a full classroom or at a school dance on the dance floor, or to learn the latest combination of derogatory terms, or the latest lies, excuses, and techniques kids are employing to subvert teacher and parental authority. We want  them to have a little more trouble contacting the drug dealers in the schools.


We don't want to fight over uniforms or no uniforms, or dress codes where our child can't wear a t-shirt reflecting his or her religious beliefs but is ineffective at keeping girls from dressing like "hos".


We don’t want to deal with endless appeals for money or employing my child as a shill to raise funds, even though we're already paying plenty in taxes to fund the school.


We don't think "one size fits all" or even very few sizes fits all. Frankly, my kids are smarter than most their age.


We don't want our kids to have to deal with bullies who are not removed from the school after proving themselves to be thugs. In the adult world, the bullies get fired from the workplace.


We don't want to deal with endless PTA and school board squabbles.


We don't want to fight over class placement.


We don't want to fight with administrators over testing methods, or the content or method of textbooks or curricula, including material that attacks our faith, asserts philosophical naturalism, promotes pagan or New Age concepts and practices, embraces environmental alarmism, twists history, bashes America and its founders, denies the positive Judeo-Christian influence in this nation's history, or denies the Bible's influence on government, law, and the arts.


We don't want to fight over which languages will be taught, or the emphasis, funding priorities, or other decisions applied to electives, sports, physical education, arts courses, etc.


We don't want to fight over the content of assemblies.


We don't want our kids to have to use substandard facilities, especially dirty restrooms.


We want our children to know that getting the right answer the right way and applying it to the right uses, and other accomplishments is the key to self-esteem, not touchy-feely motivational programs about how they're "okay" no matter how badly and often they screw things up when they should know better.


We want to be able to let our kid know when he or she gets a wrong answer – with a red marker even, and help them figure out how to get the right answer instead of telling them the wrong answer is okay.


We don't want to fight over the food offerings and quality at the school.


We don't want to fight over reading selections and whether or not they include enough works from obese disabled crossdressing lesbian Buddhist Marxists of color.


We don't want to fight over the nature and amount of homework.


We don't want to have to structure our lives around the school's schedule, or fight over extending the school year or school day. We want to spend time with our kids.


We don't want to fight over what to call vacations and activities clearly scheduled around Christian holidays, or struggle to allow our kids to express their celebration of those holidays.


We don't want our children prevented from citing, referencing, or mentioning the Bible or Jesus Christ in their schoolwork.



We don't want to fight over school prayer, or the even the school mascot.


We don't want our children being taught the bogus notion that disapproving of a behavior or disagreeing with an opinion makes someone intolerant or bigoted. We don't want them subjected to speech codes with which we disagree.


We don't want our grade-schooler accused of sexual harassment for hugging someone.


We don’t want someone else teaching our children in a way that normalizes fornication when we're raising them to value the sacredness of marital lovemaking.


We don't want school officials aiding and abetting statutory rape by taking our daughter to get an abortion without our knowledge.


We don't want our children being taught that homosexual sodomy is no different from heterosexual coitus, or that there is no difference between a couple of both sexes and a couple missing one of the sexes.



We don't want our children being taught that if they have some sort of emotional or psychological difficulty, that they must be homosexual or are really the opposite sex and should have body parts lopped off.


We don't want our children taught relativism, postmodernism, or multiculturalism, or otherwise subvert what we're teaching them.


We want to teach our children with an integrated, logical, consistent worldview, to judge people based on their actions as individuals, that it is good to have traditional values and to make moral judgments, that not all religions, customs, or cultures are the same or equivalent, that some actions AND ideas are evil or just plain stupid, and that feelings can change, can be managed, and don't necessitate action.


We know better what's best for our child than lawmakers in Sacramento and Washington D.C, who want to micromanage.  I see all of these battles over every aspect of public schooling as arranging deck chairs on the Titanic.  The government should get out of the education business, and I vote against using any more tax money (including bonds) for public schools.


I respect school teachers, I really do.  I had some great ones myself and I have family members who are or have been school teachers. Almost all of my formal education was in public schools. But times have changed too much, and especially in California, the public schools have far too many problems.


Plus, I know my kids will not get shot at home.

Friday, July 5, 2013

What We Mean When We Say 'The Homosexual Agenda'

As a limited government conservative, I would never want to use the force of government to stop consensual socializing, physical interaction, cohabitation, religious ceremonies, voluntary associations and business transactions, or free expression. I do think it is the role of various levels of government to cite, fine, and incarcerate one who physically harms someone else or steals or damages the property of someone else against their consent.

Therefore, I would never try to pry two (or three or more) men in bed together apart, to disrupt a "gay wedding" in a church, nor do I think it is excusable to assault someone just because they are gay, or spraypaint vulgarities on their home. I think we should all have the freedom to exercise our rights to life, liberty, and property, regardless of whether we are attracted to men, women, both, or neither.

Yes, I believe that homosexual behavior, like all sexual or sex-like behavior outside of marriage, is sinful (a license from a state does not make a brideless or groomless pairing marriage). I do not believe, however, that our laws should attempt to prevent the commission of all sins.

When someone like me refers to "the homosexual agenda" negatively, we're not talking about seeking to live as you choose in your own home, or protecting yourself from crimes.

What we are talking about are things like:
  • Denigrating traditional gender roles. If the traditional masculine or feminine roles do not work for you as an individual or a couple (understandable, especially with two men or two women), that's fine, but the rest of society can still embrace traditional gender roles, and should be able to without being accused of animus towards homosexual people.

  • Trying to punish thoughts with "hate crime" legislation.

  • Instituting official public school clubs centered around expressing sexuality and the affirmation of homosexual behavior. I'm against public schools in general, but schools full of minors should focus on academics, athletics, and the arts, not to whom you have an attraction. If you really, really need to form a gay-straight "alliance", take Drama. Grades K-12 should not be forming official sex clubs, and make no mistake, it is about sex. Also, in California, the Leftists running the state now require textbooks to include and identify people as "LGBT" and call positive attention to their sexual attraction, behavior, or gender confusion.

  • Trying to get our churches to abandon Scriptural teaching on sexuality and marriage.

  • Telling someone, especially a child, with homosexual thoughts or feelings that they must identify and affirm themselves as homosexuals and engage in homosexual behavior, and that there are no alternatives. This may include trying to prevent anyone from offering assistance to modify behavior away from homosexual sodomy.

