Moderator: Andrew
Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:In Alaska, Palin signed a bill extending state benefits to gay couples. She clearly separates any personal belief on the issue from what is fair.
As a sidelight, praying to the Almighty about ANY sexual issues just doesnt work- I know this I spent every Firday and Saturday night as a youth praying my ass off that I'd get laid. Alls I ever got was a a few slaps in the face![]()
RossValoryRocks wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:In Alaska, Palin signed a bill extending state benefits to gay couples. She clearly separates any personal belief on the issue from what is fair.
As a sidelight, praying to the Almighty about ANY sexual issues just doesnt work- I know this I spent every Firday and Saturday night as a youth praying my ass off that I'd get laid. Alls I ever got was a a few slaps in the face![]()
God answers all prayers GTS...hust sometimes the answer is NO!
RockitRide wrote:http://www.gallup.com/poll/110137/McCain-Now-Winning-Majority-Independents.aspx
The last straw...EUROPE wants Obama to be President!!! Talk about the kiss of death!!! Now I get to vote against Obama AND France. I will enjoy voting more than ever this year. Also, looks like Obama's fund raising is circling the drain.
Barb wrote:FOUR FREAKING PAGES of fakse internet rumors about Sarah Palin.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/157986/page/1
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
RedWingFan wrote:Prayer can help with anything, whether it's addiction or sexually deviant behavior whatever it may be. Absolutely nothing wrong with this. But then again maybe I'm just another Religious Zealot!!!!I strive to be like you someday John.
Rhiannon wrote:RedWingFan wrote:Prayer can help with anything, whether it's addiction or sexually deviant behavior whatever it may be. Absolutely nothing wrong with this. But then again maybe I'm just another Religious Zealot!!!!I strive to be like you someday John.
Prayer is possibly the single most powerful thing ever. If someone doesn't agree with that then obviously they've never given it an honest shot. I agree that there isn't anything wrong with this at all. I'm all for letting people live their own lives, but with that should come the reciprocated respect from the other side that I (and those similar) should be allowed the same thing. Just for the record, minorities don't exist. We're all human.
Gunbot wrote:If I had my way, any talk of religion during campaigning would invoke immediate banishment to some dark and dusty dungeon. I'm all for a Grand Creator but talking snakes and "God said this" or"God said that" or "God told me to tell you that he'll make you straight" ( Is this implying that God fucked the first time he made you? Was he drunk or something?) this has no place in politics in my mind.
bluejeangirl76 wrote:Gunbot wrote:If I had my way, any talk of religion during campaigning would invoke immediate banishment to some dark and dusty dungeon. I'm all for a Grand Creator but talking snakes and "God said this" or"God said that" or "God told me to tell you that he'll make you straight" ( Is this implying that God fucked the first time he made you? Was he drunk or something?) this has no place in politics in my mind.
He might have been. You teach your kid to make water into wine and things like that happen.
Calm down, peoples. Its a joke.
The problem on that count though, is that the same people who believe god or religion can "save" gays are the ones who also believe homosexuality is a choice. It isn't.
Ehwmatt wrote:bluejeangirl76 wrote:Gunbot wrote:If I had my way, any talk of religion during campaigning would invoke immediate banishment to some dark and dusty dungeon. I'm all for a Grand Creator but talking snakes and "God said this" or"God said that" or "God told me to tell you that he'll make you straight" ( Is this implying that God fucked the first time he made you? Was he drunk or something?) this has no place in politics in my mind.
He might have been. You teach your kid to make water into wine and things like that happen.
Calm down, peoples. Its a joke.
The problem on that count though, is that the same people who believe god or religion can "save" gays are the ones who also believe homosexuality is a choice. It isn't.
I've thought about this a lot, and I'm not sure it's ALWAYS genetic. I think for some gay people, lifestyle influences might activate the dormant "gay gene;" much the same way that a kid genetically prone to alcoholism might activate that gene only when he starts to drink. I think some people do "choose it" out of a misguided need to be deviant. Others I think are born to be full-blooded "practicing" gays. I don't think everyone who lives a homosexual lifestyle was completely born that way. Who knows if science will ever determine for sure. Doubtful.
