Sin City wrote: » Surely you weretaught informed that drugs were bad and you still went and did them .
Sin City wrote: » Secondly you met these men while at drug parties, so lets just assume that most of the attendies would be fairly shady charecters
Sin City wrote: » Hetrosexuals can be preditory too, its not a homosexual trait.
Sin City wrote: » That behaviour wasnt normal by most people standards, you just met with pervs and peadoes who just happened to be homosexuals
28064212 wrote: » What does "the norm" mean, in your opinion? Are homosexuals abnormal?
28064212 wrote: » That's some remarkably bizarre reasoning. Is teaching heterosexuality as the norm responsible for statutory rape?
Brown Bomber wrote: » Correct. This would be a false assumption. Generally regular people. I have no doubt that you are correct but my own experiences showed otherwise. Maybe, but now that i think of it what is most creepy is that these predatory episodes decreased the older I got.
Brown Bomber wrote: » Norm = typical, unless I am mistaken.
doctoremma wrote: » At least three instances of confirmation bias here. 1. Of course the people at the parties were "regular people". After all, you were there, fully participating, and you're a regular person, are you not? Obviously, to someone who doesn't go to parties to take drugs, you might all appear a bit shady.
doctoremma wrote: » 2. You're a man. In order to experience a heterosexual instance of predatory behaviour, the aggressor would have to be a woman. Now, I'm not suggesting for one minute that women can't be predatory. But I would wager that a man doesn't always perceive aggressive behaviour from a woman as "predatory" or "threatening". You may not have experienced predatory heterosexual behaviour because you don't view it as predatory.
doctoremma wrote: » 3. Extending from above. I'm not going to deny that a predatory person might not intentionally target someone vulnerable (e.g. young). However, as you get older, maybe you WERE hit on as often, you simply stopped viewing them as predatory approaches?
28064212 wrote: » Are homosexuals abnormal? What language would you be advocating is taught to children in this regard? Abnormal? Not normal? Less normal? "Differently" normal?
What language would you be advocating is taught to children in this regard?
Brown Bomber wrote: » Homosexual, and let people find their own truths.
No authentic pastoral programme will include organizations in which homosexual persons associate with each other without clearly stating that homosexual activity is immoral
Although the particular inclination of the homosexual person is not a sin, it is a more or less strong tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil; and thus the inclination itself must be seen as an objective disorder.
Brown Bomber wrote: » I have no doubt that you are correct but my own experiences showed otherwise.
Brown Bomber wrote: » Maybe, but now that i think of it what is most creepy is that these predatory episodes decreased the older I got.
Brown Bomber wrote: » On a personal level I am glad that these kind of views weren't pushed into my consciousness as a teen. In my mid-teens in the 90's I was big into the drug scene as were a lot of homosexual men and my path would converge with theirs in parties etc more often than not. I was then an awkward, boyish looking 15-year-old who looked a lot younger who was at these parties off my head on drugs and alcohol. I was propositioned on numerous occasions by predaratory middle-aged to elderly gay men at these parties in very direct and sometimes aggressive manners. I hate to imagine what might have happened if I was left under the impression that their behaviour was somehow normal because of what I was thought at school.
Brown Bomber wrote: » What is normal though?
Brown Bomber wrote: » There are homosexual groups that are advocates of pederasty etc http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_Man/Boy_Love_Association
28064212 wrote: » You defined it earlier using the term "proportionally", why are you looking for a new definition now? Are you really suggesting that the behaviour you describe is the norm for homosexuals?
Brown Bomber wrote: » I'm not looking for a new definition to be fair. "The norm" and "normal" are two different things. Homosexuality imo is normal but certainly not the norm in the same way that red hair is not the norm (and normal). I'm all for education programmes that instill in students the idea that homsexuality is normal but not this school programme which wants to punish people for the thought crime of holding the view that heterosexuality is not "the norm" - when it clearly is, in every society, in every nation in the world.
28064212 wrote: » In what way is it "punishing people"? You appear to have applied a very specific definition of norm to this program that doesn't appear to be borne out in the slightest.
norm (nôrm)n.1. A standard, model, or pattern regarded as typical: the current middle-class norm of two children per family.2. Mathematics a. A mode.b. An average.c. The length of a vector.