  • New or increased government funding for HIV/AIDS research, prevention, treatment, etc., especially at the expense of funding for other diseases not as easily preventable. I’m not convinced it is the federal government's place to spend any money on any disease, except in treating military personnel and federal prisoners.

  • Trying to get us to believe it is okay for someone to dress inappropriately or undergo surgical mutilation and unnecessary hormone treatments in an attempt to appear to be the opposite sex, and that to accommodate such behavior, we should allow men and women (AND BOYS AND GIRLS!) to use the public restrooms of each other. (I don't lump "transgendered" with homosexual, but so many activists do.)

  • Intolerance of anyone who does not affirm homosexual behavior. Labeling as a "hater" or "bigot" anyone who doesn't affirm homosexual behavior, and trying to silence such people or prevent them from publicly expressing their opinions.

  • The notion that someone who engages in homosexual behavior should receive special or extra protection under the law, and shouldn't in any way be criticized.

  • Neutering state marriage licensing, especially through judicial imposition. Preventing adoption agencies from preferring homes with bride+groom couples when placing children.

  • Placing into law, curriculum, medical/counseling policies, church teachings, the media, and workplace training and policies that one must affirm:

    • Homosexual behavior is healthy and morally neutral or positive.

    • Homosexual attraction should be embraced and acted upon.

    • There is no difference between heterosexual coitus and homosexual sodomy, and no qualitative difference between a couple comprised  of both sexes and a couple comprised of one.


Since I believe in property rights, I do believe employers should be able to fire someone based on their sexual orientation. But, I believe employers, absent a contract that says otherwise, should be able to fire (or not hire) anyone for any or no reason, so it isn’t like I think someone should be able to be fired because they are gay. An employer should be able to fire someone because they are the employer.

I do not think there is right to two men to commit sodomy with each other. They have the freedom to, and as long as they are doing it in private I wouldn’t try to stop them. But I’m against having laws or court decisions that there is a right to such behavior in a way that government must, say, license "marriages" between two men.

I recognize that not all people who identify themselves as homosexual support this homosexual agenda. While some homosexual people make it the end-all, be-all of their existence and thus are "homosexuality advocates" or even "homofascists", I know that there are plenty of homosexual people who, like straight me, have higher priorities, such as Constitutionally limited government, national security, and national fiscal sustainability. They don't obsess over trying to get people like me to abandon our belief that homosexual behavior is wrong. And I don't obsess over trying to get them to renounce homosexuality.

Under limited government conservatism, we can use our right to free speech to try to persuade each other, but we should not use the force of government to try to silence each other, or to force "affirmation" from each other.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Divorce Does Not Justify Marriage Neutering

People arguing for the neutering of marriage cite the high divorce rate as a reason why a brideless or groomless couple should be able to get state marriage licenses for their voluntary association, or perhaps why we, the people, don't have moral authority to set marriage licensing requirements. After all, if it is God's will that marriage last for life and we as a society aren't following God’s will in that respect*, how can we invoke God's will when it comes to insisting that marriage uniting the sexes?  They argue that if we want to protect marriage, we should ban divorce, or they claim they're going to push for such a ban themselves.

If you want to circulate a petition to place an initiative on the ballot that bans divorce, go ahead.  Nobody is stopping you. You can vote for it, too. Be my guest. If you donate money to back it, I won't boycott your business.

One need not be religious nor believe in God nor believe that divorce is a bad to believe that authority over licensing requirements belongs with the people instead of the courts, or that state marriage licensing should be reserved for voluntary associations consisting of a bride and a groom.
But in entertaining this appeal to the Bible or religious tradition, I still don't see that immorality in one thing precludes making a moral judgment at all. (If you fell down some stairs this morning, you should still try to avoid crashing your car into a wall.) If the political authority doesn't belong with the people, it belongs with nobody, as all authority of our branches of government is assigned to them by the consent of the people.  The answer is not to promote more immorality or fundamentally alter the nature of marriage. It is also disingenuous to invoke Scripture or religious tradition against those who hold such things dear with one hand and dismiss it with the other.

Yes, divorce is a bad thing. Even if it gets someone away from a sociopath - and people should get away from sociopaths - it is bad in the sense that there never should have been a marriage in the first place, and the divorce is part of the larger mistake. Marriage, ideally, should be for life. But that there is divorce has no bearing on whether or not state marriage licensing should be neutered.  It is an entirely different issue. I can cut an orange in half. I can destroy it. It can be eaten away by fruit fly maggots.  There can be a wax likeness of an orange fraudulently passed off as a legitimate orange. None of that makes an orange rubber ball an orange, even though it is round and orange in color. We even revoke the state-issued driver's licenses of some drivers because they have been horrible drivers, but that doesn't obligate us to issue driver's licenses to bus riders, bicyclists, pedestrians, or anyone who can apply for a state identification card, even though driver's licenses are considered more desirable.

Really, it is silly to say that because there is divorce, we should neuter marriage. It simply does not follow.  A state-licensed marriage is essentially a kind of partnership. Partnerships are dissolved all of the time.

The high divorce rate can be cited as evidence for a devaluation of marriage in our culture. But how would neutering marriage help that? To me, it seems, it would be kicking marriage while it is down.  Some may argue that "heterosexual couples haven't been doing such a great job with marriage, so why not let same-sex couples have a shot at it?" That may sound appealing to some at first, but it also does not make any sense, as bride-groom couples will still be able to get state licenses, and it is akin to saying "orange growers have been doing a lousy job, so let's throw rubber balls into the crate with the oranges."

Yes, the divorce rate is too high, and those who want to protect marriage should take steps to change that. There are ways of addressing that, but neutering marriage isn't one of them. That there are a lot of divorces in no way means we should forfeit our votes to judges or activists.


*From a religious standpoint, (which, we are constantly reminded, the state can't consider), any church that takes the Bible seriously should not be performing marriage ceremonies or recognizing the marriage of anyone who divorced a previous spouse without Biblical grounds.  (Biblical grounds boil down to abandonment – actual geographical or sexual abandonment or other forms, such as abuse of others or self or adultery.  If someone divorces you without just cause, that is abandonment.)

I do agree that divorce is detrimental to marriage.  To this end, I could see it as reasonable if a state decided it was going to change its laws so as to stop issuing marriage licenses to couples in which at least one of the individuals had previously filed for and received a divorce, say, two or more times.  Note - that means being the divorce initiator, not the spouse presented with the papers.  I could especially see it as a reasonable restriction if the state also allowed some other form of civil licensing for such couples.  Ultimately, however, no number of divorces changes the basic nature of marriage, or the state's interest in licensing it.

