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Author Topic: Cousin Hobbes solves the homosexual debate :)
Hobbes
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That’s right! With all this back and forth and name calling clearly what was missing was Cousin Hobbes reasoned and informed position. And now here he is it to give it to you, aren’t you lucky! [Wink]

Wow, if that wasn’t a credibility statement I don’t know what is!

Anyways, after such an arrogant statement I better back it up, eh? Or perhaps just hope everyone realized I was joking… or both.

I’ll get to the point, my ideal solution without reference to the fact that things like tax laws of the word “marriage” in them: any two people can get a civil union. I would completely redefine a civil union so that all it represents is the legal issues of two people who want to be companions. I wouldn’t limit to heterosexual couples, or even to couples in love. Two sisters who have lived together since they moved out of their parents house could get a civil union to make sure they have the legal power to do things for their sister. Any two people who asked for it and did not already have one (that’s valid) could get one.

I like this idea because I really don’t see how the government has the power to do anything that’s not strictly legal. Marriage is a sacred bond between two people, I really don’t see how the government should be involved with that in any way. If a couple wants to enter into those vows then they should do so, even now the governments not stopping them. If they want to be recognized by their community as being a couple getting a hotly contested marriage license is not going to do it. If you want people to recognize you as a couple do it by trying to explain rationally and well why you are couple, not by forcing it down their throats with legal changes they didn’t want. And certainly plenty of people are doing this, I’m not trying to say it’s an original idea but that it’s a good one.

I can see both sides getting mad at my solution, that’s what’s with all the asbestos. However, it is my opinion that the government has no place whatsoever in marriage bedsides those places in which the government is involved by definition. Tax rights, health care, security rights (the right to see medical charts and what not). And it seems to me that all these right apply just as well to any two people who spend significant time together.

Now this idea does have some flaws, like two random people getting a… whatever this would be called for a few days and canceling it, than doing it over and over with new people, when it’s convenient. And also, the laws already in existence that mention marriage specifically will have some issues, but I feel these could be overcome, and are worth overcoming to get the government out of something they never should’ve been involved with.

Fundamentally I just don’t think the government has any place in marriage, marriage is about promises and societal recognition, and the government can’t (or shouldn’t do) either. If a homosexual couple finds someone willing to marry them in whatever system it is that person is a member of, go them, if they don’t feel it’s necessary, then that’s fine, they can make promises to themselves just fine without anyone. And heterosexual couples that belong to Churches (or find Churches) willing to marry them, more power to them to. Once again, if they don’t feel it’s necessary, then that’s fine, they make their promises in private.

<--*Awaits flaming and/ doughnuts from his dorm floor*

Hobbes [Smile]

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pooka
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I went through this solution briefly and discarded it because I do think children deserve some protections in this society and their best interests are not served by chaos. I think monogamous but gay parents are better for a child than cheating but straight parents. But by the same bias, I think monogamous straight parents are better.

Adoption is a great thing, but children time and time again want to learn about their natural parents. With gay parents, there will always be at least one parent who is not the natural parent that the child will wonder about. Well, except for the child with the famous musician parents. I'm not saying these people's lives will be meaningless, but it will make them separate, and some people feel you can't be separate but equal.

But I guess it comes down to the fact that I don't believe gayness is genetic. That is, I don't think the science has proved it. I think it goes against the democratic principle that all men (and women) are created equal. And the fact that so many more men are gay than women is a puzzle.

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fugu13
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Its not a bad idea, and I theoretically support it. Of course, its completely impossible to bring about currently, and as such its just so much intellectual jaw wagging. Injustice must be fought in reality, not in fantasy worlds.

This isn't a condemnation of the view; I really do support it. It is a condemnation of the idea that this view solves the problem, or is any kind of step towards its resolution.

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Hobbes
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That solution doesn't at all adress the issue of adoption, which is a whole can of worms I wont be personally opening. However, it is to me, the right solution, and I really don't see how it's infeasible. Or I do, in exact terms as I've stated, but I think it's a good goal to work towards.

How would I work towards it? I personally plan on just voting for whatever would move closest to that solution, and voting against what would move away. I am not going to go out and picket goverment buildings until it's accepted because I'm not terribly upset with the system now. It's close enough to my ideal system that I don't feel it worth it to go to all that trouble just to get it changed. If I were advising someone else who deeply cared about it I would say the first step would be to change peoples minds, not their laws.

Hobbes [Smile]

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pooka
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If the world were all consenting adults, I wouldn't care. But the world has quite a few children in it, who learn as much from what they see around them as they do from what they are deliberately taught. Gayness may be genetic, but I somehow predict it will become a much larger segement of the population as role models are available. Role models who swear that if there were any way to not be gay, trust them, they would not have chosen it.
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Synesthesia
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Women are a lot more fluid than men in terms of sexuality
And perhaps one reason why a lot of gays want to get married is for respectability? To not be seen as promiscuous just running around for the sake of sex and not companionship?

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mackillian
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Will anyone actually read this?

Because it all seems to get ignored by the conservative camp.

On Civil Disobedience and Radical Change

Civil disobedience: “a public, nonviolent, conscientious yet political act contrary to law usually done with the same of bringing about a change in the law or policies of the government’s authority.” (Bleiker, 2002).

