maklelan wrote:I'm well aware of the complexities of this and related situations. Keep in mind I did express my opposition to Prop 8 over on the MAD board and was called an apostate for it by several posters over there. I also criticized the reactions from many in the gay community to the vote, as well as those who question the Church's reasoning for their support of Prop 8. I understand the reductive perspective that is so common among the loudest voices in debates like these, and I don't think I can honestly be accused of being one of them. My assessment of this particular issue, however, is unrelated to my overall perspective of the conflict between gays and the Church. The facts of the case, I believe, very clearly undermine any claim to altruism and innocence on the part of the gay couple.
I understand that you originally voiced opposition to Prop 8, but my recollection is that after the vote, you changed your view and supported it due to the post-election protests. Do I have that incorrect? (I may be thinking of other post-ers).
I noted that the LDS church (among others) was within their
legal right to try to persuade it's citizens to participate in the democratic process, even if I believe the position it took in this case was
constitutionally and morally wrong. The fact that I don't believe it should have ever been allowed to be put on the ballot was ultimately not due to the judgement of the LDS church, despite the participation of many of it's adherents to get it there.
I, too, criticized the scattered and few acts of vandalism committed against the LDS church in the wake of Prop 8's passage. I did and do support the right of freedom of speech of citizens to peaceably assemble and protest what they perceive to be unjust voting to remove the previously recognized civil rights of a minority group.
I haven't accused you of being one of the "reductionist voices" in this debate--but I do take exception to your claim that the LDS church "isn't antagonistic" towards gays and lesbians. In my post, I wasn't commenting, specifically, about this couple during the Plaza incident, merely that particular comment.
I am personally not involved in any of that, and I did not support Prop 8, but I do stand up for the Church's right to react to the situation according to their beliefs, and all they have been doing is reacting to the actions of others.
Again, my post was not an accusation of you as a participant in the anti-gay political process, but a comment on what appeared to me to be an objection on your part to the characterization that the LDS church is, in fact, "antagonistic" towards gays and lesbians. Prop 8 is just one incident in a long history of what I believe is highly "antagonistic" behavior by both the institutional church and many of it's members.
I have taken no actions to impede anyone in any capacity in their life, and I am not responsible for the belief that homosexual relationships are contrary to God's will. I will not compromise my beliefs because others disagree, but the opposition to gay marriage stems primarily, whether others want to believe it or not, from deep concerns the church has over the future legal implications of the practice. I'm not responsible for those concerns either, but I can point to a large group of people who are.
Sometimes, all that evil needs to prevail is for good men to do nothing.
You are, of course, well within your rights and probably your capabilities to not do anything--there are many, many issues which I am not involved in due to my own limitations or choice. But claiming that the church and those members that DID participate in the process were not "antagonistic" is, in my view, indicative of an out-of-touch reality about the actual actions of the LDS community.
I don't ask you to compromise your beliefs--but I would hope that each of us not kid ourselves about or try to sugar-coat the reality of the consequences of our beliefs.
I honestly don't believe the church's anti-gay actions are motivated by concern about future legal implications--if so, they disregard the enormous wealth of information that many legal scholars have put forth explaining that gay marriage would not infringe upon the constitutionally-protected freedoms of religion (in the same way that civil mixed-religion marriages do not, or in the same way that civil interracial marriages do not, among many other examples). If your claim that the church was motivated by concerns about legal implications for religious groups, I believe the church would jump at the opportunity to pass equality-based legislation that provides specific (though redundant) verbage protecting religious clergy and organizations from lawsuits based on their refusal to participate in any gay marriages.
I disagree that this comes down to something so petty as spite or simple prejudice.
I don't believe that I said anything that indicates that "this comes down to something so petty as spite or simple prejudice."
Even if that were the case, prejudice is rarely "simple."
If you mean to allude to this Plaza situation then I wholeheartedly disagree. This has nothing whatsoever to blocked civil liberties. If you refer to other visible actions please let me know which ones.
No, my previous post (which you were responding to) was not referring to anything related to the Plaza incident.
I think it would be hard to imagine a perfectly analogous situation, but I agree that there would be animosity. Many Mormons would also misinterpret the intentions of whatever opposition might be imagined, but I believe there would always be cooler heads in the administration that would be able to put thing in perspective. At the same time, irrespective of whatever success such hypothetical rights-suppression might have, church leadership would vehemently oppose degradation of opposing worldviews and not support discord and unruly protests.
I am glad that you can see that "there would be animosity," in such a scenario.
Can you admit that LGBT individuals, families, and supporters understantably DO view the LDS church's actions and the actions of it's members as "antagonistic" towards gays and lesbians?
I am not so sure that LDS leaders would "not support dischord"... After all, the church makes no apologies that it will clash with more liberal worldviews. Individual members often recall the scripture in which Christ teaches that he did not come to send peace, but the sword, and to divide families in his cause of truth.
I don't know any pro-gay organizations that encourage "unruly" protests--on the contrary, many that I read (even in the wake of Prop 8) encouraged LGBT supporters to temper their understandable anger with restraint, and respond peacefully and with the purpose of encouraging respect. Can you point to any gay-supportive organizations that suggested otherwise...?
Well then hopefully it's some consolation that I don't oppose gay marriage. What I oppose is the misrepresentation of the church and its motivations.
I commend you for your stance in support of gay marriage. Again, my recollection was that in the wake of Prop 8, you'd changed your views, suggesting that the violent reactions of some individuals justified the church's support of the removal of LGBT couples' right to civil marriage.
I believe I also oppose misrepresentation of anyone (the LDS church, or the gay community), and their motivations.
Sadly, I think this is largely true. My FHE with those Soulforce Equality Riders was still educational and enjoyable, and everyone who was there was edified by the experience. We didn't become best friends, but we all learned that there are rational minds on both sides of the isle who could disagree but still respect and appreciate each other. I know i respect and appreciate your perspective, Darin, and I hope you don't totally disagree if I say I think you respect and at least partially respect mine.
I, too, believe that "rational minds on both sides of this issue can disagree, but still respect and appreciate each other." I also believe that even "rational minds" can occasionally be motivated by irrationality, even as they do so in a respectful manner. Rarely are people wholely "rational" or "irrational." And I'd even suggest that people are rarely wholely "respectful" or "disrespectful"--rather, such exist on opposite ends of a sliding spectrum, and where an individual falls on any given day could depend on a whole host of other issues, such as external events, personal history, individual provocations, fatigue, emotional and physical health, etc.
I respect your approach,
Makelan. As I said, previously, my interactions with you have reflected, from my perspective, an attempt to approach the issue in a thoughful and constructive way, which I definately do respect.
My view,
Darin
"Have compassion for everyone you meet even if they don't want it. What seems conceit, bad manners, or cynicism is always a sign of things no ears have heard, no eyes have seen. You do not know what wars are going on down there where the spirit meets the bone."--Miller Williams