Monday, July 23, 2007

 

De-criminalising Homosexuality in Singapore

This is a really hot issue lately and as an educator, I have to make a stand.

There is nothing wrong with the homosexual as a person, and I'll go as far to say that we should treat them as normal people. But to have that person asking the nation to repeal (or remove) the law against criminalising their sexual activities, then I think that's where my support ends.

Why?

I'm for the argument that goes for personal responsibility. It is one thing to say that you are born with certain tendencies, but another to say that you want the law to look the other way when you commit a crime base on the law of the land.

I came across a good story to highlight the above reasoning. Please bear with me as I relate the story below:

It is a well documented and scientifically proven that children born to abusive fathers tend to be abusive. A child who has watched his father systematically abuse his mother, his siblings and himself, will most likely grow up under such circumstances to be abusive. Say now this child is in school and his classmates has provoked him unknowing of his tendencies. He bashes up the classmate and leaves him with broken bones and smashed up face. He is brought before a judge and conducts his own defense by telling the judge the following. I've an abusive father and I've been conditioned from young like that. So it is really not my fault that I bashed my classmate up. Question - do you think the judge will release him because he is not responsible for what he did? Obviously not. The judege will hold him accountable for what he did, inrrespective of his tendencies.

Fast forward to our discussion on homosexuals. The reasoning that the supporters of homosexuals are asking us to remove the law that has criminalise homosexual acts amounts to the line of thinking in the abusive child above. We should not repeal (remove) the law that has upheld certain values and truth that has served us well for so many years base on (1) some compassionate arguments that they are born like that. (2) Neither should we do so because some of these people are highly creative and can bring economic gains to the country. We can see the effects of this in countries that has allowed this to happen.

If the law is repealed, firstly, it will begin the downward slide in moral values in the country, and secondly there will be a breakdown in the "family" unit as we know and lastly, there will be a slide in the economic value of the nation when families struggle to handle the crisis.

So, don't begin the downward slide by standing firm against repealing the law against decriminalising homosexuals activities in Singapore.

Decriminalising homosexual activities is the right decision of our forefathers, let's uphold it.





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