not being for gay pride events in gay-friendly areas. — csalisbury
I don't think theyre a prime rape spot tbh. — csalisbury
If anything needs to be changed, it is the labeling of these restrooms. Instead of calling them men's and women's rooms, call them male's and female's rooms, since gender is not identical to sex. — darthbarracuda
I am against the spread of hypersexualisation, be this gay movements, anti-slut shaming movements, etc. Patriotism is spreading a value - love and respect of one's country and ancestors. That is important. Not shaming sluts? Give me a break - they shouldn't be sluts if they care so much what others think of them. On another note, one's sexual orientation is a private NOT public affair, unlike patriotism.Are you against 4th of july parades in patriotic communities? St pats parades in irish neighborhoods? — csalisbury
Right - that's where our money needs to go.Let's just have restrooms, as you guys call them, unmarked by gender, and let there be someone keeping an eye on them at all times, a restroom-concierge. — mcdoodle
I think LGBT have separated themselves from everyone else by calling themselves LGBT and organising themselves in groups. Raising the dust and then crying that they cannot see is an all too common progressive strategy :DLet's not separate the 'we' who decide the important things from the 'lgbt', or any other group of people we want to name who are different from 'us'. — mcdoodle
That is alright - but they shouldn't be forced to do this. If you want, invite them in your home, make them pay an entrance fee, and let the show begin! ;)I believe that all people should have the privilege of watching me urinate, and to at least hear me defecate, if they wish to do so. — Ciceronianus the White
Why do you assume this? What part of my writing states that I think someone should spend their time shaming sluts, etc.?If your jam is shaming sluts, I guess that's how it is. Hope you get some good shaming in this week. — csalisbury
Maybe because 1. it answers your question regarding gay parades, and 2. also shows how the analogy with patriotism is a false analogy?But why would I - or anyone - care at all whether you're for or against hypersexualization? (Plus, I think everyone on here is already well aware you got a thing about sex) — csalisbury
That is an argument, but it seems you wouldn't know one if you saw one. It's an argument showing that the analogy you made is false, and therefore misses the point. I can spell it out in premises and conclusion if you need that :)The idea is to make arguments. Sorry Agustino, but you're not interesting enough for your opinions to be inherently interesting. — csalisbury
No I'm not against LGBT "values". I'm for maintaining social order and a healthy morality. That particular person X is lesbian, homosexual, transexual, etc. is not a problem to society, it's their freedom to be as they wish. It only becomes a problem when this seeks to become a social NORM or STANDARD. My issue is to ensure that this is contained as a minority position, and not allowed to spread through society, something that I claim is harmful.Obviously these analogies don't hold up as well against someone who's against LGBT parades because they're against LGBT values — csalisbury
Ok you finally discovered that arguments cannot help us choose the right/correct premises (and by the way, this wouldn't be the way I'd state the argument, it's a strawman of my position but regardless), and some other practice is needed. This is good, but all I'll say for now is that it equally applies to your position!Your argument is that LGBT parades are bad because LGBT values are bad. It's an argument in form but all it boils down to is that you don't like hypersexualization, your opinion.
Things that affirm LGBT values are bad
LGBT parades affirm LGBT values.
Therefore LGBT parades are bad.
lol — csalisbury
No, it absolutely is not. That sex is a private matter (and hence doesn't belong in the public sphere) is a separate issue from LGBT values. It's a premise for an argument against gay parades (among other things - it's also an argument against many forms of advertising for example). You may disagree with the premise, which is fine, but then you need to put forward an argument or reasons for disagreement.Stating that one deals with private matters and one deals with public matters is simply to state, once more, that you don't like LGBT values. — csalisbury
That's a position that applies across the board to progressives regarding sexual matters, not just LGBT. It is one of the core progressive "values" to be able to express PUBLICLY your sexual identity - something that I think is nonsense. Sex ought to be a private, not a public affair, simply because over-sexualisation, and sexual obsession are socially and personally harmful.LGBT values, as I'm sure you aware, include being able to express one's sexual identity publically without fear of recrimination. That's like the core value. — csalisbury
The substance of my post has nothing to do with whether I like or I don't like gay parades or anti slut-shaming parades. The substance of my post has to do with the fact that I think both of those are social evils that should not occur. This combines with my belief that every particular person should be free to do as they wish regarding their sexual behaviour BUT nevertheless, there are social norms that should be maintained.So, again, I'm not sure what the substance of your post is other that you don't like gay parades and people who have the gall to not want to be shamed for wearing short dresses. — csalisbury
Persuading others has little to do with argument and reason in this case, and a lot with moving their emotions and wills - why? Because as you have identified, we are disagreeing over how to choose our premises...You're certainly free to have that opinion, but if you want to persuade others to share it, you have to do more than simply express it. — csalisbury
Ok you finally discovered that arguments cannot help us choose the right/correct premises [lol - cs] (and by the way, this wouldn't be the way I'd state the argument, it's a strawman of my position but regardless), and some other practice is needed. This is good, but all I'll say for now is that it equally applies to your position!
