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Fandango at Home Forum Guidelines

The Fandango at Home Forums are designed to help viewers get the most out of their Fandango at Home experience. Here, Fandango at Home customers may post information, questions, ideas, etc. on the subject of Fandango at Home and Fandango at Home -related issues (home theater, entertainment, etc). Although the primary purpose of these forums is to help Fandango at Home customers with questions and/or problems with their Fandango at Home service, there are also off-topic areas available within the Fandango at Home Forums for users to chat with like-minded people, subject to the limitations below.

Please post all comments in English. When posting a comment in the Fandango at Home Forums, please conduct yourself in a respectful and civil manner. While we respect that you may feel strongly about an issue, please leave room for discussion.

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2. Email addresses, phone numbers, links to websites, physical addresses or other forms of contact information
3. "Spam" content, references to other products, advertisements, or other offers
4. Spiteful or inflammatory comments about other users or their comments
5. Comments that may potentially violate the DMCA or any other applicable laws
6. Comments that discuss ways to manipulate Fandango at Home products/services, including, but not limited to, reverse engineering, video extraction, and file conversion.

Additionally, please keep in mind that although Fandango at Home retains the right to monitor, edit, and/or remove posts within Fandango at Home Forums, it does not necessarily review every comment. Accordingly, specific questions about Fandango at Home products and services should be directed to Fandango at Home customer service representatives.

Terms of Use - User Comments, Feedback, Reviews, Submissions

For all reviews, comments, feedback, postcards, suggestions, ideas, and other submissions disclosed, submitted or offered to Fandango at Home, on or through this Site, by e-mail or telephone, or otherwise disclosed, submitted or offered in connection you use of this Site (collectively, the "Comments") you grant Fandango at Home a royalty-free, irrevocable, transferable right and license to use the Comments however Fandango at Home desires, including, without limitation, to copy, modify, delete in its entirety, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from and/or sell and /or distribute such Comments and/or incorporate such Comments into any form, medium or technology throughout the world.
Fandango at Home will be entitled to use, reproduce, disclose, modify, adapt, create derivative works from, publish, display and distribute any Comments you submit for any purpose whatsoever, without restriction and without compensating you in any way. Fandango at Home is and shall be under no obligation (1) to maintain any Comments in confidence; (2) to pay to users any compensation for any Comments; or (3) to respond to any user Comments. You agree that any Comments submitted by you to the Site will not violate the terms in this Terms of Use or any right of any third party, including without limitation, copyright, trademark, privacy or other personal or proprietary right(s), and will not cause injury to any person or entity. You further agree that no Comments submitted by you to this Site will be or contain libelous or otherwise unlawful, threatening, abusive or obscene material, or contain software viruses, political campaigning, commercial solicitation, chain letters, mass mailings or any form of "spam."

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Gay/Lesbian Genre

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    #16
    Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

    Originally posted by MaxH View Post
    I've actually suggested a way to "screen out" genres from even being browsed, which would make some people here happy. I know I'd like to use that to temporarily screen out all horror flicks when I'm browsing for movies with my five year old daughter. Some of the movie posters are pretty disturbing.
    Totally agree here! I have a 5 year old daughter as well.

    Meta tags would be great and even though they'd have a lot of catch-up to do, it's really not something that couldn't be handled by a few temps over a couple of weeks.

    Comment


      #17
      Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

      Originally posted by NA9D View Post
      But the films are NOT a genre.
      Well technically according to the definition of genre it is a class or category of a particular form, and content, making it a genre, per se.

      Although, I do get your point about how that opens the door to all sorts of sub-cultures.

      Originally posted by NA9D View Post
      Why must I know what that choice is? I don't spout my sexual preferences in public. Why must the homosexual community do the same?
      I've been saying the same thing about religious people to for a long time, but they just can't seem to seperate their personal belief from politics and find it necessary to push their values and beliefs on Americans everyday.

