flamerbob wrote:Please show me where marriage is a right?It's not written in the Constiution of the United States, but the right to marry tends to be universally recognized as a basic human right.
Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke
flamerbob wrote:Please show me where marriage is a right?It's not written in the Constiution of the United States, but the right to marry tends to be universally recognized as a basic human right.
PAmedic wrote:you're absolutely right
LUconn wrote:As I'm sure you've heard many times before, you HAVE the right to get married.Not true. ATrain is correct.
PAmedic wrote:you're absolutely right
ATrain wrote:I have the same right to marry any consenting unmarried female age 18 or over for any reason we choose (a joke, money, power, fame, whatever) and THEN divorce for any reason and repeat...however, I do not have the same right to get married to someone I would desire to commit the rest of my life to.
BuryYourDuke wrote:LUConn, I'm not embarrassed by this, but I do disagree. And it makes us look pretty ridiculous. My fiancé, a Christian Conservative, is a 3L at a pretty respected law school and she almost spit her drink out laughing about this. It's a joke. So, just as it is patriotic to voice dissent against out government when it is wrong, it is my love for my Alma mater that causes me to speak out when I believe our school is in the wrong on something.How could you not be embarrassed to hold an LU degree in light of that entire post? I'm not in law school but then again, neither is Staver. What is it that you guys find so funny? Is the the objective grading of a subjective question? Is it the instruction of civil disobedience in a case of clashing morality?
LUconn wrote:And I think you learned in GNED that that is a slippery slope argument which would send this thread wildly off-topic, which is the tradition on this board.ATrain wrote:I have the same right to marry any consenting unmarried female age 18 or over for any reason we choose (a joke, money, power, fame, whatever) and THEN divorce for any reason and repeat...however, I do not have the same right to get married to someone I would desire to commit the rest of my life to.
Correct. You can probably find a similar juxtaposition with any right (lets stop arguing the semantics of what a right is in this conversation. We all know what we mean). There's limitations to all of them. And on top of that you can get into whether or not this is something the state should be sanctioning at all, and if so, why they would be encouraging this type of thing. And I think you can see where that would be headed.
PAmedic wrote:you're absolutely right
PAmedic wrote:you're absolutely right
ATrain wrote:If the will of the people were to be preserved, then we'd still have segregated schools in the South.Spoken by a guy who probably knows a little about the educational history of Farmville, VA in the 1960s.
Cider Jim wrote:Agree. That comment that in the present day, the southern schools in the South would still be segregated is about the most ignorant comment I've heard in a long time.ATrain wrote:If the will of the people were to be preserved, then we'd still have segregated schools in the South.Spoken by a guy who probably knows a little about the educational history of Farmville, VA in the 1960s.
alum82 wrote:Just some quick clarifications: BYD, I didn't call you a liar. I said you used a ploy. I don't doubt that FF members asked you to comment on this or that because they didn't have the guts to do it. But, that doesn't mean that LU would have retaliated against them or that they thought LU would. Some people are just wusses but, when you say that FF members PMed you to post this or that, you are implying that there was some evil force lurking in the background that would have annihilated the poor folks who were scared to comment. That is the ploy. Another point: Law firms don't check with law schools when they make a hire. They look at grades. Somebody here said the former law students who wouldn't use their names were afraid of not getting good employment references from Staver. Also, some of you guys need to be a little more skeptical of LU critics like Posner when they write scandalous pieces like the one mentioned above. Doesn't it make you a little suspicious that he didn't get Staver's side of all the silly accusations. Seriously, do you really believe that students would get a poorer grade at LU if they didn't agree with the teacher about civil disobedience? And do you really believe that these "anonymous" students who were quoted would know what grades all the other students got. If these wuss former students who were too cowardly to use their names were afraid to disagree with their teachers because they feared a bad grade, then that is their problem. I doubt if they will go far in life if they continue such cowardly practices throughout their careers. With friends like some of you who fall for this Posner-type journalism, LU doesn't need any enemies.There's so many qualifiers in your argument, I don't even know where to begin
alum82 wrote:Just some quick clarifications: BYD, I didn't call you a liar. I said you used a ploy. I don't doubt that FF members asked you to comment on this or that because they didn't have the guts to do it. But, that doesn't mean that LU would have retaliated against them or that they thought LU would. Some people are just wusses but, when you say that FF members PMed you to post this or that, you are implying that there was some evil force lurking in the background that would have annihilated the poor folks who were scared to comment. That is the ploy. Another point: Law firms don't check with law schools when they make a hire. They look at grades. Somebody here said the former law students who wouldn't use their names were afraid of not getting good employment references from Staver. Also, some of you guys need to be a little more skeptical of LU critics like Posner when they write scandalous pieces like the one mentioned above. Doesn't it make you a little suspicious that he didn't get Staver's side of all the silly accusations. Seriously, do you really believe that students would get a poorer grade at LU if they didn't agree with the teacher about civil disobedience? And do you really believe that these "anonymous" students who were quoted would know what grades all the other students got. If these wuss former students who were too cowardly to use their names were afraid to disagree with their teachers because they feared a bad grade, then that is their problem. I doubt if they will go far in life if they continue such cowardly practices throughout their careers. With friends like some of you who fall for this Posner-type journalism, LU doesn't need any enemies.
back2back wrote:alum82, so at a Christian University, it is okay to lie on exam about your personal beliefs in order to obtain good grades? Yeah, Christ loves that...
Why can't you take BYD at his word? I see you choose not to take him at his word, so you are calling him a liar. but I want to know why?
flamerbob wrote:alum82 wrote:Just some quick clarifications: BYD, I didn't call you a liar. I said you used a ploy. I don't doubt that FF members asked you to comment on this or that because they didn't have the guts to do it. But, that doesn't mean that LU would have retaliated against them or that they thought LU would. Some people are just wusses but, when you say that FF members PMed you to post this or that, you are implying that there was some evil force lurking in the background that would have annihilated the poor folks who were scared to comment. That is the ploy. Another point: Law firms don't check with law schools when they make a hire. They look at grades. Somebody here said the former law students who wouldn't use their names were afraid of not getting good employment references from Staver. Also, some of you guys need to be a little more skeptical of LU critics like Posner when they write scandalous pieces like the one mentioned above. Doesn't it make you a little suspicious that he didn't get Staver's side of all the silly accusations. Seriously, do you really believe that students would get a poorer grade at LU if they didn't agree with the teacher about civil disobedience? And do you really believe that these "anonymous" students who were quoted would know what grades all the other students got. If these wuss former students who were too cowardly to use their names were afraid to disagree with their teachers because they feared a bad grade, then that is their problem. I doubt if they will go far in life if they continue such cowardly practices throughout their careers. With friends like some of you who fall for this Posner-type journalism, LU doesn't need any enemies.Am I able to guarantee what wouldn't happen? Sorry, I must be missing something.![]()
Are you able to guarantee this doesn't happen? I would choose the wording a little better before assumptions are made that this type of thing can't happen.