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- Newsgroups: alt.rush-limbaugh,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.politics.clinton,alt.politics.bush,alt.politics.homosexuality
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ennews!anasaz!briand
- From: briand@anasazi.com (Brian Douglass)
- Subject: Re: Lifestyle Choices (was Re: Sexuality)
- Organization: Anasazi Inc Phx Az USA
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 20:43:08 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.204308.11118@anasazi.com>
- References: <1992Dec30.191743.7958@asl.dl.nec.com> <1992Dec30.234500.21163@anasazi.com> <1992Dec31.015806.17561@unet.net.com>
- Sender: usenet@anasazi.com (Usenet News)
- Lines: 83
-
- In article <1992Dec31.015806.17561@unet.net.com> stank@perrault.unet.com (Stan Knight) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec30.234500.21163@anasazi.com> briand@anasazi.com (Brian Douglass) writes:
- >>>In article <1992Dec30.185545.26789@cbnewsj.cb.att.com> ecl@cbnewsj.cb.att.com (Evelyn C. Leeper) writes:
- >>>>All people are asking is that unless you can come up with some
- >>>>*secular* reason for why their lifestyle choice is bad, you grant
- >>>>them the same rights they are willing to grant you: the right to
- >>>>live their life without persecution.
- >
- >>Tell that to a smoker. Clearly this is a lifestyle choice, and yet
- >>non-smokers have persecuted them out of most public places. Why? Because
- >>non-smokers find smoking offensive, smelly, and possibly dangerous to their
- > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- >>health.
- > ^^^^^^
- >Well ggeeeeee whiz Brian. Things that are possibly dangerous to the health of
- >the general public are banned all over the place. Amazingly enough a majority
- >think that this is a good thing! What the heck does that have to do with
- >whether or not gays have the right not to be discriminated against?
-
- Well ggeeeeeee whiz, Stan. Where do you see in my statement that I said it
- was a bad thing? In fact, I don't say that it is is good or bad, only that
- it happens and why.
-
- >
- >>But in this battle the rights of a clear minority, have had little
- >>weight in comparison to the greater good of the public. That is the rights
- >>of the majority have been deemed more important than the rights of a
- >>minority.
- >
- >Smokers are discriminated against due a demostratable reason. They could
- >actually be harming someone else by smoking.
-
- BINGO! Society, government, business can discriminate against a minority
- for demonstratable reasons, ie. the potential harm to someone else.
-
- >Evelyn's post ask for a
- >secular reason why we should allow gays to be discriminated against. Is this
- >the best answer you can come up with? BTW if you have some proof that gays
- >are dangerous to the public's health, simply by the fact that they are gay,
- >I'm sure we would all like to know what that proof is.
-
- Well, as you will read in another post, Gays are descriminated against from
- donating blood due because of they're lifestyle has made them potentially
- dangerous to the public's health. And this is not restricted to gays,
- there is a long list of people that are forbidden from donating because
- their lifestyle has made them potentially dangerous. (IV drug users,
- people who pay for sex, having visited certain countries in the last year,
- etc.) But the questionairre is very blunt, "Have you had sex with a member
- of the same sex?" At the bottom, it says, "If you have answered YES to any
- of these questions, you must NOT donate."
-
- So, while I was addressing the point that society does have the right to
- supercede the rights of a minority and discriminate against them (Smokers),
- here is an example where certain lifestyles (again, it's not just gays)
- have been proven to be dangerous to the public health and so may be
- discriminated against. And to lie on the screening questionairres and/or
- donate is a criminal offence, I believe a felony here in AZ.
-
- Now, so what? Blood donation is a very specific case. Can an employer ask
- if you are gay and deny you employment because donate blood either?
- Insurance risk to the company? I don't think so, and should not be able
- to. Being gay or not has little to do most jobs, and federal law is already
- fairly specific about what employers can and can't ask. However, in the
- Health Care and specifically in positions where contact with bodily fluids
- is probable, simply being gay is a strong likelyhood for discrimination.
- The biggest reason being the latentcy between contraction and detection of
- HIV. During this latentcy (~6 months), transmittal to others is possible.
-
- BTW, some companies have fired workers who smoked ON THEIR OWN TIME. That
- is at home. Why, because they viewed such employees as a health risk and
- felt they had the right to tell those employees what they could or could not
- do outside of work hours. In the report I saw, some of the workers had won job
- descrimination lawsuits. Others were pending. The suits, I think used
- Fedearal statutes. In fact, I believe it was Colorado that passed a law
- saying you couldn't fire someone because they smoked on their own time.
- (talk about your ironies).
-
-
- >Stan Knight
- >|Still waiting for that secular reason|
-
- Ahhh, now is that better?
-
-