Using Rawls’s definition, the mayor of San Francisco acted within the bounds of civil disobedience. His action of issuing marriage licenses to gay couples was public, nonviolent, conscientious yet political act contrary to California state law. This action was done with the intention of bringing about change in said law in order to force the policies of California to match the writing of its constitution. (Bleiker, 2002). California has a precedent of court cases involving the unconstitutionality of state laws. One case is 1948’s Perez vs. Lippold where the state’s law banning interracial marriage was ended. (Wolfson, 2003). In the findings of the case, the state pronounced that the essence of the right to marry is the freedom to join in marriage to the person of one’s choice. (Wolfson, 2003). The battle in court over this San Francisco mayor’s action will very likely use this legal case as precedent for unconstitutional restriction on a person’s right to marry whom they choose.

Conscientious objection is not relegated to just religious matters while not taking into account secular objections, certainly in a state that is separated from church (Epstein, 2002). In taking apart this definition of civil disobedience, conscientious is a word that has differing connotations. Conscience, in secular terms, is a type of morality shared by those in a society, such as fellow citizens, friends, political party members, etc. (Epstein, 2002). As we have come to agreement in previous threads, religious objection to the issue of legalizing civil marriage for gay couples has no place in state decisions, aside from those voters who hold those views. However, those who object on religious grounds are also conscientious objectors—but remain in a small minority among the entire group of objectors. (Epstein, 2002). As a citizen of the United States, a country that is a member of the United Nations, we are granted the freedom of conscience—the ability to hold opinions of the moral kind. (Epstein, 2002). In fact: “The primary aim of the United Nations in the sphere of human rights is the achievement by each individual of the maximum freedom and dignity. For the realization of this objective, the laws of every country should grant each individual, irrespective of race, language, religion or political belief, freedom of expression, of information, of conscience and of religion.” (Epstein, 2002). Therefore, in the spirit and definition of civil disobedience, this San Francisco mayor has acted in the realm of his freedom of conscience in publicly decrying a state law he has found to be in conflict with a state constitution, and of previous state legal findings.

As a province, Ontario, Canada has legalized civil marriage for same-sex couples (Wolfson, 2003). In this ruling, the Ontario high court stated that “the exclusion of same-sex couples from the important legal institution of civil marriage infringes upon human dignity, harms real families, and violates constitutional guarantees of equality and fairness.” (Wolfson, 2003). For the chicken littles who object to the legalization of civil marriages to same-sex couples, other radical changes have occurred in the past years that have had the same chicken little reactions yet brought nothing of the “sky is falling” effect: 1) Uncontested divorce, 2) the end of restrictions on interracial marriage, 3) establishment of women’s equality and end to married women’s loss of legal identity, property, and rights 4) the civil rights acts of the sixties. (Wolfson, 2003). While each change has brought about its positive and negative effects, none has brought society crashing down.

Social Ramifications of Same-Sex Marriage

“If the right of privacy means anything, it is the right of the individual, married or single, to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child.”-- Supreme Court Justice William Brennan, Eisenstadt v. Baird, 1972.

Here is another fight entirely. Other opponents of gay marriage rights decry the notion of children being brought up in that type of family unit. These objectors, religious and secular, bring up the statistics of those children brought up in homes of divorce, children being born out of wedlock, and the effects of those situations on those children. (Gomes, 2003). If gay parents could be legally married, the number of children born in wedlock and with both parents would rise.

This is why: 22 percent of gay/bisexual couples are raising children as compared to 23 percent of married/heterosexual couples. Nearly the same amount of children have married, heterosexual parents as do the children who have partners are parents. (Gomes, 2003). Those 22 percent of children of these same-sex couples are in families where they are born “out of wedlock” another social depravity used as a mark for an immoral society. (Gomes, 2003). Were there legal civil marriages for same-sex couples, those 22 percent of children would be from unbroken homes.

In terms of the effects on children who have same-sex parents, they are indistinguishable from their peers who have heterosexual parents. Another finding was that divorce has a more damaging effect on children than does having gay parents. (Gomes, 2003). To determine if children of same-sex parents had a higher incidence of being homosexual, Carlos Ball and Janice Farrell Pea surveyed a series of studies from 1978 to 1996 and found that “the percentage of children of gays and lesbians who were identified as gay or lesbian ranged from zero to nine.” (Gomes, 2003). Another study done by Carole Jenny determined that 94 percent of molested girls and 86 percent of molested boys were abused by men. Of those, 74 percent were abused by an adult male in a heterosexual relationship with the mother. However, these statistics are not taken into account in custody battles where a father is seeking the physical custody of the child. (Gomes, 2003).

References

Bleiker, R. (2002). Rawls and the limits of nonviolent civil disobedience. Social Alternatives, 21(2), 37-41.

Epstein, A.D. (2002). The freedom of conscience and sociological perspectives on dilemmas of collective secular disobedience: the case of Israel. Journal of Human Rights, 1(3), 305-321.

Gomes, C. (2003). Partners as parents: challenges faced by gays denied marriage. Humanist, 63(6), 14-20.

Wolfson, E. (2003). Case against marriage equality implodes. Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, 10(6), 25-28.

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HonoreDB
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I have to believe that anyone who doesn't support Hobbes's approach is just playing politics. You can't legislate people's approach to what is fundamentally a religious institution.

Adoption agencies should, and my uninformed impression is do, judge the stability and quality of the relationship of the parents, not its sanctity under state or God.

