Yeah man, but it's all the decisions you make throughout your life that makes the connectionsYeah man, being accepted for the way you're wired is a really awful thing.

Moderators: Jeff250, Tunnelcat
Yeah man, but it's all the decisions you make throughout your life that makes the connectionsYeah man, being accepted for the way you're wired is a really awful thing.
Except that action and predisposition are essentially one and the same in this case, so separating them is meaningless.Sergeant Thorne wrote:Maybe in some cases accepting the way you're "wired" isn't such a good idea. However I was referring to action, which you changed into predisposition to accomplish your sarcasm. That kind of a twist is pretty blatant for someone of your intellectual standing, isn't it?
No...it's not. At all. And until you figure that much out, your opinion is frankly worth squat, because you've failed to accomplish even the most basic understanding of what this entails.I said they want what they DO to be accepted. I have sympathy for people who may have a certain disposition toward homosexuality, and I believe that there is help for it, but anyone should know that its pretty screwed up for a guy to go after another guy. It's something to be ashamed of.
...is that supposed to mean anything at all? Because it really doesn't.flip wrote:Yeah man, but it's all the decisions you make throughout your life that makes the connections. The great thing is man's ability to rewire himself by changing his mind and making different decisions.
Yeah, that's one part of it. The other part are of course the connections that are formed on the basis of genetic instructions, or the environment you grew up in.flip wrote:Yeah man, but it's all the decisions you make throughout your life that makes the connections.
Again, that is only true to some extent. Many connections can be genetically formed or in sensitive faces during development and may be impossible to alter.flip wrote:The great thing is man's ability to rewire himself by changing his mind and making different decisions.
I am honestly shocked to read this sentence. Why would this be screwed up? And why should anybody be ashamed of it? I say, stick it wherever you want, as long as it is consensual (and the other person is capable of giving consent). I have no idea why anybody would want to restrict people's freedom in this.Sergeant Thorne wrote:anyone should know that its pretty screwed up for a guy to go after another guy. It's something to be ashamed of. No one likes to live with shame... but when you start saying it's fine then you've got a whole new problem.
I don't accept Christianity, but I don't go out and try to ban their right to freedom of worship or be practicing Christians. That right should NOT include the extension of their beliefs to repress non-Christians in a free society however. You don't have to "like" the way someone else lives, but you should have the common decency to allow them the freedom to live it the way they wish and as equal members under the law in a free society.Sergeant Thorne wrote:Where's that violin music coming from? Freedom from persecution is well and good, but when you say they know that people will "hate" them, but they want to be free from bigotry, that's a contradiction unless you devise a legal means to suppress the people who "hate" them. And don't **** redefine acceptance in the middle of the argument. They ARE fighting for acceptance.
"Restricting people's freedom" has not been part of my argument.Pandora wrote:I have no idea why anybody would want to restrict people's freedom in this.
Common decency is EXACTLY what is at stake. As far as I'm concerned these people are equal under the law, and they as anyone else are free to live however they please, but their equal standing and desire to be accepted does not change the fact the homosexuality is immoral, abnormal, and unhealthy.TunnelCat wrote:You don't have to "like" the way someone else lives, but you should have the common decency to allow them the freedom to live it the way they wish and as equal members under the law in a free society.
This is why what kids have to say can provide a bit of comedic relief, "kids say the darndest things" style, but shouldn't exactly be followed by adults. I think that sometimes they have a way to coming at issues from an angle that adults are too conditioned to recognize. So, sometimes there's value in what kids say, in that it sometimes yields a new perspective on the issue that can then be explored by adults. A lot of benefit can come from this, but I think that the the rule is generally that kids just don't have the knowledge or development to see the whole picture. (which is why they can come from new angles....)CUDA wrote:actually I'd like to get back to the OP, that kids get it.
NO they don't.
Kids Parrot. and anyone that thinks that kid wasn't coached to say what he say is fooling themselves. that kid is being used as a tool for an agenda, and I personally find that More offensive then the whole Gay V Straight argument.
