Ladas wrote:
Is this in the same vein as arguments that partaking in "unhealthy" (subjective) activities leads to increased experimentation and further off the norm?
I suspect it goes the other way - i.e., that allowing for some degree of experimentation probably
reduces the percentage of people who veer off into the fringes; whereas requiring strict adherence to a narrow mean encourages those who do experiment to more thoroughly reject the consensus and get truly freaky.
Ladas wrote:
Of course, take your comment and consider the point behind reasoning, to which Khross earlier alluded. Celibacy was a solution to solve a pattern of abuse.
Yeah, I don't get the relevance of this point, actually. I know the origins of the celibacy requirement, but I don't see what it has to do with the question of whether or not it leads to higher levels of sexual deviancy.
Ladas wrote:
That comment aside, I don't believe the push is strictly to that notion, but to the notion that being a catholic priest turns men into gay pedophiles, which is what was claimed by a poster here.
Heh. I must have missed that comment.
Quote:
So if we were to make reliance on government programs a sin, we would in fact be sowing the seeds of a greater dependency on hand outs? Who knew.
Actually, I think that's quite plausible. It might reduce the number of people accepting temporary hand-outs, but I wouldn't be surprised if it made it harder for people who are chronic dependents to get off the dole by fostering depression and/or resentment. It's like fat people who can't stop eating because they're so depressed about being fat and resentful of all the people shaming them for it. They're like, "F*ck you! Mind your own business! Ima eat this donut and enjoy it!" *cry* *sob* *nom nom nom* *sniffle*