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John L
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I'd agree with this "no government a part of it" union, if it weren't for the fact that a heterosexual married couple is treated differently than a heterosexual couple who are living together, even under common law. The fact that a heterosexual married couple has rights as a single entity that two people outside of that union do not necessarily have, especially with regard to post-mortem estate, restitutions, and so on. Conversely, this single entity is subject to a lien which affects both individuals in the union, moreso than just cosigning or common-law. Still, in every concievable way, a married heterosexual couple is afforded greater recognition on just about every level than even a heterosexual unmarried couple.

Make that unmarried couple homosexual, and the recognition as far as rights dwindles dramatically.

So, Hobbes, if government, insurance, and other agencies were to stop recognizing married couples as a single fiscal entity at the same time your fantasy scenario took place, then it would be closer to being equal and fitting. However, you intentionally ignore this. Why? It's not just the government that is making fiscal survival more lenient on heterosexual married couples, so just taking government out of it is not a solution.


This is just like the situation where white people like to say, "if minorities stopped pointing out their ethnic differences and government stopped interfering, then people could live together equally and peacefully." In both Hobbes' hypothetical and the example I just described, this means the majority groups—heterosexuals in Hobbes' scenario and whites in my example—don't have to give a damn thing up, while the minority group—meaning homosexuals in Hobbes' example and ethnic minorities in mine—have to give up much.

That's really damn easy to call a solution when you're the one standing on top, and a whole lot harder to swallow when your rights are being restricted.

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John L
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And as far as I'm concerned, God has no part of what marriage rights are in the United States of America, and even if you believe God does, you have no right under the Constitution of the United States to make me abide by it.

If your God doesn't allow equal rights, then your God can kiss my patootie.

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JonnyNotSoBravo
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Mack, I just read your article and that was a really great post! I just love posts that are well written and informed!
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Synesthesia
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John L, you rock
those are excellent points.

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Hobbes
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What I was saying John was that all legal ramifications of marriage, all goverment interaction is exactly as I described. I don't care what the goverment says about my martial status, just about my legal status for things like taxes. It's what I think about my martial status (and what my Church thinks), take the goverment out of everything, not just homosexual unions.

Mack, sorry, I'm afraid I'm tired so I skimmed your post since I'm not really up to responding to things about the mayor of SF in this thread. I wasn't really talking about him at all, just general martial issues.

Hobbes [Smile]

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Suneun
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Hobbes, you should go back and read it some time. It is separated into several sections, only the first of which concerns the SF mayor.

I asked her to reproduce it here because of the "concern" that gay parents necessarily beget/raise gay children.

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fugu13
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Hobbes -- Leto's point in the first part was more that marriage is ingrained as a benefiting institution in many (secular) parts of society other than government. For instance, homosexuals in a civil union do not necessarily get lower car insurance rates but homosexuals in a marriage almost certainly would.
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John L
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A pertinent quote:
quote:
"All animals are equal but some animals
are more equal than others."


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Hobbes
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Fugu, I mean that the word marriage is stricken from the goverment. That's what I'm trying to convey, there is now two people getting together in this legal bond and then heterosexual marriage. I mean just the former, there is no marriage in the goverment. ... I'm ridiculously tired to try and convey this, if you're still confused, sorry, I think in my current state this is the best I can do.

Hobbes [Smile]

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Hobbes
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I will Sun, when I'm not so tired. In fact, why am I posting now? I should be in bed. Hmmm, I should work on that.

Only since I'm up I am going to say two things about the mayor. I think he was a civil resistor most likely. But that doesn't make him right (or wrong). Second is, as I understand it he broke the law. Didn't California pass a law that said marriage was "man and women"? If so then the mayor should be ejected because he was breaking the law pure and simple. A civil resistor has to face the consequences of their actions or the whole point is lost. I know, I should read Mack's post. I love you Mack and you know it, I'm not disregarding your post forever, I promise! Forgive me?

Hobbes [Smile]

[ February 21, 2004, 02:30 AM: Message edited by: Hobbes ]

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John L
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Hobbes, as I said in my post, it isn't just the government who follows this criteria for the word marriage.

And if the word "marriage" were still used by any religious body after it was stricken from government use, I would hold that religious body in severe contempt (for its hypocrisy). It's like ideological indian-giving.

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Hobbes
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John, then it's not really a legal issue is it? It's company specific, so then people should try and deal with the companies.

I'm confused on your other part though. I would take out marriage as a word because it's about sacred vows, not about legal rights. Thus the goverment shouldn't have its hands in it. Churchs seem pretty ideal to have their hands in it though.

Hobbes [Smile]

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fugu13
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Breaking a law that's unconstitutional is a necessary part of getting it declared unconstitutional. In this case it probably won't be upheld, but in a place like New Mexico (where marriage certificates are not gender specific) it might work.

[ February 21, 2004, 02:52 AM: Message edited by: fugu13 ]

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Hobbes
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Well I'm not going to comment on constitutionality or the morality of the choice itself (I don't know if anyone's noticed, but I have not once stated my opinoin on the morality of homosexuality here once), but right or not, when you break the law you should pay for it. Being a civil resitor is all about accepting the consequences of your actions.

