Any Dudes Wanna Get Married?

Now that I have your attention Gambit:

[quote]But let’s flex our imagination muscles why don’t we. A different form of relationship than either a simple homosexual relationship or the nonsexual relationship John Doe has with his best friend. Imagine forlife’s friend DID remember the paperwork, and is allowed the visit. But now a third person shows up at the desk, a woman!. This person says she is the patient’s life partner, but she has left her paperwork back up at home. She is told no, a male life partner has already proven himself. Oh, but the woman explains, the three are involved in an alternative lifestyle.

See, the two men are bisexual, loving each other and her. And her, loving both. They are, she explains, polyamorous. And now here she is, without the proper paperwork. But even after the other partner emerges from his visitation and verifies her story, she is still denied access without her documentation. Well, we’re good little emotional equality crusaders so back to redefining marriage, again!

No, we won’t? Oooooh, but then support of homosexual marriage isn’t based on those buzzwords, anti-discrimination/bigorty. It’s just a poorly thought out cool-kid fad, which suddendly appears completely unprincipled when other human reltionships would ride it’s coattails. Fakers. Frauds. The duped.[/quote]

Redefine marriage, yet again?

Thanks for considering my opinion Sloth, but I’m not in the mood to argue today. I hope you have a nice night.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.

[quote]Grneyes wrote:

Ummm, because heterosexuals in a romantic relationship are afforded special status, duh. Romance and love, have everything to do with the relationship, whether straight or gay. That’s why those relationships are afforded special status of MARRIAGE. [/quote]

Setting aside your elliptical non-response, no, the state doesn’t award anyone “special status” for romance. Society-via-the-state doesn’t have a policy interest in rewarding people for engaging in “romance”.

I’ve said this a thousand times, and I supposed I will have to say it a thousand more. State-recognized marriage doesn’t exist for its own sake. It is not an End - rather, it is a Means. The state legally recognizes marriage as a policy quid-pro-quo in order to achieve desirable social results: yet again, it is a Means to an End, not and End.

What is that End? Been said a thousand times: social ordering of child-bearing and raising, and remedying the problems that come with the Pandora’s box of heterosexual sex, all in order to provide for a more peaceful, organized, and healthy replenishment of society.

Now, this is - wait for it - undisputed. Despite hilarious attempts to suggest that marriage is “none of the above”, this is what Western society has had in mind for centuries by recognizing and privileging heterosexual marriage: it serves the public interest and helps remedy certain problems.

There is not and never has been a policy to simply reward people for being “romantic” with one another. And why would there be? First of all, from a policy standpoint - never forget we are talking about the existence of a law, not just an opinion - the state doesn’t care about your “romance”. Second of all, even if we cared at all, we wouldn’t wade into regulation of “romance”, because no one knows what the hell that means and no one has any idea what such a regulation is supposed to do.

No sane person pretends traditional marriage was simply about honoring “romance”.

Now, what gets lost in all the fighting is how we got here. Myself and others noted the bad trajectory of no-fault divorce and gay marriage and noted that this trajectory was making marriage meaningless because the definition as changing to exactly the situation of honoring two people for the sole sake of their affections for one another and desire to co-habitate, and really nothing more.

That’s a good argument, and Forlife and other gay marriage advocates recognized it was a point they could not concede, because they are smart enough to recognize that if marriage simply becomes a legal recognition of two people’s affections, there in fact would be no reason to have the legal institution of marriage (as explained above).

So, with no ability to concede the point (and therefore agree that the solution is not gay marriage, but no legal marriage), Forlife and other gay marriage advocates embarked on a tortured and frankly dishonest revisionism of what marriage was “really” about. It was desperate and dumb on its face.

Repeating for yet another time: to enact gay marriage means changing the definition of marriage. Again, that is fine. If that is what people want, then argue that the definition should be changed as a matter of “tolerance” or whatever. But gay marriage advocates simply cannot escape this most basic fact, and as evidenced by the desperate revisionism, palpable panic, smug yet hollow disdain, slandering opponents as having bad faith motives (“bigot!”), and Hail Mary arguments, they know it.

Put another way - if this were a poker game, these posts would be a golden tell that the gay marriage advocates are bluffing and have a weak hand.

