Caring about someone, the act of caring about someone's welfare - whether they live or die, is never wrong.
When I care for someone, I don't just want to keep him alive, I want to do
whatever makes him happy, rather than "I love you, but not enough to do
that".
And it's just fantastic how you assume every christian wants to stop your insurance coverage from going to your partner or vice versa
Not "every" Christian, just the majority.
like we're all financial vampires trying to suck the house out from under you
Not every Christian wants to make sure I can be evicted from my house, or fired from my job, just for being who I am-- but of course the legislative effort to prevent such discrimination is going to fail again, because of the Christians (it is always the Christians, never anybody else, who fights to do me injury) . There was a legislative effort to provide national assistance to local governments faced with gay-bashing murders (Laramie, Wyoming was almost wiped out financially by the Shepard case), but the good Christians blocked it, spreading hysterical rumors among the flock that "it is going to become a federal crime to read from the Bible!" (I am not making this up). In Michigan, school administrations are not allowed to intervene in bullying cases if the bullying takes the form of queer-bashing, because that is protected "religious speech"; there is a legislative effort to change that, but of course the Christians are going to block it.
that is certainly a misery for me.
And that's good for you.
You wonder why I find Christians evil??
Celibacy is no bad thing.
For some people, sure. I am not one of them. God does not make us all alike.
Christians generally aren't going to be happy for someone who is delighted in the false joy of sinning.
There is nothing false in the joy, and there is nothing sinful in loving.
Jesus is the Logos made flesh, and the Bible is very much the word of God and certainly not "dead".
Jesus was often critical of the Old Testament laws, acknowledging that they were written for primitive tribes when people knew no better, for example saying bluntly of the law on unilateral divorce "Out of hard-heartedness that was written." Someone like you who does not consider right and wrong to have anything to do with the difference between loving other people and doing them harm, but only to whether it violates the letter (the "dead" letter, as Paul called it) has nothing to do with Jesus, but rather has more in common with his crucifiers.
This is a really bad analogy, so take no offense because I am not connecting homosexual actions with it, but I'm going to use it to make a point.
If we understand why a pedophile rapes a child...
GODDAMN YOU TO THE DEEPEST PIT OF HELL, of course I take offense to such a comparison, but I am not surprised at such foulness from a Christian. It illustrates, more clearly than anything I could say, that you really have no comprehension of what makes pedophilia, or anything else, "wrong".