Hobbes [Smile]

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A Rat Named Dog
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I really hope that at some point this debate gets off the whole bereavement leave/car insurance/tax benefit tack. It's insulting to everyone involved. That isn't what marriage is about, on either side of the debate.

John L, that's right, equal, equal, equal, equal, equal, say it again, we didn't hear you, equal. Let's treat everyone the same by giving everyone exactly what they want all the time. Let's let polygamists in Colorado City marry as many women as they want, let's let NAMBLA marry eleven-year-olds, let's let cats and dogs live together, let's let vampires marry hemophiliacs, and everyone will be happy. Because it is just not FAIR that someone should feel a desire and not get to fulfill it, when other people get to fulfill their desires. It's not FAIR! WAAA!

All right, I'm being snarky and irresponsible and going way further than my real position.

I'm mostly just annoyed, John, that you said my god could kiss your patootie, and never mind the rich and complex doctrine and tradition you skipped right over to go for the playground insult. My god doesn't promote hatred or bigotry, but my religion does believe that the marriage of the two human genders is more than a mere biological imperative. It's an earthly reflection of a much larger eternal truth, and my god doesn't teach us to lie, to tell people that it doesn't matter whom or what you marry. According to my faith, it is not just an arbitrary, earthly decision. It has much larger meanings and consequences, and while you may feel totally free to insult Him and us for that, we can't just flip-flop on basic truths according to the whims of the decade we live in. This is not some hate-filled emotional reaction to seeing someone different. It isn't a homophobic "disgust" reaction to gay sex. It's an honest appraisal of a difficult situation.

We believe that gays are children of God just like anyone is, and have the same right to pursue happiness in any way they can. But believing that doesn't make gay marriage a part of the eternal reality any more than it makes gay sex a viable way to produce offspring. There are certain limits to how far a homosexual relationship can go, both in the natural world, and in the eternal world, and if you have any concept of what it means to have faith, you know that there is nothing we can do about it, except to show tolerance and love, and go as far as we can to bring other people joy. That's what I try very hard to do, every day.

But striving to bring other people joy does not always mean reflexively and thoughtlessly giving them everything they ask for. I have to draw the line here. Bigendered marriage is a vitally important part of my faith, and while that may be a feeling largely restricted to my own people, it's not something we can shoo away for your convenience either. If we're outvoted, we'll be outvoted, and we'll continue to live alongside our fellow people in peace. But we aren't going to rewrite eternity just to please you.

Can you possibly see this as something other than petty bigotry? Must you paint all of your opponents with the same brush? I'm disgusted at the behavior of many of the opponents of gay marriage, and it terrifies me sometimes to think what the world would be like if they ran it. I don't want that world any more than you do.

Politically, I'm moderate on this issue. I can see both sides, and I admire people like Hobbes who try to seek honest compromises, rather than simply, blindly attacking their opposition. I advocate caution and the rule of law, and shy away from picking one solution over another until we know more.

But when you drag religion into it, I have to stand up for the fact that what I believe is not hate or bigotry, the way you portray it. There is nothing bigoted in recognizing that scientifically, it takes a man and a woman to produce human offspring. Therefore, it is similarly non-bigoted to hold other beliefs, through faith, that the union of a man and a woman is a uniquely powerful thing different from any other human relationship.

If I were to personally twist my beliefs into hatred and mistreatment of others, that would be morally wrong. If I were to abandon them freely under social pressure, that would be weak and dishonest.

But when I simply seek to be honest about the truths of the universe as I see them, and when those truths are as completely benign and morally neutral as they are, it is very churlish of you to simply bat them away and hurl insults as though you knew something about them. You don't. So keep it to yourself and stick to politics.

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Rappin' Ronnie Reagan
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Why does the ceremony have to be done in a church to call it a marriage? My parents have a marriage. They did not get married in church. A marriage is a union between two people who love each other. Why shouldn't the government be allowed to govern them? Religion doesn't have to enter into a marriage ceremony at all.

Hobbes, when you say that you would do away with government-operated marriage and replace it with civil unions which any two people could enter into and leave it to churches to do actual marriages. To me, this devalues my parents' marriage. They aren't just two people who want a list of certain legal rights. They chose to spend the rest of their lives together, to love each other in sickness and in health and so on. But they didn't include religion in that. That doesn't mean it's less worthy of the status of marriage.

It's like during the fight for civil rights when towns, instead of allowing African-Americans to go to public pools and libraries, made them private and kept them segregated.

[ February 21, 2004, 03:23 AM: Message edited by: Rappin' Ronnie Reagan ]

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AvidReader
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Hobbes, making what the government issues for everyone the civil union was my first thought, too. Change the name, give everyone equal access.

A Rat Named Dog, here, here!

For anyone not familiar with Genesis, God made Adam and gave him the whole world. He talked to Adam directly and walked with him in the garden. Adam was still lonely. So God made Eve.

My church teaches that man is not perfect and will not be able to feel the perfectness of God's love until we get to Heaven and are made worthy to stand with Him. All our earthly impurities go away and we'll finally be free to truely understand the perfectness of God.

Until then, He has given us marriage as the closest we can come on earth to experiencing His love with another person. Just because many Christains fail to take their responsibilities seriously does not diminish God's gift to mankind.

Love is the most important commandment. Love God, love each other. But marriage is supposed to transcend even love. Therefore, Christains can not recognize gays as married in our sense of the word regardless of what is decided in court.

