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  4. 12 Reasons Same-Sex Marriage will Ruin Society

12 Reasons Same-Sex Marriage will Ruin Society

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  • I Ian Darling

    http://www.answersingenesis.org[^] Nice website, BTW - I couldn't actually find (in a fairly quick 10 minute look through, admittedly) anything which debunked or even discussed the science and evidence which supported evolution - all I could find was a series of articles describing why Christians should believe in Biblical inerrancy and Y-E Creationism (using what appeared to be little but biblical references and quotes from Christian speakers - which hardly counts as scientific evidence, does it?) If it's just a case that I've missed something, then please would you mind providing links directly to the relevant articles for my perusal? Oh, and I might point out the fact and science of biological evolution is somewhat distinct from astrophysics and the origins of the universe, and having a big-bang or solid-state theory of universal creation doesn't affect the ability of life to evolve on a planet a few billion years later on (unless you have a reference that says differently? Please tell)


    Ian Darling "The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell

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    John Fisher
    wrote on last edited by
    #48

    Ah! First time I've been nabbed by the clickety police. :-O This[^] provides a summary of a few evidences for a young earth. And the Q&A area[^] has most of the scientific articles (as well as some others). This site has a lot of references to other locations, some of which may be more in the style you were looking for. A lot of the information isn't very deep, but there is some in there. (They also publish a "Technical Journal" that is very hard for non-scientists to understand, and serves mostly as a peer-review journal.) John
    "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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    • I Ian Darling

      John Fisher wrote: _Your statement is also out of line with the simple existence of people like this: http://id-www.ucsb.edu/fscf/READING/BeDBB.html\[^\]_ Sorry, but Behe (at least, as far as I, a nominally educated layman in this can tell), has been thoroughly debunked too: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/behe.html[^] THe IDist agenda is just creationism in another form. I suppose you have heard of the "Wedge" Strategy.


      Ian Darling "The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell

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      John Fisher
      wrote on last edited by
      #49

      The link you provided certainly is against Behe's book, but I don't see anything that thoroughly debunked it. The links I looked at appeared to each focus one specific argument (or a small subset) of his book rather than the whole of it. Separating things and causing confusion is a common tactic (which I believe you called the "Wedge" strategy :)). BTW, I don't know whether ID people are part of an under-cover creationist agenda, but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. John
      "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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      • I Ian Darling

        John Fisher wrote: _Your statement is also out of line with the simple existence of people like this: http://id-www.ucsb.edu/fscf/READING/BeDBB.html\[^\]_ Sorry, but Behe (at least, as far as I, a nominally educated layman in this can tell), has been thoroughly debunked too: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/behe.html[^] THe IDist agenda is just creationism in another form. I suppose you have heard of the "Wedge" Strategy.


        Ian Darling "The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell

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        Wjousts
        wrote on last edited by
        #50

        Thanks for saving me the trouble of replying. Here's another link Behe's Empty Box[^]

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        • W Wjousts

          Here's some...I don't have time to find the rest right now Daniel 4:7-8, "I saw a tree of great height at the center of the world. It was large and strong, with its top touching the heavens, and it could be seen from the ends of the earth." The earth would have to be flat otherwise people of the other side of a spherical earth wouldn't be able to see it. Also Matthew 4:8 claims there is a mountaintop from which one can see “all the kingdoms of the world” (impossible on a round world) The value of pi is implied Kings 7:23 and Chronicles 4:2

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          John Fisher
          wrote on last edited by
          #51

          Daniel 4:7-8 is a prophecy, and is using a figure of speech that is quite easy for people to understand. This is not a scientific statement about the shape of the earth, but is everyday language being used to describe the size of a tree. People today still use "the ends of the earth", but there is no such thing, since the earth is a sphere. 1Kings 7:23 gives measurements of an object. Just as every measurement you're likely to run into today, they aren't completely precise. When you measure the rim of your cup, are you measuring the outside or the inside? How thick is the cup at the point of measurement? Saying that these verses teach an incorrect value of pi is a real stretch. The basic principle of any writing to be understood is to read it at face value. If the text indicates it is allegorical, then it is. If the text indicates it is a scientific statement of fact, then read it that way. If the text is using figurative language to describe something, treat it that way. If the text is giving a general description of sizes and shapes, don't assume it's accurate down to the nano-meter. (Etc.) John
          "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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          • J John Fisher

