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You never did answer if you'd still support the team though.
Can this thread be moved to off topic since it does not pertain to basketball?
Do you not agree that gay marriage is a divisive issue in this country? There are people that support it and there are people that do not support it, no?
I'd have to think long and hard about it. I love the Blazers, but I also believe very strongly in equal rights. I have since the 1960s. The night Reverend King was assassinated had a profound impact on my life. I don't wish to share the details. It's very personal and I've only told a few people very close to me exactly how the events of that night changed me forever.
But I'd give the EXACT same answer if they came out with a statement denying any group of law abiding citizens equal rights under the law. No one will ever come out with an anti straight marriage position. The right for straight people to marry is a non-issue. It's so entrenched that people don't even think about it. Granting gay couples the same rights as straight couples does not infringe on anyone's rights in any way. That's why I have a hard time sympathizing with the anti gay marriage crowd. They are hiding behind religion to justify their bigotry and deny their fellow law abiding citizens the same civil rights they enjoy - and that's just wrong.
BNM
Sure it's divisive. Tough shit. So was equal rights for African American and women. Those who have rights always seem to want to hold down those who don't have equal treatment under the law. Oppression of minorities is just plain wrong. It's wrong on the basis of race, it's wrong on the basis of religion and it's wrong on the basis of sexual preference.
And no, supporting gay marriage does not oppress straight people in any way. It does not infringe on their religious freedoms. They are still free to believe what the choose and worship who they choose. Supporting gay marriage may offend them, but it does not take away any of their rights. Like I said earlier. Anyone who is offended by equal rights for for any minority deserves to be offended.
BNM
I understand how you feel BNM. I really do. That's not what I'm debating at all. Is it wrong to deny people equal rights? Yes. Absolutely. 100%.
I'm trying to have a respectful debate about the issue of involving politics in sports.
I for one do not want to talk about politics in sports.
Okay, I'm done. It's clear that you do not understand what I'm debating, and I'm not going to try to continue to explain it. I'm just talking in circles while you continue to talk about why gay marriage is good, even after I said that's not what I'm contesting. Cheers.
Oh, I understand completely what you're saying. You think the Blazers should sit on their hands and do nothing rather than risk annoying some people by doing the right thing and supporting equal rights for all law abiding citizens. I get it completely. You don't want the organization to have a conscience because it might alienate or annoy part of their fan base. I say too bad. Being right and being popular aren't always the same thing. Anyone who is annoyed or inconvenienced by the team supporting equal rights should take a long hard look in the mirror and ask themselves how they'd feel if their favorite sports team did not support their quest for equal treatment under the law.
BNM
seriously
Most seriously.
Oh, I understand completely what you're saying. You think the Blazers should sit on their hands and do nothing rather than risk annoying some people by doing the right thing and supporting equal rights for all law abiding citizens. I get it completely. You don't want the organization to have a conscience because it might alienate or annoy part of their fan base. I say too bad. Being right and being popular aren't always the same thing. Anyone who is annoyed or inconvenienced by the team supporting equal rights should take a long hard look in the mirror and ask themselves how they'd feel if their favorite sports team did not support their quest for equal treatment under the law.
BNM
Um . . . not the way "family" has been defined for thousands of years in every culture around the world.
In an era where the NBA appears most focused on increasing its market share both domestically and abroad, it's sometimes difficult to remember that each franchise represents a community. For many of these teams — particularly those in smaller markets — responsibilities include not just winning games and rewarding fan loyalty, but also broadcasting the character of a city to the rest of the country and world. A basketball fan in Miami, for instance, may only come to know Milwaukee through his experience of the Bucks. Profit typically comes first for every team in the league, but that doesn't mean that their civic duty is immaterial.
These factors factors help explain why, in rare cases, a team feels the need to make a political statement on behalf of its city and fans. During the 2010 NBA Playoffs, the Phoenix Suns spoke out against Arizona's controversial SB 1070 bill, which effectively allowed law enforcement officials to stop anyone on the suspicion of being an illegal immigrant. In their view, it was important enough to support their Latino fans and make a statement on behalf of equality in Arizona.
