beezer wrote:Please add me to the list of "homophobes". You're right, luns - they are trying to set themselves up as the tolerant, open-minded ones and labeling us as the close-minded ones. Obviously, they don't like it when that notion is challenged.
Look, in really simple words, here is why 'Banning all mention of homosexuality from schools' is, in fact, 'close-minded'.
The pro-Brokebackers don't hate Christians; but they want to keep free speech in schools. We're not trampling your values, we're not trying to keep christianity out of schools. We're just refusing to privilege your viewpoint over others. Christianity says homosexuality is wrong; great, we don't mind you saying that to children. But homosexuals, and the law of the land, say that homosexuality is just fine; we want children to be exposed to both points of view.
You see, we want them to grow up with 'open minds', so they're able to rationally come to any viewpoint on the matter that they choose.
The "closed-minded" side of this debate comes from people who think that the only satisfactory way of upholding their value system is to ban other people from expressing theirs. We're not denying you your beliefs. We're not denying you expressing them. But we are oppossed to you demanding that your beliefs can only be respected by silencing all competing ones.
If we accept that; then we have to uphold everybodys' beliefs by banning everything that anyone could regard as offensive.
On the other hand, we could just say that anybody is free to express any opinion that they wish in schools; so long as they do not state that any one of those opinions is correct.
So tell me Beezer (and Jay, and Luns). Which one would you prefer? Which one is the tolerant option? Banning everything; or leaving all points of view free to be expressed?