Darth J wrote:In other words,
people in another country (your article is about the United States)
who are not you
freely choosing to marry another person
who is not you
is not, in fact, imposing anything on you.[/b]
The subject of that sentence is a gerund: "freely choosing to marry another person."
The predicate is: "is not imposing anything on you."
The rest consists of dependent clauses.
How about?: "How does legal gay marriage in another country impose anything on you?"
But I understand you're a lawyer.
Two women are on a transcontinental balloon voyage. Their craft is engulfed in fog, their compass gone awry. Afraid of landing in the ocean, they drift for days. Suddenly, the clouds part to show a sunlit meadow below. As they descend, they see a man walking his dog.
One of the flyers yells to the figure far below, "Where are we?"
The man yells back, "About a half mile from town."
Once again, the balloonists are engulfed in the mist. One flyer says to the other, "He must have been a lawyer."
The other says, "A lawyer! How do you know that?"
The first says, "That’s easy. The information he gave us was accurate, concise, and entirely irrelevant."
Q: If you are stranded on a desert island with Adolf Hitler, Atilla the Hun, and a lawyer, and you have a gun with only two bullets, what do you do?
A: Shoot the lawyer twice.
Darth J wrote:But what a shocking twist, huh? Ray cannot respond when his premises are not accepted at face value, so he starts making it about a person instead of the issue he raised. I cannot imagine that anyone could have predicted such a turn of events.
I'll be back later when you get off your hissy fit.