[quote]Sloth wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:<<< When people actually know gay men and women, especially when those people are friends and family, their perspectives change.[/quote]Not mine.
[/quote]Same. [/quote]I would tell my own full blooded kin the exact same thing I’ve been telling Elder Forlife. Repent, forsake your sin, believe the gospel and live. In fact I DO tell them that even tough they’re not gay.

[quote]Makavali wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.[/quote]

Oh I see you mean that you don’t understand that I was referring to divorce among those who are homosexual skyrocketing. Even though I explained that in the post that you already quoted.

Do you still not understand?

Here let me say it a different way. Long term homosexual unions are usually NOT monogamous. Oh I know forlife will say that he and his partner are exclusive. And for the sake of argument let’s say that he’s not lying this one time. But over all the statistics on homosexual monogamy are bleak. I’ve posted many stats on this on other threads. And I’d be glad to dig them up again if you like (in fact now that I think of it I will post some of those statistics just for the young men who might be reading this and have not yet formed an opinion - thanks for reminding me). Homosexual men are not meant for marriage, they just are not. And if a couple million of them are allowed to marry the divorce rate will sky rocket. Now you can follow that right? Subject: Gay men. Divorce rate for (come on you can do it) GAY MEN.

Okay, talk to you soon Mak.

Bye

[quote]ZEB wrote:

[quote]Makavali wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.[/quote]

Oh I see you mean that you don’t understand that I was referring to divorce among those who are homosexual skyrocketing. Even though I explained that in the post that you already quoted.

Do you still not understand?

Here let me say it a different way. Long term homosexual unions are usually NOT monogamous. Oh I know forlife will say that he and his partner are exclusive. And for the sake of argument let’s say that he’s not lying this one time. But over all the statistics on homosexual monogamy are bleak. I’ve posted many stats on this on other threads. And I’d be glad to dig them up again if you like (in fact now that I think of it I will post some of those statistics just for the young men who might be reading this and have not yet formed an opinion - thanks for reminding me). Homosexual men are not meant for marriage, they just are not. And if a couple million of them are allowed to marry the divorce rate will sky rocket. Now you can follow that right? Subject: Gay men. Divorce rate for (come on you can do it) GAY MEN.

Okay, talk to you soon Mak.

Bye

[/quote]

If you were talking about divorce rate among gay couples -okay. But the way it’s written it sounds like you’re talking about the overall divorce rate. That’s the way I read it and most others would.

But in the end you’re right, we’ll never agree.

[quote]therajraj wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:

[quote]Makavali wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.[/quote]

Oh I see you mean that you don’t understand that I was referring to divorce among those who are homosexual skyrocketing. Even though I explained that in the post that you already quoted.

Do you still not understand?

Here let me say it a different way. Long term homosexual unions are usually NOT monogamous. Oh I know forlife will say that he and his partner are exclusive. And for the sake of argument let’s say that he’s not lying this one time. But over all the statistics on homosexual monogamy are bleak. I’ve posted many stats on this on other threads. And I’d be glad to dig them up again if you like (in fact now that I think of it I will post some of those statistics just for the young men who might be reading this and have not yet formed an opinion - thanks for reminding me). Homosexual men are not meant for marriage, they just are not. And if a couple million of them are allowed to marry the divorce rate will sky rocket. Now you can follow that right? Subject: Gay men. Divorce rate for (come on you can do it) GAY MEN.

Okay, talk to you soon Mak.

Bye

[/quote]

If you were talking about divorce rate among gay couples -okay. But the way it’s written it sounds like you’re talking about the overall divorce rate. That’s the way I read it and most others would.[/quote]

Really? Well then I’m very glad I went on to explain it to Mak because I wouldn’t want anyone thinking otherwise. And these are very important posts so we have to make absolutely certain that each word and phrase is near perfect. But once again I thank God (oh sorry Mak I said God) it’s clear now Phew…And I can hear everyone breath a sigh of relief.

No, and actually no one’s mind is ever changed around here. The Internet is where you go to argue (when you’re in the mood) not where you go to convince people that you are correct. Anyway, you have yourself a great weekend my friend :slight_smile:

[quote]Cortes wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:

Are you denying that you have an aversion to homosexuality? Do you honestly believe it’s morally acceptable for gays to have a committed long term relationship? If so, I would be pleasantly surprised. And please do answer the question, it’s not rhetorical.
[/quote]

Look, forlife, it doesn’t matter if I’m a Nazi member of the Ku Klux Klan attending Westborough Baptist crushing a kitten’s skull under my jackbooted heel as I type, you are still obligated to address the actual arguments I make, or we might as well all go home. This is exactly what you got so upset at TB for supposedly doing to you, yet here you are assigning or implying latent motives to my arguments where none are necessary.

