Christian Liberty
Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2013
- Messages
- 19,707
Funny, I always thought it was the reverse.
lol!
I wasn't at the state GOP convention, but I'm a Texan with a lot of friends who went and all of the anti gay efforts are tearing any alliance between Tea Party and Liberty types asunder. When the head of the Texas RLC is posting on his Facebook that the Tea Party are bigots, you know tensions are high and alliances are irreparably fucked up.
There is no longer anything resembling an alliance between the two groups. Despite Rand's words about it being a friendly rivalry if he and Cruz run, it will be all out war between supporters of Cruz and supporters of Rand on the ground. Time to put Freedom Fanatic, Traditional Conservative, and their ilk on ignore if you support or have hopes for Rand succeeding in 2016. It's not worth your energy debating dying ideas from the past.
Woah woah woah... hold on a second. Do you think I'm a Ted Cruz supporter? Are you kidding me?
Before you ignore me, I should state that I support Rand at the moment. And my issues with Rand are that he's not libertarian enough, not that he's not conservative enough.
I am culturally conservative and a political voluntarist. I want the government out of marriage. I want the government out of the bedroom. And, for that matter, I want the government out of the public square too. I just want the State gone, period.
But you just assumed that because I am culturally conservative that I'm also a Ted Cruz supporter. Which is odd considering I've called Ted Cruz "evil" "disgusting" and "worse than Ted Bundy" each multiple times on these forums.
I am not a political conservative.
Well it scares non religious people. It's like how some of us feel about Santorum, Bachmann and their ilk. Too extreme. Most people do not want theocratic type legislation yet some portions of the GOP can't seem to let go. This country, this state, and presumedly quite a few citizens who vote are not necessarily ever going to embrace Christian dogma as rules to live by. Most of the ones arguing against the therapy being added were young Republicans. I guess the only way the GOP is going to become relevant is for the old ones to die off. By then no one will remember because we'll be living in liberal hell. Except Texas where we will have some Texanized version of Sharia law apparently.
I doubt you know what theocracy actually is (disclaimer: I oppose theocracy.) The closest thing to actual theocracy is theonomic reconstructionism, the ideology of Rushdoony, Gary North, Greg Bahnsen, etc. Incidentally, as far as non-libertarian ideologies go, theonomic reconstructionism is probably the most libertarian (ie. small government) conservative ideology that there is. Santorum and Bachmann aren't theocrats. They're neoconservatives with a socially conservative slant. By contrast, theonomists agree with us on foreign policy.
With that being said, having a negative opinion of homosexuality and the homosexual lifestyle is NOT a political issue. The GOP is making a mistake by pretending that it is one. So are those who want to put me in Ted Cruz's camp because of it (I'd rather take a bullet to the head than vote for Ted Cruz, for what its worth.)
So is eating shellfish and masturbating and I'm willing to wager a large sum of money that you do at least one of those things.
Eating shellfish is not a sin, but when did I say I don't sin? I have NEVER said that I don't sin. I would never say such a thing. If it were not for God's grace, I'd go to Hell.
From a liberty perspective they're both consensual lifestyles that the individuals involved in get off on; and they don't impinge upon anyone else - so no harm no foul.
Politically I agree with you. In terms of force, I agree with you. No force should be used to restrict those lifestyles. But not all of morality can be summed up by the NAP. The NAP is a legal standard, not a complete moral standard (and I guarantee that everyone here has morals other than the NAP as well.)
The statement made by whoisjohngalt is at least stated as something "thought" by an individual (basically, an opinion)
The statement made by FreedomFanatic is stated as fact, but without proof. It would seem incumbent upon FreedomFanatic to prove the statement, but I think that would be something best relegated to the "Peace Through Religion" forum to discuss. And since the participants in that forum don't even seem to be able to reach consensus on what "Christians" believe - it'd probably be best for the various sects of "Christians" to resolve their differences before they start debating others on behalf of Christianity.
I don't think there's any professing Christian in the Peace through Religion subforum that disagrees that homosexuality is a sin. At the least, I've never seen anyone challenge that stance from a Christian perspective.
Except for humans
[Calvinist]especially Catholics[/Calvinist]
[Catholic]especially Calvinists[/Catholic]
I chuckled at this. Its not accurate, but still.