No it's not hypocritical. It's freedom of Speech.
I might want someone to stfu Lol. But freedom of Speech :/
And it's not my "standards." It's just a fact that beliefs inform actions. If you believe X, it will influence your action regarding Y. If they are connected.
The reason I want them to stop spreading parts of what they believe, is because it is wrong. Homosexuality by definition is not, "evil, immoral or against nature". As many Christians say. Those are simply divisive lies. I want things of that nature to stop being spread. Not because of emotion. But because the truth is better. Homosexuality has nothing to do with morality. The idea that it's evil makes no sense and it's obviously not against nature.
I have no idea of what you are talking about or where you are coming from for the second part. It seems like you're replying to a different discussion.
English
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Webster Definition - Hypocrite: "a person who claims or pretends to have certain beliefs about what is right but who behaves in a way that disagrees with those beliefs" The pretend belief you're trying to show is that you believe all people should be able to spread what they believe. You even said that. However, you clearly prefer that Christians not spread what they believe and that you retain the ability to spread what you believe. This is undoubtedly hypocritical - there's no debate...but maybe a better way to put it is that you are living by a double standard Right, the "belief informs action" standard is not YOUR standard. It is a fact- you're right. However, it is the standard YOU chose to support YOUR argument. That's why I said your standard. I'm only trying to show you that in judging others in the spread of their faith, you judge yourself too. [quote]The reason I want them to stop spreading parts of what they believe, is because it is wrong. Homosexuality by definition is not, "evil, immoral or against nature".[/quote] Whose definition of homosexuality is this? Yours? Webster's? Is it objective? Is it God's? Christians have a very different definition of homosexuality than you do because they attach morality to it. So when you argue that it's not wrong, they already don't believe you. What you're doing is exactly what a Christian does when he comes to you and says that homosexuality is wrong and you laugh because your definition of homosexuality is completely different. So to say "by definition" does not work. It's not their definition. You're using another double standard. And what does freedom of speech got to do with this? I never said you couldn't say what you did. I just meant it makes you look ignorant. Calling freedom of speech is usually just used as a distraction, and it has nothing to do with your argument in this case.
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[quote]However, you clearly prefer that Christians not spread what they believe[/quote] Sort of, yes. But I won't take action to stop them from spreading their beliefs. Depending on the situation anyway. [quote]and that you retain the ability to spread what you believe.[/quote] This is where you lose me. So I'll just say my position. I think everyone, even if I don't agree with what they believe, should be allowed to spread the belief. How is that hypocritical? Everything we were talking about is speech or at least expression. Maybe I should have used that. Freedom of Expression. Because what else are we talking about when you say challenge? Are we not challenging ideas by discussion? That is why I thought speech would be the better term. [quote]I want Christians to continue to have the ability to challenge beliefs. Yet I don't agree with their stand point.[/quote] That's what I said from the get go and I stand by it. And for the life of me, I can't see how it is hypocritical. :/ maybe I worded myself wrong. It doesn't matter though because that is my position. (Maybe I'll get a better understanding of it some other time and revise my position.) The first part is realizing everyone should be able to express themselves. The second is my stance on what they are expressing. From my understanding, if this is hypocritical.. I would want Christians to challenge ideas, yet actively deny them the opportunity to do so.