Yeah, 'obsession' over anything is harmful.& I've never met anyone as obsessed with sexual mores as you :PSex ought to be a private, not a public affair, simply because over-sexualisation, and sexual obsession are socially and personally harmful. — agustino
No. You fail to realise that the so called poor argument I put forward is sound - there's nothing poor about it, even in the uninformative way you wrote it out.As to the bad argument equally applying to a pro-gay parade position - well, obviously. Any position has the potential to be poorly defended with bad arguments of that type. That's why I don't make those kinds of arguments to defend my positions. — csalisbury
Obviously.Of course you can infer that I'm probably pro gay-parade (which I am, though I personally don't enjoy parades, because they manage to be loud and boring at the same time) — csalisbury
Sexual promiscuity, including parades involving sex-related promotion, is a social evil because 1. it confuses individuals about the means and purposes of sexual activity, 2. it promotes conflict, jealousies, and so forth among people, 3. it threatens the stability of committed relationships and encourages people to treat each other as means to an end, instead of as ends in themselves, 4. it destroys intimacy by making it public. And I could go on.First, in some yet-to-be-explained way, they contribute to a burgeoning social evil that threatens social order. — csalisbury
No, they're just encouraging a minority position to become more widespread, and thus threaten social stability and sexual morality.Second, they're part of a concerted campaign to make cisgendered heterosexuality a minority position. — csalisbury
Obsession with justice, truth, virtue, etc. is called love. Obsession has a negative connotation, and it refers to the situation where someone loves or is attached to something that does not deserve that love and/or attachment. Morality deserves love and attachment. Desire for sex in and of itself, if by that we understand the physical act, is an obsession because sex in and of itself does not deserve that attachement and/or love.Yeah, 'obsession' over anything is harmful.& I've never met anyone as obsessed with sexual mores as you :P — csalisbury
Then you don't care about the well-being of others, pure and simple. Consent is not sufficient to make something moral/virtuous/ethical - in fact it has no necessary tie to morality at all. For example, if I gain someone's consent to kill them, does it follow that I should? Clearly not.I don't care how adults choose to disport themselves sexually, or with whom they do so, provided their frolic is consensual. — Ciceronianus the White
I don't care how adults choose to disport themselves sexually, or with whom they do so, provided their frolic is consensual.
— Ciceronianus the White
Then you don't care about the well-being of others, pure and simple. Consent is not sufficient to make something moral - in fact it has no necessary tie to morality at all. For example, if I gain someone's consent to kill them, does it follow that I should? Clearly not. — Agustino
Then you don't care about the well-being of others, pure and simple. Consent is not sufficient to make something moral/virtuous/ethical - in fact it has no necessary tie to morality at all. For example, if I gain someone's consent to kill them, does it follow that I should? Clearly not.
Desire for sex in and of itself, if by that we understand the physical act, is an obsession because sex in and of itself does not deserve that attachement and/or love. — Agustino
LOL - not a bad explanation ;)Of course Ciceronianus cares about the well being of others, in the same way that Mrs. Campbell did:
Reply to a young actress who asserted that an older actor in a production showed too much affection for the leading man (c. 1910); as reported by Alan Dent in Mrs. Patrick Campbell, p. 78 (1961).
"My dear, I don't care what they do, so long as they don't do it in the street and frighten the horses."
At a time, Agustino, when there were many horses on the street, "frightening the horses" could have dire consequences. It was in the sense of not wanting to cause a stampede of angst-ridden horses that Ciceronianus was speaking.
Just imagine, two men kissing on Broadway in 1910, watched by a pair of stallions pulling a fancy coach, and the two large studs taking off to find some place to do horse-likewise, and igniting a stampede down the Great White Way. Why, hundreds of important people attending the theater might be hurt! — Bitter Crank
In the past, LGBT people have been systemically oppressed, but I think we are beginning to see the end of this de jure oppression of LGBT people. — darthbarracuda
I believe that for some, their LGBT difference is an entitlement to special treatment. Being a liberal democracy means we must treat everyone equally, and this means that the LGBT community does not deserve special treatment (hence why I generally don't like gay pride events in areas that aren't really against the LGBT community). — darthbarracuda
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