Poll majority: Gays' orientation can't change

Discussion in 'Politics' started by ZZZzzzzzzz, Jun 27, 2007.

  1. Uhhh, does the legal document declare the child has no biological father...

    More dopiness posing as a pseudo intellectual response to a previously stated logical falsehood.

    Call me when a child is born as a result of a virgin birth, or some other "likely" possibility...

    Oh, I know, scientists believe...

    Or human cloning...

    Today, right now, no child is born without male sperm involved, hence, de facto...a father...

    Say some girl got pregnant, and the man who impregnated her died during the love making...still the child had a father.

    Please, I trust you can do better than the silliness of some legal document, that has no relationship to a logical truth...

     
    #81     Jul 1, 2007
  2. Yes, intentionality supplants biology.

    Jesus
     
    #82     Jul 2, 2007
  3. jem

    jem

    uh did you respond to the fricken point. What the heck are meds doing to your clarity of thought?

    Have you been in the hospital when a child is born. Have you seen the nurse come in and ask the fathers name. Have you seen them record it and then report it.

    Other than the birth certificate there were no other legal documents for my 3 children. The hospital took our word for it. If I had not been then I am sure they would have taken my wife's word.

    If the document now allows two women to be the parents - you just erased one of the critical components of the record.



     
    #83     Jul 2, 2007
  4. #84     Jul 4, 2007
  5. 10M dollar flat - Buckets of sex toys. :p

    I'd like to go out like this horror man - skip the heroin though, and give me ladies.


    Count Gottfried von Bismarck, descendant of 'Iron Chancellor,' dead at 44
    JILL LAWLESS

    LONDON (AP) - Count Gottfried von Bismarck, the stylish and troubled scion of one of Germany's most famous families, has died, police said Wednesday. He was 44.
    The Metropolitan Police said Bismarck, great-great-grandson of Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, who unified Germany, was found dead Monday at his apartment in London's Chelsea district.

    British newspapers reported he had suffered a heroin overdose.

    Gottfried Alexander Leopold Graf von Bismarck-Schonhausen was born in 1962 and educated in Germany and Switzerland before attending Oxford University in England.

    As an undergraduate, he was known for his flamboyant wit, lavish parties and extravagant appearance, which at times involved dressing in fishnet stockings or traditional Bavarian lederhosen.

    Bismarck's life was clouded by two violent deaths at his homes. In 1986, Olivia Channon, the 22-year-old daughter of a Conservative government minister, died of an overdose in Bismarck's bed at Oxford.

    Bismarck - who was not in the bed at the time - was not implicated in the death, although he was charged and fined for possessing cocaine and amphetamine sulphate.

    At his trial, his lawyer said Channon's death "is going to be a shadow over the head of Gottfried von Bismarck, probably for the rest of his life."

    The count said years later that some had accused him of disgracing the Bismarck name.

    Bismarck eventually settled in London, working in finance and telecoms. He remained out of the headlines until last August, when a 38-year-old man, Anthony Casey, died after falling from a roof terrace at Bismarck's home during a party.

    Dr. Paul Knapman, presiding over an inquest at Westminster Coroner's Court, said one room of the apartment contained a "bizarre" assortment of items including a large rubber tarpaulin on the floor, towels, lubricants, bottles of vodka, buckets of sex toys and a TV set up to show pornography.

    "In common parlance, in the early hours of the morning, there was a gay orgy going on," Knapman said.

    "Nevertheless," he said, "this was conducted by consenting males in private."

    Police concluded Casey's death was an accident, and the coroner's verdict was "death by misadventure," meaning no once was to blame.
     
    #85     Jul 5, 2007