IMHO
That's your opinion and not based in fact. They are also not really free or equal under the law either, mostly due to political pressure from people who hold the same opinion as you.Sergeant Thorne wrote: As far as I'm concerned these people are equal under the law, and they as anyone else are free to live however they please, but their equal standing and desire to be accepted does not change the fact the homosexuality is immoral, abnormal, and unhealthy.
How about "unproductive" or maybe "un-re-productive?"tunnelcat wrote:That's your opinion and not based in fact. They are also not really free or equal under the law either, mostly due to political pressure from people who hold the same opinion as you.Sergeant Thorne wrote: As far as I'm concerned these people are equal under the law, and they as anyone else are free to live however they please, but their equal standing and desire to be accepted does not change the fact the homosexuality is immoral, abnormal, and unhealthy.
Not true. That is my perception, and it does have basis in proven fact.TunnelCat wrote:That's your opinion and not based in fact.
You're deviating from reality here, in attempting to frame the topic according to your goals--a homosexual is every bit as free as I am, and they are equal before any court.TunnelCat wrote:They are also not really free or equal under the law either, mostly due to political pressure from people who hold the same opinion as you.
Journal articles or GTFO.Sergeant Thorne wrote:I tried to demonstrate some of the more easily proven points in this topic, and it was simply denied.
You pretty much hit the nail on the head here. =P Even if that stupid kid didn't parrot it, he got it from somewhere external. Adults do these things too, like the OP. =PCUDA wrote:actually I'd like to get back to the OP, that kids get it.
NO they don't.
Kids Parrot. and anyone that thinks that kid wasn't coached to say what he say is fooling themselves. that kid is being used as a tool for an agenda, and I personally find that More offensive then the whole Gay V Straight argument.
IMHO
So? What does that matter? Do we really need more people on this already overpopulated planet anyway? The percentage of heteros on this planet far outweighs the number of gays anyway. There's no shortage of reproducers out there to keep the planet hip deep in new humans. However, if some apocalypse where to occur, wiped out most of humanity and there were only a few people left alive, then it might be an issue.snoopy wrote:How about "unproductive" or maybe "un-re-productive?"
Ditto with Top Gun. Perceptions are not facts, so what valid facts do you have to prove your perceptions.Sergeant Thorne wrote:Not true. That is my perception, and it does have basis in proven fact.
ProofTop Gun wrote:...except when they're not. Seriously, what about that is hacrd to understand?
That might be a hard case to make, considering the hardware.Top Gun wrote:...except when they're not. Seriously, what about that is hard to understand?
Funny, I thought those "hundreds of species exhibiting homosexual behavior" and "homosexuality increasing reproductive success of siblings" references constituted scientific evidence.CUDA wrote:ProofTop Gun wrote:...except when they're not. Seriously, what about that is hacrd to understand?
And i mean scientific evidence. Not your opinion
Man I love when people who have no biological background and have plainly done absolutely no reading on the topics involved try to prognosticate on stuff like this. Every statement you've made here is wrong, and the "no reproduction" line proves that you didn't even read my post properly.Spidey wrote:I’m pretty sure if that was the case, we would see a much higher instance of homosexuality.
There is absolutely no evidence that homosexuality is genetic in so far as a “homo” gene…there is no evidence it runs in families, so that kind of disproves the sibling theory, and since gays tend to not reproduce, the “homo” gene has no way to reproduce itself.
And how the hell would this gene know when to express itself (or be expressed)…I’m not buying it.
Homosexuality is more likely a potential that “all” humans have in their genes, and is likely initiated by some trigger event/s
So as I implied before, more like an adaptation or modification, rather than by design.
And what sort of genetic or neurological knowledge do you have that would allow you to make those determinations?flip wrote:Similar and yet wholly different, in regards to conciousness and awareness. I'm pretty sure if a monkey goes apeshit in the wild, he isn't thinking that far ahead. He is reacting to immediate threats or stimuli. If he kills 3 of his clan, tomorrow the only difference is there is 3 less than the day before. Life goes on for them. With awareness comes responsibility and consequences. I'm just looking down the road at the high-minded evolutionists, who will start separating people by whether they lap directly from the stream or not
.
