I Hadn't Thought About it That Way
I read an interesting quote the other day. It is from Focus on the family Policy Update dated May 2007. It seeks to answer the reason for the attacks on the Love Won Out conferences.
" ...If the gay rights movement loses the argument that homosexuals are "born gay" and are unable to change, then the foundation for their entire political and cultural agenda crumbles. If "gayness" is not an immutable characteristic, then why should society redefine marriage for an ill-defined, changing group? Indeed, why should a vague category of people be accorded special civil rights protections of the sort given to ethnic and racial minorities?"
Good question...and good point. I've long held the belief that any group of people should not have special rights, or be a protected class of people. That inherently sets them up above the rest of humanity. That's fundamentally wrong, and dangerous.
" ...If the gay rights movement loses the argument that homosexuals are "born gay" and are unable to change, then the foundation for their entire political and cultural agenda crumbles. If "gayness" is not an immutable characteristic, then why should society redefine marriage for an ill-defined, changing group? Indeed, why should a vague category of people be accorded special civil rights protections of the sort given to ethnic and racial minorities?"
Good question...and good point. I've long held the belief that any group of people should not have special rights, or be a protected class of people. That inherently sets them up above the rest of humanity. That's fundamentally wrong, and dangerous.
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