As for the "they're in love, too" argument: they weren't supposed to be looking at each other like that in the first place. You can fall in love with a married woman and try the same argumant. I'll give you the same response. Some urges are really temptations that ought to be ignored.

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Dagonee
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quote:
And if the word "marriage" were still used by any religious body after it was stricken from government use, I would hold that religious body in severe contempt (for its hypocrisy). It's like ideological indian-giving.
People want to know why some religious people feel "threatened" by gay marriage? Statements like this.

Some people, like me, believe that marriage as defined by a person's individual beliefs (religious, secular, or whatever) is separate from the civil institution of marriage. We think that the civil benefits of marriage should be available to any couple, and that people should be allowed to exercise their own conscience with regards to the "sacred" or "spiritual" side of marriage.

But some people don't want to allow the sacred aspects of marriage to be left to the individual (or to congregations of individuals). They demand these individuals change their beliefs on sacred marriage or be labeled "bigots" or "hypocrits."

I'm comfortable ignoring such hypocrisy from people claiming to be all about individual choice. Some people aren't.

Dagonee

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Storm Saxon
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quote:

But believing that doesn't make gay marriage a part of the eternal reality any more than it makes gay sex a viable way to produce offspring.

quote:

Bigendered marriage is a vitally important part of my faith...

quote:

I advocate caution and the rule of law, and shy away from picking one solution over another until we know more.

I respect what you are saying. I don't believe you or your religion are 'bigoted' in the sense that you hate gay people.

I don't understand how if the first two statements are true, the third can have any meaning. I don't see how Mormons can ever embrace gay marriage if bi-gendered marriage is a part of their doctrine of belief.

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Jenny Gardener
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What about not recognizing marriages legally at all? Perhaps a credit could be given to households with dependents.
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Bob_Scopatz
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quote:
I really hope that at some point this debate gets off the whole bereavement leave/car insurance/tax benefit tack. It's insulting to everyone involved. That isn't what marriage is about, on either side of the debate.

Geoff, you'll have to pardon me for a rather cynical answer to this. Which is, "well, of course you want to get off this. It's the part of your position that's completely untenable. That it's okay to deny people equal rights under the law just because you have some moral or religious qualms about it."

Looking beyond that, I think I know what you are getting at. That marriage is about more than legal recognition of basic rights that married couples have and single couples do not. Marriage is about family and community, and a whole lot of other things.

That's really why I think the government should just stay out of the marriage contract altogether. If people want to register a union for legal purposes, that's something the government can get involved in. It would actually help for things like insurance, inheritance, and medical decision-making. Those ARE real issues that need to be dealt with by any solution we arrive at. I propose that we simply limit. Every person is allowed to form a personal union with exactly one other person. The other person must of legal age and mentally competent at the time the union is made.

Then, to make sure people don't just do this frivolously, we should establish laws and procedures for the dissolution of personal unions. It should cost money and time to break a union. And there should be equitable distribution of joint assets, child support and all the other things that people have to deal with now when they are married.

And it should be the case that anyone married in a church is automatically entered into a personal union for legal purposes. That way we don't have the equally silly outcome that people could go get married in church and then claim NOT to be married for purposes of the courts.

The only way those nagging issues are going to go away is if we address them. This way makes the most sense to me.

I think the alternative is gay marriage.

I don't think the alternative is the status quo.

Do you?

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Synesthesia
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quote:
As for the "they're in love, too" argument: they weren't supposed to be looking at each other like that in the first place. You can fall in love with a married woman and try the same argumant. I'll give you the same response. Some urges are really temptations that ought to be ignored.
You cannot compare adultery and homosexuality. There's a huge different between the two. Gayness is not just some temptation that should be ignored. It's a part of people's life just as heterosexuality is.
And it's excruciatingly painful to be gay in a world where that is simply not allowed.

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mackillian
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quote:
Gayness is not just some temptation that should be ignored.
Except that area is where much argument takes place. Some believe that it is a temptation, some believe that you can have the urges but must control them, some believe it's a psychological condition, others think it's genetic, others think it's an inborn trait, others think it's a disease.

There still isn't a sure answer. However, unless a person belongs to a religion that espouses that gayness is a temptation, there is no right to deny homosexuals the rights that other people can exercise.

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Synesthesia
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[Wall Bash]
That's the difficult thing... That folks have about 90 different ways of looking at an issue, and who knows which way of looking at it is right?
There's only what a person experiences to consider and the reading and research I've done that says that the ex-gay movement is really ineffective or causes a lot of depression and stress in anyone who takes that path.

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Bob_Scopatz
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Gah!

Religious views of homosexuality are irrelevant to this debate. It's about whether our laws are going to recognize that people can live in a committed relationship that benefits society.

I have to say that if we are willing to take taxes from gay people, allow them to serve (silently) in the military, and all the other things that we take by way of contributions from homosexuals, then we also have the obligation to recognize that they are able to form pair-bonds that benefit society as well. If that is the case, then they deserve the same legal status and protection under our laws that any other pair-bonded couple has.

We can pretty much ignore the other things like polygamy and NAMBLA etc that Geoff raises (again, the old slippery slope argument, Geoff???) by recognizing pair bonds only and then only between consenting adults. I don't see this as entirely necessary, but I can see a compelling case for the state to make this distinction.

