OK. I don't live in the US, but my understanding is that if you want to be tax exempted as a charity or such, you can't participate in politics in this sense.
And that is supposed to be true. Supposedly, you should lose your tax-exempt status if you tell people how to vote. However, there's a certain Utah-based faith that poured unknown dollar amounts and volunteer hours into the Proposition 8 campaign, and
they still have tax-exempt status. I'm sure one marquee on one obscure Olympia church isn't going to change a thing.
While I do hope that what you describe about gay marriage approval is correct, I'd still like to see some actual statistics. It's not legal in more than a couple of states, after all.
Assuming the Supreme Court overturns Prop 8, it will be legal for a quarter of the US population. That will be because California is the most populous state in the Union--and it's legal in New York, which also has a rather large population. It is legal in nine states, the District of Columbia, and two Indian tribes. Obama has publicly declared his support of same-sex marriage.
Three states made it legal in one day, which is fairly impressive. On that same day, another failed to pass a constitutional ban, becoming only the second to do so. What statistics do you want? I gave you current poll numbers. Do you want links to the actual polls? Because I can do that, too. Heck, it doesn't take much looking around to discover that the support for same-sex marriage is increasing in the US, whereas the amount of people who consider themselves religious is relatively static.
Fragmentary information is not what I meant. If all of you got about the same information about the movie, and you could even agree that you were talking about the same movie, that's fine. It has nothing to do what I meant, though. Could you actually make a review of the movie?
Probably, but I wouldn't. I
know there are several movies I haven't actually seen that I could not only write reviews of, but could write
accurate reviews of.
Perhaps not, but I know I love more my wife and my child than my parents, for example. I've also observed that all of them exist.
You're missing my point, perhaps deliberately. I can't remember the exact quote, but in
Hogfather, Death talks to Susan about how humanity is all about the things that don't exist. She argues, but he suggests she mill the universe down to its smallest particles and find her an atom of "justice" or "love." Charlie Sheen and Emilio Estevez certainly exist, as does your family. Your love for them, and their beauty,
do not have tangible existence. They are names we have assigned to something that, from an objective perspective, can be said not to exist. "Compatibility"? Find me a particle of that. The object of desire exists, but "desire"?