Kandarim wrote:it's kinda cute how you still think claeyt can be won over by logical arguments.
Does anyone believe this? I do not, I just like to argue.
However, I can say that I never thought that people should be allowed more than hunting and some hand guns until last night when I really really looked at the second amendment and put two and two together. I've known the intent of the second amendment since high school, but never actually realized what it means. Talking to Claeyt changed my mind.
Claeyt wrote:Yet Republicans still want to check your birth certificate before you can go to the bathroom where you feel comfortable.
Yeah, I agree with that one, as I clearly said
in the thread about it. This thread is not about bathrooms.
Claeyt wrote: As for workplace rules there is no national protections for workplace firings for sexual orientation... period. You can flat out be fired by your company if they find out you're gay, no questions asked in most states and none by the federal government. The Republicans have blocked this over and over.
Yeah, and I was laid off once when they realized they weren't comfortable with a woman. They don't have to say it, they made up an incredibly lame, but legal, excuse. However, many states are instituting protective laws, though I see your state isn't one of them. Maybe you should do something useful and write your representatives.
Claeyt wrote:You absolutely said that they shouldn't be proud of it or make it public. The opposite of not being proud is to be ashamed.
Your quote:
TotalyMeow wrote:What annoys me a bit is the insistence that being gay is something that needs to be publicized and paraded about and be PROUD OF. It's just a personality trait and it's kinda a private one.
Why should they have to be 'NOT' proud of it or make it private if they don't want to?
I said it's not an accomplishment to be proud of... it's just a trait. I'm not saying hide it and I'm certainly not saying be ashamed. I'm saying it's just a thing, a normal thing that is no big deal.
Claeyt wrote:No, you are wrong. Being gay is not like having red hair. Being gay is also a community. Being gay is more like being 'Irish'. Yes, you may have red hair but you also have 'Irish Bars' and 'St. Patty's Day Parades' and a special flag and other stuff that important to your community and when some religious nut job guns down a bar full of 'Irish People' and hunted the survivors because they're 'Irish' you feel it deep down and personally. And when you're friends with some 'Irish' people and have had some drinks and laughs with them in 'Irish Bars' on occasion you tell people that you sympathize with them and all 'Irish' people right now and think about your 'Irish' friends and how they feel.
And when some jackass says that your 'Irish' friends shouldn't be proud of being 'Irish' or says that they should keep their being 'Irish' private then you call them out for being anti-'Irish' in this especially bad time for the 'Irish'.
Irish is a culture. I suppose you can argue that being gay is both a genetic trait and a nascent culture... but I don't go around introducing myself as Irish and proselytizing about 'Irish Pride' and starting parades about it. Because that would be silly. I know some people probably do, and I think they too are silly. Now, I'm not saying that they can't be silly. Let them be silly. I reserve the right to find it annoying.
Claeyt wrote:K, then you're NOW okay with gay people publicizing, parading and NOT keeping it private, because just 2 pages ago you said the opposite.
No, 2 pages ago, you deliberately misunderstood me... again.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:I'm not Republican, actually, and I disagree with many things that both the Republicans and the Democrats have done.
Yet you're defending their gun law policy.
I agree with things that both the Republicans and Democrats have to say too. It annoys me to no end that we have only two major political parties and that they are divided the way they are. There is never anyone who agrees with me entirely that I can vote for. I have to usually just pick the one closest and hope for the best. For example, I disagree with the 'right to life' argument, though that is a big old topic all it's own. Point is, I'm smart enough to make my own decisions of what I agree or disagree with, I don't just vote a party line because my ancestors did or whatever.
Claeyt wrote:It does not say that at all. Only in the most loosely interpreted Republican wet dreams does this:
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
mean unregulated unlicensed unchecked gun sales, and ownership of modern weaponry and firepower undreamed of by the founding fathers.
The constitution does NOT tell us that completely unregulated gun ownership is a guaranteed right...
It says 'the right of the people to keep and bear arms
shall not be infringed'. And I know that many others have made this argument, but infringed means 'limit, undermine, or encroach on', which seems fairly clear. That gun ownership should not be limited. At all. Now, I'm not saying that I disagree with any and all limitations, but that's what the amendment says.
I know, people who want governmental regulations of gun ownership like to point out the beginning of the amendment, but look at it again. It's talking about a Militia. Not the militia, and not specifically guns. In this case, 'well regulated' means 'working properly, correctly maintained' and it's not saying 'government regulated militia'. It's not saying who does the regulating. It means we have the right to organize
ourselves to train and
regulate ourselves into a militia. That part of the amendment has nothing to do with governmental gun regulation.
Claeyt wrote:It happened like I explained but I guess someone's going to have to go dig it up. I'll leave that to you.
I bet you will. You're hoping everyone else will be too lazy to look it up. Except who cares? Everyone but you remembers accurately how it ended.

Claeyt wrote:No, as I've said in this thread many, many times now people who are going to commit a crime are going to find a way. Let's make it as hard for them to do that as possible by making it as hard as possible for them to get a gun. Fortunately that also means that it'll be harder for all of us to get a gun including all those abusive husbands who shoot their wives and kids, or those right wing nut jobs who want to take over nature centers.
You just argued one thing, and concluded the opposite. And how, really, is an abusive husband shooting his family any different from beating them to death? Your argument truly pisses me off. If someone who is going to commit a crime is going to find a way, trying to keep guns out of their hands is irrelevant.