Friday, June 28, 2013

David Benkof on the Phantom Gay Past

Benkof, who has experience with homosexual behavior, has encouraged sharing this note.

The Phantom Gay Past

The idea that being gay is a naturally occurring orientation in a minority of the human population everywhere has achieved wide acceptance in our society. Many voters and legislators have been approaching the question of redefining marriage to include same-sex couples with that idea in mind.

The problem is, that idea just isn’t true. And the scholars who have provided us with the data showing that being gay is actually a product of Western society originating about 150 years ago are overwhelmingly gay and lesbian (and supporters of “marriage equality”) themselves.

These intrepid social scientists have examined the evidence of homosexuality in other times and cultures (documents, field studies) to see how the gay minority fared in other milieux. But such historians and anthropologists haven’t found much. Sure, there’s substantial evidence of same-sex relationships, love, and sex in pre-modern times, sometimes in very open contexts. But there’s no evidence of a same-sex oriented minority or even individuals with gay or lesbian orientations in any society before the 19th century.

(There isn’t any evidence of straight people either. As far as we can tell, in societies before the 19th century, even happily married people were assumed to be capable of enjoying intercourse with either sex, and only our own society includes people believed to be unidirectionally oriented. The best book on the recentness of straightness is Jonathan Ned Katz’s The Invention of Heterosexuality.)

The experts at homosexuality across the centuries and the continents have thus asserted, overwhelmingly, that being gay is a relatively recent social construction first arising in Western culture about 150 years ago. To my knowledge (and I’ve looked), there isn’t a single scholar with a Ph.D. in anthropology or history of any repute writing and teaching about homosexuality at a major American university who believes gays have existed in any cultures before or outside ours, much less in all cultures. These women and men work closely with an ever-growing body of knowledge that directly contradicts the “born that way” ideology that has been key to the spread of the belief that homosexuality is equivalent to heterosexuality in every way.

It can be lonely to be the one of the few people in gay circles with knowledge about the phantom gay past, while everyone else is certain gays have always existed. Professor John D’Emilio (University of Illinois-Chicago), the first scholar to write a doctoral dissertation on American gay history, lamented in the late 1990s that even while the social-construction idea has swept the academic world,

the essentialist notion that gays constitute a distinct minority of people different in some inherent way has more credibility in American society than ever before…. The core assumptions at the heart of [most recent gay] historical studies are ignored, even as the content of the history - the fascinating lives, the heroic struggles, the fierce oppression - are embraced and absorbed.

Historical perspectives

One thing that becomes clear in looking at the historical scholarship about sexuality is that today’s categories are weak tools for describing the past. A few years ago, I spoke with leading gay historian Martin Duberman, the founder of the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies in New York City. He put it this way: “Were people always either gay or straight? The answer to that is a decided ‘No.’” Instead, people from other eras who slept with members of their own gender “haven’t viewed that as something exclusive and therefore something that defines them as a different category of human being,” Duberman said.

Many popular attempts to portray an age-old history of homosexuality go back to ancient Greece. We do have a large body of evidence - from the poetry of Sappho to Greek vases that depict two or more men in flagrante - affirming that same-sex love, relationships, and intercourse were common practices in that culture. But did a gay minority exist among the ancient Greeks? The scholars say no.

Rather, the Greeks thought homosexuality was something everyone could and should enjoy, particularly men in the upper classes. In addition to a wife, elite men were expected to take a younger male as an apprentice-lover, with prescribed sexual roles (the younger male was always passive). This system was so different from ours that to describe specific ancient Greeks as gay and others as straight would show profound disrespect for their experiences, and violate the cardinal historical rule against looking at the past only through present-colored lenses.

Another example in which the evidence of same-sex relations has been misinterpreted as a gay minority involves romantic friendships among women in upper-class European and American society in the 18th and early-19th centuries. We have many letters, some explicit, expressing deep love and passion between women, many of whom were also married to men. But the scholars who have examined this body of evidence don’t consider these women lesbians. First, it’s unclear how often the women in romantic friendships had genital relations with each other. But even those who did thought about sex, gender, and intimacy in ways so different from today that scholars have spurned the viewpoint (nearly universal among non-scholars) that two 18th-century women who wrote each other love letters and shared a bed were obviously lesbians.

So when in history did the gay minority first appear, and why? Historians have two major approaches to these questions, and there is plenty of room for further exploration of this important question. The first approach (growing out of the work of French philosopher Michel Foucault and reinforced by the 1970s studies of female sexuality by Carroll Smith-Rosenberg and Lillian Faderman) focuses on the late-19th-century medicalization of homosexuality as a mental illness or psychological condition. Psychiatrists and sexologists in Germany, Britain, and the United States began to pathologize patients who expressed same-sex desires or described same-sex experiences. These labels then led to gay or lesbian identity among those stigmatized, which in turn led those not so labeled to take on heterosexual identities. (An unfortunate byproduct of this process has been the diminishment of open non-sexual affection between heterosexuals of the same sex, to avoid suspicion of homosexuality.)


The other approach, which I find more interesting, explains the rise of the gay minority in terms of economic and demographic trends in Western society. D’Emilio’s landmark 1983 essay, “Capitalism and Gay Identity,” applied a Marxist analysis to the question, arguing that as subsistence became possible outside the nuclear family, young men, especially in cities, were for the first time able to experience same-sex eroticism in ways that could lead to gay identity. Scholars have also looked at the changes in middle-class mores that sanctioned limits on fertility, thus allowing individuals to envision life outside an opposite-sex marriage. And gay history pioneer Jonathan Ned Katz (formerly of Yale) has pointed to the increased “sexualization of commerce and commercialization of sexuality” during the second half of the 19th century, in which entrepreneurs made money from sex-oriented literature, films, bars, baths, and other merchandise and establishments.


While both major approaches place the rise of the gay minority somewhere in the mid- to late 19th century, it’s clear that in many places gay identity didn’t develop until much later. For example, the studies of Newport, Rhode Island, and New York City by outstanding Yale historian George Chauncey include many individuals involved in same-sex activities in the few decades before the Second World War who cannot fairly be called “gay.” Nationwide and certainly worldwide, there are still places where the age of the gay minority would best be counted in years, rather than decades or centuries. In any event, it seems clear that ours is the most sex-obsessed society in history, so perhaps it makes sense that it’s the first in which people form identities around the sex to which they find themselves most attracted.


