ArrantPariah wrote:
AngelRho wrote:
if homosexuality were somehow criminalized again. Don't ask me how that could happen, because I have no idea…
Since it was the Supreme Court that decriminalized homosexuality, a constitutional amendment would be required to undo it. Unless the next president uses a pledge on this question to stack the Supreme Court.
Taking away the right to privacy would be a bad precedent, though, even for heterosexuals.
Don't forget, though, that laws are only going to be as powerful as our ability to enforce them. Let's say I run a red light or a stop sign. More likely than not I can do it any time without getting caught. No government agency (yet) is watching my every move to make sure my vehicle comes to a complete stop at every red light or stop sign. A police officer would have to be at the same intersection at the same time to catch me red-handed or I'd have to cause a wreck before anybody would even pay attention.
Similarly, nobody is going to drop in on your bedroom to monitor your sexual behavior. It would be a "probably cause" issue for anyone to attempt that, or it would have to be something that would cause a real problem. I'm barred by a certain interpretation of the TOS from suggesting that it does, so I'm not going to go into whether it is a problem or not; however, I will point to other activities that remain criminalized. A drug dealer, for instance, can't make the defense that he was selling dope from the privacy of his personal residence. If we want to look at existing, acknowledged sex crimes as other examples, there's rape and sex trafficking. Someone who commits rape or has sex with a sex slave can't make the defense that his privacy was violated if he was reported or caught in the act. IF homosexual acts were to be recriminalized, and ONLY IF people in a free society (I'm not saying that they do) somehow came to see it as a problem, the same principle would apply. Privacy is only going to extend so far as what the public says it should. It doesn't extend to all situations at all times, so it would be false to assert that we enjoy a right to privacy in any absolute sense.
I just had a thought…why are we even discussing this???
Quote:
The following activities are unacceptable on WrongPlanet:
1. Posting offensive language...
Unacceptable content includes...homophobic language; behavior intended to provoke...other members;
The OP is raising the issue of gay marriage and Christian approval, presumably with full knowledge of Biblical teaching on the subject. If a Christian here were to object on religious grounds, as you can see in the chart originally posted that Evangelical Christians have been slow to warm up to the idea, that Christian would be prevented from voicing any such objections because such an objection would constitute "homophobic language."
I call shens. PLEASE someone lock this thread!! !