Is the bible believing community to be recognized? If not, why not? You keep saying "religious nut" but I haven't seen you say what you really mean by it or why anyone should care.
Religious nut = ultra fundamentalists who think that only they are right and have no ability to see things from another POV. They only make decisions based on their religion, and religion can't and shouldn't define how society is to be run.
The Bible community is to be recognized, but not catered to any more than any other religious group. You will unfairly discriminate against those of other religions if you make laws based on the Bible. All people should be given the rights that they desire, provided those rights don't infringe upon those of others and are not in some way detrimental to society (see anti-incest marriage example below)
Why should you - or anyone else - care what the scientific community says?
To fast-forward this argument, can you give any reason for people to agree with you that doesn't involve the fallacies of the appeal to brute force, the appeal to majority, the appeal to emotion, or the appeal to studies that inherently make general statements based upon incomplete particular observations?
Because they gather data objectively, and give information on which informed decisions can be made. The complete, truly objective ones will be scrutinized by the scientific community at large, and will stand up to the scrutiny. Without data, all we have to base decisions on is emotion or religion, or more commonly a combination of the two.
Have you ever considered that "religious nuts" (whatever you mean) might actually put God's interests first because, amongst other reasons, God's interests ARE in the every individual human's best interest, which would directly counter-act your statement above?
two part answer here:
1. These nuts put interests that they
think are God's will ahead of everything. The problem with that, is that the Bible has too many verses that are open to polar opposite interpretations, and also contains verses that contradict one another. The nuts may think that a verse means something, when in reality it means something completely opposite. For example, the Bible was used to justify slavery for many centuries.
2. God's interests aren't what matters in regards to state and national law. The people's interests are what matter. If God says that homosexuals are to be denied equal rights, then He doesn't have every individual's interests at heart. Not on this Earth anyway. Furthermore, if you can't prove the existence of something, you shouldn't be forcing its will on people who don't believe in it. We don't have aircraft combing the skies for UFOs because you can't prove the existence of extra-terrestrial spacecraft roaming our skies.
Further, and more important, WHY is the interest of of any given individual more important than God's interest? Are you, me, or any other human more important than God? Can you show that anyone outside of God is, without having to resort to false, aka, irrational justifications?
I believe that #2 above answers this
This may only be a point of unclear language, but you've just said that the studies can't define anything, which means that they couldn't provide information to the government.
Is that what you really meant?
I'll clarify. Studies can't make laws on their own, and sometimes studies on the same subject contradict each other. It's up to people to look at the results, and make a decision based upon all of the available information gathered from the credible, scrutinized ones. They CAN and do provide government lawmakers with important social information, such as if being gay is nature or nurture, for example. By looking at the results of such studies, good justifiabke laws can be made. Another example would be denying close relatives the right to marry because it often produces children with deficient mutations.
You're just repeating that the Government HAS to define things on the basis of what you're calling "informed" decision making, said information provided by "actual studies." This has the government codifying into law, but not defining.
They define and create laws based on these studies. Government is the body by which the results of such studies can be factored into policymaking. That's what I mean by "informed" decision making.