Brown Bomber wrote: » The schools programme, according to the article at least, would see students punished for expressing their views that heterosexuality is "the norm", when the vast majority of people are attracted to the opposite sex.
Proud Schools is a $250,000 program aimed at tackling homophobia in schools. The pilot program began this year involves around 12 public high schools across Sydney, the Hunter and the Central Coast. The aim of the program is to build on the culture of understanding and respect in NSW schools and includes: Professional development: In NSW we have sophisticated training materials to help promote awareness among school staff of racial and sexual discrimination, but there are limited training opportunities to help teachers improve their awareness and understanding of discrimination and abuse of same-sex attracted or gender questioning students. Professional learning will be developed that will include key modules for school leaders and school staff. Supporting resources Work is being conducted to inform the development of the program and to identify the kinds of resources and support materials available to support staff and students participating in the program. It is important that we identify early in the program how best to assist schools build their capacity to support same-sex attracted and gender questioning young people. Student workshops Consultation sessions will be conducted with NSW students to find out what they think needs to be done to help address homophobia in schools. Parent Workshops Experience has shown that when school communities work together real improvements in promoting understanding and reducing discrimination can be made. In every pilot school a parent information workshop will be held to explain the aim and goals of the pilotprogram and to seek their input about how the pilot program can be tailored to suit the needs of their local community. Steering group A steering group comprising government and non-government agencies has been established to monitor the pilot program. At the end of the pilot it is anticipated that the steering group will provide a series of recommendations that will inform the development of a final Proud Schools program that can be rolled out across the State.
Ambersky wrote: » My point is this doesnt bring their heterosexuality into question. They remain heterosexual fornicators or adulterers a kind of deviant branch of heterosexuality but we remain safe in the belief that heterosexuality is ok. Homosexuals who inappropriately approach or have sex with children or vulnerable adults are seen as proof that homosexuality itself is deviant, not a deviant branch of a homosexuality that expressed appropriately is ok. And within Christian churches Homosexuals cant have spouses to be unfaithful to as they are not allowed to get married and remain faithful to that person as a married partner. This is the double standard.
georgieporgy wrote: » Ah, I see what you mean. Let's compare it to eating. Some people suffer from bulemia or anorexia. These are nice people but we refer to their condition as an eating disorder. Something they have to struggle with and overcome if they are to live normal healthy lives. We don't all have eating disorders. Some of us have sexual disorders. That's not all. There's a whole list of mental and physical disorders out there.
doctoremma wrote: » Yes. But we label something a "disorder" if it causes a negative outcome (as you allude to re: eating disorders and incompatibility with normal health). I don't see how homosexuality can be considered a disorder, even less so when compared to medical disorders.
georgieporgy wrote: » We're talking moral disorder, not medical disorder. For people who think morals mean nothing then that would not be a problem I suppose. anorexia, for example, is first and formost a moral disorder. But it has physical consequences, as do all moral disorders.http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_19861001_homosexual-persons_en.html
28064212 wrote: » A "moral disorder" is entirely in the eye of the beholder. Many people would consider Catholicism to be a moral disorder. And you might consider anorexia to be "first and formost a moral disorder", but you will not find anyone in the medical or scientific arena that agrees with you
georgieporgy wrote: » A 5 second google found this one:Eating disorders are not "the symptom of an underlying mental disorder, as is often argued. They are the symptoms of ordinary morality, which is just being taken seriously -- or more seriously than usual" (257). http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/25100-understanding-eating-disorders-conceptual-and-ethical-issues-in-the-treatment-of-anorexia-and-bulimia-nervosa/
Benny_Cake wrote: » I certainly accept that morals exist, however, eating disorders such as anorexia or bulimia are absolutely not "moral disorders". I speak from knowing sufferers unfortunately.
georgieporgy wrote: » I too know sufferers and have treated their dental needs. I know I sound cruel. But you have to be cruel to be kind sometimes. Would you agree that alcoholism is a moral disorder? Drug addiction? Kleptomania? Mythomania? Or is everything just an unfortunate condition beyond our personal control? "I can't help it, I'm addicted" "I'm a victim"