At this level, it is ALL about fairness. And the overwhelming sense that I believe will come to everyone who thinks about this issue is that it is unfair to offer legal advantages to people for things about which the state has no compelling interest.

If the state can prove that it has a compelling interest for couples to be composed of only a man and a woman, it will prevail in the courts. I don't see this happening, though. And I think our courts are more conservative today than they've been in decades.

The point is, however, that America's laws supercede religious doctrines when it comes to civil and criminal matters. And if that changes, we really will have destroyed America in the process. And the parts of our laws that are most germaine here are those guaranteeing equal protection under the law, blind justice, and the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

The very basics are what we're talking about.

It seems far easier a stretch to me to give people freedoms already guaranteed under the Constitution than to try to find new ways to grant freedoms to some but not others based on just about ANY criterion you'd care to name. It just isn't easy for Americans to do that.

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Bob_Scopatz
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quote:
What about not recognizing marriages legally at all? Perhaps a credit could be given to households with dependents.
Jenny, I wasn't ignoring you. I just missed this.

I think this is probably the easiest solution. The problem is we have a whole body of civil law surrounding the division of joint assets in marriages that would need to still be in place somehow.

And if the state fails to recognize marriages of any sort, then even your standard married couple will need to make legal arrangements for things like inheritance, hospital visitation, medical decisions, etc.

Children would complicate things further. If the state doesn't recognize marriage at all, it has to come up with some other way of assigning legal control over children. Would we have natural parents go through the equivalent of "legally adopting" their own kids? And what if they refused?

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Amka
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The legal benefits that one gets from a legally binding marriage is not a right. We shouldn't treat it like that. There are many legal benefits that the government bestows on people unequally.

The government will give money grants to students who can prove that they and their parents are too poor to pay for college. Should I say my happiness is curtailed and my rights are violated because I am not protectected by affirmative action? If a person does not pass a physical to join the armed forces, but really wanted to join the armed forces, is it really fair that he cannot recieve medical care at the veteran's hospital? I do not qualify for WIC.

Oh, here is one: a few years ago while looking for a bigger apartment to move our growing family in, we saw a nice one with a playground. We had wanted a playground, and this was the first one we'd seen with a playground. We went to the rental office and were immediately asked how much we made. It turned out that this was low income, and even though we could easily afford the rent, we made too much to even be considered. The government had descriminated against us, and we were irritated. We could not get in the only apartment complex with a playground because we made too much money. But we never considered that our rights had been denied.

Discrimination happens all the time. Benefits are not rights. Not everyone qualifies for every benefit.

The reason why this is a debate more about legalities than about the definition of marriage is because that is what it must hinge on. Homosexual couples get married all the time by ministers. They have every RIGHT to perform a religious ceremony to be married to any significant other they want. No one has stopped them from being happy. No will arrest them for it.

They must challenge us on legalities, because they cannot challenge us on the intangibles. But when we say: sure, have the legalities, that is a reasonable expectation, they are still not happy. It is not enough. What is really wanted here?

They cannot change OUR beliefs when we say: God can only recognize marriage between a man and a woman. But I think they want the government to say that. If the government can tell a religious minister that they will now recognize the marriage ceremony performed for the homosexual couple, then the government is telling them that God will recognize that union.

The government has no such authority, nor should it pretend to.

So I say: abolish the practice of giving religious clergy the authority to make legally binding marriages.

This is perfectly acceptable and has precedent.

In the Soviet Union, they strove to get rid of the religious aspect of marriage. I've seen videos of weddings over there.

It comes down to this: Two people getting married and two witnesses go to a beaurocrat's desk, promise to abide by some rules and then sign a few legal papers.

If you are religious, you go to the church and get married. After that, you go to the party and get smashed. If you aren't religious, you go directly to the party and get smashed.

In the US, where a civil union can be enacted by a religious authority, the LDS church will not perform the temple ceremony until one year has passed if the person chose to be married outside of the temple. In countries where the the government does not recognize religious ceremonies as legally binding, members of the LDS church go and sign papers, and then go get married in the temple.

But until we do that, I really can't condone government sanction of homosexual marriage.

As far as children go, that is a different ball of wax. But you probably can get an idea of my opinion when I state that under no circumstances has adoption ever been a right. And that sex with a person outside of marriage, even a legally binding one, is justification for dissolution of the government contract which is more legally binding than any verbal agreement. And that agencies arranging sperm donation or surrogate mothers must be very selective with regards to the psychological health of its clients.

[ February 21, 2004, 12:07 PM: Message edited by: Amka ]

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mackillian
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quote:
It comes down to this: Two people getting married and two witnesses go to a beaurocrat's desk, promise to abide by some rules and then sign a few legal papers.

If you are religious, you go to the church and get married. After that, you go to the party and get smashed. If you aren't religious, you go directly to the party and get smashed.

Currently, it is possible for two people to get married by getting two witnesses and a license and going to a justice of the peace.

And the idea that people that do not practice a religion immediately go and get smashed after a wedding is...a generalization that has no place in a rational discussion.

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Storm Saxon
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I think she's just talking about Russia where, from what I understand, drinking is something of a national past time. [Smile]
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Amka
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I am talking about Russia here. Notice, the religious people took a detour to the church first.

Yes, you can have a civil ceremony without God.

And you can have a religious ceremony without the government.

