PabloSerna said:
Transgender ideology? I'm not familiar professor.
I'm sure you're not. Most likely willfully so.
PabloSerna said:
Transgender ideology? I'm not familiar professor.
AGC said:
Edit: there is some irony in asking if we know how a gender dysphoric person feels, when a gender dysphoric person does not know how being the other sex feels. They cannot experience life as someone who's never struggled with it, nor have they gone through the developmental phases we have. It is a basic fact.
kurt vonnegut said:AGC said:
Edit: there is some irony in asking if we know how a gender dysphoric person feels, when a gender dysphoric person does not know how being the other sex feels. They cannot experience life as someone who's never struggled with it, nor have they gone through the developmental phases we have. It is a basic fact.
Years ago, my wife went through a bout of depression, Nothing super severe and I'll spare the details, but she lost a lot of weight, didn't feel like eating, spent most of the time in bed, felt guilty about spending her time in bed, cried a lot. Not her favorite times.
She comes from two parents who are engineers and she married another one. I think that all of our initial instincts were to assess the problem and work a solution as though it were some technical problem we needed to find the fix for. I've since learned that we are hardly the first people to misunderstand the problem of depression and try to work it from the wrong angle. After a change in strategy, she and I spoke more about what she was feeling, she saw a therapist for some time, took anti-anxiety medication for a little while but quickly stopped needing it, and fast forward now and everything is all good. . .
I only offer this anecdote because I think it may be important in how we reach out and get through to people in positive ways. My fear [about what I think the Christian approach to LGBTQ persons is] is that I worry that the Christian approach ignores and dismisses what they feel and experience and prescribes them a solution. And maybe I'm wrong - I'm only offering my perspective.
As you said, we start from different points and we view identity differently. Maybe something I've said here resonates in some ways and maybe it doesn't. I don't expect to change anyone's mind
The Banned said:
I know my last one was a novel, so I'll keep this brief: this is a perfect example! Imagine if the clinical prescription was to help your wife identify as a depressed person. If she feels this way, then it's who she is. Embrace it and live with it. If she identified as depressed person and I told her depression is an illness and we should seek to fix it, do you see how that could be a near impossible conversation to have? I'm essentially telling her that her lived experience isn't real, while what I'm trying to do is show an alternative way to live life.
However, if you're a person struggling with depression, we can have that conversation. It's not central to who you are. I'm not trying to change your lived reality. Therein lies the difference.
Ok - but when you start from a place of "how you feel is fine, here is the solution" you are granting legitimacy to what they are feeling - which in its very essence is not real. A boy is not a girl. A boy cannot be a girl. A girl cannot be a boy. So you are treating something that feels real but objectively is not as real, to be embraced and empowered.Quote:
When you start from a place of "how you feel is wrong, here is the solution", you aren't granting any legitimacy to what they are feeling. You are treating something that feels real and personal to them as a tumor to be cut out and discarded
Zobel said:Ok - but when you start from a place of "how you feel is fine, here is the solution" you are granting legitimacy to what they are feeling - which in its very essence is not real. A boy is not a girl. A boy cannot be a girl. A girl cannot be a boy. So you are treating something that feels real but objectively is not as real, to be embraced and empowered.Quote:
When you start from a place of "how you feel is wrong, here is the solution", you aren't granting any legitimacy to what they are feeling. You are treating something that feels real and personal to them as a tumor to be cut out and discarded
I cannot make any objections to your sincerity or your intentions to help and do what is best for your neighbor. I'm glad I did not ignore your post.The Banned said:
We aren't prescribing a treatment. We aren't saying "just don't be the way you are" We are pointing to what the end goal should be. . . .
AGC said:
We've slipped back into the postmodern dialogue. Every time you ask who defines 'healthy', that's where we are. There is no reconciliation or resolution to the disagreement if you reject objective standards outside of one's mind.
kurt vonnegut said:AGC said:
We've slipped back into the postmodern dialogue. Every time you ask who defines 'healthy', that's where we are. There is no reconciliation or resolution to the disagreement if you reject objective standards outside of one's mind.
In other words, there is no resolution to the disagreement because we disagree. Yes. . . . .
