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Re: Obama Chooses Joe Biden as VP
Somehow McCain is creating this image that he is a down to earth working class citizen himself.
I'm not sure who's buying that. From everything I've read about him and from every time I've heard him speak, he seems to be one of the most out of touch people I've ever seen. |
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When asked how many houses he owned, he responded "I'll have to have my staff get back to you." When asked if he thought it was unfair that health insurance companies covered viagra and not birth control, he sat there with a very pained expression on his face for about 15 seconds, before saying, "I don't know enough about that to answer you" or something to that effect. McCain once stated that there had been great economic growth during the 8 years Bush has been in office, stating there had been "great progress economically over that period of time." I guess someone told him the mistake he made, because on the next day he turned around and said "American's are hurting badly, they're not better off than they were 8 years ago." I don't think he's in touch with regular people at all. And it's not just those things, it's the way he acts and the things he does. The other day I saw a video of him giving a speech somewhere, and he introduced one of his supporters to talk...some Puerto Rican rapper named Daddy Yankee. I mean, could that be any more obviously an attempt to get what he considers to be the "young and cool" crowd to like him? Maybe if Puerto Ricans could vote it would have been an alright thing to do. And now his VP pick. Mostly just a ploy to draw in women voters. You complain about Obama's lack of experience all the time, and here McCain chooses someone who has been a governer for two years, not even any experience with the federal government. If McCain dies (and he's getting kind of old, it could happen) would you want her to be our president? |
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As for him being rich, well, really his wife is rich and he went along for the ride. he enetred politics pretty much right out of the Hanoi Hilton. Quote:
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And I do take exception to the wording in McCain's second statement, as I think he pandered a bit. The economy isn't as bad as everyone would have you believe, and the BBC even reported that it went up over 3% last quarter. The Anmerican idea of success and "poverty" is so skewed by our affluence it's insane. It used to be success was a car in every driveway... now its a car in every three-car garage, a plasma screen TV in every room, and meanwhile the kids in these families are relying on grants and government loans to go to college. I grew up knowing what it was like to be in a successful and poor family. In the 80's my dad had a successful, but small, construction company. When the recession hit, he barely worked for almost 2 years and struggled just to keep his business afloat. I remember weeks of tuna casserole for lunch and dinner. I also remember steak and eggs for breakfast in years earlier and in the mid-late 90's and my dad being lucky enough in 2001 to have a contractual job with a private school when times got tough again. Times aren't that tough right now, we're just doing as well as we were before and we have to make adjustments. Its not the democrats or republicans who are responsible... its the economy... its done it before and MUCH worse and it will do it again. And the sky certainly isn't falling and no amount of raised taxes to the rich will help, it will only inspire the rich to hide their money in untaxable trusts and not invest it back in their businesses, which can only hurt. And in my experience, demonizing business and the rich never made any poor person any richer. Does it make them feel better? Sure, I guess and I find that sad. And it defeinitely gets people elected. Quote:
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As for her experience, I'll admit I am concerned about it, especially considering McCain's age and her lack of pretty much any international experience. She would not have been my first choice. I always liked the governor of Lousiana, Bobbty Jindal. |
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Sometimes I wish these threads wouldn't get so lengthy so quickly. It's so hard to jump in after a few pages and reply to everything. :( |
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And this isn't about him having money, it's about about being out of touch with reality because of it. @Prof S. your post didn't point out a single thing McCain has done or said to prove he -is- in touch with reality, you just pushed my points to the side as "quoting Obama's ads", and said McCain was admirable. I fail to see how him not being able to answer the simple question of "do you think this is right or wrong" makes him admirable. I think it makes him crooked. And yeah, I could quote some Obama ads, like the one that has John McCain saying "Our economy isn't headed to a recession", but I know -that- one was taken out of context, his house comment was not. And I'm sure McCain though "Well, if you taken into consideration that everything got REALLY bad after 9/11, then greatly improved, and if I word things just right, I can say that the economy improved." Seriously Professor, you're amazing with facts, but I think you're terrible at reading peoples intentions. And the difference? Obama can actually pull of being cool, and everyone knows who Ludacris is. No one knows who Daddy Yankee is. They may be doing the same thing, but McCain is obvious that he isn't really comfortable in the situation, and he's just doing it because some campaign manager said it was a good idea. |
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Opinions olike this only show complete bias. Its ok for one candidate and not for the other because you like one and not the other... good for you. :crazy: I wish both candidates wouldn't do it. Its insulting but unfortunately deemed necessary in today's political climate. |
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I wanted to edit out the insuting comment at the end of my post, but for some reason I can't edit it. I apolgize for the insulting tone, I just don't understand how you can overlook pandering by one candidate, yet condemn the other for the same thing.
