*not a UN member in TNP, tempted*
Erm, that is a load of bologne.
The author desperately tries to put a legitimate reason on the repeal (finally succeeding in setting up a "beastiality" strawman), but the true motivation is quite clear: "Religion" and "societal structure" (in other words, conservative tradition) of the nation must be allowed to dictate what rights individuals of the nation enjoy, and what not. It boils down to the conflict of national sovereignty vs. codified ethics of the international community - the universal attack that works on any UN resolution from Emission Control to Abolition of Slavery.
You are simulataneously taking two routes. One) Bestiality is obviously not good (or at least imply reasonability of disliking it). Two) People are trying to pass this based on a value system. Well, Erm, you just established that. Bestiality is part of a value system, which to you is at least ok to disallow/ban at least within a marriage arean, but to other people there are values beyond this. To establish a source of more unanimous dislike, it spreads the idea of sovereignty more universally. Most TNPers would likely not be as supportive of a pro-bestiality marriage amendment, so they can possibly comprehend further ability to define a system of ethics and values within their nation. Are you implying that if someone has a more refined sense of ethics that they should be banned from speaking up? Should any minority opinion in the UN have to write in the clearest and most unpopular language their legislation to ensure it fails? The UN is for everybody, love it or leave it.
Ironically, the strawman aims for the one line of the resolution that actually does endorse national sovereignty. I quote,
FURTHER RECOGNIZES all nation's right to expand this definition beyond species borders as the individual governments see fit.
To which the author replies:
knowing that the individual nations know best what is a marriage and what isn't.
The only conclusion is this: On one hand, the author demands the sovereignty for a nation to discriminate against its homosexual citizens; on the other, he denies them the sovereignty to endorse beastiality. Since the author is clearly following his own specific set of morals that mandate this ("Homosexuality and Beastiality are WRONG"),
why does he not explicitly state these morals in the repeal for all to see and vote upon? Hiding behind vague mutterings about national sovereignty is disingenuous to say the least.
Uh? First off I can write a resolution that allows a nation to support penus pumps even though there is no resolution stoppping it nor any resolution that would hinder that. The bestiality marriage is only discussed in this resolution. It is obviously the "right" of the nation even if this was repealed. The only thing that is not a "right" b/c of it is the ability to make a resolution opposing bestiality marriage. There is absolutely no grounds b/c of the DoM res. to establish any ban of marriage from two tangible objects even if for some reason it would be wise to decide such object. Thus the point is not that it forces people to have bestiality marriage, but it protects it as a right just as with the other parts of the resolution. Perhaps every TNP member could imagine something they aren't fond of and thus understand that a person within body they are in has issue with it passing resolutions against its core beliefs. I mean geez. Just b/c you take Intro to Logic doesn't mean you can start throwing around phrases to scare people from disagreeing with you.
Finally on the bold, Erm, welcome to international diplomacy. Shall every resolution have the inner secrets of its writer. Should the pot ones have that the person wants to smoke it, or the ones repealing the pedophilae one about their problem. Heck no, I'd rather only face issues on meritious points not between the line analysis by even such respectable and fine people as yourself, Erm.
Might continue later.
I am not huge fan of the repeal's language, but I think the resolution should be repealed. If I could, I'd support it.
Edit: Grew rather longer than I anticipated. Oh well, apparently it is not against the rules to debate in the UN voting threads.
No just the custom to bow down to the first person who uses a logic term. A modus ponens, and bam you got'em by the balls.