Mechanical Bliss said:
>>>>We would like to be able to voice our religious beliefs without being called homophobes or bigots or hatemongers or whatever.<<<<
You don't have that right. Perhaps if those Christians who deserve the label "homophobe" for demanding special rights for their agenda of bigotry realized that there are other people who live in this country who should be able to enjoy the freedoms they do, then maybe there wouldn't be such a backlash from those people who realize that freedom is being unjustly restricted by such zealots.
So now if a Christian believes that homosexual activity is a sin, that he objects to it on moral or ethical grounds, then the 1st Amendment no longer applies to that Christian? He cannot say that he feels such activity to be a sin according to his religion? He doesn't have the same right to freedom of speech as every other American?
Wow.
This is precisely what disturbs me about the whole "gay rights" issue---in their zeal to press for their own rights, be they real or imagined, the "gay rights" advocates seem to have no problems whatsoever in trampling on the rights of everyone else, with the added element that if you dare to disagree with them in the slightest degree (which usually means anything less than a complete and vigorous wholehearted support for any and all forms of homosexual behavior), then you are fair game to be subjected to treatment that for virtually any other group on the surface of the planet would be considered a hate crime.
142 years ago, the issue of slavery contributed to a division of this country that literally split it in half, led to four years of warfare unparalleled in its violence, and the effects of which are still being felt today......and we nearly didn't make it out of that war in one piece.
About 36 years ago, the issue of the Vietnam War contributed to a division between hawks and doves that led to nearly a decade of demonstrations and violence, again, the effects of which are still being felt today.
I wonder if this issue will lead to a similar division, splitting the American public in half, and whether the effects of such a division might eventually eclipse both of the other examples above......
I wonder.
I'm a fairly tolerant guy, so long as nobody tries to trash the Catholic Church (in which case they'll hear from me); and while I have my political views, which are conservative, I don't expect everybody in the country to agree with them.
But when somebody tries to tell me that the constitutional rights of American citizens are now suspended because said citizens happen to disagree with current liberal opinion on the topic of homosexuality.....then we have moved out of the realm of disagreement and into something much, much more sinster, and much, much more serious.
I wonder where this is going to end, and what it's going to lead to. And I suspect it is not going to be pretty.