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Prof S you're being overly defensive about Mccain in my opinion. You're a good example of someone who's completly sold, I doubt there's anything that'll change your mind in the next few months.
Like I said earlier in the thread though, I'm in a situation where I see very few people who actually support John Mccain. I've heard the speeches, and have been following Mccain for a long time... But honestly, I've probably watched it from biased sources with a biased mindset, but at this point I can't think of any good reason why I'd want to vote for Mccain. So to clarify your stance, why do you think Mccain should be our next president? If possible, leave comparisions to Obama out of it and mud slinging. Just look at Mccain for himself and what he is and what he stands for. Why would you vote for him? What does he bring to the table that you know from history would make him the most suitable for this job? I guess side questions could be be, are you a supporter of what bush has done in the last 8 years? If so, what would you say Mccain is carrying on from bush that you like? If not, what things do you think Mccain is going to change? I'm conserative, but I prefer not to define myself by a party. Since defining myself like that implies I would vote with them no matter what. |
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I like Mcain's foreign policy, I like that he is pro-life, an that's about it. I think he may want to do something about the economy, but doesn't know how (Maybe part of the Palin pick?) I think he may be changing his mind about drilling in the anwar (which I like alot) He is a bit to liberal for me, and I really don't like that he his for global warming, but he is waaaaaay better then Obama. Which is sad, because I don't really like Mcain, Obama just scares me. Especially with a democratic congress. I like some of what Bush has done, but he hasn't done enough. Hopefully Mcain will make the tax cuts permanent, start drilling anywhere we can, and ramp up alternitive energy (Specifically shale coal, clean coal, and nuclear) In addition to finishing the fight in Iraw, and presenting a strong country against Iran and Russia.
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I think I've been quite clear on why I'm a supporter of McCain through my openess when it comes to my stance on issues. 1) Iraq - We need to stay in until the job is done. Thats McCain's stance and thats been my stance from the beginning. If this were the only issue that I agreed with McCain on, I would be his supporter compared to Obama. 2) Economy - I have made it clear that I am a supply-sider since I came on these boards. Low taxes plus low spending. I know Obama has talked a big game when it comes to giving tax breaks to 95% of the economy, and just raising taxes on the rich, which is idiocy if you want ot build the American economy since they create the jobs, but he also is in favor of an obscene spending bill. Most economists and newspapers agree that his policies would only increase our national debt... or Obama would do what I expect and say "Whoops! Looks like you're going to have to pay more too!" His consistent voting against spending is one of the things I support the most about McCain, and separates him from the Republicans of the last 8 years and Bush especially who has had an open wallet policy, and not just for the war. To be honest,. war spending is a drop in the ocean when it comes to our debt. 3) Experience - He has proven to be one of the \most effective and respected Senators in American history. He has a wealth of experience in both the economy and foreign relations. He has seen it all before, from Vietnam, to the Cold War, Peristrioka(sp?), the Iraq War. He has the context to translate world and domestic events. 