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View Full Version : Should Gay marriage be legal in Australia?


Cybermat47
10-22-12, 08:52 PM
Well, as many Australians know, our 2 main parties, the Crap Party and the Useless Party, recently voted to continue treating Gays as subhuman, while the one good party, The Greens, were leaning toward Gay Rights.

Well, I think that they should have done a plebiscite vote.

Despite being only 13, I would have tried to vote for Gay marriage.

But what would you have voted for?

Please, only Australian Citizens or Ex-pats voting (Unless you feel very strongly about Gay Marriage, either way)

CCIP
10-22-12, 08:59 PM
Actually, in Australia as everywhere, I'd say this: marriage shouldn't be the government's business in the first place, period. I think lawmakers need to stop wasting their time trying to milk social and personal issues (that they have no right to even touch) for support, and solve important things like, you know, the economy and geopolitics.

Sailor Steve
10-22-12, 09:09 PM
Well said, George. My first instinct would be to say that since I don't live in Australia it's none of my business, and for that reason once again I'm not voting in a poll that I don't take seriously anyway. The question, yes; the poll, no. But then I don't take most polls here seriously unless they address something that affects me directly.

But you're right, and I feel pretty much the way you do. This shouldn't really exist as a question at all.

Cybermat47
10-22-12, 09:13 PM
This shouldn't really exist as a question at all.

Sadly, it does.

The real irony is that the politicians only voted against gay marriage because they're afraid that the Church Leaders will turn against them, but the majority of Christians actually support gay marriage.
It's just like the current affair about Voluntary Euthanasia.

Gargamel
10-22-12, 09:46 PM
WhileI truly believe your polls are well intended, They are becoming somewhat redundant.

These are questions not answerable by simple polls, and require intense debate, as there are many points of view on each issue. Again, to narrow these down to black and white is wrong.

While these are valid topics, with the intent to show you are a mature person (and I believe you are, even for your age), they are bordering IMHO, on subtle trolling.

If you truly wish to discuss these topics, try finding a relevant article or current event that highlights the topic to foster discussion. This will also allow to you have multiple sources of differing view points.

Thats good advice in other avenues in life too.

Cybermat47
10-22-12, 09:51 PM
^^^^^^

Thanks for the advice.

CCIP
10-22-12, 09:52 PM
Well, in his defense, some of them did generate some pretty good debate!

(though usually after a requisite period of indignation and mud-slinging, but hey, that's almost every thread we get here.. :hmmm:)

THE_MASK
10-23-12, 02:54 AM
No .

Cybermat47
10-23-12, 03:45 AM
No .

Why do you think that? :hmmm:

Skybird
10-23-12, 06:18 AM
Should there be any sexes at all?

By social role model for children, is a homosexual man the same as a woman? Is a lesbian woman a man?

Is it indeed discrimination to call a women having children a "mother", as the EU gender legislation claims? Is calling fathers "father" and mothers "mother" discrimination? The EU says so.

Is it of importance and interest for society to make sure a future generation of children is being risen that is expected to pay future taxes and work and care for the elder? If it is, does that deserve special status and security granted for couples creating children - a status that is expressed in the form of marriage? Are these hcildren to be risen as sexual neutrons, or are they better served to be risen by one female woman - their mother - and one male man - their father? -

Why is it that the concept of marriage since millenia and in the overwhelming majority of cultures is based on the understanding of 1 man+1 woman? That is not just religious tradition. Biology had something to do with.

And so on and on. What friends I spend my time with, means nothing for society. adult people living together, means nothing for society. What is important - especially in our overaging, shrinking Western societies - is loving couples having children and rising them with love and attention. Status of these should be protected indeed, and priviliged. Two men or two women living together, means nothing for society, it simply is unimportant even if that fact hurts some egos. What do they expect special respect and equal status with families for? The destruction of the institution of families and the meaning of a loving home for children, already has created a social disster out there, and our societies reflect that in violence, lacking respect for each other, erosion of values, and an extraction of children from their caring family context as early as possible, even at the age of 1 year.

That is sick. Inhumane. And a declaration of moral bancrupcty of modern society committing suicide in slow motion.

Add to this gender engineering, and feminism. The idea that human get born as total tabula rasa and without any differences between boys and girls, because then the goal has been reached: no differences, total equality in all features and characteristics of two sexes. So, political ideology, feminism and gender engineering has an awful lot to do with the relativisation of marriage and family and the spotlighting of homo marriages.

Hm. I could swear we had threads on this issue in the past. Several ones. :hmmm: Did they ever end nicely? well, one reaps as one sows. True for this forum. True for Western society.

CCIP
10-23-12, 06:45 AM
Why is it that the concept of marriage since millenia and in the overwhelming majority of cultures is based on the understanding of 1 man+1 woman? That is not just religious tradition. Biology had something to do with.



Well, if we go that route, then arguably the historical institution of marriage has no less to do with cows, land, titles and children than it does with men and women. Everybody seems to conveniently forget that while marriage may have been co-opted by religious tradition, it arguably is, was, and always will be primarily an economic/social contract meant to secure assets and protect the genetic, economic and political legacy of people beyond the limits of their lifetimes. So yes, biology is involved here, but in the most abstract sense only.

