First, you attempted to discredit someone's argument by saying "should religious people be banned from voting then"?
What's wrong with that? The point of 'debate' is to discredit other opinions.
People elected to govern this country doing so on the basis of non-secular beliefs, and peoples personal beliefs being informed by religion aren't in any way analogous. The government, unless given clear evidence otherwise, should prioritise people's rights to be free from persecution over people's rights to have laws made in their favour i.e. they should prioritise the right for LGBT peoples to not be banned access to marriage,
verb (used with object), persecuted, persecuting.
1.
to pursue with harassing or oppressive treatment, especially because of religion, race, or beliefs; harass persistently.
Don't talk like a pompous dickhead when you don't even know the meaning of rudimentary words
over the right from religious people to not have to live in a society where gay marriage is allowed.
What protected rights people should have is a contentious issue in the first place. You value gay marriage and think it should be protected, other people don't and think it shouldn't be protected. Why are your values any more valid than theirs?
Also, voting doesn't really influence laws, honey, we democratically elect parties every four years from which we largely place faith in their capacity to organise and influence laws on our behalf.
I said
ultimately influences laws, as opposed to directly. Which it DOES, because the party is elected on the basis of an expectation to enact specific laws or some kind of laws that aim for a particular outcome.
If voting had no influence on laws whatsoever then voting would be utterly meaningless.
Second, them being a muslim != an inability to talk about Christianity. Everything he said was correct and sourced, so don't be a bigot.
muslims accuse anyone who isn't a muslim and talks about islam of being ignorant and unqualified to talk about it, but im sure they arent bigots.
hospitals = government institution
banning access to free health care != active dispossession of liberties
Correct. Without government, there wouldn't be government-provided free healthcare. Therefore, it's not a liberty.
law and order = government institution
banning access to law and order != active dispossession of liberties.
Firstly, order is a state of being, not an institution.
Secondly, the government has a monopoly on law and prohibits other law-making parties from operating within its jurisdiction.
Therefore its not a valid comparison.
It's important to note that marriage
of the kind desired by 'marriage equality' advocates can only exist with government. If government were to suddenly collapse and cease to exist, gays would still not have the right to marry, and yet there is no government restricting them from marrying. Then whence cometh the oppression? If a right does not exist in the absence of government, then how can government be responsible for the deprivation?
It would be a generous description - given the sheer lack of logic behind your arguments - to even label them sophistry.