But homosexuals are not happy with having merely the legal union or merely a religious ceremony. They want to be able to have clergy with authority given to them by the government to say that God sanctions this marriage. The government does not ethically, religiously, or constitutionally have that authority.

If none of our religious ceremonies were recognized by the government, that would solve the problem, as I see it. It is just another angle on the "get the government out of our personal lives" argument.

[ February 21, 2004, 12:24 PM: Message edited by: Amka ]

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A Rat Named Dog
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Storm, my politics are more moderate than my religious views because I recognize the need to live in a nation among people with wildly different ideals. I also don't advocate outlawing coffee and tea, nor do I think the government should mandate a 10% charitable donation out of every family's income. The fact that I hold a sacred belief about marriage does not mean that I should necessarily enforce it, verbatim, on the rest of society.

For instance, in my faith, homosexual intercourse is a sin. But I am strongly in favor of repealing sodomy laws because I don't think it's the government's place to rule on such matters. I would still look askance at a practicing Mormon who attempted to simultaneuosly practice as a homosexual, because that would be hypocritical. But someone outside the church has no personal obligation to live by teachings of which they are ignorant or disbelieving.

(There are some general trends that I see as unhealthy, such as young people becoming sexually active at an increasingly tender age, cultural advocacy of promiscuity, and the absolutely ridiculous illegitimacy rate, but I believe that is something we should address socially, not legally.)

Gay marriage is an interesting special case because the state of marriage and family in this country is important to everyone, whether they know it or not. And while everyone is convinced that a stack of studies or scriptures supports their extreme view on the matter, most of the strongest advocates on either side come across to me as crazy people.

When I say I don't recommend a particular course of action, I'm saying that I'm not in favor of gay marriage, but I'm also not in favor of condemning gays and offering them nothing — a total victory for that camp would be much uglier than I could ever stomach. So I'm looking for a moderate solution, like Amka's or Hobbes's. And I don't think we've found the ideal answer yet. So I say, hold on, San Francisco. Calm it down, and let's see if we can find a better way.

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Bob_Scopatz
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Amka, I think you miss the point. The whole issue is whether the state has a compelling interest to do what it does when it does something discriminatory. The state usually gets challenged on it and has to prove that it did have a compelling interest to do what it did.

For example, that low-income apartment you didn't qualify for was built/renovated with special funds set aside specifically for that purpose. If those funds hadn't been there, in all likelihood, the apartment wouldn't have been either. If the government then allowed high income people to get the apartments, it would be violating its own laws regarding disbursement of funds for low-income housing.

Also, in most communities, there are a fair number of apartments created in the "low income" category for the express purpose of off setting some exclusive development nearby. In other words, in order to win government approval of the REAL project, the developers had to promise to create affordable housing for the poor. It's an attempt by government to stem the tide of homelessness in the wake of redevelopment, gentrification, etc.

So, you basically were trying to get housing that was cheaper and better than what the community you live in says is right for you and your income level. In other words, you wanted something for nothing, ... at least in comnparison to your community's standards. And you were willing to do it at the expense of someone less well off than you are. And you wanted to do it with my tax dollars.

(I know, I know, you would've paid fair market value for the apartment. Unfortunately, that development's bond structure didn't allow that).

Anyway, the only germaine part of that whole discussion is whether the government has a compelling interest in the discrimination it engages in.

In the case of affordable housing, it does.

In the case of marriage, I don't think it can ultimately prove the case.

As for adoption, I think that governments which allow gay people to be foster parents are going to have a pretty tough time barring them from legal adoption. Florida recently won a case like this, but I think ultimately the Supreme Court will overturn it and Florida's entire adoption law will be turned upside down as a consequence.

That's the biggest problem I have with all of this. That we waste time trying to shore up discriminatory practices where the state has no compelling interest and EVERYONE KNOWS IT. Why do that unless it is to pander to particular blocks of voters who aren't ready for the eventual change?

In the meantime, the public has to pay to defend the state in lawsuits that most of them HOPE the state loses. Criminy sakes, how does that make sense?

And we have to waste time trying to craft legislation that will institutionalize the "fine points" of someone's idea of where the line should be set when, in fact, the best and most equitable thing to do is just fix the existing laws and treat everyone the same whenever possible -- when taht's consistent with the state's compelling interests.

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Storm Saxon
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Thanks for response, ARND. I think I understand your position more clearly, now.

[ February 21, 2004, 12:35 PM: Message edited by: Storm Saxon ]

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Bob_Scopatz
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Geoff...

Am I just imagining things or have you decided never to respond to one of my posts?

If so, I'm sure it's because I said something offensive to you in the past, but I sure don't know what it would've been.

Maybe if you e-mail me about it, I could figure out a way to set things right.

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John L
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quote:
John L, that's right, equal, equal, equal, equal, equal, say it again, we didn't hear you, equal. Let's treat everyone the same by giving everyone exactly what they want all the time. Let's let polygamists in Colorado City marry as many women as they want, let's let NAMBLA marry eleven-year-olds, let's let cats and dogs live together, let's let vampires marry hemophiliacs, and everyone will be happy. Because it is just not FAIR that someone should feel a desire and not get to fulfill it, when other people get to fulfill their desires. It's not FAIR! WAAA!
Yup, when there's no reasonable argument for denying a people rights, the usual tactic of unrelated straw men comes up. This is the number one reason why people are treated like second-class citizens, now and before.

