No, but I hear Shemp has some experience with goats.Ever kept guinea pigs?
In most of Europe you can even marry your sister/brother.
Lots of creepy people in Europe.
Even zoos don't mate animal siblings.
In an age where the right to get marriage is being fought over by gays, why no one stands up for cousins who are in love with each other?
Well since Aunts and Uncles share the same DNA with one of your parents wouldn't marrying one of their children be like marrying a half sibling? Half incest?I'm astounded by learning that in some US states marrying a first cousin is prohibited.
The quotes below are from Wired, but I suggest reading the entire article, which is short and enlightening.
In an age where the right to get marriage is being fought over by gays, why no one stands up for cousins who are in love with each other?
And how come it became associated with backwardness, poverty? In Europe it was common practice among the royalty. It must have been common practice in the vast majority of tribes throughout history.
To deny marriage to a couple because their children is at higher propensity for genetic disorders is a major can of worms we don't want to get into, and one which I don't foresee outside of a totalitarian society. So why can't first cousins get married in so many US states?
I can see at least a few possibly valid reasons:So why can't first cousins get married in so many US states?
One other issue that has not been bought up yet. A man sees a pretty woman, has sex with her which produces a child. The same man also has sex with his wife who then produces another child. The two children meet and want to get married. Currently there is nothing to stop them. I know the probability of this happening is very low, but the number of marriages happening is so high that it must happen from time to time.
http://cbs2.com/watercooler/Twins.unwittingly.got.2.627900.htmlTwins who were separated at birth got married without realizing they were brother and sister, a lawmaker said, urging more information be provided on birth certificates for adopted children.
A court annulled the British couple's union after they discovered their true relationship, Lord David Alton said.
Roboramma said:1. While the risks to the children of any particular cousin-couple may be negligible, the loss of genetic diversity harms society as a whole. Specifically, if cousins A and B marry and have children Y and Z, while cousin C and D marry to have children W and X, what are the risks for the children of X and Y if they marry? This is similar, by the way, to the problem of vaccination: it may not be a big deal for any individual to avoid vaccination, but if enough people do it, everyone else is at greater risk.
I can see at least a few possibly valid reasons:
1. While the risks to the children of any particular cousin-couple may be negligible, the loss of genetic diversity harms society as a whole. Specifically, if cousins A and B marry and have children Y and Z, while cousin C and D marry to have children W and X, what are the risks for the children of X and Y if they marry?
This is similar, by the way, to the problem of vaccination: it may not be a big deal for any individual to avoid vaccination, but if enough people do it, everyone else is at greater risk.
2. Cousin marriage may lead to greater nepotism, stronger inter-familial ties, and thus weaker extra-familial ties. Depending upon how common the practice became, society may become more and more "tribalised" (as in, split into separate groups who look out for each other, but do not cooperate with members of other groups, and perhaps actively compete with them.)
This may seem far-fetched, and I don't know that's it's particularly likely, but I wouldn't be surprised if there is a correlation between societies with a predominance of cousin-cousin marriage and this sort of "tribalism" (for lack of a better word).
How about the awkwardness it causes for the rest of the family? How do a grandmother and a grandfather react to two of their grandchildren having sexual relations with each other? How do an uncle and an aunt react to their niece/nephew marrying their son/daughter? A father or mother feel about their child being with a person they regarded as a loved niece or nephew and that they now have to treat like a child's partner? How do siblings feel about their brother or sister being with their cousin?
I'm not against marriages between relatives because it is practised by the poor and uneducated (or rather, perceived to be practised by them. Surely there are plenty of middle-class and wealthy people who have done it, as well), I'm against it because it's too problematic.