There doesn't have to be agreement and there doesn't have to be resolution. We believe different things, which does not exclude the possibility of common ground. Is there not value in exchanging ideas? If there is no value, then why engage?
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Or how many homosexually attracted people in their youth wish they weren't. I wish they weren't too. Not because I hate them or fear them, but because I can't imagine having to go through that.
100% agree.The Banned said:
But at the same time, cleaner language needs to be used for the same reason. If people think we view them that negatively, we'll never be able to reach them, or they will bottle it up. Imagine your wife or mine just fake smiled through the day instead of talking about what was bothering them. Disastrous results. So people struggling should be able to talk about their struggles without the stigma. Maybe it's too pie in the sky but I see a world in which the healthy human is an objective goal, we're all trying to get there, and we don't hammer each other for our failings, but attempt to help each other along the way.
PabloSerna said:
" You equate inherent traits with LGBT actions. Thats what makes conversations essentially impossible."
Are you saying that you can "pray the gay away?"
Quo Vadis? said:
*The Banned and Kurt Vonnegut cast lvl 10 "Great Wall of Text" crit for max damage*
-3 END, -4 STR, +1 CON
This is funny. Wish I still had my laugh/cry emoji...Quo Vadis? said:
*The Banned and Kurt Vonnegut cast lvl 10 "Great Wall of Text" crit for max damage*
-3 END, -4 STR, +1 CON
PabloSerna said:
You wrote it, I zeroed in on what I see to be the most concerning part of your argument. Please pass on this line of inquiry if it disrupts your logic.
There is this idea that LBGTQ folks "choose" to be a certain way. That line of thinking has lead many to send good young people to conversion therapy camps with the misplaced understanding that people can change this aspect of their being. This is an unfortunate, misguided effort to help and or witness the love of God.
The fact remains that we do not know enough about human sexual orientation to assume that it can be re-wired or suppressed.
However, reading your opening remarks (yes, I actually read all of your post) you put anyone on notice that this is a non- starter with you. So, yes, I naturally jumped to a ridiculous idea that has been repeated to many young people that they can actually "pray the gay away."
PabloSerna said:
Wasn't trying avoid, was putting my cards on the table by defining the terms with respect to science and religion.
I do reject the notion that you can somehow "become gay" as well as my initial remark about "praying the gay away".
Engage or don't engage.
Hahaha, I agree. It also feels like I've spent 2 and a half pages saying exactly this and getting push back from Christians. You all know that its okay to agree with me sometimes, right? God probably won't send you to hell for sometimes agreeing with me.The Banned said:
Certainly it's out of fear. Which is why I think Christians need to be more warm and understanding. Sin is not something to fear and so many Christians have made this the ultimate sin of all time, so it makes sense that they would hide it.
I don't agree, but that's fine. So, lets compare LGBTQ actions with those of non-Christians. Religion is clearly not something heredity and is clearly taught. 120 million Americans have chosen to reject the Christian God and live a life in open defiance of God and in sin, but we don't treat that sin the same way, do we?Quote:
Your second paragraph is exactly the issue. Being black is hereditary. Being Irish is hereditary (you didn't pick where your parents lived). Now, you can't control that but you can control how you act. You equate inherent traits with LGBT actions. Thats what makes conversations essentially impossible.
Its a clever phrase. Application of the phrase 'love the sinner, hate the sin' is important. And I think you have to ask yourself - if someone treated me this way, would it make me feel loved or unloved.Quote:
In actuality, it will likely be LGBTQ students who won't want to be friends with my kids, provided I've taught them what I think I have/will: love everyone, but don't withhold what you believe to be true. In other words, the evil phrase "love the sinner, hate the sin". Again, on this very board I've been told this is a hateful phrase due to the identity issue.
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I understand that feeling persecuted can lead to a higher level of identification, but I challenge you to show me where else we accept this for a non-hereditary or minimally hereditary issue. Do depressed people ban together around their issue? Do rageaholics? Do addicts? Where else do we take a contra-societal action and envelop into who we were born to be? I don't think it's merely being an outcast. I believe it comes from being told this is the way you are, there is nothing you can do about it, so embrace it. That's fine if you're defending your Irish decent, your black skin or your deafness prior to technological breakthroughs. I do not believe that should extend to LGBTQ issues.
