IMO, it's destined to go before the US Supreme Court eventually. I can only hope that, when the opportunity arises, Obama will nominate Justices who respect the rights of all citizens.
To remove the civil rights of people is a perverted act.
I'm very impressed by how cleverly you manage to consistently avoid adressing the issue of intersexed individuals.blah blah blah
The proof is stupidly simple.Since there seem to be a lot of threads on this I'm going to ask again, can you prove that Marriage is a civil right, or do you just assume that it is?
And this is the main intangible I was thinking of in my earlier post. If marriage/domestic partnerships is solely a contractual arrangement, then I have no problem at all with incestuous marriages. But, marriage is clearly associated with sex (reproductive issues aside, as non-fertile couples are allowed to marry, provided they pass the gender test). If the sex is "icky" for whatever moral reasons, people are opposed to calling it marriage.
I personally think this is wrong.
To expand just a bit on the incest question, in the most extreme cases (mother/son, brother/sister), marriage is irrelevant, as the birth relationship already guarantees most of the rights and privileges of marriage, which is why most people justifiably ignore that issue. Many places already allow first cousins to marry. Would you consider that incestuous?
if someone can show that domestic partner status...and marriage status are inherantly and in practise unequal...then heterosexual and homosexual unions should be the same.
but, if it cannot be shown that domestic partner and marriage status are unequal..but instead share literally the same rights, privelages, obligations, etc..then I see no reason to change a thing.
That might be a difficult thing for many to accept, but it is the opinion of the electorate. Are they wrong?
Yes they are wrong. In 1959 would a ballot meaure in any southern state have approved the desegregation of public schools? ...One day those who voted for prop. 8 will understand that taking away the rights of others only diminishes themselves.
I am very pleased with Barack Obama's win.... but I have to say my exuberance is tempered with a good bit of sadness for the passage of Prop 8 in California.
The sadly ironic part. The gay community was almost completely behind Barack but in the end, from the poll numbers I have heard, it was mostly the African American vote that got Prop 8 passed adding a Constitution amendment to ban gay marriage in California.
More ironic perhaps, Barack ran on a message of unity and inclusion. Of all the electorate Black American's should understand how it feels to be excluded. "Inclusion" was the underlying message that attracted them to Obama in the first place.
Even in my joy and relief at Obama's win, as a white straight male, today I am truly sad for my gay friends.
We do have much work to do still in our nation.
Okay, I understand what you mean.Maybe I expressed myself poorly. I said that the intangibles were motivating factors, but not really relevant to the ballot initiatives.
What I meant was that the ballot proposition defines law, i.e. tangible things. It is tangible to say that a pair of people can have something called a "marriage license", an official government document. It is tangible to say that a couple can have a "civil union license", and say that a "civil union license" is treated, by law, exactly the same as a "marriage license".
The associated intangible is saying that, since there are two different things, they are inherently "unequal". The first intangibly you noted was "equality".
Yes. And I recognize that that's an opinion. I think putting it to popular vote and declaring victory when you win barely over half is the wrong way to amend a constitution, though. "Tyranny of the majority" comes to mind.I think that's the most important of the intangibles, and the one that motivates people to vote as they do. The people of California said that while they were willing to grant people the legal benefits (and responsibilities,,,there are some, aren't there?) of marriage, they are not willing to say that a homosexual union is "equal" to a marriage.
That might be a difficult thing for many to accept, but it is the opinion of the electorate. Are they wrong?
It's not hard to answer ("No. Because it confers no tangible benefits that do not already exist or that cannot already be obtained by other means, and there is no class of people on whom it would confer intangible benefits. Genosexuals?") but it's a red herring.Meanwhile, though, why is it that you duck eeyore's question? What is so hard about saying yes or no to that question? Do you think we should allow incestuous marriages? If not, why not? It's a fairly simple question.
There are several places that governments could draw the line that are rational. Drawing the line at one man/one woman is rational. As is drawing the line at first cousins or what have you. But governments should consider the intangibles in their calculus about where that line is drawn. I think the line should be neither rigidly fixed nor an open free-for-all. It should be moved conservatively, moved only if there is substantial interest in moving it and one or both of the following:Some people might object to the question because there is no one trying to legalize incestuous marriages, so who cares? Well, that's true. Certainly anyone trying to say that gay marriages will lead to incestuous marriage is almost certainly wrong, but why are they wrong? Why is it that people oppose incestuous marriages?
nor an open free-for-all.
Sorry Terry, I don't think you are going to get an answer other than that. I am usually pretty good at seeing the "other side" of things. I am strongly pro-choice but I can make myself see where the pro-life folks are coming from. I believe in universal healthcare and state-paid education all the way through college, but I can see the other side.
As for this case, I can't wrap my mind around it. Religious bigotry is the ONLY explanation. How, how, HOW does you marrying another adult of the same gender infringe on my liberties in ANY way?! It doesn't. Plain and simple. It has to be religious bigotry.
meadmaker said:Some people might object to the question because there is no one trying to legalize incestuous marriages, so who cares? Well, that's true. Certainly anyone trying to say that gay marriages will lead to incestuous marriage is almost certainly wrong, but why are they wrong? Why is it that people oppose incestuous marriages?
The Ick factor. Genetic arguments fall short because we have so much better ways to determining who falls into catagories that should not marry each other, but that is not used to prevent people from marrying geneticaly incompatable people.
parky76 said:American society has decided that "Marriage™®©(pat'd pending)" should be left between an unrelated couple of 1 adult man and 1 adult woman.
Because the religious fundamentalists don’t care about marriage. Not since Henry the VIII wanted to divorce his wife.
This is all about the gays. First they ban gay marriage. Then they will ban gay people from adopting children. Then they will work to ban gays from working in jobs that involve contact with children, like teaches, day care workers, pediatricians, Catholic priests, etc. Then they will ban gay people from having any contact with children whatsoever (even their family). Finally, all gay people or anyone who just “looks” gay will be stripped of their citizenship and shipped to Cuba.![]()
There is no such word as “ppl”.
In my humble opinion, since religion has decided to take ownership of the word marriage, then the state ought to give it up.
They should go entirely, in all applicable law, to "domesic partnership" of some other unclaimed term (a glimp? a burple?), and remove all mention of marriage from the legal books.
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and by the way, women and men have seperate bathrooms. they DO NOT have the right to use the other sexes' bathroom. is seperate bathrooms for men and women inherantly unequal? why not?
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That might be a difficult thing for many to accept, but it is the opinion of the electorate. Are they wrong?
Yes, and it wouldn't be the first time. As a skeptic and rational person, surely you're aware of that?
M.
Sux living in a democracy doesn't it.