But even without terminology or cultural identity, one might object, on a basic level some people in earlier centuries desired their own sex and thus were, essentially, gay or lesbian, right? Katz says no. “The existence of the words and our use of them can’t be separated from the feelings and the acts,” he told me in an interview a few years ago. In his opinion, “it’s literally true that homosexual feelings and acts didn’t exist before those concepts.”


Anthropological perspectives


Lesbian and gay anthropologists report much the same lack of a gay minority in their studies of cultures around the world. In fact, anthropologist Esther Newton (SUNY-Purchase) noted in an essay that in her field, “there is really no essentialist position on sexuality, no notion that people are born with sexual orientations. The evidence, fragmentary as it is, all points the other way.” Thus, Newton wrote, “Western lesbian and gay anthropologists, for the most part, have not run around the world looking for other lesbians and gay men.”


Instead, they have found that different cultures have a panoply of different understandings of sex, gender, and desire specific to their own people. For example, the Native Americans known as berdaches or two-spirits have generally taken on feminine dress and social roles, and almost exclusively partnered with non-berdache men. They also often had prescribed religious and military tasks. To call berdaches a “gay minority” stretches the definition of “gay” to a point where anthropologists refuse to go.


Another good example involves many Arab, African, and Latin American cultures, in which sexuality is organized around the femininity or masculinity of the sex object and/or the active or passive sexual role, rather than the biological sex of the individual desired. Such cultures have plenty of same-sex activity, but many of them didn’t have a gay minority until very recently.


Research on sexuality in such cultures rarely reaches the popular press. Columbia University anthropologist Carole S. Vance has pointed out that we see headlines announcing a “gay brain” but no similar reporting of the social science that shows sexual orientation to be uniquely Western.


Vance has a helpful model for thinking about same-sex behavior across cultures. She told me in an interview that she sees being gay or lesbian in American culture as a “package” that includes at least three elements beyond sexual practice: erotic attachment, emotional interest, and cultural membership. But in other cultures, she says, “same-sex sexual behavior can happen without these other elements, or with only some of them.”

Our gay/straight (or gay/straight/bisexual) system can seem logical and obvious to us because we exist within it, but anthropology provides an important corrective to our ethnocentric assumptions. Newton asserted without hesitation that she knows of no non-Western cultural system that divides people into four categories (i.e. men who like women, men who like men, women who like men, and women who like women) as ours does.


The social scientists I spoke with in preparing this essay spoke disparagingly about the natural-science studies purporting to show sexual orientation as “hard-wired.” Newton considers a study showing a link between sexual orientation and blinking rates to be ludicrous: “Any anthropologist who has looked cross-culturally (knows) it’s impossible that that’s true, because sexuality is structured in such different ways in different cultures.” And Duberman told me that in his opinion “there’s no good scientific work that establishes that people are born gay or straight.” While a Ph.D. in history or anthropology does not make a scholar an expert at hard science, these academics’ comments do demonstrate how strongly gay and lesbian social scientists reject of the “born that way” viewpoint.


Nonetheless, the gay community and the wider society increasingly hold the opposite view. In particular, organizations promoting gay equality have promoted “truths” about gay history and culture that have no scholarly basis. For example, pro-gay and coming-out literature tends to make a big deal of the supposed ubiquity and timelessness of the gay minority. Perhaps the most outrageous example is on the Web site of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (pflag.org). One Q and A in the Frequently Asked Questions section reads as follows:


Is there something wrong with being gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender?

No. There have been people in all cultures and times throughout human history who have identified themselves as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender (GLBT). Homosexuality is not an illness or a disorder….


The fact that the leading organization coordinating straight support for the gay community, in its basic introductory document, completely misrepresents the known facts about history and anthropology before even addressing what we know about medicine and psychology shows how powerful, and important, social science is in shaping people’s attitudes toward homosexuality.


Can the gap be bridged?


It’s no small problem. The gay community - and to a growing extent the wider society - believes that all societies have included some gays and lesbians, which makes sense because being gay is supposedly something hard-wired to turn up in some fixed percentage of our species. Yet despite serious searching, scholars (most of whom would love to be the first to find a gay minority outside our era) have come up empty. If there’s no evidence of gays and lesbians in other societies, how can being gay or lesbian be something that happens naturally?


There are at least four ways to try to defuse the tension between the community view and the scholarly view, but I’m satisfied by none of them:


The difference is just semantics. It’s really not. Gay and lesbian historians aren’t just claiming that before the 19th century nobody was called “gay” or “lesbian.” They’re saying nobody was gay or lesbian (or straight). While various societies had different ways of thinking about and expressing maleness, femaleness, love, and sexual desire, the most common approach to homosexuality seems to be a belief that it was something one could do, not something one could be.


Gays existed in other cultures but couldn’t come out because of homophobia. But we have loads of evidence of same-sex intercourse and love, which would be unlikely if the problem was homophobia and coming out. We have no convincing evidence that any of the people leaving such records were unresponsive to the opposite sex or considered themselves to be oriented differently from those who expressed passion for opposite-sex individuals.


Other societies had gay minorities, but they left no records. Doubtful. We actually have more evidence that dragons and unicorns existed in earlier history - because they show up in literary and other historical documents - than we do of gays and lesbians. We have records of so many aspects of people’s public and private lives, that it seems clear that if there were long-ago gay people, we’d know about them. For example, there are thousands of 20th-century letters and novels and speeches and diary entries that say some version of, “My parents want me to marry an opposite-sex person, but I don’t want to, because I only like my own sex.” But to my knowledge, there are no such 15th-, 10th-, or 5th-century documents.


By definition, people who want or have same-sex love and sex are gay, and people who don’t are straight, both today and in the past. It’s tempting to look at the past and see versions of our own lives and identities, but responsible history tries to understand the past on its own terms. Asking whether Shakespeare was gay or straight makes about as much sense as asking whether he was a Republican or a Democrat. Of course, none of this means that people don’t have sexual orientations today; it means sexual orientations are a result of our specific culture, and thus not basic human nature. Perhaps a good analogy is to computers: being gay or straight is the software and even the operating system of many people’s lives in today’s highly sexualized culture, but it’s not in anybody’s hardware.


