Hydrophilic
Well-known member
If you really think about it, do you really think that the last 10 years of activity on the topic has been a greater burden on we straight folks than the last several hundred years of discrimination have been on the LGBTQ population.
Honestly, how many times has LGTBQ activism caused you to worry about getting a job, or about having a place to live, or about being able to access appropriate medical services, or being able to marry whom you loved or about your personal safety walking alone?
I am not trying to be argumentative, but sincerely, why is this such a big deal to liberty loving folks? To each there own tends to be my motto.
An age old question. There are those who thought amendments 13,14,15,19,24 were too radical, and the ERA still hasn't been ratified. It makes me wonder if we were great by default, or are becoming great through progress?
50 years ago sex equality seemed destined for the Constitution. What happened?
The U.S. Senate overwhelmingly voted to approve the Equal Rights Amendment in 1972, paving the way for it to become the 28th amendment to the U.S. Constitution. It was roaring along...until it wasn't.
www.npr.org