Taunta said:
Lightknight said:
Great, so people shouldn't be hired based on their personal beliefs. Glad to know that that tolerance is a one way street. Not that I give two shits east who marries who. I just consider it an epic double standard to demand that people who hold a different belief, even controversial ones, should be un-hire-able and shrivel up and die.
Now, if his personal beliefs flooded into the way the company functions? That's quite another thing.
I'm not sure where you're seeing anyone advocate for his removal. Okcupid just politely informed you in case that sort of thing is important to you. People are allowed to continue to use a product regardless of the CEOs personal beliefs, just as people are allowed to choose not to support people who they disagree with. I don't see why this is hard to understand.
Oh, the old "tolerate the intolerant" adage. "Disapproving of someone for something they have no control over" and "disapproving of someone for having an entirely optional opinion and actively supporting legislation that denies a group of people their civil rights" are not equal.
That's turning a blind eye to the intention of the action. Company hires a guy with a belief system they don't agree with so they decide to punish the company for not being more discriminatory. Hiding it behind the guise of informing customers doesn't make it any less pro-discrimination. Their goal is to send a message that companies shouldn't hire people if they hold beliefs that this group doesn't hold.
I get that their position upsets you and so it's easy for you to dismiss them as not deserving the same basic human rights we enjoy on our side of the fence. But that is not what our rights stand for.
And look, it's common to automatically associate people who advocate "traditional marriage" with those who disapprove of someone for what they are born as but the two are not inseparable. Some people and cultures simply believe that marriage is axiomatically between a man and woman. That doesn't necessarily imply anything negative regarding alternative arrangements but merely states a definition of a term (of course, some people are absolutely also anti-gay). Again, this is why I think the government has no right assuming control of the term "marriage license". It's not theirs to control. It is the sole property of religious and cultural segments and that includes gay culture and their own willingness to marry each other. But because the government insists on maintaining a mandatory "Marriage" license to gain access to legal financial and familial unions then people are going to associate the two things as one in the same even though marriage has almost always been common law even in America with marriage licenses being to overcome the few laws regarding it (permissible age, marrying a mourning period, etc.) and not to let it happen at all. Additionally, the marriage ceremony itself was a religious or cultural ceremony.
In my discussion with others on the subject, I have found that many people in the traditional marriage camp have no problem with gay couples having all the benefits of marriage. Inheritance, family benefits like visitation rights, etc. They simply don't believe that marriage is a flexible or subjective term. So you've got to ask yourself, what is the goal here? Is it to have a license with the term "marriage" written on it or is it to get all of the basic rights that come along with it? The answer is likely both but I think the fight for the marriage license is more of trying to force society to accept their union. That will not achieve the goal but changing the term will alter the uphill battle in a favorable way and hopefully make sure all groups get the same treatment.
This is why I advocate the complete removal of the term "marriage" from the government license language. They are appropriating a term that means something to people and that is causing a tremendous amount of confusion and conflict. Just changing the term should begin to alleviate some of the pressures and give gay couples access to rights they should have been having all along.