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andrewcooke | 12 years ago

i've stood my ground for my beliefs when people were ridiculing me for doing so. it's a lonely position to be in.

i didn't share eich's views here, but he's free to have them, and the reason for the problem is, ironically, the intolerance of other people (people forcing their "tolerance" down his throat).

he has my respect. not for his view on gays. but for staying true to what he did. i think this is a shame.

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wdewind|12 years ago

Except he didn't stand his ground at all. He never once explained his beliefs. If he had done that I think people would've been a lot more tolerant of him. I don't think it had to end this way.

rossjudson|12 years ago

Sure it did. The knives were out.

Is it a requirement to explain what you believe? You can't just state it? I mean, there's no rational reason to oppose gay marriage, so attempting to rationalize it just comes off sounding stupid. Should we force a person to say stupid things?

Maybe what you mean is to demand a conversation. Forcing someone to participate in a conversation doesn't seem right either.

Does a person have the right to be close-minded?

badubu|12 years ago

Except that personal beliefs are just that, personal. You don't have to explain them.

yawboakye|12 years ago

Assuming people can logically explain why they're LGBTQ. Most of the time personal beliefs are irrational.

vacri|12 years ago

Except he didn't stand his ground at all. He never once explained his beliefs.

He did stand his ground in terms of what his position meant at Mozilla, explaining it on his own blog and doing interviews.