See, that's the problem TG. You think since you are well-studied on a subject it makes you an expert. What you have really done is filled your head and memorized what everyone else's conclusion's on the subject are, and left no room for your own.Man I love when people who have no biological background and have plainly done absolutely no reading on the topics involved try to prognosticate on stuff like this. Every statement you've made here is wrong, and the "no reproduction" line proves that you didn't even read my post properly.
You know why I studied information about this subject? Because THAT'S WHAT LEARNING IS. It's reading things written by people who know a hell of a lot more than you, realizing why they came to those conclusions, and then building on them. What you do...well honestly, I don't know what the hell goes on in your head, but it's the exact opposite of "learning." Make your own conclusions? How the hell do you expect your conclusions to mean anything when you don't even have a high-school-level understanding of the topics involved?flip wrote:See, that's the problem TG. You think since you are well-studied on a subject it makes you an expert. What you have really done is filled your head and memorized what everyone else's conclusion's on the subject are, and left no room for your own.Man I love when people who have no biological background and have plainly done absolutely no reading on the topics involved try to prognosticate on stuff like this. Every statement you've made here is wrong, and the "no reproduction" line proves that you didn't even read my post properly.
On this subject? No, you're not. I know more than you about it, I know how to learn more about it much better than you seemingly do, and most importantly, I'm actually WILLING to learn about it in the first place. So yeah, learn your place.Spidey wrote:I know…I’m not worth a damn thing.
...I think this is finally the key to figuring out what's going on with you. Learning strictly via rote memorization is a terrible way to produce true critical thinking skills, but taking things to the opposite extreme, attempting to learn using only self-reasoning, is every bit as dangerous. The truly-successful path lies somewhere in the middle, by learning what those who came before you accomplished, then working through how they did it, and moving forward from there. I kept wondering why your usual style of response in technical-minded threads involved starting with a few basic concepts, then mashing them together to come up with completely-erroneous conclusions...but what you describe of your educational experience explains that. If you're going to attempt to go for a self-reasoned route, you'll have to either put yourself in a lab and do a bunch of experiments yourself, or else get the data from someone else who has. Because if you don't have either of those, what you're going to find out is that your own reasoning is often going to lead you down the wrong path, one that simply doesn't mesh with the physical reality of the world. That's exactly what's been going on in many of your posts.flip wrote:On top of that, I believe my education was quite adequate at teaching me to teach myself. I basically got your high school education in middle school. We had 6-8. The school was built somewhat like a honeycomb. Each grade had a commons, where they ate together right outside the classrooms. The classrooms were hive shaped and had 3 classes in them but was completely open. We had great food and never went anywhere in lines. Throughout the day we would have a schedule to go to smaller classes where there were maybe 5-6 of us. We would be presented with questions and then have great discussions on them. Or problems and have to come up with several different solutions. It was great fun. I went from kindergarten until 8th grade in that school system and wish like hell i could have finished there. We moved to the bum-fucked kudzu and it was like stepping back in time. Give a man a fish or teach him how to fish, that is the question.
That actually may be the best statement you've made about the issue Spidey.Spidey wrote:I think the point here is the term “by design” homosexuality is more likely a software issue.
flip wrote:Again, considering the emotional and psychological differences between humans and animals
no, they are not. However, the bottom line seems to be that most of these arguments involve a group of folks with very limited knowledge debating with a handful that clearly have no clue. With that dynamic, it's no surprise that the body of human understanding doesn't move forward here.....We could argue all day about our biological beginnings, but those differences should be obvious to everyone.
and you don't think humans operate in EXACTLY the same fashion over a different set of chemical, electrical, physical and psychological triggers? Really? Seriously? Please, rush to the local library, or log onto Amazon, and do some reading about...(amusing tale snipped).... My point. It looked like a total chemical reaction that got triggered in which he had no control over. Same as Pavlov's dogs