Obnoxious Opinions
I once made a rude and unfair remark about hating young people with opinions. I made it after I heard two high school students talk about the “message” in a Hedley song (there was no message, the song was an annoying top 40 hit that no one will remember five years from now).
I made it again after I offered to buy the friend of a friend’s younger brother a hot chocolate from Starbucks, and he said it was stupid to buy coffee that you “had to take out a second mortgage for.” One should not criticize a kind offering from a near stranger. It was a nice gesture on the part of a [relatively] mentally astute young woman, not a creepy enticement from a pantsless man in a 1989 Oldsmobile.
After browsing a few pro-family (and pro-family always means anti-sex but pro-gun, go figure) websites, I hate at least 60 percent of people with opinions.
To the “no kissing before marriage” crowd: You must be joking. Kissing – the mere touching of mouths – is now considered (by some, not all) to be an impure practice that compromises a couple’s Christian integrity before the bounds of holy matrimony make it okay to have vigorous, unprotected anal sex in the honeymoon suite at the Holiday Inn? Tell me it’s not true (it is)!
Kissing, some people on the Focus on the Family blog argue, is a prelude to sex. A wet tongued temptress forcing you to tear off your pants and consummate your unholy union, leading to the inevitable disappointment of God, Jesus and your mother.
Here’s the thing – an act becomes most tempting when it’s naughty. No one feels a rebellious rush when studying for a test or volunteering at a food bank. Why? Because those are things you’re supposed to do, things that society encourages (and for good reason). When people – particularly people in positions of authority, parents included – start condemning acts and warning of grave consequences, curiosity is peaked and overindulgence ensues. This is why the cool kids drink too much and smoke too often and drive really, really fast. It’s cliche behavior, but it’s still a little badass. All girls still say they want a man who’s “a little bit of a bad boy,” don’t they?
All I know is this, if people have no intention of having sex at a certain point in time, a kiss won’t turn them into rabid nymphomaniacs, unless they’re overwhelmed and enticed by the dastardly immorality of their scandalous actions.
As far as other young opinions go, I recall being encouraged to “think critically” in my elementary school days by having light ethical questions posed to me and other classmates. The favourite question, other than “why was the Holocaust bad?”, was “is it right to keep animals in captivity?”
That’s a stupid fucking question for several reasons. One, all kids will say it’s bad because they’ll feel that’s the right answer. Second, it’s unfair because all children love zoos, and need not be guilted into relinquishing the joy that comes from an activity not involving sneaking their mom’s cigarettes. Thirdly, animals in captivity (this includes domesticated pets, by the by) don’t know any different, so they don’t care. If they’re well fed and cared for, they’re as content as they can be.
Furthermore, anyone who watches the Discovery Channel knows that while zoo animals may not be free, they’re safe from predators and starvation and habitat destruction and poachers. You can’t draw some unreasonable parallel between zoos and fascist governments who trade freedom for safety either, because that’s not an appropriate analogy. Animals have only one “civil” right, and that’s the right to humane treatment from humans. They don’t vote or protest or write strongly worded letters to politicians. They sleep, eat, shit and play, and adequately run zoos allow them to do so in peace. Also, zoos bring people joy, and there isn’t enough joy in the world as it is.
Zoos, really, are the least of the animal kingdom’s problems. If I was a tiger or polar bear or shark or lemur, I’d want to live in captivity. I’d get used to the stares and shrieks and greasy fingerprints on the walls of my spacious enclosure, and I’d likely never yearn for a short and brutal life somewhere in Africa.
So, the point of this post (I think), is to stop asking kids about the ethical nature of zoos. It breeds obnoxious opinions that make me angry.
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