4) Independence - McCain does what he feels is right. Does that mean he's never guilty of pandering or standing behind his party at times? Of course not, but no one is. But his record of bucking his party's stances that he disagrees with is long and strong. People try and debunk this by saying that he voted with Bush 90% of the time... well Obama voted with Bush 60% of the time. If you don't know what those issues were, the number is meaningless. Political statistics exist to fool people, like polls, and thats why I rarely use them. 5) Diplomacy - When the Georgia invasion took place, McCain was the first to analyze and understand the nature of it immediately. Bush didn't, the media didn't, and Obama didn't. McCain did. Talk without the legitimate threat of action does nothing but empower nations that want to exert dominance, like Russia and Iran. I believe McCain understands this more than any other candidate today. For the record my perfect ticket is McCain/Powell, and I've made that clear FOR YEARS on this forum in presidential talk. To be honest, if at this point you don't unbderstand why I'm for McCain, you haven't listened to me, McCain or both of us. Its been quite clear for some time. Now add to the that the fact that he's running against Obama, who I view as a borderline marxist, and it's a no-brainer. |
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Almost forgot:
6) Health care - Single payer would be the biggest mistake in the history of American domestic policy. McCain's policy on this is a $5,000 tax credit for families to get their own health care, and be able to choose the kind they weant, which keeps competition in place, and competition increases the quality of the product. Compared to Obama's policy, which I believe he stated would only save the average family under $3,000 a year in health care costs and give them little to no choice. But If I'm wrong on the number, please let me know The choice remains with the individual, and philisophoically, that is very important to me. |
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As an aside saw Obama's speech yesterday and maybe it is I watch too much wrestling, but the whole thing had a WrestleMania feel to it.
Huge set piece. Outside. Titantron. Fireworks going off the top of the building. Confetti. MAybe he did smell What The Barack is cooking. |
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Obama needed to give a state of the union address, heavy on substance and not spectacle. He added a little more policy to his acceptance speech, but he should have done much more. I think he was overly negative about the plight of the American people as well. A lot of middle class won't want to hear how bad they're doing, especially if they're not doing all that bad. |
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I suppose it could be more effective for an independent, but I feel like McCain has lost his "elitism" angle anyway. In this race we have a black guy who was raised by a single mother in a middle class family who worked his way up to go to a good school. This same guy turned down a higher paying job to go into public service. And this guy is an elitist?! I'm sorry, I thought the gray haired white man who can't remember how many houses he had fits that bill. I'm very thankful the Obama campaign hit him hard on that as well. If there is one thing Republicans do better it is to attack worthless tidbits better, but I'm glad the Obama campaign latched on to the "7 houses gaffe" along with the "not rich until you make 5 million line." I don't know, I just see that whole ad campaign as grasping for straws from McCain, and I hope that independent minded voters aren't idiotic enough to fall for something that can be seen through so easily. |
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I never said the Obama elitism attacks are necessarily valid. I'm saying they are EFFECTIVE, and they are. McCain has been steadily gaining on Obama since they began, and the star-studded stadium spectacle that was his aceptance speech only fed into that image McCain and Co. are trying to create.