The “double standard,” and the point, to bring us back off this side-track, exists because one kind of relationship confers upon its society basic benefits that the other kind of relationship does not. Period.

You have yet to demonstrate otherwise.

[/quote]

No. YOU are the one that brought confirmatory bias into the discussion, and started lecturing me on it, as if I haven’t said a million times that I’m as subject to confirmatory bias as anyone else. I’m honest about that fact, how about you? I just turned YOUR question back on you, and asked if in fact you have a moral aversion to homosexuality. Not surprisingly, you still haven’t answered the question.

I wrote TB off, not because he accused me of confirmatory bias, but because he questioned my sincerity and my integrity. I believe all of us are subject to confirmatory bias, but I also believe we are sincere in what we post here. To question someone’s basic integrity is crossing the line.

Yes, let’s get back to the discussion. I would appreciate an answer to the point I’ve made a couple of times now. You asked what value gay married couples can provide to society, and I pointed out that adopted children are better off with married parents than with unmarried parents. Gay couples can and do adopt children. Don’t you agree those kids are better off with the stability and security of their parents being married, irrespective of whether they are gay or straight?

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]Sloth wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:<<< When people actually know gay men and women, especially when those people are friends and family, their perspectives change.[/quote]Not mine.
[/quote]Same. [/quote]I would tell my own full blooded kin the exact same thing I’ve been telling Elder Forlife. Repent, forsake your sin, believe the gospel and live. In fact I DO tell them that even tough they’re not gay.
[/quote]

I didn’t mean to imply that personally knowing and loving a gay person guarantees that your perspectives will change. It only improves the odds, by virtue of personalizing the issue, and helping people realize that the stereotypes are just that. It’s easier to demonize an iconic leather-wearing, flag-waving, homosexual marching in a Pride parade than to demonize your lesbian daughter.

Sadly, people with a deeply engrained moral aversion to gays are unlikely to change their views, even when someone close to them is gay. I recall hearing about one guy who came out to his parents. His dad didn’t say a word. He left the room, returned with a pistol in hand, and gave it to his son. Many are completely ostracized from their family after coming out. I don’t see that changing for the most hard core opponents of gay rights, no matter what happens with society in general.

[quote]forlife wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]Sloth wrote:

[quote]Tiribulus wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:<<< When people actually know gay men and women, especially when those people are friends and family, their perspectives change.[/quote]Not mine.
[/quote]Same. [/quote]I would tell my own full blooded kin the exact same thing I’ve been telling Elder Forlife. Repent, forsake your sin, believe the gospel and live. In fact I DO tell them that even tough they’re not gay.
[/quote]

I didn’t mean to imply that personally knowing and loving a gay person guarantees that your perspectives will change. It only improves the odds, by virtue of personalizing the issue, and helping people realize that the stereotypes are just that. It’s easier to demonize an iconic leather-wearing, flag-waving, homosexual marching in a Pride parade than to demonize your lesbian daughter.

Sadly, people with a deeply engrained moral aversion to gays are unlikely to change their views, even when someone close to them is gay. I recall hearing about one guy who came out to his parents. His dad didn’t say a word. He left the room, returned with a pistol in hand, and gave it to his son. Many are completely ostracized from their family after coming out. I don’t see that changing for the most hard core opponents of gay rights, no matter what happens with society in general.[/quote]This “guy” wouldn’t happen to be a Muslim would he. I just know you aren’t attempting to say that people who believe what I believe would send their own son into eternity without Jesus.

[quote]forlife wrote:

[quote]Cortes wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:

Are you denying that you have an aversion to homosexuality? Do you honestly believe it’s morally acceptable for gays to have a committed long term relationship? If so, I would be pleasantly surprised. And please do answer the question, it’s not rhetorical.
[/quote]

Look, forlife, it doesn’t matter if I’m a Nazi member of the Ku Klux Klan attending Westborough Baptist crushing a kitten’s skull under my jackbooted heel as I type, you are still obligated to address the actual arguments I make, or we might as well all go home. This is exactly what you got so upset at TB for supposedly doing to you, yet here you are assigning or implying latent motives to my arguments where none are necessary.

