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HOLIKA DAHAN 3.3
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With is with those expressions? Alia's interview at Bafta
Anything wrong with same sex marriage ? ..NO.It is getting greater approval these days and people just tolerate it. But the conservatives will never accept such flirtings...Those people are retarded.It does go against the grain of most religions; so I guess it is religion that has to change their guidelines rather than the other way round...what kind of religion is a religion when it does not approve of man's sexual needs? If it does not keep a man happy?It the society evolving or degenerating ? ...evolving. Because, homosexuals are finally coming out, laws are being made to make homosexuality, same-sex marriage legal. Gays in the past were treated with cruelty, they didnt get the rights they deserved(they still dont, but the law are being made). In countries like India, their condition is even worse! The parents themselves dis-own when they discover that their children are gays.I guess times are changing and we are all getting carried away by the tide. Carried away by the tide?! The homosexuals have been existing all along! They're humans, they need to be ensured the same rights as straight people! Just because of their sexual preferences they werent treated as humans ..that is inhumane!!But in many countries individuals have little rights and they are not even allowed to change religions.I believe judgement should be based on one's character rather than religious or sexual preferences. Yes, look at the man's character, not who he gets attracted to. It's his personal life.
In USA, Mr. Obama has endorsed it and allowed gay marriages.I guess times are changing and we are all getting carried away by the tide.But in many countries individuals have little rights and they are not even allowed to change religions.I believe judgement should be based on one's character rather than religious or sexual preferences.

Anything wrong with same sex marriage ?It is getting greater approval these days and people just tolerate it. But the conservatives will never accept such flirtings.It does go against the grain of most religions; so I guess it is religion that has to change their guidelines rather than the other way round.It the society evolving or degenerating ? Because ...In Japan the monks are allowed to marry and drink alcohol.In USA, Mr. Obama has endorsed it and allowed gay marriages.I guess times are changing and we are all getting carried away by the tide.But in many countries individuals have little rights and they are not even allowed to change religions.I believe judgement should be based on one's character rather than religious or sexual preferences.
Obama merely made a statement supporting gay marriage. At this juncture he does not have the power or authority to "allow" gay marriage, no President does. That is still very much a "State right" as you can see by North Carolina's amendment to prohibit it. What it means that his government will work and vote in favor of gay marriage. "Allowing" gay marriage as a "legal" option in all fifty states is still a long way away despite this statement.
What does marrying monks have to do with gay marriage? Even Protestant Christians allow ministers to marry and drink!
Originally posted by: Prometeus
I think Obama's declaration of support for gay marriage would have had a bigger impact if he and Joe Biden started making out right after...jst saying😉
The Obama administration received a major shellacking in the 2010 midterm elections. A huge reason for the abysmal performance was the low voter turnout. Many members of the gay and other minority communities were disappointed with the Obama administration and did not show up to vote. Being an election year, they definitely want to reverse the trend. Obama will be actively wooing the most minorities. He expressed support for gay marriage and on the Latino front has reintroduced the Dream Act. Although, in Obama's case the changes in stance may come off as waffling or electoral politics, I have to say that the evolution of views on homosexuality is something very real and common. I've known many religious people who began with perceptions that homosexuality is a sin, then slowly accepted homosexual people but held marriage to be between man and woman, then eventually accepted marriage equality. Marriage is a social and religious institution so firmly entrenched in our thought process that even many liberal, open and accepting people struggle accepting new concepts to marriage. Finally, even though it is just electoral politics the fact that a president goes on record to support gay marriage is pretty huge and significant.
^ It is a great momentum!
But polls show that gay marriage issue is not a huge concern to swing voters vs the pressing economic concerns. I rather have both parties focus on economy which truly does not run on marriage status! Let's see what the DNC will bring to the table...
Ah sis, since I had been away from here and the place was dead😆Originally posted by: Angel-likeDevil
Summer bhaiya, why did you make this topic, there was one a few days ago 😆

HONG KONG - US President Barack Obama's ground-breaking support for same-sex marriage was met with applause from beleaguered gay rights campaigners in Asia on Thursday, but also with scorn from hardline opponents.
Rights and marriage for homosexuals barely figure on mainstream political agendas in the Asia-Pacific region, where traditional values dominate in many societies and sodomy remains illegal in some.
As in the United States, religious conservatives decried Obama, and most gay rights campaigners said in fact that the issue of wedlock was premature for now.
The region's only country where there is a serious debate about legalising gay marriage is Australia, but Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she was unswayed by Obama's change of heart and would continue to oppose it.
"I've made my mind up and my position on this is well known," she told reporters after Obama for the first time said that same-sex couples should be able to wed, igniting a fury of election-year debate in the United States.
Gillard said that when a bill calling for legalising gay marriage comes before the Australian parliament later this year, "I won't vote for it".
"This is a matter that people form their own views on, a deeply personal question, people will think about it, work their way through it."
Australia passed a legal amendment in 2004 explicitly defining marriage as between a man and woman, but activists believe pressure is mounting for Canberra to extend the right to same-sex couples.
Cheering supporters in Australia expressed hope that Obama's announcement would set a precedent that ripples across the Pacific.
Reverend Jeremy Greaves, whose liberal church in Darwin welcomes worshippers "regardless of sexual orientation", said: "I think for gay people within the church it'll come as a wonderful surprise and a great bit of news.
"I think for many gay people there's been a long struggle for recognition in the eyes of the church and the state, and I think this is another sign that times are changing for them," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
In the mainly Catholic Philippines, the only country in the world apart from the Vatican which still bans divorce, President Benigno Aquino's government said cautiously that any change to the law would have to come from lawmakers.
But even the Progressive Organisation of Gays in the Philippines said it was not pushing for same-sex marriage, while hoping that Obama's advocacy would prompt Aquino to address other issues of concern.
"We are not asking for wedding bells soon, we are merely requesting the government to face up to the reports" of alleged discrimination against gays in the Philippines, the group's spokesman Goya Candelario said.
Neither is the issue of marriage high on the agenda for gay men and lesbians in India, "because they know it will upset more people", said Ashok Row Kavi, head of Humsafar Trust, a Mumbai-based group dealing with male sexual health.
"Already there is so much opposition, if they start talking about same-sex marriage, it will increase further. We can only fight this much at a time," he said.
But Kavi also acclaimed Obama as "a terrific president".
"I wish the Indian political class and state learn their lessons from Obama. Our traditional society is uncomfortable about these issues - they don't know how it works."
But there was a vitriolic response from Vinod Bansal, spokesman for India's right-wing Vishwa Hindu Parishad group, who said gay marriage would "completely destroy our social fabric".
"It is Obama's view, it can't be endorsed by societies anywhere in the world. No religion permits same-sex marriages, neither is it beneficial in any way to society as a whole," he said.
"It will destroy the family system as well as the cultural and social values of different societies. What is morally wrong will never be accepted in India."
In Muslim-majority Malaysia, Ibrahim Ali, a parliamentarian and president of right-wing Malay group Perkasa, said that Obama's announcement would have no effect on public opinion.
But young Malaysians should nonetheless be educated against this "unnatural" lifestyle, which is against Islam, he said.