Also, the chanting of O-BAM-A in the ads is meant to play on the fanaticism that has followed Obama's campaign, with the fainting women and all, and create nervousness about it. Its been effective as well, especially since Obama is the more unknown out of the two candidates. McCain is McCain, and he has a long record that makes people more comfortable. Obama is still a relative unknown, and there are a lot of people that are uneasy voting for a political unknown for President. Like my wife, and she's a life long democrat but is voting McCain this year. And trust me, it has nothing to do with my influence. She never listens to me anyway... :D |
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I was just looking for a clear viewpoint from a Mccain supporter. :P I am conservitive by my own beliefs, but I do not claim a party since what it implies is that I'd support them no matter what. I will openly admit that I did vote for bush in 2004, and I feel like at the time I voted for him that he was misleading about what he hoped to do in his second term.. And the events of his second term showed that he was misleading in his first to. So as it stands now I'm strongly against Mr. President. I do have some comments though... For #1, your opinion on Iraq. In your personal opinion what would you define as the job being "finished" in Iraq? And do you honestly think we're going to reach this goal realistically with how we're handling the war out there now? In my opinion, I don't see a resolution there anymore, I just see Americans endlessly babysitting the people there and endlessly causing a distraction for the rest of the middle east. I think eventually we just need to pull out and let them handle their own social issues. I think in time if we were to ever reach this so called "peace" in Iraq, that the other countries around them will simply turn on them and start killing them off again anyway. As for the economy (only drawing references to Obama because you did), I don't think myself or my kids stand to benifit more from what Mccain wants to do. Obama seems to want big changes, but a lot of his changes are rooted in what America stood for in the first place. Being the true land of oppertunity, and being strongly in the interest of the middle/lower class people instead of trying to once again spread the gap between the middle and upper class. As for experience, there's no denying that he has a lot of experience, but judging off of all the slip ups he's done and all the flip flopping on forgien policy.. And given the fact that I've seen him outright paint false pictures, or show lack of understanding for what is going on overseas.. I don't think that his experience is helping him much. I think he has good advisors for speeches, but when it comes to live answers he sounds very clueless and I can't respect him at all for that. As for Mccain's "independence", I think that's proven to be a bad quality for him, because his independent stances (that I have seen) go against what most americans think/want. That reminds me a lot of some other bad president we recently, or maybe even still have. As for him voting with bush 90% of the time, that's not shocking to me, nor is Obama voting with him 60%. The way things stand, I did vote for bush to begin with for a reason, so I'm not completly against all his views either. Like I said, I am conservitive. But sadly in today's world, the bad is going to over shadow the good. Mccain openly supports bush on things I strongly disagree with, which is bad. In fact, hearing obama voted with him 60% of the time shows that Obama is reasonable and knowing that makes me more comfortable with my decision as it stands now. |
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Okay, staying in Iraq until "the job is done" is rediculous. Mcain has said we should stay in Iraq 100 years if we have to. He backs this statement up by referring to the fact that we still have troops in Germany and Japan after world war II. WAKE UP PEOPLE, Germany and Japan arent Muslim countries! Thats the difference! As long as we have troops in Iraq, there will be terrorists plotting to kill americans. It really is that simple. Pull out of Iraq = stops terrorism.
And off shore drilling isnt a short term answer, and it isnt even a long term answer. Its a lose - lose situation. People act like off shore drilling will all of a sudden bring our gas prices down. Not going to happen. At the rates we are currently consuming, the worlds oil reserves will be completley gone in 50 years. Thats a scary though to me, we need to end our dependence on all oil, not drill ourselves out of the problem. We cant just drill more and expect this problem to go away forever. |
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1) After reading this post, you're not a conservative. If you believe that anything that Obama says about the economy and taxes reflects what this country was founded on, your confusing the constitution with the communist manifesto. He is a redistribition of wealth, new deal liberal, and thats NOTHING new, just a reflection of past failed policies. 2) My policies has been obvious since I joined this forum, and most of them are reflected in McCain's policies. You should KNOW why I'm for McCain. There's no need for me to repeat it yet again. If I'm concentrating more on Obama its because: a) There are a lot more vocal liberals on this forum than conservatives, so the topic has been Obama more than not. Plus the Dem convention just took place. Of course Obama will be the topic of conversation. b) Obama is the unknown, not McCain. Plus, he stands for EVERYTHING I'm against and I believe an Obama presidency combined with a Pelosi and Reed controlled congress could transform out nation into something it was never intended to be, and never should be. 3) You pick on me for not being clear enough on why I support McCain... but where is your criticism of the Obama supportrers who spend most of their time criticizing the Republicans and voting more against Bush than anything else? Its non-existant. 4) In a two party system, the opposition is just as important as the person running. Your voting not just for something you believe in, but against something you DON'T. I find your entire critique of my posiiton to be disingenuopus at best, and while you say you're a conservative, I don;t see any conservatove beliefs reflective in your views. Your support of Obama defies all conservative belief. I declare shenanigans. |