The Portland Trail Blazers have now made a similarly bold move. As activists in Oregon prepare to place a constitutional amendment in support of marriage equality on the November 2014 ballot, various Portland business and political organizations have thrown their support behind the measure. On Friday, Major League Soccer's Portland Timbers and the National Women's Soccer League's Portland Thorns FC voiced their endorsement of the efforts. Shortly thereafter, the Blazers became the first NBA team (and, although confirmation does not exist, likely the first team from one of the four major North American sports leagues) to support marriage equality and this prospective ballot measure. Here's their short statement:
“The Portland Trail Blazers are in support of the Freedom to Marry and Religious Protection ballot initiative. We do so as believers in individual choice as a fundamental right of all people.”
Although the statement consists of only 32 words and employs quasi-libertarian rhetoric rather than unabashedly liberal language, this is a bold statement. While the aftermath of Jason Collins's coming-out announcement in April changed the course of the NBA forever, the league retains many old prejudices in various forms. It's difficult to argue that Collins currently lacks an NBA job solely because of his sexual orientation, but that fact still plays into any team's consideration of whether he should be added to the roster. When an organization announces its support for marriage equality (or any LGBT cause), it speeds up the normalization of that behavior and creates a more open climate within an institution. With this announcement, the Blazers have told the world that they wish to be at the forefront of accepting gay and lesbian employees in the world of sports.
At the same time, it's perhaps best to view the statement in terms of Portland rather than of the NBA as a whole. The city conceives of itself as a haven for progressive-minded people. Its relationship with LGBTQ causes is strong, as well: when Sam Adams won election in 2008, it became the largest American city to elect a gay mayor. Despite the fact that the Blazers surely have fans who do not support marriage equality, it's absolutely the case that this announcement would be met more kindly in Portland than in most other NBA cities. In some way, the Blazers were able to make this statement because it broadly expresses the belief of the city they call home.
By this view, the Blazers have done little more than express an increasingly common sentiment in American society. If it's a bold statement in the context of sports, then it's worth wondering exactly why such barriers exist. Perhaps the Blazers, in making history in such simple fashion, have proven just how uncontroversial this issue can be under the right circumstances.
This whole idea of "equal rights" is misleading, and a classic example of the perversion of language. Who could possibly argue against "equal rights" for anyone? The same thing is done in the abortion argument when people talk about "women's choice." Who could possibly be against something so important as "choice"?
But when you elevate a woman's choice above everything else you overlook the fact that the child inside of her has no choice at all. And when you defend her right to do what she chooses with her own body, you're overlooking the fact that there is a separate body inside of her, and that she is taking life away from it. All of this is cloaked in the politically correct and sanctioned language that we use.
So it is in the gay marriage argument. Language has been so perverted that we don't even recognize it anymore. There is nothing intrinsically "gay" about homosexuality, and it 's not a natural "right" for homosexuals to marry. No one is advocating that brothers and sisters should be able to marry, or that parents should be able to marry their children, or that grandparents should be able to marry their grandchildren. So why is it a natural right of homosexuals?
As a society we are moving in a dangerous direction. The perversion of language is part of a larger perversion all around us.

Isn't incest just two humans making a choice for love?![]()
And in what culture in the history of mankind has the word "family" been used to describe the union of two homosexuals? Please provide examples.So..what about the single parents out there? or the grandparents who are taking care of their grandkids? or aunts and uncles? or brothers or sisters who are caring for siblings?
I would bet there are FAR more families that fit the description above, than that of a gay marriage/have kids combo.
Yet, those aren't the way "family" has been defined for thousands of years in every culture around the world.
Wow. You completely missed the point.Wow, so you equate same sex marriage with abortion and incest. Now that is a perversion of language.
This whole idea of "equal rights" is misleading, and a classic example of the perversion of language. Who could possibly argue against "equal rights" for anyone? The same thing is done in the abortion argument when people talk about "women's choice." Who could possibly be against something so important as "choice"?
But when you elevate a woman's choice above everything else you overlook the fact that the child inside of her has no choice at all.
And when you defend her right to do what she chooses with her own body, you're overlooking the fact that there is a separate body inside of her, and that she is taking life away from it. All of this is cloaked in the politically correct and sanctioned language that we use.
So it is in the gay marriage argument. Language has been so perverted that we don't even recognize it anymore. There is nothing intrinsically "gay" about homosexuality, and it 's not a natural "right" for homosexuals to marry.
No one is advocating that brothers and sisters should be able to marry, or that parents should be able to marry their children, or that grandparents should be able to marry their grandchildren. So why is it a natural right of homosexuals?
As a society we are moving in a dangerous direction. The perversion of language is part of a larger perversion all around us.
