Alberta's an interesting province. Our population is somewhere to the right of Alan Keyes; we routinely vote Conservative in every riding whenever we have a federal election; and the scariest conservative MPs tend to run, and win in Alberta.
Yet, at the same time, we have a substantial younger population that has either moved in or has grown up here and is starting to actually vote.
The reason I bring this up is that Stephen Harper has vowed to revisit the Gay Marriage issue if he's elected prime minister. His logic, he claims, is that the majority of Canadians do not want Gay marriage, ergo, it should not be law.
Mr. Harper, apparently, has failed to understand the concept of Tyrrany of the Majority.
But that's really not what I wanted to address. The point I want to get across is that if he's elected, it means that he's going to be elected, at least in part, based on the promise of being the first Prime Minister in the History of Canada to use the Notwithstanding clause. For the non-Canucks of you out there; this means that he could get elected, at least in part, based on a promise to suspend the civil liberties assured by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
This is a very scary precedent.
What I don't get, completely, is why this is an issue. The law is very specific that no religious institution will be forced to perform any marriage which is outside their belief system; ergo the Churches have exactly the same leeway as far as marriage is concerned that they did a year ago. All this law means is that the rest of us aren't necessarily required to fall in line with their doctrine.
I recall I was wandering around downtown around about the time that Bill C-38, the Gay Marriage law, was being voted upon in the House of Commons. I don't think anyone seriously believed that the bill would be defeated; but nevertheless you had people out there waving signs, and screaming that allowing people that they did not know and had never met (and, I imagine that it's reasonably safe to assume, had no desire to associate with) to marry would somehow cause society as we understand it to crumble.
This is, clearly, ridiculous; but this is apparently what they believed. Among these people was one woman who was waving a sign which read, simply Leviticus 18:22. First off; if you don't have at least a passing understanding of the bible, you hadn't the faintest clue what the sign meant (incidentally, that passage of the King James' version of the bible reads: "Thou shalt not lie with Mankind as with Womankind; it is an abomination"). Second, as far as this woman was concerned, that one passage of the bible; one line among thousands; ended the debate.
One line of one volume of one book written by people who have been dead for hundreds of years in a different country was the final word on the subject, as far as she was concerned.
Call me crazy, but maybe, just maybe, that might not be the best way of running a country.
That, and, let's face it, it's kinda hard to argue with God.
Faith is one thing; blind faith is something completely different. Belief in something that may not be scientifically observable is fine. I have absolutely no problem with that. I personally believe that there are a number of phenomena which cannot now, and may never be empirically observable. But to blindly take one set of rules and assume that that is the final word on any given subject basically creates a system where you're not allowed to think for yourself. We see that happening far too often in the states, and to a lesser degree in Canada.
The problem with politics is that it's seen too much as a factor of us against them; without much of a well-defined position on who we or they are. The US is divided into "Red States" and "Blue States." In Canada we have our "Liberal Provinces" and our "Conservative Provinces."
Just once, at least in the US, I'd like to see a running team for president throw that whole concept out the window. I'd like to see a third party team stand a solid chance in a run for president. I'd like to see a pair of independent candidates; people with no strong ties to either party... or even better: a bipartisan running team; one former Democrat, one former Republican running for a third party... I'd like to see them run, and I'd like to see them win.
I'd like to see us lose this concept of "Swing States." I'd like to see so-called "Red States" get a little Bluer, and "Blue States" get a little redder.
In short, just once, I'd like to see partisanship become secondary to what's best for the country.
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I'm pretty sure Mr. Harper understands the idea of 'the tyrrany of the majority'. He is many things, and intelligent is one of them. Unfortunately, I don't think that he sees the gay sex and gay marriage issue as a personal choice thing. I'm betting that he thinks that it is a wrong that affects others, sort of like pedophelia or bloodlust: impulses that are should never be acted on because it is dangerous in society and people suffer because of it. In other words, inherently evil.
His take on the separation between church and state probably fall in that same bucket.
The problem isn't in his understanding of the laws, it is in his understanding of evil.
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