Gwyn ap Nudd
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2005
- Messages
- 381
The people of Sweden were. Why not Senator Jones?
The people of Sweden were not decieved. They knew what they were voting for and approved it. Senator Jones is not decieved, either. He knows what we are seeking and chooses to do his best to deny it to us.
The Massachusetts legislature was willing to go for civil unions equivalent to marriage, but not the word "marriage". Had that happened, it almost certainly would have stayed that way. As it is, there is enough support to get a constitutional ammendment on the ballot in Massachusetts banning same sex marriage. Once on the ballot, it might fail, but it might not. No popular vote on the subject has ever been close. Granted, Massachusetts is a good place to try, but on the other hand, that also makes a loss there even more of a hurdle to overcome.
But even in Vermont, (and the Massachusetts legislature specified Vermont-style civil unions when they asked the Court for clarification), civil unions are covered by less than 10% of the 3000+ marriage laws. It is more than just "the word "marriage." It is the institution behind the word. And the inevitable inequality in denying that institution to an arbitrarily discriminated against segment of the populace.
If a ban passes, then they won't have either. It's a high price for that word.
What made that word worth it?
Again it is not the "word"; it is the reality behind the word. The only reason for "separate but equal" institutions is to hide a perpetuation of separate and unequal institutions.
Actually I have no problem with a two-tiered marriage scheme, when it is done right. In many states that have "marriage light" institutions, (civil unions, domestic partnerships, etc.), cross-sex couples choose to avail themselve of it rather than full marriage. There are several reasons for this. As long as it is their choice that's fine(although I would add the opportunity to easily "upgrade" to full marriage). But when a significant minority is told "you can have these benefits but can't aspire to the rest," that is unfair and goes against the principles of fairness embodied in our laws and our Constitution.
Laws can always be changed. There's no law immune from being watered down.
2) True, but it is so much easier to water down your bill than my bill even before coming to a vote, since you hand him the opening of a separate institution.
3) And if my bill passes, Senator Jones will have to garner support to once again completely redefine marriage before he can deny my constitutents the protection of any the 3000+ laws, unless he denies them to all married couples. If your bill passes, he can hide such a denial for civil unions into a rider on a totally unrelated bill.