andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2010-04-30 12:00 pm
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I could live with that.
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Taking "long-exposure" photographs with a scanner.
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And a good thing too.
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[g]
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Now I know that many people who read this comment will think that homosexual relationships are the same in almost all or all ways as heterosexual ones. That may or may not be the case, that's not my point, my point is that for some people it's not the case, and it puts people like this in a really hard situation.
It'd be easy to push buttons of he's being oppressed or the gay people he wouldn't counsel are being oppressed, but what I'd propose is something less confrontational. Our society is full of people with different views about morality and so on, views which conflict, and we all have to live and work together. It seems to me that it would have been ideal for Christian counsellors to have been allowed to not work with gay couples on personal moral grounds (in the same way that doctors do not have to do things they object to morally, like abortions), in cases where no one would actually be disadvantaged by doing so. So in places where there were multiple counsellors most of whom would have no problem with counselling gay couples, have them takeover those future cases. Such an exemption would only apply to people currently employed, anyone new joining would not have that exemption, so it closely mirrors the situation with changing the terms of someone's contract (you can't, but you can have a different contract for new people).
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Unfortunately, though, if (like me) a person does think that, your point does become completely irrelivent. For your argument to be valid we have to take it as a given that his job description changed. It didn't.
Let's take another example of the type you're citing here. If you bought a home to let it out in 2000, you didn't have to have a fire alarm wired into the mains of your house.
A few years later, HMO legislation came in whereby all homes being let to more than two people had to have mains wired fire alarms. Then, more recently still, superceding European legislation meant that now all let homes must have mains fire alarms.
Would it be okay for landlords and agents from before this legislation came in to say, "Actually, no, I'm not going to comply to this because I started letting this flat out before that was the law"?
Let's take a more closely relevant example. Post 1967, was it okay for a registrar to refuse to legally marry interracial couples in the US? They really believed it was wrong, and by your definition it's a change to their terms of employment.
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Unfortunately, though, if (like me) a person does think that, your point does become completely irrelivent. For your argument to be valid we have to take it as a given that his job description changed. It didn't.
Aren't these two separate points? In this case if his job description didn't change then yes I agree, this argument doesn't apply here, but if someone does think that homosexual relationships are the same in all ways then that doesn't invalidate my argument because my argument has nothing to do with whether such relationships really are equivalent or not.
I don't think your analogy about fire alarms is equivalent, employment terms and moral principles are clearly a different sort of thing, and this is already accepted to be the case as it is illegal to change someone's terms of employment without their consent.
With respect to your example of interracial marriage, if the registrar honestly thought that marrying interracial couples was an immoral thing to do, and that registrar could be accommodated without any effect on any interracial couples that wanted to get married then yes I think they should have been accomodated. My argument is not based on whether I think the action in question (gay sex therapy, interracial marriage, etc) is moral or not, it's about trying to do achieve the overall aims (that the government has decided) while avoiding throwing people out of their jobs and causing them to act in what they consider to be immoral ways.
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Do you remember Killer Net?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killer_Net
It was one of Paul Bettany's earliest roles.
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I have seen Man Bites Dog, which is one of the more brilliant and black things I've seen.
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And quite right. If a political vegetarian took a job at Gregg's and was then sacked for refusing to make or serve meat pasties to the public would they have a leg to stand on through discrimination laws?
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'Political correctness gone mad!
I'm advertising for a new job at my company and so in the advert I politely put "Muslims and Jews need not apply." Muslims are generally cool about it, Jews don't care - it's just those fuckers from the council who are round straight away threatening me with a court summons for active racial discimination. Stupid, dopey bastards. I'm a pork butcher.'
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Probably still terrifying at the time, of course :->
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Not sure how I feel about Belgium. I felt I supported this, but now it's here, I'm thinking, sure, it's a symbol of oppression, but ban the symbol and the oppression remains.
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I think Islam is a mysoginistic, archaic relic of a medieval society, but freedom of expression should trump that easily.
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Anyone know if it actually got released?
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I could live with that
I know the Tories aren't as insane as the US Republican party, but they are still the party of Margaret Thatcher. How is having them with more than 45% of the vote and well more of the vote than either other major party a remotely good thing?
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