What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Wow!! - Brett Finch incident

Status
Not open for further replies.

Tiger5150

Bench
Messages
3,862
Just a point of interest: the majority of countries that currently criminalise homosexuality (or, more correctly, different sexualities and transgender etc) are ex British colonies. It tends to be a hangover of British colonialism. Islam hasn‘t, historically, been particularly hung-up about it. It’s modern Islamist extremist regimes that have become particularly punitive about it (ie: its criminalisation is more culturally and politically motivated, than religious).

You sure?

 

Mojo

Bench
Messages
4,121
Last edited:

The Rosco

Bench
Messages
2,909
Who says “Our Father”?

Perhaps Catholics.
Well, you'd have to be some kind of dumb merkin to think otherwise, especially when you consider those words are the introduction to a Catholic prayer.
Who thinks a bloke with a beard, a set of balls, a penis, and all the manly things that testosterone brings . . . . is a woman ?
Perhaps a fruitcake ?
 

Mojo

Bench
Messages
4,121
Well, you'd have to be some kind of dumb merkin to think otherwise, especially when you consider those words are the introduction to a Catholic prayer.
Who thinks a bloke with a beard, a set of balls, a penis, and all the manly things that testosterone brings . . . . is a woman ?
Perhaps a fruitcake ?
You might be onto something. Maybe god is transgender? (This thread has gone rogue).
 

The Rosco

Bench
Messages
2,909
You might be onto something. Maybe god is transgender? (This thread has gone rogue).
Oh no.
After reading my post, I saw how someone might think I was referring to God.
No mate, I'm talking about your bloke that has stood to piss his whole life, has chest hair and a beard, a pair of balls and a willy . . . . but after seeing the delicate rays of the sun reflect off a flower in a particular afternoon glow in the springtime . . . has decided he is a woman.
Strange days indeed.
 

Tiger5150

Bench
Messages
3,862
Yes, I’m sure. Refer to the first ‘Key Fact’ in your post : ‘71 jurisdictions … almost half of them are Commonwealth jurisdictions’. The second part of my post mentions that modern Islamist regimes are particularly punitive.

so.......NOT a majority? Most of the Countries have never been British Colonies and most of the ones that were gained independence 100 years ago Nothing to do with British Colonisation. Islam is the overwhelming common denominator.
 

soc123_au

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
19,867
Who says “Our Father”?

Perhaps Catholics.
Jesus, according to the bible. They didn't have dna tests back then, so Mary might have made that shit up and Jesus just went along with it so the family avoided the embarrassment.

Maybe his real dad is Finchys great great x 200 Grandfather?
 

Mojo

Bench
Messages
4,121
so.......NOT a majority? Most of the Countries have never been British Colonies and most of the ones that were gained independence 100 years ago Nothing to do with British Colonisation. Islam is the overwhelming common denominator

I've agreed several times that Islamist regimes are particularly punitive and repressive but, I'm sorry, it is a fact that many of the jurisdictions around the world that still criminalise homosexuality enforce legislatures that derive from British colonial histories. It is, in fact, a majority: 36 out of 71 countries. Islam is a large, but not the overwhelming common denominator. The common denominator is extreme conservatism - whether it's a hangover from colonialism, or religious extremism - both Islamist and fundamentalist Christianity.

Colonial legacy

Many of the laws criminalising homosexual relations originate from colonial times.
And in many places, breaking these laws could be punishable by long prison sentences.
Out of the 53 countries in the Commonwealth - a loose association of countries most of them former British colonies - 36 have laws that criminalise homosexuality.
Countries that criminalise homosexuality today also have criminal penalties against women who have sex with women, although the original British laws applied only to men.
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (Ilga) monitors the progress of laws relating to homosexuality around the world.

It says the death penalty is the legally prescribed punishment for same-sex sexual acts in Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Yemen and in the northern states in Nigeria.
 

Tiger5150

Bench
Messages
3,862
I've agreed several times that Islamist regimes are particularly punitive and repressive but, I'm sorry, it is a fact that many of the jurisdictions around the world that still criminalise homosexuality enforce legislatures that derive from British colonial histories. It is, in fact, a majority: 36 out of 71 countries. Islam is a large, but not the overwhelming common denominator. The common denominator is extreme conservatism - whether it's a hangover from colonialism, or religious extremism - both Islamist and fundamentalist Christianity.

Colonial legacy

Many of the laws criminalising homosexual relations originate from colonial times.
And in many places, breaking these laws could be punishable by long prison sentences.
Out of the 53 countries in the Commonwealth - a loose association of countries most of them former British colonies - 36 have laws that criminalise homosexuality.
Countries that criminalise homosexuality today also have criminal penalties against women who have sex with women, although the original British laws applied only to men.
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (Ilga) monitors the progress of laws relating to homosexuality around the world.

It says the death penalty is the legally prescribed punishment for same-sex sexual acts in Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Yemen and in the northern states in Nigeria.

Complete rubbish. Most of these ex British colonies became independent more than 100 years ago. Aus, GB & Canada had laws against homosexuality, what changed? A progressive system of democracy, culture and society. The fact that these countries once were (most over 100 years ago) british colonies is irrelevant, what has happened since is the reason that these laws remain.

Which of those countries do you contend has these laws due to "fundamentalist Christianity"?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts

Top