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        #18
        Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

        Originally posted by rstone View Post
        I've been saying the same thing about religious people to for a long time, but they just can't seem to seperate their personal belief from politics and find it necessary to push their values and beliefs on Americans everyday.
        It's evident from the writings of the founding fathers that religion has a place in society and religious people in government. Look at all references to God in places such as our money, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

        People of faith "push" their faith because it's something important to them and they are passionate about it. They believe it to be truth and what is right. Some over do it but most don't. You can choose to listen. The Constitution guarantees no one a right to be heard - only to speak.

        Politics is directly tied to personal beliefs and religion and faith is a personal belief. The two cannot be separated. Any other view is fantasy.

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          #19
          Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

          Originally posted by NA9D View Post
          It's evident from the writings of the founding fathers that religion has a place in society and religious people in government. Look at all references to God in places such as our money, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.
          Lets not forget that In 1782 Jefferson, who coined the phrase "wall of separation between church and state", authored the first national motto "E Pluribus Unum," which was this first motto and still part of the great seal of the United States. This motto appeared on the first coin in 1798. It was not until 1865 (78 years after the country was founded) that any reference to God was added to ANY coins, and not until 1909 (122 years later) that it was to appear on all coins and not 1956 (169 years later) that it was added to paper money. I hardly call that a decision of our founding fathers, and should be referred to as the national myth.

          As for the Constitution itself and the Bill of Rights neither mention the word "God", and although you are correct that the Declaration of Independence does mention specifically both "God" and "Creator" at its start, you have to remember that our founding fathers were seeking to remove god from politics as they had endured in England, which is why they wrote that "all governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed", and not God, as was believed in England.

          The Declaration of Independence is not a legal document for this nation. What this means is that it has no authority over our laws, our lawmakers, or ourselves. It cannot be cited as precedent or as being binding in a courtroom. The purpose of the Declaration of Independence was to make a moral case for dissolving the legal ties between the colonies and Great Britain; once that goal was achieved, the official role of the Declaration was finished.

          And while you can argue that the document expressed the will of the same people who wrote the Constitution, and thus, it provides knowledge about their intent as to what sort of government we should have, there are still serious flaws to consider.

          First, religion itself is never mentioned in the Declaration of Independence. This makes it difficult to argue that any particular religious principles should guide our current government.

          Second, what little is mentioned in the Declaration of Independence is only barely compatible with Christianity, the religion most people have in mind when making the above argument. The Declaration refers to "Nature's God," "Creator," etc. These are all terms used in the sort of deism which was common among many of those responsible for the American Revolution as well as the philosophers upon whom they relied for support. Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, was himself a deist who was opposed to many traditional Christian doctrines, in particular beliefs about the supernatural.

          Finally, the Declaration of Independence also makes it clear that governments created by humanity derive their powers from the consent of the governed, not from any gods. This is why the Constitution does not make any mention of any gods. There is no reason to think that there is anything illegitimate about an interpretation of any of the rights outlined in the Constitution merely because it runs contrary to what some people think that their conception of a god would want.

          What this all means is that arguments against the separation of church and state which rely upon the language of the Declaration of Independence fail. First, the document in question has no legal authority with which one could make a legal case. Second, the sentiments expressed do not support the principle that government should be guided either by any specific religion (like Christianity) or by religion "in general" (as if such a thing even existed).

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            #20
            Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

            We could have a lot of fun with this one because if you go back and read other writings of the founders you will see into their intent and beliefs behind the Constitution. I agree with what you stated regarding the Declaration and about the Constitution. The Constitution was left intentionally vague as a legal document. The establishment clause was there specifically to prevent a state church from being enacted as it was in England. In other words it was put in there to keep the state out of the Church. It was not put in there to keep religious people out of government.

            While it would be fun to debate this further, this would be way beyond the scope of this forum and this thread. So let's just file this away and enjoy our Vudus!

            Comment


              #21
              Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

              Yikes - can this get back on topic?

              I'm an armchair apologist and I can pretty much dismantle any atheists argument - but AFAIK, this is the movie request forum, not the religious debate forum.

              Comment


                #22
                Re: Gay/Lesbian Genre

                Originally posted by tsammo View Post
                Why was this genre removed?
                The OP listed above has been answered as much as possible (read this thread). I'm locking this thread to encourage our prolific posters to focus on Vudu topics. Please Private Message me if you have any questions about this matter.

                Now go watch a movie!

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