Arguably modern society has already developed ways of preserving economic, political, intellectual and even genetic legacy of people that do not require 1 man and 1 woman. So why stick to that as the only possibility? We might as well go back to insisting that marriage be an "exchanging of cows" while we're at it, after all that's how people in many cultures have done it for thousands of years...

And let's not confuse marriage with procreation and sexuality, or sexuality with procreation for that matter. Marriage is a social contract. Procreation is a biological function. Sexuality is a set of psychological tendencies. The links between the three are very tenuous and have at no time in human history been perfectly aligned. We just like to pretend that in the "good old times" they somehow magically were.

Jimbuna
10-23-12, 07:01 AM
Actually, in Australia as everywhere, I'd say this: marriage shouldn't be the government's business in the first place, period. I think lawmakers need to stop wasting their time trying to milk social and personal issues (that they have no right to even touch) for support, and solve important things like, you know, the economy and geopolitics.

DITTO....and not voting either.

Skybird
10-23-12, 10:29 AM
Well, if we go that route, then arguably the historical institution of marriage has no less to do with cows, land, titles and children than it does with men and women. Everybody seems to conveniently forget that while marriage may have been co-opted by religious tradition, it arguably is, was, and always will be primarily an economic/social contract meant to secure assets and protect the genetic, economic and political legacy of people beyond the limits of their lifetimes. So yes, biology is involved here, but in the most abstract sense only.

Arguably modern society has already developed ways of preserving economic, political, intellectual and even genetic legacy of people that do not require 1 man and 1 woman. So why stick to that as the only possibility? We might as well go back to insisting that marriage be an "exchanging of cows" while we're at it, after all that's how people in many cultures have done it for thousands of years...

And let's not confuse marriage with procreation and sexuality, or sexuality with procreation for that matter. Marriage is a social contract. Procreation is a biological function. Sexuality is a set of psychological tendencies. The links between the three are very tenuous and have at no time in human history been perfectly aligned. We just like to pretend that in the "good old times" they somehow magically were.
Indeed marriage is a social contract, and i also is a social convention. But that does not make it a random outcome, or arbitrary. A convention that was formed to its shape over centuries and millenia. Why in this form and shape, and not differently? Because all in all, considering pros and cons, it worked better than the alternatives, it seems.

And just for the record, over the better part of the past 5 thousand years, the majority of people did not live in wealth and glory, but were poor, were farmers, often oppressed, threatened by wars, starvation, tyranny, disease, taxes. The argument that princess brides were used to seal political contracts, numerically has little or not argumentative weight.

You see, feminists for long decades seriously argued that in the past males suppressed females by marrying them and having them locked to the oven, the kitchen, the bed, and the children, while glorious men did all the heroic stuff and had all fun in life. But even most feminists now admit, that that was right, and that the typical gender-roles of men and women in the socially accepted contexts more likely were the result of needs and distributing the different works to be done in the way they then were distributed between males and females. Which led to the females and mothers caring for the house and imminent farmwork, the males for the risky things, hunting, strength-depending farm work and travelling. Splitting the jobs and workload was necessary, and the way it was split and distributed was the pragmatically best working solution posing the smallest risk to children, and procreation chances. Pregnant women doing heavy field work for example have a significantly higher risk to lose their babies. It was self-recommending then if this was left to men, and women stying closer to housework, and easy field-.work. that was not males supressing females. It was just that it made more sense this way, than in a different way.

I think the understanding of 1 man, 1 women= marriage is the result of a similar sharpening of optimisation chances for social issues and societies interests in a next generation being risen. For society, whether there are two men or women living together and loving each other, or not, simply is uninteresting, and unimportant. Being gay is no accomplishment, and it does not contribute anything to society. So why should society give it the same privilieges it gives to couples producing babies?

would the privilige given to coup0les not mean a dsicrkiminatrion of signles then, by the same logic that now it is called a discrimination of gays if they are not given equal status and privilige to hetero couples and families? I must protest against this discrimination of people like me. We singles have rights, too. The same rights like families, even if we do not contribute to society any babies and children-raising. It's about human rights! :hmph:

Same debate, same arguments, no needed to run it all once again. I recommend we leave it to this reminder of our different positions. I just had two major collisions yesterday, I am not yet motivated to just headjump into the next hot rumble so short after.

JU_88
10-23-12, 11:19 AM
Who cares what Gays do, why is it even a subject for debate? Homosexuals actually do man kind two massive favours,
1) they free up more single women for hetrosexual men.
2) they cant reproduce easily so they help keep the population down.
Let them get married.
The world has real problems like poverty, corruption, crime, and a failing economy, Id suggest we work on those before we worry about the stupid stuff.

Tribesman
10-23-12, 11:29 AM
Is it indeed discrimination to call a women having children a "mother", as the EU gender legislation claims? Is calling fathers "father" and mothers "mother" discrimination? The EU says so.
What utter bull from Sky yet again:doh:


As for the topic, is there any actual real reason why it shouldn't be allowed?

