On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 02:06:10 GMT, "Frank Dresser"
wrote:
"Tracy" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 01:42:13 GMT, "Frank Dresser"
wrote:
There are many anti-internet porn groups such as Morality in Media.
How
many similiar anti-transexual groups are there?
Have the anti-transsexual groups ever testified before Congress?
Frank Dresser
Those questions I cannot answer, but I would think that if a person
took a street survey they would find that most people would be against
it. I would venture to say that a good 95 percent would not agree with
it. Just because people don't speak out against it does not mean that
they support it.
Hardly anybody speaks out against it. Hardly anybody even thinks about
it. It's not much of an issue for most people.
Porn is just so much larger that it attracts attention to a very large
degree. Look at the spam that the average person gets. Most of it is
porn related. I filter my kids computers. I don't agree with porn
either.
Tracy
Let's imagine some other person asked you for some good moral parenting
tips. I imagine you'd emphisize good loving discipline, good study
habits, restrict internet access, have some fun, go to church, etc.
I really can't imagine the first thing you'd emphisize would "Make sure
the kids don't become transvestites!".
Frank Dresser
Your right! Just because it lacks popularity within the framework of
moral does not mean that people agree with it or even come close to
agreeing. Like I said, porn is everywhere, people see it all the time.
Probably 1 in 500000 people are transsexuals. It's not on people
minds. Does that make it any less immoral? Most people would probably
agree that they think more about porn, gays or lesbians as issues but
if the subject where brought up I would gamble that they would agree
that it is perverted and immoral. You don't hear about pedophilia as
much either but is it any less immoral that porn?
Tracy
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