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And simply ANNOUNCING we have opened up areas to drilling will plummet gas prices. When Bush annouced the removal of the presidential ban, gas started dropping, just because global speculation got nervous. Its basic economics. |
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Obama only appeals to me because I think that Bush did not do a good job. Even though Bush did bad I gave him a second chance because of social issues I agree with him on, and because I felt he'd handle the war better. I didn't know Bush couldn't make any realistic judgement on Iraq, and what really threw me off was how he is so much for linking Mexico, Canada, and the US more. Quote:
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But on the flip side, I'm not a millionaire. I'd consider myself in the lower to middle class tops as far as finances go, and I do support changes that I feel stand to benifit my group the most. From how I was raised, I had no choice but to work right out of HS, though I did go to college at the same time it didn't progress as easilly as I believe it should have. I also believe that supporting the American people and giving them a good way of life is equally important as fighting to defend it. Not that I'm complaining about how we live now, but I do think that progress can be made. And, while I said before that I'm all for being proactive on wars and squashing what could be considered threats, I feel that the war in Iraq itself started off of a false premise. And because of how the people will not stop fighting its obvious that Iraq never wanted our help. So in this case of war, I think we should back out of it in a timely manner, our presence there is causing more of a problem then its helping as far as gaining a resolution over there. And I guess to further my views on war, I do not believe in political wars. I don't believe in wars aimed at one person or group, instead it should be focused on both the group and the people who support the group. If you're unwilling to kill the supporters, then there's no reason to fight because if they didn't want their leader bad enough they could simply have their own civil war and work out their own issues. There that's my personal stance on politics, though a very dumbed down version without many examples.. But I'm not trying to write a term paper for the forums though. :P And as you may have noticed, my stance doesn't go in line with Mccain or Obama 100%, nor does it go alone with Democrats or Republicans 100%. The reason I'm voting for Obama right now, is because I belive he's is more capible of making the right decisions for the issues I feel are affecting me right now. And I'm well aware of what things I may regret. |
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I don't understand how you can be against abortion and vote for Obama. I don't understand how you can be a christian and vote for Obama. He is the most pro-abortion senator ever. Economic issues notwithstanding.
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If we somehow meet this unrealistic goal of the people there stopping their hate for americans and accepting a government we set in place there, Iraq is just going to turn into the new isreal and everyone is going to want to break in and kill them anyway. I think the only way the problem will reach a real resolution is if THEY resove it themselves among their own people, just like we resolved our issues ourselves after fighting off the "opressor". And to be honest, my old opinion was like yours, that we could just make a government there and leave, But its NOT going to work. If it was going to work, and the people were going to accept it, then it'd already been done. But they will not accept Americans changing them. |
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And last I checked both Mccain and Obama are christians. |
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See I am going to have to disagree there, abortion is a big enough issue for me that I will not vote for anyone that is for it. Don't want to derail this thread into an abortion debate though (or a religious one).
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I would love to see an athiest win. It will never happen because there are way too many right wing nut job conservatives. I cant wait for Religulous to come out. |
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As for voting based off of open promotion of one's religion, that was one of the big things that sold me for Bush. In the end, once he got back in office he stopped sounding like a chritian and I think just went back to his true self. All Bush did by doing that before, is made me turn religion into a non factor when it comes to my vote. The only way I'd accept it as a factor again is someone who was running did openly deny christ and said they are an athiest. In the case of this year, I'm not gonna vote for mccain because he's "more openly christian" then Obama. Because the truth is that when they're open about any opinion like that, they're doing it for votes. |
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McCain has actually been historically very reluctant to talk about his religion.
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Game, I can see our differences in conservative belief then, and you're pretty much the exact opposite of me.
