Q&A: Homosexuality
Homosexuality
Question
The Rabbi writes in the third book that he does not see this as a moral problem, and therefore the problem is apparently only religious.
As I understand it, there is a moral problem if you look beyond the person himself and his choices. If, say, you look from the standpoint of the children that person wants to raise, you could say that there is something immoral about approving such a thing as a society. Beyond that, you could also say that there are problems beyond morality, and they are neither moral nor religious problems.
Answer
Fine. I disagree.
Discussion on Answer
What's immoral is that in a society where "homo" is a slur, the child will become the punching bag of all the other children living in their cruel world, and therefore anyone who loves his children and not himself, on the basis of his children, should and is even recommended to hide anything in his behavior that would cause his children pain, as long as that is possible
(for example, a disabled father has no way to hide his disability, but a gay father can certainly hide his deviance).
As for studies, there are more studies on the opposite side.
No, the problem is you and people like you. When religion marked this with an X, that's what developed in society. If you went back in time to Greek culture, it was a symbol of masculinity and honor. Personally, I really don't like at all the way this developed and what it became (and again, most likely that's because of how society condemned it), but when it's normal and there is only this inclination, it's completely normal. Can you point me to even one study? You're welcome to.
What is immoral about it? Studies show that it doesn't matter whether it's a father or a mother; the main thing is that there be one stable figure raising the child.