Tito wrote: ... Who wants to be gay?
Ehwmatt wrote:bluejeangirl76 wrote:Gunbot wrote:If I had my way, any talk of religion during campaigning would invoke immediate banishment to some dark and dusty dungeon. I'm all for a Grand Creator but talking snakes and "God said this" or"God said that" or "God told me to tell you that he'll make you straight" ( Is this implying that God fucked the first time he made you? Was he drunk or something?) this has no place in politics in my mind.
He might have been. You teach your kid to make water into wine and things like that happen.
Calm down, peoples. Its a joke.
The problem on that count though, is that the same people who believe god or religion can "save" gays are the ones who also believe homosexuality is a choice. It isn't.
I've thought about this a lot, and I'm not sure it's ALWAYS genetic. I think for some gay people, lifestyle influences might activate the dormant "gay gene;" much the same way that a kid genetically prone to alcoholism might activate that gene only when he starts to drink. I think some people do "choose it" out of a misguided need to be deviant. Others I think are born to be full-blooded "practicing" gays. I don't think everyone who lives a homosexual lifestyle was completely born that way. Who knows if science will ever determine for sure. Doubtful.
Arkansas wrote:Tito wrote: ... Who wants to be gay?
Interesting question. All the arguments over the years are about how bad it is, or why someone is that way. Has anyone ever said they know they're not gay, but choose to be? Has anyone ever said they WANT to be gay?
later~
RossValoryRocks wrote:I have heard it put this way...95% of all gay men are born that way...the other 5% are sucked into it!![]()
Enigma869 wrote:Well Obama took shit for his religious affilation and his insane pastor. I think it's time Puppet Palin be under the same scrutiny. Also, before some of you yahoo Palin suckups come out of the woodwork telling me how great Sarah Lee is...save it! I like her as much as I like Obama! I'm sure the conservative yahoos agree with her church's sentiment, but I find it to be ridiculous! Just what The White House needs...a religous zealot!
http://news.aol.com/elections/article/p ... ion/165471
Palin's Church Promotes Gay Conversion
AP
Alaska (Sept. 8th) - Gov. Sarah Palin's church is promoting a conference that promises to convert gays into heterosexuals through the power of prayer.
"You'll be encouraged by the power of God's love and His desire to transform the lives of those impacted by homosexuality," according to the insert in the bulletin of the Wasilla Bible Church, where Palin has prayed for about six years.
Palin's conservative Christian views have energized that part of the GOP electorate, which was lukewarm to John McCain's candidacy before he named her as his vice presidential choice.
She is staunchly anti-abortion (opposing exceptions for rape and incest), and opposes gay marriage and spousal rights for gay couples.
Focus on the Family, a national Christian fundamentalist organization, is conducting the Love Won Out Conference in Anchorage, about 30 miles from Wasilla.
Palin, campaigning with McCain in the Midwest on Friday, has not publicly expressed a view on the so-called "pray away the gay" movement. Larry Kroon, senior pastor at Palin's church, was not available to discuss the matter Friday, said a church worker who declined to give her name.
Gay activists in Alaska said Palin has not worked actively against their interests, but early in her administration she supported a bill to overrule a court decision to block state benefits for gay partners of public employees.
At the time, less than one-half of 1 percent of state employees had applied for the benefits, which were ordered by a 2005 ruling by the Alaska Supreme Court.
Palin reversed her position and vetoed the bill after the state attorney general said it was unconstitutional.
But her reluctant support didn't win fans among Alaska's gay population, said Scott Turner, a gay activist in Anchorage.
"Less than 1 percent of state employees would even apply for benefits, so why make a big deal out of such a small number?" he said.
"I think gay Republicans are going to run away" if Palin supports efforts like the prayers to convert gays, said Wayne Besen, founder of the New York-based Truth Wins Out, a gay rights advocacy group. Besen called on Palin to publicly express her views now that she's a vice presidential nominee.
"People are looking at Sarah Palin as someone who might feasibly be in the White House," he said.
John from Boston
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 71 guests