Quote Originally Posted by Torog
Your wrong,it does cause harm to society in general,especially if aids cases rise exponentially,as well as STD's. Also,it destroys the meaning of marriage,which has always been defined as a union between a man and a woman. Homosexuality is counter to the laws of Nature,as well,and introduces confusion into the natural instincts to couple with the opposite sex for the purposes of procreation.

Marriage is the building block of any society,without it,societies will crumble because there ain't a natural pyramid of reproduction and a clear establishment of the roles that men and women have. The work force will not be renewed without a steady stream of reproduction,sexual deviancy is more of an indulgence,than a neccesity.
Speaking of wrong...

STDs, including AIDS, can just easily be spread between a man and a woman. The whole "only gay people get AIDS" thing is twisted logic that's been generally unaccepted since the mid-'80s. Even then it was only a notion advanced by the insanely naive (ie, Christian homophobes).

Science is a bitch, yanno?

Second, gay marriage doesn't destroy the meaning of marriage, much less the foundation of our society. If Jack and John get married, does that mean that Bob's marriage to Ethel becomes any less important? Do Bob and Ethel love each other less because of it?

Bob and Ethel are still going to get a divorce 50% of the time regardless of what gay people do. So who cares?

And lastly, I don't know about anywhere else, but here in America, marriage is not the building block of our society. That distiction goes to greed, lies and violence. I mean, look at our history and those values being supreme become quite evident.

At any rate, I'm not going to say anything else about this topic. I'm content with being correct on the issue; I don't need to convince anyone else anymore.

I'm tired of the right putting these mindless, unimportant issues out in the mainstream for people to bicker over while our country is being decimated by the worst president in history. That's where I, along with other progressives, should focus energy, the proverbial bigger fish to fry.