            The link you provided certainly is against Behe's book, but I don't see anything that thoroughly debunked it. The links I looked at appeared to each focus one specific argument (or a small subset) of his book rather than the whole of it. Separating things and causing confusion is a common tactic (which I believe you called the "Wedge" strategy :)). BTW, I don't know whether ID people are part of an under-cover creationist agenda, but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. John
            "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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            Wjousts
            wrote on last edited by
            #52

            John Fisher wrote: but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. :laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh: That's the funniest thing I've heard in ages. You really believe that don't you? Despite the total lack of "evidence", despite the total lack of legitimate qualification of these quacks and despite the total lack of peer-reviewed scientific papers.

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            • J John Fisher

              Daniel 4:7-8 is a prophecy, and is using a figure of speech that is quite easy for people to understand. This is not a scientific statement about the shape of the earth, but is everyday language being used to describe the size of a tree. People today still use "the ends of the earth", but there is no such thing, since the earth is a sphere. 1Kings 7:23 gives measurements of an object. Just as every measurement you're likely to run into today, they aren't completely precise. When you measure the rim of your cup, are you measuring the outside or the inside? How thick is the cup at the point of measurement? Saying that these verses teach an incorrect value of pi is a real stretch. The basic principle of any writing to be understood is to read it at face value. If the text indicates it is allegorical, then it is. If the text indicates it is a scientific statement of fact, then read it that way. If the text is using figurative language to describe something, treat it that way. If the text is giving a general description of sizes and shapes, don't assume it's accurate down to the nano-meter. (Etc.) John
              "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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              Wjousts
              wrote on last edited by
              #53

              John Fisher wrote: Daniel 4:7-8 is a prophecy, and is using a figure of speech that is quite easy for people to understand. This is not a scientific statement about the shape of the earth, but is everyday language being used to describe the size of a tree. People today still use "the ends of the earth", but there is no such thing, since the earth is a sphere. Well I glad for you that you have the supreme wisdom to tell what parts of the infallible word of god really are supposed to be taken seriously and which are not. You must be extremely wise, wise enough to know the meaning of gods words when she's being delibrately vague. Good job. Perhaps the hating gays part was just a figure of speech? John Fisher wrote: 1Kings 7:23 gives measurements of an object. Just as every measurement you're likely to run into today, they aren't completely precise. So you are telling me that the infallible word of god is only approximate????? Holy crap! What else was only approximate? Perhaps that bit about how evil gays are? :laugh::laugh:

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              • W Wjousts

                John Fisher wrote: but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. :laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh: That's the funniest thing I've heard in ages. You really believe that don't you? Despite the total lack of "evidence", despite the total lack of legitimate qualification of these quacks and despite the total lack of peer-reviewed scientific papers.

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                John Fisher
                wrote on last edited by
                #54

                It's extremely difficult for me not to be hurt or angry at your comments. You continue to accuse me of ignorance and unfounded belief. Have you ever seriously considered what the opposition proposes? Have you ever attempted to understand the entire framework, since that is the only way to verify its claims (the same as any scientific theory)? I could make claims that you believe in unfounded, ingorant, misguided, deceptive men's ideas too. But, would that convince you of anything other than that I'm mean-spirited? Bible-believing Creationists are primarily creationist because of belief in the Bible. (Other people are creationists, too though.) The Bible also happens to teach that lying is sin. So, the people who truly believe both (the ones I admire most) wouldn't be intentionally deceptive. No matter what you might think. You also keep saying that there is a "total lack of evidence" for the creationist position. This is patently absurd. Evidence is evidence. Interpretation within a framework is what matters in this sort of discussion. Water is evidence, layers of rock are evidence. Life is evidence. Both sides have the same evidence. Take the evidence and prove that the framework can't adequately explain it -- that's how a debate like this should go. I would like to think that our discussion is fruitful, but another similar response will neccessitate that I stop responding to your posts for now. John
                "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                • W Wjousts