Then what should we make of all the hoopla over various biological studies that point in the other direction? Most of those studies (few of which have been replicated) do little more than suggest that gay men are similar to straight women, and lesbians are similar to straight men in a variety of measurements - from finger lengths to blinking rates. The conclusions are tentative, and no “gay gene” has been found. While biology certainly plays a role in sexual behavior (as it does in every aspect of life), the natural-science data for a biological basis for sexual orientation is all preliminary and mostly disputed. Contrast that to what social scientists have discovered, with very little dissent: century after century and culture after culture with no gay minorities to be found, outside the recent West.


Clearly, all the research taken as a whole suggests that being gay or straight arises out of our specific social context, rather than being etched into our DNA. Of course, given the scant popular awareness about this situation, the idea that gays haven’t always existed can be completely unsettling. Many gays and lesbians have experienced their sexual orientations as unchosen and unchangeable, and therefore they are skeptical - and even hostile - toward anything that implies being gay isn’t part of human nature. And even lots of nongay people and organizations have built outlooks about homosexuality around a belief that the gay minority occurs naturally.


For example, the American Psychological Association (APA) argued in its Supreme Court brief in the landmark 2003 sodomy case of Lawrence v. Texas that “the sexual orientation known as homosexuality - which is based on an enduring pattern of sexual or romantic attraction exclusively or primarily to others of one’s own sex - is a normal variant of human sexual expression.”


Since the specific sexual orientation described is a recent, culturally driven phenomenon, it cannot be a “normal variant of human sexual expression.” Had the APA argued that homosexual orientation “appears to arise involuntarily among some people in our society,” it would have been closer to the mark. There were good, legitimate reasons (such as privacy) to oppose anti-sodomy laws. The supposed natural occurrence of homosexual orientation in the human species, however, was not one of them.


Nonetheless, the Supreme Court seems to have been reading more gay history than the APA, because the majority decision by Justice Anthony Kennedy shows familiarity with social-construction scholarship and to its credit cites both Katz and D’Emilio.


Such awareness is still rare, though, which raises an interesting question: How would the homosexuality debate change if both sides were to jettison the idea of a timeless gay sexuality and to incorporate the social-science perspective into their arguments?


A few possibilities:


The gay community can certainly make a case that non-discrimination policies and laws are justified whether being gay is natural or socially constructed. The fact that people didn’t have sexual orientations a thousand years ago doesn’t necessarily mean that people today shouldn’t have whatever family structures and consensual bodily pleasures they desire. Many left-wing gays already take this sort of stance, rejecting “born that way” as condescending and narrow. And several gay historians and commentators have noted the radical, liberationist implications of the viewpoint that, given the right historical or cultural environment, anyone could enjoy same-sex activity.


Advocates of the traditional nuclear family may, instead, fight for their preferred social construction in the public square. More broadly, religious and other groups who oppose homosexuality on moral grounds might move away from attacking individual gays with “it’s a choice” rhetoric and instead aim at changing the socio-cultural aspects of our society that not only encourage people to build identities around sex, but that also block them from imagining life any other way.


It’s a whole new conversation, one that’s touchy and hard to predict but long overdue.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Heart of the Marriage Neutering Issue

David Whiting of the Orange County Register wrote a piece on neutering marriage and that prompted some letters from readers which the paper was willing to print.

Russ Neal of Huntington Beach:
Legalizing same-sex marriage means that people objecting to this transgression will be compelled to treat it as legitimate.
This is at the heart of the issue. It isn't just that someone who objects to homosexual behavior will be forced to endorse it. We will all, whether we have a moral objection to homosexual behavior or not, be forced to treat brideless and groomless pairings and marriage identically. State marriage licenses are issued on our behalf. The marriage neutering advocates don't want us to even have a word that notes there is a difference. It would be official government policy that there is not. Public schools (and many other schools, if not all) would be prevented from teaching that marriage is different from this pseudomarriage, and homosexuality advocates would be unrestrained in pushing their worldview in the schools as official curriculum. Parents would have no ability to opt their child out. Adoption agencies would not be able to give preference to placing children with a home that is inclusive of both sexes. No government agency, nothing associated with a government program or funding, would be allowed to make a distinction, unless of course it was to somehow provide a targeted advantage to same-sex couples. Soon after, no business, private employer, or private property owner would be allowed to make any distinction.

If California's constitutional amendment (Proposition 8) was allowed to stand, and California's domestic partnership and other laws were kept in place, same-sex couples would retain their treatment as spouses by the state government and everyone else, including businesses, could treat them as spouses. They're free to draw up legal paperwork, have ceremonies, change names, exchange rings, live together, share a life, and call themselves married. But the rest of us would not be forced to ignore the inherent difference between marriage and pseudomarriage.

Monday, June 24, 2013

The False Compromise

What if you were a California voter who had an earned degree from the University of California Los Angeles – a state institution – and someone else who did not attend the university nor did the coursework insisted that spending his time sunning himself on the beach was just as valid use of his time, and demanded he also be awarded the same degree from UCLA?

What if you, as a voter, said "no" to this idea twice? Would you consider it a good compromise if your degree was rescinded so that you and the beach bum would be treated "equally"? My guess is no.

The False Compromise is getting government out of marriage licensing entirely (or so they say), either by dropping the word "marriage" or not recognizing personal unions at all. Michael A. Lindenberger of Time Magazine took a look at that. First he mentions Jewish and Catholic rituals that do not get licensing from the state. But these rituals do not involve the sharing or transfer of property, nor do these rituals naturally tend to result in bringing children into the world, or subjecting them to an unrelated adult as head of their home. Those and other reasons are why marriage is different.

And for non-believers or those for whom the word marriage is less important, the civil union license issued by the state would be all they needed to unlock the benefits reserved in most states, and in federal law, for "married" couples.
This is coming from the assumption that any two people who claim to be a couple should have those benefits. Why are those benefits issued in the first place? There is a reasoning behind it. Domestic partnerships in California were not created for the benefit of the state – more to satisfy the demands of same-sex couples, many of whom ended up not satisfied by something that treated them as married. And thus, the people of the state thought they were helping people who turned around and used that help against them, using the partnerships law as Trojan Horse to neuter state marriage licensing.
Both sets of lawyers agreed that the idea would resolve the equal protection issue.
Sure – if you stop government issuing of any sort of licensing, then everyone has equal non-access.
Why try to pretend marriage is nothing more than a domestic partnership or civil union? Let's really go for "equality" and only have the state issue a Roommate License, and nothing more. After all, some platonic roommates depend very much on each other. And why should platonic roommates not be treated equally to lovers?
Take the state out of the marriage business, and then both kinds of couples - straight and gay - would be treated the same.
Why should three different kinds of voluntary associations be treated the same? Simply because someone wants them to be? If that someone is the people of the state, then that would be legal. But why should we do that?
And as Justice Chin considers whether he can craft a compromise with his fellow justices that would both uphold Prop 8 - and therefore the right of the people to amend the state constitution - and assert the right of gay people to be treated equally, he may find that the folks who cling hardest to the word "marriage" are the gay couples themselves. After all, what was the most sweeping part of the May 2008 decision Ming and his colleagues issued granting [brideless or groomless couples neutered state marriage licenses]? It was the idea that the word "marriage" itself is so strong that denying it to [same-sex] couples violates the most sacred rights enshrined in the state constitution, the right for all people to be treated with dignity and fairness.
This is a leap. What about single people or trios, or like I said, roommates? Are they not being treated with dignity and fairness because the state doesn't issue them marriage licenses? What about friends who aren't even roommates?