Sailor Steve
10-23-12, 12:50 PM
That is sick. Inhumane. And a declaration of moral bancrupcty of modern society committing suicide in slow motion.
While your other arguments have some modicum of reason, this is pure moral posturing, and not worthy of reasonable debate.

Hm. I could swear we had threads on this issue in the past. Several ones. :hmmm: Did they ever end nicely? well, one reaps as one sows. True for this forum. True for Western society.
Same debate, same arguments, no needed to run it all once again. I recommend we leave it to this reminder of our different positions.
So you give your arguments and then say it's been debated before and not worth debating again? If you truly feel that way, why make your arguments at all?

Hottentot
10-23-12, 01:04 PM
So you give your arguments and then say it's been debated before and not worth debating again? If you truly feel that way, why make your arguments at all?

Eh, not half bad. I used to frequent a *ahem* certain well known and large forum dedicated to a *ahem* well known sim, where a certain moderator regularly took part in heated debates by posting his opinion on the subject and then locking the thread.

Not that I disagree with that assesment in general.

Fubar2Niner
10-23-12, 01:13 PM
Eh, not half bad. I used to frequent a *ahem* certain well known and large forum dedicated to a *ahem* well known sim, where a certain moderator regularly took part in heated debates by posting his opinion on the subject and then locking the thread.

Not that I disagree with that assesment in general.

I think I might *ahem* know that *ahem* forum and *ahem* sim :hmmm:

yubba
10-23-12, 06:54 PM
OOOOOOh this issue comes up in the States it's a human rights issue,,elsewhere it's so so,,as far as I'm concerned marriage is between a man and a women,,it has been that way for a couple of thousand years so what's the big deal with this, well I tell you what the big deal is, some body wants something for nothing,,I for one will not subsidize what goes on in ones bed room, you want to get your freak on, you should be able to pay for it yourself.

Cybermat47
10-23-12, 06:56 PM
Eh, not half bad. I used to frequent a *ahem* certain well known and large forum dedicated to a *ahem* well known sim, where a certain moderator regularly took part in heated debates by posting his opinion on the subject and then locking the thread.

Clever.

Misusing the power bestowed upon him, but still, clever.

Sailor Steve
10-23-12, 07:03 PM
some body wants something for nothing,,I for one will not subsidize what goes on in ones bed room, you want to get your freak on, you should be able to pay for it yourself.
Exactly what is the something somebody is getting for nothing? Exactly how are you or anyone else being asked to pay for it?

Your post makes no sense.

yubba
10-23-12, 07:23 PM
Exactly what is the something somebody is getting for nothing? Exactly how are you or anyone else being asked to pay for it?

Your post makes no sense.
Makes all the sense in the world, if they get marriage rights, then they get all the beneifits that married couples get like insurance, survior beneifits, tax breaks, and a few other things that I know nothing about since I'm not married, that's why they are fighting this, something for nothing...

Takeda Shingen
10-23-12, 07:24 PM
Makes all the sense in the world, if they get marriage rights, then they get all the beneifits that married couples get like insurance, survior beneifits, tax breaks, and a few other things that I know nothing about since I'm not married, that's why they are fighting this, something for nothing...

So your problem is with all marriage. Okay. :doh:

yubba
10-23-12, 07:33 PM
So your problem is with all marriage. Okay. :doh:
Hell yeah I should get something I love my bike, I should get a tax break on some tires..see give it to another group and another group will step up, and want something,,, so where will it end. that all you got.

Cybermat47
10-23-12, 09:18 PM
Hell yeah I should get something I love my bike, I should get a tax break on some tires..see give it to another group and another group will step up, and want something,,, so where will it end. that all you got.

This reminds me of this Liberal senator, who said that if we gave Gays rights, soon we'd be letting people marry animals.

He got fired.

Tchocky
10-24-12, 04:17 AM
We can't allow marriage equality. It will make it impossible for me to marry my girlfriend and for us to raise children.

Tribesman
10-24-12, 10:55 AM
Hell yeah I should get something I love my bike, I should get a tax break on some tires..
Errrrrr...you can. :doh:
Sorry for introducing you to reality yubba:rotfl2:

Cybermat47
10-24-12, 05:36 PM
We can't allow marriage equality. It will make it impossible for me to marry my girlfriend and for us to raise children.

erm...how!?

Buddahaid
10-24-12, 06:03 PM
erm...how!?

I thought that was sarcasm. Maybe I'm wrong but that's the only way it makes sense.

Sailor Steve
10-24-12, 07:06 PM
I thought that was sarcasm. Maybe I'm wrong but that's the only way it makes sense.
I agree, and I thought it was obvious.

Jimbuna
10-25-12, 05:23 AM
We can't allow marriage equality. It will make it impossible for me to marry my girlfriend and for us to raise children.

British sarcasm at its best :)

Tribesman
10-25-12, 10:50 AM
British sarcasm at its best :)
Is that sarcasm?

Jimbuna
10-25-12, 11:00 AM
Is that sarcasm?

Up in these northern parts...yes.