The difference is that becoming a Christian or a Hindu does not require surgery and hormone treatment. And also does not require denying a biological reality which I think is a mental illness.kurt vonnegut said:Hahaha, I agree. It also feels like I've spent 2 and a half pages saying exactly this and getting push back from Christians. You all know that its okay to agree with me sometimes, right? God probably won't send you to hell for sometimes agreeing with me.The Banned said:
Certainly it's out of fear. Which is why I think Christians need to be more warm and understanding. Sin is not something to fear and so many Christians have made this the ultimate sin of all time, so it makes sense that they would hide it.I don't agree, but that's fine. So, lets compare LGBTQ actions with those of non-Christians. Religion is clearly not something heredity and is clearly taught. 120 million Americans have chosen to reject the Christian God and live a life in open defiance of God and in sin, but we don't treat that sin the same way, do we?Quote:
Your second paragraph is exactly the issue. Being black is hereditary. Being Irish is hereditary (you didn't pick where your parents lived). Now, you can't control that but you can control how you act. You equate inherent traits with LGBT actions. Thats what makes conversations essentially impossible.Its a clever phrase. Application of the phrase 'love the sinner, hate the sin' is important. And I think you have to ask yourself - if someone treated me this way, would it make me feel loved or unloved.Quote:
In actuality, it will likely be LGBTQ students who won't want to be friends with my kids, provided I've taught them what I think I have/will: love everyone, but don't withhold what you believe to be true. In other words, the evil phrase "love the sinner, hate the sin". Again, on this very board I've been told this is a hateful phrase due to the identity issue.
Lets say that I told you that I knew for a fact that Christianity was a terrible religion built on lies and deception. That I had zero respect for the ideology of Christianity, that it was poisonous to the mind, and that it was a system built for its own self elevation. And lets say that I opposed Christians being able to marry or adopt children. And that we should remove references to Christianity in books and media so that our kids are not exposed to this infectious idea. None of this comes from a place of hate. Actually, I love Christians and it is my love for them that drives my dislike for their false and damaging ideology. I respect Christians as humans, but not their ideology because I KNOW the truth and they don't.
So, after reading that, how much do you want to be my best friend? Do you feel loved by the paragraph above? Could you really blame your child if they didn't want to make friends with someone like this at school?Quote:
I understand that feeling persecuted can lead to a higher level of identification, but I challenge you to show me where else we accept this for a non-hereditary or minimally hereditary issue. Do depressed people ban together around their issue? Do rageaholics? Do addicts? Where else do we take a contra-societal action and envelop into who we were born to be? I don't think it's merely being an outcast. I believe it comes from being told this is the way you are, there is nothing you can do about it, so embrace it. That's fine if you're defending your Irish decent, your black skin or your deafness prior to technological breakthroughs. I do not believe that should extend to LGBTQ issues.
Again, religion is the prime example. If you believe that rejection of the Christian God is a sin, then we are back to the 120 million Americans who openly reject your God. And we have come to accept this as perfectly okay. Or at least Christians aren't actively fighting the normalization of this 'sin'.
The societal pendulum is swinging away from traditional values. Perhaps it has swung too far and maybe even in a way that is dangerous or destabilizing. I think that most people who think they are trying to stop the pendulum swing are actually just adding fuel to the fire. The more Christians single them out for their sexuality or gender association - by opposing rights and advocating for their censorship - the more that sense of identity grows and the more they dig their heels in.
I'd like to see Christians treat LGBTQ persons like they treat Hindus. You clearly don't approve of Hinduism and you think it's a false religion and disagree with some of its values. But, how many Christians are out actively trying to suppress Hinduism and shield their children from it? The reason there are no Hindu pride parades and the reason why there aren't a thousand tv shows with Hindu people is because Christians don't care as much about their 'sin'. Christians exhibit a level of respect for individual autonomy when it comes to who we worship, but not when it comes to who we love or how we view ourselves.