The “double standard,” and the point, to bring us back off this side-track, exists because one kind of relationship confers upon its society basic benefits that the other kind of relationship does not. Period.

You have yet to demonstrate otherwise.

[/quote]

No. YOU are the one that brought confirmatory bias into the discussion, and started lecturing me on it, as if I haven’t said a million times that I’m as subject to confirmatory bias as anyone else. I’m honest about that fact, how about you? I just turned YOUR question back on you, and asked if in fact you have a moral aversion to homosexuality. Not surprisingly, you still haven’t answered the question.

I wrote TB off, not because he accused me of confirmatory bias, but because he questioned my sincerity and my integrity. I believe all of us are subject to confirmatory bias, but I also believe we are sincere in what we post here. To question someone’s basic integrity is crossing the line.

Yes, let’s get back to the discussion. I would appreciate an answer to the point I’ve made a couple of times now. You asked what value gay married couples can provide to society, and I pointed out that adopted children are better off with married parents than with unmarried parents. Gay couples can and do adopt children. Don’t you agree those kids are better off with the stability and security of their parents being married, irrespective of whether they are gay or straight?[/quote]

That’s okay. I’ve made my point. You tend to drop the confirmatory bias point/explanation/rebuttal/dismissal pretty casually in the religious threads, as if it neatly compartmentalizes and explains everything. I just wanted to afford you the opportunity to see how it feels when it’s turned on you. You certainly don’t appear to like it too much.

As for moral aversions, we all have them. Much of the time they serve us very well. Occasionally they don’t. Either way, though, their mere presence is still not going to tell you diddly-squat about what IS. And bringing them up in a debate and attacking them as if they have any bearing upon that reality, well, there’s a word for that and I’m sure you know what it is.

As far as your final question goes, I already answered it in this very discussion, I’m copying and pasting from text above:

“…one kind of relationship confers upon its society basic benefits that the other kind of relationship does not. Period.”

We don’t need married gay couples to adopt or raise our children. We need society overall, as a whole, to function in a certain very important manner. Indeed, the behavior and familial arrangements marriage seeks to encourage are integral to the very fabric of our society. That is, first, its own propagation, and, second (among others), the closest-to-ideal family unit to nurture, raise and provide a balanced parenting to this progeny.

Gay marriage does NOT provide this benefit, the benefit for which the first kind of marriage was created in the first place. There’s a reason for all of this. Believe it or not, it has nothing to do with bigotry, but is just as simple to understand.

[quote]forlife wrote:

I wrote TB off, not because he accused me of confirmatory bias, but because he questioned my sincerity and my integrity. I believe all of us are subject to confirmatory bias, but I also believe we are sincere in what we post here. To question someone’s basic integrity is crossing the line.[/quote]

No, it isn’t - not when it’s justified. When someone acts without integrity, and a second person recognizes it and condemns it, that’s not crossing a line.

You argue poorly, engage in bad faith, slander your opponents and assign ill intent to their motives, and then whine that others aren’t being polite enough or respecftul to you.

Some of us have simply reached a point where we won’t tolerate your hypocritical indulgences.

[quote]Cortes wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:

[quote]Cortes wrote:

[quote]forlife wrote:

Are you denying that you have an aversion to homosexuality? Do you honestly believe it’s morally acceptable for gays to have a committed long term relationship? If so, I would be pleasantly surprised. And please do answer the question, it’s not rhetorical.
[/quote]

Look, forlife, it doesn’t matter if I’m a Nazi member of the Ku Klux Klan attending Westborough Baptist crushing a kitten’s skull under my jackbooted heel as I type, you are still obligated to address the actual arguments I make, or we might as well all go home. This is exactly what you got so upset at TB for supposedly doing to you, yet here you are assigning or implying latent motives to my arguments where none are necessary.

The “double standard,” and the point, to bring us back off this side-track, exists because one kind of relationship confers upon its society basic benefits that the other kind of relationship does not. Period.

You have yet to demonstrate otherwise.

[/quote]

No. YOU are the one that brought confirmatory bias into the discussion, and started lecturing me on it, as if I haven’t said a million times that I’m as subject to confirmatory bias as anyone else. I’m honest about that fact, how about you? I just turned YOUR question back on you, and asked if in fact you have a moral aversion to homosexuality. Not surprisingly, you still haven’t answered the question.