                  John Fisher wrote: Daniel 4:7-8 is a prophecy, and is using a figure of speech that is quite easy for people to understand. This is not a scientific statement about the shape of the earth, but is everyday language being used to describe the size of a tree. People today still use "the ends of the earth", but there is no such thing, since the earth is a sphere. Well I glad for you that you have the supreme wisdom to tell what parts of the infallible word of god really are supposed to be taken seriously and which are not. You must be extremely wise, wise enough to know the meaning of gods words when she's being delibrately vague. Good job. Perhaps the hating gays part was just a figure of speech? John Fisher wrote: 1Kings 7:23 gives measurements of an object. Just as every measurement you're likely to run into today, they aren't completely precise. So you are telling me that the infallible word of god is only approximate????? Holy crap! What else was only approximate? Perhaps that bit about how evil gays are? :laugh::laugh:

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                  John Fisher
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #55

                  It appears that you have ignored the part of my post which would answer the question you just raised, so I'll post it again. The basic principle of any writing to be understood is to read it at face value. If the text indicates it is allegorical, then it is. If the text indicates it is a scientific statement of fact, then read it that way. If the text is using figurative language to describe something, treat it that way. If the text is giving a general description of sizes and shapes, don't assume it's accurate down to the nano-meter. (Etc.) John
                  "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                  • J John Fisher

                    Ah! First time I've been nabbed by the clickety police. :-O This[^] provides a summary of a few evidences for a young earth. And the Q&A area[^] has most of the scientific articles (as well as some others). This site has a lot of references to other locations, some of which may be more in the style you were looking for. A lot of the information isn't very deep, but there is some in there. (They also publish a "Technical Journal" that is very hard for non-scientists to understand, and serves mostly as a peer-review journal.) John
                    "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                    Wjousts
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #56

                    What a load of junk, just one example: 10 Dangers of theistic evolution Werner Gitt First published in: Creation Ex Nihilo 17(4):49–51, September–November 1995 The atheistic formula for evolution is: Evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods. In the theistic evolutionary view, God is added: Theistic evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods + God. In this system God is not the omnipotent Lord of all things, whose Word has to be taken seriously by all men, but He is integrated into the evolutionary philosophy. This leads to 10 dangers for Christians. So theistic evolution can exist exactly because it challenges their beliefs. What the hell kind of arguement is that? What you say can't be true because it means something I say will have to change? They should try that as a defense in court rooms: "Your honor, I suggest the last witness' testimony be rejected because it makes my client look guilty." That site is so full of nonsense it's laughable.

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                    • W Wjousts

                      What a load of junk, just one example: 10 Dangers of theistic evolution Werner Gitt First published in: Creation Ex Nihilo 17(4):49–51, September–November 1995 The atheistic formula for evolution is: Evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods. In the theistic evolutionary view, God is added: Theistic evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods + God. In this system God is not the omnipotent Lord of all things, whose Word has to be taken seriously by all men, but He is integrated into the evolutionary philosophy. This leads to 10 dangers for Christians. So theistic evolution can exist exactly because it challenges their beliefs. What the hell kind of arguement is that? What you say can't be true because it means something I say will have to change? They should try that as a defense in court rooms: "Your honor, I suggest the last witness' testimony be rejected because it makes my client look guilty." That site is so full of nonsense it's laughable.

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                      John Fisher
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #57

                      Haven't you understood any of this? We speak from the basis of one framework of understanding the world (creationism). You speak with a completely different framework in mind (evolutionism). The frameworks are very different, so of course things will initially sound ridiculous. However, the question isn't whether one framework makes sense when analyzed from the perspective of the other. The question is which framework has the fewest problems with the available evidence? Being more familiar with one side and completely unfamiliar with the other puts you in a bad position to be making judgments like this. John
                      "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                      • J John Fisher

                        Ah! First time I've been nabbed by the clickety police. :-O This[^] provides a summary of a few evidences for a young earth. And the Q&A area[^] has most of the scientific articles (as well as some others). This site has a lot of references to other locations, some of which may be more in the style you were looking for. A lot of the information isn't very deep, but there is some in there. (They also publish a "Technical Journal" that is very hard for non-scientists to understand, and serves mostly as a peer-review journal.) John
                        "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                        Ian Darling
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #58