It's not about a desire to have sex with children, because homosexuality has nothing to do with minors. Implying it does is highly bigoted, and comparing homosexuality with pedophilia is implying it does. It's not about a desire to have multiple partners in a marriage, because the push for homosexual marriage rights has nothing to do with having multiple partners. Implying it does is highly bigoted, and comparing homosexual marriage with polygamy is implying it does (comparing polygamy to pedophilia is pretty good, since all known cases of polygamy in the US currently have a male "married" to some 12 and 12 year olds).

And a "vampire" (someone who drinks blood) can marry a hemophiliac, Geoff. Provided it's a heterosexual couple. Same with couples who have every inch of their body tattooed, pierced, or otherwise mutilated. As far as the US is concerned, their outward appearance doesn't stop them from having the right to heterosexual marriage. So, I don't know where you pulled that one from, but you're straw man is pretty useless with this regard.

And Amka, the privileges bestowed upon married couples became a right when it became a requirement for these other institutions to bestow these privileges. Just because they aren't inalienable rights does not make them cease to be rights. And denying homosexual couples those privilages is still bigoted and hateful. Call it what you want, but a rose is a rose is a bigot is a bigot.

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John L
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And once again: THE WORD "MARRIAGE" NO LONGER BELONGS ONLY TO RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS, AND HAS NOT FOR AT LEAST OVER A CENTURY. THE MORE PEOPLE REFUSE TO ACKNOWLEDGE THIS, THE MORE THEY ARE ALLOWING A BIGOTED AND HATEFUL MENTALITY TO PROSPER. NO ONE IS TELLING YOUR RELIGION TO STOP DISAGREEING WITH HOMOSEXUALITY, PEOPLE ARE JUST TELLING YOUR RELIGIONS TO STOP HOLDING DOWN THOSE YOU DISAGREE WITH AS IF YOU THINK YOU RUN THIS COUNTRY.

Why not just be honest about it, and admit that you don't want to allow some people to have equal opportunity? Why not be up front with your wanting to pass immediate judgement on others because your faith disagrees with them? At least the "God Hates Fags" crowd is being honest with their hatefulness.

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fugu13
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quote:
But homosexuals are not happy with having merely the legal union or merely a religious ceremony. They want to be able to have clergy with authority given to them by the government to say that God sanctions this marriage.
Nonsense. First, many homosexuals and equal rights advocates are okay with just having civil unions -- this can be found simply by reading their platforms -- which completely invalidates the point in their case. Second, the government cannot force a clergyperson to marry anyone, and has never tried to. Why should your belief that a clergyperson cannot marry homosexuals be forced upon clergy who do not share your belief? Also, there are plenty of clergy out there who can and do say that God sanctions homosexual unions, so its sort of a moot point -- the marriage is the license from the government, the ceremony performed is merely an instantiation of it typically, but hardly exclusively, performed by the clergy. Furthermore, since members of any clergy are given the ability to perform such ceremonies, it is most certainly not an endorsement by God. A number of the faiths that perform ceremonies don't believe in a single God! The idea that the government is saying God sanctions marriages is ludicrous.
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Bob_Scopatz
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John, I don't think shouting will work.
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mackillian
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You'll notice that calm, rational discussion hasn't worked either. A few of us have had posts ignored entirely despite the knowledge contained within. As with you, Bob, my posts also go unanswered.
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John L
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That's because they just ignore it anyway. Not a single one of the people who keep saying the same thing over and over has given a thoughtful response to Mack's short essay. I'd wager that not one of them has read it all the way through. The bold capitalization wasn't so much shouting as it was putting it very clearly into text that you have to intentionally skip to not read.

I'm starting to wonder what's more insulting: ignoring with no indication of doing so or at least admitting that you're ignoring.

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David Bowles
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Change will happen, despite the reluctance of anyone. The pendulum is swinging. Let them cry out against it. They are powerless to stop it.
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Bob_Scopatz
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Mack...Oh, I thought it was just me.

I'm actually glad to be included in SOME group today, even if it is the group that's being ignored.

[Big Grin]

<lonely, lonely Bob...>

Gah!

Anyway, I was just poking fun, John.

So...Geoff, any response? Amka?

Geoff, I do see that you have taken a stand which would allow for civil union or something similar. I think the part that bothers me is the "eventually" aspect of it. There are two problems with the "further study" approach as I understand it:

1) There's no objective criteria for deciding when we have ENOUGH study. And what TO study is a problem too. Many of the people I've heard advocate this position are talking about longitudinal studies of children's outcomes raised under varying conditions. The ethical problems with actually conducting such studies aside, there's a fatal flaw. Children raised by people who are denied some of the same advantages as others are at a disadvantage to begin with. You'd have to level the playing field first to make a decent study even possible.

2) Nobody should have to wait for fairness. With Congress getting ready to craft legislation that actually makes things worse -- by codifying nationally what is now a state-level issue -- one could argue that the push to change is being fueled by the conservative religious movement's attempt to see if they have the muscle to push through this agenda item. Far from there being a gay agenda on this issue, the Conservatives are the one that seem to want to push it NOW.

There's nothing to do but fight now because that's the battle line that's been drawn.

I think there's no choice.

And we need to settle the issue now, not let it fester.

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