I wrote TB off, not because he accused me of confirmatory bias, but because he questioned my sincerity and my integrity. I believe all of us are subject to confirmatory bias, but I also believe we are sincere in what we post here. To question someone’s basic integrity is crossing the line.

Yes, let’s get back to the discussion. I would appreciate an answer to the point I’ve made a couple of times now. You asked what value gay married couples can provide to society, and I pointed out that adopted children are better off with married parents than with unmarried parents. Gay couples can and do adopt children. Don’t you agree those kids are better off with the stability and security of their parents being married, irrespective of whether they are gay or straight?[/quote]

That’s okay. I’ve made my point. You tend to drop the confirmatory bias point/explanation/rebuttal/dismissal pretty casually in the religious threads, as if it neatly compartmentalizes and explains everything. I just wanted to afford you the opportunity to see how it feels when it’s turned on you. You certainly don’t appear to like it too much.

As for moral aversions, we all have them. Much of the time they serve us very well. Occasionally they don’t. Either way, though, their mere presence is still not going to tell you diddly-squat about what IS. And bringing them up in a debate and attacking them as if they have any bearing upon that reality, well, there’s a word for that and I’m sure you know what it is.

As far as your final question goes, I already answered it in this very discussion, I’m copying and pasting from text above:

“…one kind of relationship confers upon its society basic benefits that the other kind of relationship does not. Period.”

We don’t need married gay couples to adopt or raise our children. We need society overall, as a whole, to function in a certain very important manner. Indeed, the behavior and familial arrangements marriage seeks to encourage are integral to the very fabric of our society. That is, first, its own propagation, and, second (among others), the closest-to-ideal family unit to nurture, raise and provide a balanced parenting to this progeny.

Gay marriage does NOT provide this benefit, the benefit for which the first kind of marriage was created in the first place. There’s a reason for all of this. Believe it or not, it has nothing to do with bigotry, but is just as simple to understand. [/quote]

Let’s get this straight. You bring up confirmatory bias, and I completely, 100% agree that I’m as subject to confirmatory bias as everyone else. I’ve said as much multiple times, when raising the subject in the religion threads. I then point out that YOU are equally subject to the same confirmatory bias, and you throw a hissy fit. I’ve never complained about you bringing up confirmatory bias, and in fact I’ve agreed with you every time you’ve brought it up. The person that doesn’t seem to like it is YOU. Stop blaming me for your own defensiveness.

Your aversion to gay marriage is obviously informed by your moral aversion to homosexuality. JUST LIKE MY PROMOTION OF GAY MARRIAGE IS OBVIOUSLY INFORMED BY MY BEING GAY. Do you get it yet? EVERYONE is subject to confirmatory bias. It shades the way we interpret and apply evidence, in support of what we already believe to be true. Nobody is immune to it, INCLUDING YOU AND ME.

You still haven’t addressed my point.

I didn’t ask if you thought children should be raised by gay couples.

I pointed out that gay couples CAN and DO raise children. Nothing you do will change that. The question pertains to what arrangement is in the best interest of those children, given that they will be raised by gay parents.

So answer the question already.

ARE ADOPTED CHILDREN BETTER OFF IF THEIR PARENTS (WHETHER GAY OR STRAIGHT) ARE MARRIED?

If you agree they’re better off if their parents are married, then you implicitly acknowledge the benefit to society provided by allowing gay couples to marry.

[quote]ZEB wrote:

[quote]Makavali wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.[/quote]

Oh I see you mean that you don’t understand that I was referring to divorce among those who are homosexual skyrocketing. Even though I explained that in the post that you already quoted.

Do you still not understand?

Here let me say it a different way. Long term homosexual unions are usually NOT monogamous. Oh I know forlife will say that he and his partner are exclusive. And for the sake of argument let’s say that he’s not lying this one time. But over all the statistics on homosexual monogamy are bleak. I’ve posted many stats on this on other threads. And I’d be glad to dig them up again if you like (in fact now that I think of it I will post some of those statistics just for the young men who might be reading this and have not yet formed an opinion - thanks for reminding me). Homosexual men are not meant for marriage, they just are not. And if a couple million of them are allowed to marry the divorce rate will sky rocket. Now you can follow that right? Subject: Gay men. Divorce rate for (come on you can do it) GAY MEN.

Okay, talk to you soon Mak.