How can anyone who argues that state-licensed marriage is an unalienable right ever say it would be okay not to let anyone have access to that "right"? The False Compromise smacks of what some marriage defenders have said all along – this whole thing is more about tearing down the traditional family, including the esteeming of marriage – than it is about the rights of homosexual people.

There are reasons we, as a state, license marriage. Doing so is of benefit to the state. The kind of relationships that form marriage perpetuate society. We are under no obligation to treat different kinds of voluntary associations the same, no matter how much an activist group wants it that way. We should not forget that our soft-hearted acceptance of domestic partnerships has been met with scorn and a trouncing of our will.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Our Right Was Taken Away

This is another bad argument for marriage neutering.

In California, since the state Supreme Court ordered the neutering of state marriage licensing against the demonstrated will of the governed, and then refused to stay their decision until after an impending vote on a relevant constitutional amendment, same-sex couples were able to obtain state marriage licenses for several months. When the California Marriage Amendment was passed by voters, they were no longer able to obtain those licenses. So we have heard arguments that "our rights have been taken away" and that it isn't fair because "we used to have this right, but now we don't".

I like to make distinctions between actual natural rights and what is legal, allowed, or conducted under the auspices of the government. Not all freedoms are rights. Not all services a government offers are rights. The government performs services by the consent of the governed, and when the governed no longer consent, or correct a false consent made on their behalf, the service ceases.

Just because the government was passing out neutered marriage licenses doesn't mean it was a good thing or that there was an actual right to such things. State licensing is conducted on behalf of the people of a state. In California, we have partial direct democracy, in which we the people have retained some legislative abilities instead of allowing the elected legislatures to have all legislative power. Through our direct democratic process, we voted in 2000 via Proposition 22 to reaffirm marriage licensing as bride-groom only. The court decided there was a "right" for same-sex couples to obtain state-issued marriage licenses, but they overstepped their authority. Since when has a "right" applied to two people, but no more? Generally, two people have parental rights, but someone can even lose their "parental rights" by court order. How can there be a right to a state-issued license when it involves the consent of someone else? You may have a right to ask someone else for something, but that person has a right to say "no". Otherwise, it is a forcible intrusion on that person. In physical activity, we call that assault or rape.

While the Constitution of the United State of America does not enumerate all of the rights retained by the people, it does list such rights as freedom of speech and the right to bear arms. Yet, those rights to do nor force someone else to give us the use of a billboard, nor does it allow someone to yell "fire" in a crowded theater with immunity from prosecution. Gun owners can tell you plenty about how they were able to purchase and own and use certain arms in the past – but they are no longer allowed to do so legally. So even rights clearly enumerated in the Constitution have limits commonly recognized by courts.

This is not a strong argument for striking down the California Marriage Amendment (Proposition 8). It is akin to appealing to a court to issue you a diploma from the University of California (pick any one you like... Los Angeles, Berkeley, Davis) even though you've had no interest in attending classes at the university or performing course work. Instead, you have been very happy to study on your own terms with a professor in a warehouse. He refers to himself as a UC professor, but isn't. But unlike when you tried visiting a UC campus, you feel more comfortable in this warehouse, and you absolutely love your professor. And you believe you are learning. The court goes ahead and orders that you be given a UC diploma, and that others be able to obtain UC diplomas the same way. After all, those diplomas help in matters such as obtaining jobs with benefits and other things you want and enjoy.

Meanwhile, the people of California and vote in an amendment to the state constitution that restores traditional diploma-issuing when it comes to UC diplomas. If you want a UC diploma, you must meet the requirements. You don't have to go to a UC, but if you don't, you don't get a UC diploma.
You could argue that a "right" has been taken away from you. And you’d be wrong.

Neither the California Supreme Court nor the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals create or grant rights. No government does. A government can only recognize and protect rights, or by its actions, infringe upon rights. There is no right to a state-issued license. The people should retain ultimate authority in setting the licensing requirements.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Jerry Brown Signed the First DOMA

I'm reposting this entry I made early on in my contributions to The Opine Editorials.

The San Francisco Chronicle's political writer, Carla Marinucci, had an article discussing the fact that current California Governor General Jerry Brown, while Governor the first go-round, signed into law a bill codifying the legal definition of marriage as being a bride-groom pairing. There are lots of quotes defending Brown for his "progress" on the issue as he fights to remove California’s Marriage Amendment and prepares to run for Governor again. I found a quote in the article that stood out to me.
Veteran journalist Marty Nolan, who covered Brown for the Boston Globe in the 1970s and 1980s, said the defense represents Brown's longtime political mantra. "He's got a six-word answer - 'that was then, this is now,' " Nolan laughed. "It's an all-purpose shield."
This is an example of why we are supposed to be a nation of laws, not men, and we have a constitution and a representative republic. Opinions and votes can change over time, even if the truth and right and wrong do not. But we should not be held hostage to the whims of a single person. "That was then, this is now" is not a justification for a past or current action or policy, no more than saying "It's the twenty-first century." Yes, and the sky is blue. So? Was Brown wrong then? Is he wrong now? Why? Has a "right" to a state-licensed marriage for brideless or groomless couples emerged since the 1970s, or has it always existed and just not been recognized by flawed politicians? If the politicians were wrong then, what makes anyone so sure they are right now?

Friday, June 21, 2013

Shocker: MSM In the Marriage Neutering Tank

In news that should surprise nobody who is paying attention, the "mainstream" media has been shown to be in the tank for neutering marriage. I have previously pointed out that the MSM is lying about the issue.

