Big-Fat-Homo said:
Naturally, the government does not force churches that oppose to wedding same-sex couples morally to wed them. A church can still say no and refuse to wed them, if they so choose. It's the fact that it CAN and WILL happen, specific church likes it or not. That's the whole point.
Who cares what churches think? This is a civil marriage, not a religious one. Last time I checked Canada, like the United States, was not a theocracy and religion had absolutely no bearing on civil marriage whatsoever. Here's the phrase again -
Civil marriage is a secular state sponsored institution, not a civil right.
The bottom line is the government does not have the power to create that right. I would be the first person on the forums to support a very powerful federal government (due somewhat to my incredibly left wing economic views), but only as powerful as the Constitution allows. Allowing homosexuality is pushing the constitutional past broad interpretations and is clearly an abuse of legislative powers.
Is homosexuality natural? Is homosexuality socially acceptable? Is God for/against homosexuality? For this situation, it simply does not matter. Creating homosexual marriages is unconstitutional, that is all there is to it.
On a side note, whether you are doing it intentionally or not, the strategy of ‘demonizing’ (no pun intended) people against civil homosexual marriages as a purely religious matter has actually worked quite well in the United States and many people believe that not allowing civil homosexual marriages is religious oppression.
BFH said:
Also, your example is beaten by the charter of rights and freedoms.
Sure, nitpick the analogy. If you fail to see the meaning of it please inform me and I will explain it step by step.
Big-Fat-Homo said:
Naturally, the government does not force churches that oppose to wedding same-sex couples morally to wed them. A church can still say no and refuse to wed them, if they so choose. It's the fact that it CAN and WILL happen, specific church likes it or not. That's the whole point.
Who cares what churches think? This is a civil marriage, not a religious one. Last time I checked Canada, like the United States, was not a theocracy and religion had absolutely no bearing on civil marriage whatsoever. Here's the phrase again -
Civil marriage is a secular state sponsored institution, not a civil right.
The bottom line is the government does not have the power to create that right. I would be the first person on the forums to support a very powerful federal government (due somewhat to my incredibly left wing economic views), but only as powerful as the Constitution allows. Allowing homosexuality is pushing the constitutional past broad interpretations and is clearly an abuse of legislative powers.
Is homosexuality natural? Is homosexuality socially acceptable? Is God for/against homosexuality? For this situation, it simply does not matter. Creating homosexual marriages is unconstitutional, that is all there is to it.
On a side note, whether you are doing it intentionally or not, the strategy of ‘demonizing’ (no pun intended) people against civil homosexual marriages as a purely religious matter has actually worked quite well in the United States and many people believe that not allowing civil homosexual marriages is religious oppression.
BFH said:
Also, your example is beaten by the charter of rights and freedoms.
Sure, nitpick the analogy. If you fail to see the meaning of it please inform me and I will explain it step by step.
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Forged said:
That is a completlly invalid statement, a little proof in how it would harm society would be nice.
It is destroy the limits put on the legislature by the Constitution.
Forged said:
That is piss poor reasoning. Untill 1920 most women could not vote, voting for women was a right that had never existed. Do you think women should not be able to vote?
The Supreme Court has the ability to allow women to vote for a reason. It has this power because there was discrimination, the rights were not equal and the Supreme Court made them equal. How what I am saying applies to this is that the Supreme Court does not have the ability to create new rights. For your example, it did not have the ability to create voting as a whole, however, once voting existed, it had the right to make it equal. As a side point, institutions are different from civil rights.
Forged said:
When has that stopped them?
That really doesn't make sense in an argument. Since the legislature abuses its' power it somehow gains the ability to defy the Constitution?
Forged said:
If the supreme court considered it discrimination they most certainlly could.
That is what the court system in Canada did. However, I have clearly pointed out there is no discrimination.