                        John Fisher wrote: This[^] provides a summary of a few evidences for a young earth. Well (and I apologise for this, as it's getting late in the UK so I'm cutting this short for now, although I will bookmark that link for further examination later on), looking for resources discussing the first problem on that list (The so called "winding up dilemma"), I cannot find any reference to this dilemma outside creationist literature on googles web search. Google groups is much more enlightening on the subject - this list has been thrown around somewhat, it seems. Most of the refutations there are somewhat short, so I'm not going to claim that it's a bunk claim outright, but the lack of scientific documents covering this dilemma certainly makes the claim look dubious. The other points also appear to have dubious origins or suffer from a lack of data, where later observations obselete the points. The talk.origins newsgroup appears to have several lenghty posts covering the various points on this list. The original author of this list (AFAIK, a D. Russel Humphreys) also appears to have little credibility within the scientific community. Looking for articles on the original article title led me to this[^] page, which appears to be a systematic index of Creationist claims made in various articles (such as the first one specified), and references to discount them. As I haven't spent that long on this, or am an expert in any of these fields, I cannot vouch for the quality of all of these refutations, although I am well-acquainted with some of them. I should state for the record that I do not have a problem with people who wish to believe in Creationism - I just have a problem with Creationists (even those who pretend to hide under the respectable sounding ID banner) who wish to undermine scientific efforts through what appear to be intellectually dishonest and scientifically unsound methods.


                        Ian Darling "The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell

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                        • J John Fisher

                          It appears that you have ignored the part of my post which would answer the question you just raised, so I'll post it again. The basic principle of any writing to be understood is to read it at face value. If the text indicates it is allegorical, then it is. If the text indicates it is a scientific statement of fact, then read it that way. If the text is using figurative language to describe something, treat it that way. If the text is giving a general description of sizes and shapes, don't assume it's accurate down to the nano-meter. (Etc.) John
                          "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                          Wjousts
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #59

                          John Fisher wrote: It appears that you have ignored the part of my post which would answer the question you just raised, so I'll post it again. No you appear to have missed the point. You say the tree thing isn't meant to be taken literally, but yet you claim the whole creationist thing is and the whole gays are evil thing is. How can you claim parts of the bible are literal truth and other parts aren't. Is that arogant of you to the extreme to suppose to know which parts of a supposedly holy text are actually true and which aren't? The tree thing is clearly false, so you write it off as not meaning to be taken literally, the creationism thing is false (despite what you think - the facts speak for themselves) and the majority of biblical scholars have writen that off as being "just a story". So why should we give any credit to anything else in the bible? So much of it is clearly wrong, so why accept any of it all? If I had a science text book with this many errors I'd confine it to my trash can.

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                          • J John Fisher

                            Haven't you understood any of this? We speak from the basis of one framework of understanding the world (creationism). You speak with a completely different framework in mind (evolutionism). The frameworks are very different, so of course things will initially sound ridiculous. However, the question isn't whether one framework makes sense when analyzed from the perspective of the other. The question is which framework has the fewest problems with the available evidence? Being more familiar with one side and completely unfamiliar with the other puts you in a bad position to be making judgments like this. John
                            "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                            Wjousts
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #60

                            My framework springs from the data, it doesn't attempt to fit the data to the theory. My framework makes testible predications and is falsifible, yours if not. Every part of the mechanism of my framework can be demonstrated, no part of yours can. My framework fits neatly within the sum total of human knowledge and is logically consitent, yours is not. You framework requires magic, my requires nothing but math and the laws of physics and chemistry. My framework is subject to peer review and stands up to critism, your is insulated and hidden away whenever somebody tries to challenge you on specific points. My framework can produce evidence to back up it's claims, yours cannot. If my framework is proven to be false, I'll change it, you never will.

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                            • J John Fisher

                              The link you provided certainly is against Behe's book, but I don't see anything that thoroughly debunked it. The links I looked at appeared to each focus one specific argument (or a small subset) of his book rather than the whole of it. Separating things and causing confusion is a common tactic (which I believe you called the "Wedge" strategy :)). BTW, I don't know whether ID people are part of an under-cover creationist agenda, but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. John
                              "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                              Ian Darling
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #61

