stupei said:It's nice that so many people are in a position of privilege where they don't have to worry about their current lack of civil rights and so they can respond to things like this with, "LOL, you mad, OP?"
I'm not trying to minimize the importance of gay marriage, but gay people in America hardly have it bad compared to people who live in war-torn countries, people who live under authoritarian regimes, and gay people in like 100 other countries. A douchebag who uses terms like "position of privilege" might even argue that they're in a position of privilege themselves compared to the vast majority of humans on this planet...
Do you not buy products like electronics that are made using raw materials extracted from African countries where millions of people are killed, like the Democratic Republic of Congo? Do you not buy products like [half the stuff you own] that benefit dictatorial regimes that utilize labor camps and engage in organ harvesting like the People's Republic of China? Do you not drive a car because such a large percentage of our oil comes from countries that ban homosexuality altogether like Saudi Arabia?
If you buy all of those things but refuse to buy Shadow Complex, why? Is the fact that gay couples have to travel to Massachusetts to get married worse than those other things?
Congo & coltan from Wikipedia:
The Second Congo War, beginning in 1998, devastated the country, involved seven foreign armies and is sometimes referred to as the "African World War". Despite the signing of peace accords in 2003, fighting continues in the east of the country. In eastern Congo, the prevalence of rape and other sexual violence is described as the worst in the world. The war is the world's deadliest conflict since World War II, killing 5.4 million people.
The Congo is the world's largest producer of cobalt ore, and a major producer of copper and industrial diamonds. It has significant deposits of tantalum, which is used in the fabrication of electronic components in computers and mobile phones. In 2002, tin was discovered in the east of the country, but, to date, mining has been on a small scale. Smuggling of coltan and cassiterite, the ores of tantalum and tin, respectively, has helped fuel the war in the Eastern Congo.
...
In appearance, coltan is a dull black ore. Tantalum from coltan is used in consumer electronics products such as cell phones, DVD players, and computers. Export of coltan from the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo to European and American markets has been cited by experts as helping to finance the present-day conflict in the Congo, with one aid agency asserting that much of the finance sustaining the civil wars in Africa, especially in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is directly connected to Coltan profits. An estimated 5.4 million people have died since 1998 in the war in the Congo.
If you won't buy a video game because some dude who is peripherally connected to it gives money to anti-gay marriage groups, surely you don't use cell phones, DVD players, or computers, right? The death of over 5 million people is more important than maintaining your "position of privilege", right?