Bye

[/quote]

So what you’re all saying is that gay people behave just like everyone else…

[quote]I pointed out that gay couples CAN and DO raise children. Nothing you do will change that. The question pertains to what arrangement is in the best interest of those children, given that they will be raised by gay parents.

So answer the question already.

ARE ADOPTED CHILDREN BETTER OFF IF THEIR PARENTS (WHETHER GAY OR STRAIGHT) ARE MARRIED? [/quote]

actually i’m not sure that adopted children better off if their parents instrumentalize them in order to advance a political agenda.

it’s probably not the way you meant it, but it sound like that.

in french we call that “politique du fait accompli”. do “accomplished fact policy” exist in english ?

[quote]Null wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:

[quote]Makavali wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Your reading comprehension has not improved in all the time you’ve been here at T Nation. I answered his concern DIRECTLY prior to signing off. Run along now Mak.[/quote]

Your ability to look back past one post has not improved in the time I’ve been here at T-Nation.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
If gay marriage is allowed in all 50 states the divorce rate will skyrocket. It has been demonstrated in multiple studies and survey’s that homosexual men are quite promiscuous. And even those who consider themselves in a long lasting relationship have two to three sexual encounters outside their partner on a yearly basis.[/quote]

Emphasis mine.[/quote]

Oh I see you mean that you don’t understand that I was referring to divorce among those who are homosexual skyrocketing. Even though I explained that in the post that you already quoted.

Do you still not understand?

Here let me say it a different way. Long term homosexual unions are usually NOT monogamous. Oh I know forlife will say that he and his partner are exclusive. And for the sake of argument let’s say that he’s not lying this one time. But over all the statistics on homosexual monogamy are bleak. I’ve posted many stats on this on other threads. And I’d be glad to dig them up again if you like (in fact now that I think of it I will post some of those statistics just for the young men who might be reading this and have not yet formed an opinion - thanks for reminding me). Homosexual men are not meant for marriage, they just are not. And if a couple million of them are allowed to marry the divorce rate will sky rocket. Now you can follow that right? Subject: Gay men. Divorce rate for (come on you can do it) GAY MEN.

Okay, talk to you soon Mak.

Bye

[/quote]

So what you’re all saying is that gay people behave just like everyone else…

[/quote]

Not at all. You obviously don’t know a thing about divorce rates relative to those who have been married only once. As far as homosexual men being monogamous it just doesn’t happen to any large degree. But you’d actually have to study these things as the MSLM will not tell us the truth. And if you took the time to read my posts BEFORE you posted your flippant answer you would have known all this.

T-Nation has no shortage of those with serious reading disabilities, so don’t feel too bad.

One study of homosexual men shows that more than 75% of homosexual men admitted to having sex with more than 100 different males in their lifetime: approximately 15% claimed to have had 100-249 sex partners, 17% claimed 250-499, 15% claimed 500-999 and 28% claimed more than 1,000 lifetime sexual partners. ( Bell AP, Weinberg MS. Homosexualities. New York 1978) .

And this is regardless of whether they were in a “committed” relationship. Quite the promiscuous bunch. But then again men are more promiscuous than women (as a rule) and since these men are looking for other men, apparently there is no one to say the word “no”.

Here’s another good one:

“In Holland, male homosexual relationships last, on average, 1.5 years, and gay men have an average of eight partners a year outside of their supposedly ?committed? relationships. (Xiridou M, et al. The contribution of steady and casual partnerships to the incidence of HIV infection among homosexual men in Amsterdam . AIDS. 2003; 17: 1029-38.) Gay men have sex with someone other than their primary partner in 66% of relationships within the first year, rising to 90% of relationships after five years . (Harry J. Gay Couples. New York . 1984)”

Ah…but who cares, might as well give them the right to marry what could it harm other than the institution of marriage?

And the character shines through!

“The majority of homosexual men (60%) engage in anal sex, frequently without condom and even, if they know that they are HIV positive. (Mercer CH et al. Increasing prevalence of male homosexual partnerships and practices in Britain 1990-2000. AIDS. 2004; 18: 1453-8) As a result, a large number of diseases are associated with anal intercourse, many of which are rare or even unknown in the heterosexual population such as: anal cancer, Chlamydia trachomatis, Cryptosporidium, Giardia lamblia, Herpes simplex virus, HIV, Human papilloma virus, Isospora belli, Microsporidia, Gonorrhoea, Syphilis, Hepatitis B and C and others.”