                              John Fisher wrote: BTW, I don't know whether ID people are part of an under-cover creationist agenda, but the Creationists that I admire would not do that because of the deception involved. I can respect the last part, but the people behind the Wedge strategy would appear to be exactly that - a creationist agenda - the original fulcrum figure of the ID movement (Phillip Johnson) was a convert to Christianity (not necessarily a problem, I will admit). Johnson appears to be the individual who started (or was at least involved with early on) the Discovery Institute's "Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture" (SRSC) I would point out that "Renewal" is not a commonly used term within the scientific community, but I do know it's a big term within Christianity (particularly the evangelical wing). It would seem that this has not gone un-noticed, because they've since dropped the "Renewal" bit on the website - although it still appears in some of the documents om the site, (the one I'm reading also get very wordy over their non-bias. If they weren't a Creationist think-tank pretending to be a genuinely scientific research centre, or individuals genuinely concerned over the data for evolution, then they're going a very funny way about refuting it :-D) Anyway, the author of the book you originally pointed (Behe) out is a member (and Fellow, I think) of this Institute. And the most telling thing is from this[^] document on their own site: The very beginning of this strategy, the "thin edge of the wedge," was Phillip Johnson's critique of Darwinism begun in 1991 in Darwinism on Trial, and continued in Reason in the Balance and Defeatng Darwinism by Opening Minds. Michael Behe's highly successful Darwin's Black Box followed Johnson's work. We are building on this momentum, broadening the wedge with a positive scientific alternative to materialistic scientific theories, which has come to be called the theory of intelligent design (ID). Design theory promises to reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it with a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions. While not necessarily meaning that Behe himself has a Creationist agenda, he's certainly not complaining about his work being used by it. Anyway - I'd like to thank you for this debate.

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                              • J John Fisher

                                It's extremely difficult for me not to be hurt or angry at your comments. You continue to accuse me of ignorance and unfounded belief. Have you ever seriously considered what the opposition proposes? Have you ever attempted to understand the entire framework, since that is the only way to verify its claims (the same as any scientific theory)? I could make claims that you believe in unfounded, ingorant, misguided, deceptive men's ideas too. But, would that convince you of anything other than that I'm mean-spirited? Bible-believing Creationists are primarily creationist because of belief in the Bible. (Other people are creationists, too though.) The Bible also happens to teach that lying is sin. So, the people who truly believe both (the ones I admire most) wouldn't be intentionally deceptive. No matter what you might think. You also keep saying that there is a "total lack of evidence" for the creationist position. This is patently absurd. Evidence is evidence. Interpretation within a framework is what matters in this sort of discussion. Water is evidence, layers of rock are evidence. Life is evidence. Both sides have the same evidence. Take the evidence and prove that the framework can't adequately explain it -- that's how a debate like this should go. I would like to think that our discussion is fruitful, but another similar response will neccessitate that I stop responding to your posts for now. John
                                "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                                Wjousts
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #62

                                John Fisher wrote: It's extremely difficult for me not to be hurt or angry at your comments. Well, this is the soapbox. But I'll assume that you must be a reasonable intelligent person to be visiting this site. That's why it infurates me so much that otherwise intelligent people can honestly allow themselves to be so completely fooled. How can somebody be a programmer (a job that requires a mastery of logic) be so totally illogical? John Fisher wrote: So, the people who truly believe both (the ones I admire most) wouldn't be intentionally deceptive. No matter what you might think. Well, I'm sure you're say this isn't a creationist you admire, but here you go 300 Creationist Lies Index[^]. Maybe you really don't realise just how much blatant lying these people are doing to deceive you, but for god sake take off you blinders for a second. These people are neither christians or scientists, they are frauds and con-men who are playing on your deeply held believes for power and profit.

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                                • J John Fisher

                                  I forget which one it was, but one of our founding fathers sort of predicted this sort of thing. (I really wish I could remember the quote.) Basically he said that the U.S. Constitution would only work as long as people treated God and His Word as authoritative, and acted responsibly. Now, we simply see an evidence of this. When absolutes are ignored, whoever talks the loudest, the most, or with the most voices can change the law because people no longer have a non-emotional reason to stand against it. Many people who oppose homosexual marriage are doing it based upon principles of morality taught in the Bible. This is a principle, and not an emotional feeling -- thus a very valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. John
                                  "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                                  Chris Losinger
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #63

                                  John Fisher wrote: This is a principle, and not an emotional feeling -- thus a very valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. it may be a valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. but that doesn't make it a valid reason for making laws. The US Is Not A Theocracy. Cleek | Losinger Designs | ClickPic | ThumbNailer

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                                  • A Adam Wimsatt

                                    Ian Darling wrote: So which society was that then? And was accepting homosexuality as an alternative the cause of their demise? I find that unlikely to say the least. Sodom from the Bible. The city was destroyed because of unrighteousness, sins which included Homosexuality. My code isn't buggy. Those are all fleatures.