Taylor Colwell had the Townhall Tipsheet update on this:

The Pew Research Center has released a study examining media coverage of gay marriage during the period leading up to, during, and after Supreme Court hearings on the issue.
In a period marked by Supreme Court deliberations on the subject, the news media coverage provided a strong sense of momentum towards legalizing same-sex marriage, according to a new study by the Pew Research Center. Stories with more statements supporting same-sex marriage outweighed those with more statements opposing it by a margin of roughly 5-to-1. In the coverage studied, the central argument among proponents of same-sex marriage was one of civil rights. Arguments against were more varied, but most often voiced the idea that same-sex marriage would hurt society and the institution of traditional marriage.
Almost half (47%) of the nearly 500 stories studied from March 18 (a week prior to the Supreme Court hearings), through May 12, primarily focused on support for the measure, while 9% largely focused on opposition and 44% had a roughly equal mix of both viewpoints or were neutral. In order for a story to be classified as supporting or opposing same sex marriage, statements expressing that position had to outnumber the opposite view by at least 2-to-1. Stories that did not meet that threshold were defined as neutral or mixed.
This reminds of something Dennis Prager says. Either studies reinforce common sense, or they are flawed. That's a paraphrase.

Of course, when it comes to reporting bias, the perpetual question is whether the media is a molder or reflector of public attitudes. On this matter, though, it seems pretty clear. Reporting bias in the Pew study was 47% in favor to 9% opposed; that study registers present public support as 51% in favor to 42% opposed. Media favoritism for gay marriage far outstrips that of the public at large.

The most common media argument – that this issue is one of civil rights – merits a comparison of the gay marriage movement with that of black civil rights. As I see it, despite superficial similarities, the comparison breaks down once you get to the fundamental nature of the two movements. The black civil rights movement, at its core, was a cause championed primarily on a grassroots level. Massive demonstrations, strikes, and sit-ins precipitated change that eventually spread to journalism and government. Gay marriage, on the other hand, has not seen collective action on this scale. In fact, the push for gay marriage originated at the top and trickled down, whereas black civil rights was more bottom-up.
Of course, comparing someone self-identifying as homosexual and engaging in homosexual behavior NOT being able to get a state-issued license with someone of the same sex to someone who is born with an obvious skin color, the people of which had a legacy of being oppressed through enslavement, segregation, Jim Crow, and publicly supported, well-attended festive lynchings is hardly sensible.

Here's Salon's coverage.
Brent Bozell had a column dealing with this:
In many corners of the liberal media, the space for a social conservative to argue against "marriage equality" is vanishing before our eyes. It becomes twice as difficult the more and more anchors and reporters come out and declare themselves gay, and then the gay lobby expects those journalists to perform with perfect obedience to their agenda.
March in lockstep, or else!
In recent years, the promotion of homosexuality has gone beyond the "news" programs and became heavily entrenched in network entertainment shows, with entire programs devoted to gay characters and their struggle to overcome the alleged ignorance and oppression of religious villains. This easily explains why so many young people are dramatically pro-gay marriage in the opinion polls.
Yup. Homosexual characters are overrepresented on television, and almost always in sympathetic roles.
The official gay censorship lobbies -- from the Orwellian-named "GLAAD" to the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association -- define "fairness and accuracy" as being stories that try to scrape "fairness" away, treating opposition like used gum on someone's shoe. GLAAD created what they call the "Commentator Accountability Project" designed to discourage reporters and TV bookers from booking "hate" guests. 
Roll over or bend over. Whichever, shut up and obey. That's what has been going on.

There are nonreligious arguments for maintaining the bride+groom requirement in state licensing, ones that are in no way based on dislike of homosexual people or homosexual behavior, and some of these arguments are made by homosexual people. But you've never know it from the pop media.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Monday, June 17, 2013

Neutering Marriage: Where We Are and What It Means

The Supreme Court of the United States of America heard arguments regarding two laws. It is possible that in June, they could issue a ruling that would invent a new federal right to get a state "marriage" license without a bride or without a groom, often called "gay marriage" or "same-sex marriage".

Less than fifteen years ago, no government in the world had neutered licensing to replace marriage. No President of the United States ever indicated a belief that a marriage exists without a bride or without a groom. President Bill Clinton, Democrat, had signed the federal Defense of Marriage Act into law, which had the support of many Democrats in Congress. Not a single great civil rights leader in history had ever called for a "right" to a marriage license without a bride or without a groom – not Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., not Susan B. Anthony, not Gandhi, nobody. None of the people who wrote and voted for the Constitution or the Amendments was ever on record as saying marriage was anything other than the uniting of a bride and groom. Running for President in 2008, Obama claimed to believe that marriage is between a man and woman, and he did not say that there was right to a state marriage license without a bride our groom. (He has partially changed his public position since then.) In Loving v. Virginia, which overturned scattered state bans in "interracial" marriage (which actually prevented freedom of association while Proposition 8 protected freedom of association), SCOTUS did not find that a brideless or groomless union was a marriage. In Lawrence v. Texas, which overturned laws against private homosexual sodomy, SCOTUS did not find that brideless or groomless union is a marriage. There are longstanding federal and state restrictions on marriage, including against polygamy and marriages between first cousins, both of which have a long worldwide history. (Some say that same-sex "marriage" should never be compared to polygamy or incest, and I agree – after all, the latter two have been historically and widely accepted as actual marriages.)

When SCOTUS heard the cases, only nine states and Washington, D.C. had neutered their licensing, something that was largely started by judicial activism with only one of those states doing it through a direct vote of the people that was initiated by the people rather than a judge or state legislature.

Most of the remaining states have constitutional amendments or state laws, many of them directly approved by voters, maintaining the bride+groom requirement in their licensing.

Yet here we are, facing the possibility that nine judges could force the neutering of state marriage licenses on all 50 states, even those where the people have recently voted to reaffirm the bride+groom requirement.

How did we get here?

I didn't follow the case involving the federal DOMA as closely as I did the case involving the California Marriage Amendment, which was adopted by voters through Proposition 8.

There was already a California law, signed by Governor Jerry Brown decades ago during an earlier term as Governor, stating the bride+groom requirement. In 2000, Californian voters directly passed Proposition 22, reaffirming this. California lawmakers passed law(s) creating state domestic partnerships in which same-sex couples (these partnerships were denied – discrimination! - to both-sexes couples unless at least one of them was a seasoned citizen of a certain age) would be treated by state and local governments exactly the same as if they were a married couple. Striking down Prop 8 did not give same-sex couples any additional "rights".