I'm very fiscally conservative and socially moderate, and you flip that, but please don;t state that when it comes to the economy Obama reflects a conservative nature. Our founders believed in individuals, not a collectivist government. Personally, I don't believe the US government has much of anything to do with social issues. That is for the society that the goevrnment protects to decide, at leat to a point. My social issues: 1) Abortion - No abortions after the 4th month. If the mother's life is in jeopardy after that time, then the doctor decides which is more viable if a coice must be made (which will likely be the mother). The point is, once a life is declared a life, they are all equal. Life is life. 2) Stem-Cell Research - I love it, just not from embyos. All the promising advances in this research come from areas other than embryonic stem cells, such as umbillical (sp?) cord stem cells. This is an abortion fight by proxy, and wile I'm moderate on abortion, the idea of creating the first steps of life for the intention of destroying it kind of sickens me. 3) Gay Marriage - If gay marriage threatens hetrero marriage, then marriage is a very weak institution. The truth is the anti-gay marriage ban is just a way to socially separate gays from straights. Its silly this is such a huge issue in politics. 4) Immigration - Forget the illegal immigrants, and go after the employers... HARD. If no one was hiring illegals, there wouldn't be so many here because there would be no reason for them to cross over. Until there is a solution that centers on businesses hiring the illegals, all this talk is nothing but lip service. |
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I suspect with minimal research you would find that many historical figures deemed themselves 'doubters' of religion. |
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That said...I LOVEEEE alternative fuel. I'm on board, have been for the past 10 years. Yeah, in 4th or 5th fucking grade we did a project on how plastic bags use petrolium and how it increases oil prices and we need to find alternate fuel sources. Here's some fucking beef: nuclear power. The biggest problem with electric cars is.... Tada! Electricity comes from using OIL! Electricity also can come from using nuclear power....as for excess nuclear waste? Me, personally, I think we should just blast the stuff into outer space but I'm sure there is a reason we have not done so yet. I'm not so sure hydrogen or ethanol are good long-term solutions. And, right now solar cells suck ass sooo..... Personally, on the subject of energy, I'd lean towards the guy who had the most money on nuclear power. And on finding a way to lean less of foreign oil. |
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As for my stance as being pro life, to me its just common sense. I don't believe people should have the right to kill their own children. Of course there are special circumstances that I can sympathise with, but unless the child poses a health threat to the parent, or has no chance of coming out medically sound, then I'm against it. My question would be, where do you find the contradiction in the one liner you quoted? They're completly different subjects. |
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The truth of the matter is embryonic stem-cell research has no real future. If it did, private money would be in it, and there is none. Public money should follow private, as that is where the true promise lies... investing in stem-cell research that shows promise and not just political bluster. |
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You are still entitled to your belief that homosexual marriage is a "perversion of what it originally means." However, defining it as a "union" or a "marriage" is simply semantics, and in this golden day of age I personally feel we should treat everyone on common, equal terms. To get philosophical, "let he who is without sin cast the first stone." :p Quote:
Just so you know, it is fairly accepted amongst the scientific community that homosexuality is a biological predisposition (a completely natural one) that is either the result of literally, a "gay-gene," or some psychological predisposition in the developmental years. I'd love to start a side-thread and argue morals, especially morals pertaining to biological occurrences. Here's some light reading to consider, just some food-for-thought: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosexuality_in_animals Quote:
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Ethanol doesn't work, it is far to expenise (the only thing keeping the price low is government subsidaries) and not very effecient, since the tractors that harvest the corn run on deisal fuel (which comes from oil!) not to mention it doesn't run nearly as nice as real fuel. And of course it raises the price of corn alot, which is good for farmers, not so good for people who actually like eating corn. Which is like, Mexico.
Go go nuclear power! Seriously, why haven't we done this yet? edit* Wow this thread had like 5 posts in the 4 minutes it took me to write my post lol. Love the wikipedia article to support your stance :lol:. Because we all know wikipedia is such a great source. Alot of animals are cannibalistic too, should we eat eachother now? I didn't read it by the way, just assuming from the title. Don't really care what gays do, just as long as they don't try to make me a supporter. Gay rights is an odd issue, because while I am against it itself, I am definetly for people doing what they want, and government not bothering us, so I am not sure. Right, because the london bombings, warfare in Iraq and September 11th are "fear-mongering" I hope you just don't realize what you just implied. |
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You're preaching to the choir man, I <3 nuclear power. |
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