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                                    Chris Losinger
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #64

                                    Adam Wimsatt wrote: sins which included Homosexuality and idolatry, and promiscuity, and unkindness towards strangers and a whole bunch of other things. Cleek | Losinger Designs | ClickPic | ThumbNailer

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                                    • J John Fisher

                                      It's extremely difficult for me not to be hurt or angry at your comments. You continue to accuse me of ignorance and unfounded belief. Have you ever seriously considered what the opposition proposes? Have you ever attempted to understand the entire framework, since that is the only way to verify its claims (the same as any scientific theory)? I could make claims that you believe in unfounded, ingorant, misguided, deceptive men's ideas too. But, would that convince you of anything other than that I'm mean-spirited? Bible-believing Creationists are primarily creationist because of belief in the Bible. (Other people are creationists, too though.) The Bible also happens to teach that lying is sin. So, the people who truly believe both (the ones I admire most) wouldn't be intentionally deceptive. No matter what you might think. You also keep saying that there is a "total lack of evidence" for the creationist position. This is patently absurd. Evidence is evidence. Interpretation within a framework is what matters in this sort of discussion. Water is evidence, layers of rock are evidence. Life is evidence. Both sides have the same evidence. Take the evidence and prove that the framework can't adequately explain it -- that's how a debate like this should go. I would like to think that our discussion is fruitful, but another similar response will neccessitate that I stop responding to your posts for now. John
                                      "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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                                      Jason Henderson
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #65

                                      1 Corinthians 1:18-20 For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written: "I will destroy the wisdom of the wise; the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate." Where is the wise man? Where is the scholar? Where is the philosopher of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?

                                      "We have done so much in the last 2 years, and it doesn't happen by standing around with your finger in your ear, hoping everyone thinks that that's nice." - Donald Rumsfeld

                                      Jason Henderson
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                                      • W Wjousts

                                        John Fisher wrote: It's extremely difficult for me not to be hurt or angry at your comments. Well, this is the soapbox. But I'll assume that you must be a reasonable intelligent person to be visiting this site. That's why it infurates me so much that otherwise intelligent people can honestly allow themselves to be so completely fooled. How can somebody be a programmer (a job that requires a mastery of logic) be so totally illogical? John Fisher wrote: So, the people who truly believe both (the ones I admire most) wouldn't be intentionally deceptive. No matter what you might think. Well, I'm sure you're say this isn't a creationist you admire, but here you go 300 Creationist Lies Index[^]. Maybe you really don't realise just how much blatant lying these people are doing to deceive you, but for god sake take off you blinders for a second. These people are neither christians or scientists, they are frauds and con-men who are playing on your deeply held believes for power and profit.

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                                        Jason Henderson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #66

                                        Hey, quit being a jerk. Nobody has difinitive prove that creationism is false and nobody can prove evolution either. So just cool your jets and think about what you just said and how much of a jerk you and others are being. He believes in God, so how does that hurt you? There are billions of people that have examined the evidence on both sides and have found the theory of evolution wanting, and I am one of them. Logic doesn't solve all problems.

                                        "We have done so much in the last 2 years, and it doesn't happen by standing around with your finger in your ear, hoping everyone thinks that that's nice." - Donald Rumsfeld

                                        Jason Henderson
                                        blog

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                                        • C Chris Losinger

                                          John Fisher wrote: This is a principle, and not an emotional feeling -- thus a very valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. it may be a valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. but that doesn't make it a valid reason for making laws. The US Is Not A Theocracy. Cleek | Losinger Designs | ClickPic | ThumbNailer

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                                          John Fisher
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #67

                                          Chris Losinger wrote: The US Is Not A Theocracy. Quite true. Chris Losinger wrote: it may be a valid reason to oppose homosexual marriage. but that doesn't make it a valid reason for making laws. Quite false. I and many other U.S. citizens believe that homosexual marriage is morally wrong. We are part of "the people" who make up these United States. By virtue of our citizenship (and in line with the observation you made that his law could be completely arbitrary) any reason is a valid reason to make a law. BTW, I did vote down your post from the 5 it was given. Normally I don't do that, but your comment was just plain bad logic. (At least it was inconsitent with the logic of your previous post.) John
                                          "You said a whole sentence with no words in it, and I understood you!" -- my wife as she cries about slowly becoming a geek.

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