Then the Leftist marriage neutering advocates, including people who were sworn to uphold and enforce the law, decided to thumb their nose at the law by "marrying" brideless and groomless couples and then suing for recognition as marriage. That wound its way through the state courts.

Meanwhile, the voters of California decided to strengthen the bride+groom requirement by placing on the ballot a measure what would make it part of the state constitution. As that was heading for the ballot, the California Supreme Court ordered the neutering of the state's marriage licenses. Later that year (2008), California voters voted for Obama AND they adopted Proposition 8 to restore the bride+groom requirement, placing it in the state constitution.. For many months, long-term (and short term, for that matter) same-sex couples could have obtained "marriage" licenses, and thousands did. Snoozers were losers.

Of course, the California Marriage Amendment was challenged in court by marriage neutering advocates, and so it went to the California Supreme Court, then into the federal courts.

You can read all about this at these links to The Opine Editorials, where we covered it as it was happening:

On the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Proposition 8

On the Proposition 8 Trial

On the California Marriage Amendment

On Judge Walker - the federal judge who heard the federal trial over Proposition 8/California Marriage Amendment but did not disclose he stood to immediately and personally benefit from the results.)

(Click on the tags at The Opine Editorials and here on this blog for more on these subjects.)

It is possible SCOTUS may leave this matter up to the individual states, or may order states with "same as marriage" domestic partnerships, like California, to neuter their marriage licensing. There could be some other rulings other than a sweeping one.

If SCOTUS instead invents a "right" for brideless or groomless pairings to get a state marriage license regardless the state law, that will establish these can-of-worm precedents (because remember, we’re not talking about personal freedom, private behavior, and freedom of association, but rather demanding a state-issued license):

1) Minorities that are only distinguishable by their voluntary behavior or unverifiable claims about themselves will be specially-protected classes. Some might ask how this is different from protecting religious groups, but freedom of religion is specifically listed in the Constitution. Those who are in the minority in their sex-like practices will now be specially protected classes. What if someone finds it advantageous in a lawsuit to claim they are gay, even though there is no evidence they are actually homosexual? We certainly can't ask for proof, can we?

2) There will be a right to state-issued licenses and those licenses have to be recognized in all states. That should get very interesting when it comes to restrictions placed on the Second Amendment right to bear arms, or driver's licenses for people who refuse to actually take the driving test due to personal characteristics present since birth.

3) The equal protection principle applies not only to individuals, but to pairings (or groups) not similarly situated. If I had a business partnership, I'd sue for the same protections afforded to marriages (for example, not being compelled to testify against each other in court) and nonprofits.

4) Certain different behaviors must be treated by government as though they were the same. (Yes, a woman socially and sexually uniting with a man is behavior demonstrably different than a woman joining with a woman.)

5) Courts/governments have the authority to forcefully redefine organic institutions established long before the existince of those courts/governments.


Here's a basic argument against neutering marriage that is not religion-based.
1) Men and women are different. Even most of the people who try to deny this demonstrate that they understand this to be true. After all, if men and women were not different, all, or at least three, of the terms in "LGBT" would have no meaning.

2) The pairing of a man and a woman is different than the pairing of two men or two women. It is the only kind of pairing that is able to naturally produce new citizens (who, unlike the adults, do not consent to the relationship), even if not all do. This alone is enough to give the state more interest in the pairing of a man and a woman.

3) Men and women are different in personal relationships. If that difference matters enough to someone in picking a lover, how can it not matter when it comes to the parent-child relationship?

4) State licensing of bride+groom pairings provides children with a role model, guardian, and bonding partner from each of the two sexes that comprise all of society, legally bound to each other as well as the children; generally, this is good for children.

5) It is Constitutional, moral, common, and necessary to treat different kinds of relationships differently. Since all that is needed to enforce this requirement for a STATE-ISSUED license is a pair of STATE-ISSUED birth certificates, it can be done objectively and with impartiality to sexual orientation and without violating anyone's privacy.

6) One need not believe homosexual behavior, relationships, or people to be harmful, sinful, or inferior to accept any or all of #1-5. Indeed, there are people who identify as LBGT who agree with this argument.


Although marriage neutering advocates equate their campaign to civil rights for African-Americans, the comparison is insulting. Homosexual people certainly can't be described as a powerless minority akin to how African-Americans were 50-60 years ago, given how many already serve in elected and appointed positions at all levels of government, how they are treated throughout academia, their overrepresentation and positive portrayals in media, their socioeconomic status, widespread support by business including major corporations, so on and so forth. Unlike African-Americans, homosexual people were not taken from their homeland by force, systematically enslaved and denied status as human beings, systematically segregated by force of law, tortured and lynched by the thousands in festive events attended in broad daylight by entire towns (including children), denied their right to vote, etc.

Even so, heterosexuals would have just as much access to licensing a same-sex union as "marriage" as homosexual people, so how can it be about helping a suspect class?

Marriage neutering advocates are claiming they have unstoppable, growing momentum, and a clear majority of popular support with inevitable victory among voters. How can that be if they are a powerless minority subject to widespread, systematic animus? Which is it? Californians broadly supported homosexual people having the same rights as everyone else and pet legislative causes, but at the same time, voted to affirm the bride+groom requirement.

Clearly, we are talking about treating different voluntary behaviors differently. This is not the same thing as simply being able to look at someone and know they are female, or black, or an Orthodox Jew. We are told over and over again that we can't know whether someone is heterosexual or homosexual just be looking at them.

Many people who support retaining the bride+groom requirement in state marriage licensing have no animus for homosexual people or homosexual behavior. Some of them identify as LGBT themselves.

Other people who one claimed a gay or lesbian identity now live as heterosexual or claim to be heterosexual. I’ve never seen an African-American become a white guy. This is apples and oranges.

If SCOTUS does invent that new right, it will not be the end of what the fascists behind the marriage neutering movement will do. It will just be the beginning. Nobody will be allowed to hold up marriage as a bride+groom institution, such as in educational lesson plans. Other limitations on marriage licensing will be attacked, and marriage may no longer be recognized at all by government. Churches and synagogues who believe that marriage unites a bride and groom will be attacked. We’ve already seen indications of this before. Individuals will not be immune, either.

Will SCOTUS uphold the rights of California's voters? Or will it set dangerous new precedents? Do the people have a government, or are we all property of the government?