Earthborn
Terrestrial Intelligence
It's a persistent notion, but not one that is necessarily promoted by advocates of same sex marriage. Rather it is a notion that perpetuated by opponents of same sex marriage by ascribing that view to the proponents.I'm just reacting to the persistent notion that marriage is some bag of goodies that married people get from the government, but it's only available if you are heterosexual.
Here's what I mean: this PDF claims to debunk the notion that "marriage comes with 1000 federal benefits". They argue that many of those regulations are not benefits at all. At the end is a link to a website where they say they got the claim about the 1000 federal benefits. This PDF is probably where they got it from, but notice however that this website repeatedly states "benefits and responsibilities". Looks to me like the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy tries to pull a strawman.
Also note that it does not mention the benefits that are mentioned in Marriage Equality PDF, and dismisses 'benefits' that are concentrated towards the end life as unlikely to be economic incentives to marry. But that may not be true of many older gay couples who want have the security of marriage after many years of commitment to eachother.
Whether it is a goodie bag or a load of burdens is somewhat irrelevant to the discussion and I think it is more important to consider why some couples are treated differently than others.If thay's the case, I must be doing something wrong, because I never received my goodie bag.
There are a few 'goodies' though: tax incentives to stay together.
So you are basically saying that civil marriage does not come with responsibilities, only the enforceability of responsibilities? That's not entirely true though.Enforceability.
And what we are talking about here is the freedom to make those commitments and give up those freedoms.Marriage is a commitment made. It consists of freedoms lost, not gained.