Mistle Rose wrote:
It's an invalid one.
Opinions are formed out of being informed about something in a specific manner and following some level of reason and questioning of that source.
Invalid or not, it is still an opinion, right??
As for the source of opinions, I have to completely disagree with your reasoning. If you had included the words "well thought out" or "intelligent" or "rational" before opinions, then I would agree with you 100%. But for the most part people don't use common sense before making up their minds about something. Look at the state our country, no... the state our world is in; do you think that is because all of the reasoning and questioning that occured before people started making opinions?
In short, opinions don't have to be rational, sensical, well thought out, level headed, or valid for that matter... but that is what makes them what they are.... Opinions!
Mistle Rose wrote:
There is simply no room to "disagree" with homosexuals. It doesn't make sense.
I agree completely. While homosexuality doesn't make sense to me, I can respect someone else's judgement to do whatever they want to with their body. (Of course I have my opinions about what will happen based on their choices, but that is true for anything, not just sexual preference.) Every action has a consequence, some good, some not so good. If you kill someone, you go to jail. If you help an old lady cross the road, you get kicked in the shin for being a goody-goody

I don't see why I can't have the opinion "I don't agree with homosexuality, but I still agree with homosexuals" (if that makes any sense)
Mistle Rose wrote:
Right. The Greeks were the ones who pointed out the debating logic I love so much too.
I can't see any valid case for having an opinion here, at least not in the manner that people do.
I agree with the last part of your post. The opinions that a large percentage of people hold on homosexuality isn't valid. It
is one based on bigotry, fear, hatred, ignorance, whatever you want to call it.
Mistle Rose wrote:
I have to laugh at people being against homosexuality for "Valid" reasons and not out of fear, which equates "scripture". Again, the cotton polyester mix argument applies.
I am not trying to use scripture as my argument, but why can't it be one? If you truly believe in something (as some that quote scripture to fight their battles do), why can't you use it to support your causes. Before you get upset, realize that I am not justifying it as "righteous", I am just acknowledging it for what it is.
I don't know about this "cotton polyester mix" argument you are speaking of... I assume it is referrence to a previous post in this topic.
Mistle Rose wrote:
That's not valid. You can have a person view on homosexuality and homosexuals in the same way you can have those on people who dye their hair red. You don't "disagree" with people dying their hair red. It's just a thing people do and it's highly insulting to make out that it's wrong any more than anything else two consenting adults do together.
Taking it any further than that is nonesensical.
I don't exactly understand what you are getting at here. As far as I know, I can disagree with someone dying their hair red because it was a conscious choice on their part.
<hypothetically speaking>
If for whatever reason, I hate people who dye their hair red (perhaps because of my bovine nature), then that is my choice. I can hate people who choose to support someone (perhaps a facist dictator), or I can hate people who drive a certain type of car (stupid monster suv's), or I can choose to hate someone who chooses to follow a particular lifestyle (one which doesn't have the same sexual preference as me). That of course is implying that I believe homosexuality is a choice....
</hypothetically speaking>
Please understand that what I was just typing isn't what I believe. I don't know if homosexuality is a choice (concious or not). I have yet to see a "gay gene" or evidence of no such gene existing (agnostic?), so I can't rule that out or rule in favor of it. I do feel that people do choose to be gay in the society we live in. That is more of a decision based on the negative social stigma that occurs from "coming out". I.E. an individual may feel that he/she would get less hassle if they just pretended that they weren't gay and dated/married/whatever with members of the opposite sex, like "normal people", aka everyone else, was doing.
I suppose it's time to end this rant. To sum things up Rose, I agree with what you are posting. It doesn't make sense to hold negative opinions of people with a different sexual preference (or perhaps the same), but that doesn't mean people aren't going to do it.
To DeathlyPallor: Get back on topic... sheesh, I am sure you can find a bush-bash thread somewhere else. Take your liberal-hippie crap elsewhere

But seriously, TOASTPAINT!