Hi, Scot.
Scot is correct, of course.
And the post to whicj=h he was responding:
has a glaring error in it. Huntster thinks homosexuals should be able to commit to long term partners. On JREF, I've never heard anyone say they shouldn't, including Huntster.
The question is whether there is anything special about a relationship between a man and a woman that should mark it for special consideration. Some of us have this bizarre notion that reproduction is significant in all this debate about marriage.
My recent position, stable for at least a year on this topic, is that the rules of marriage should be written to make sense for young, fertile, heterosexuals who are likely to have children. Those rules should require people to get together sexually, and stay together and monogamous. Failure to do so should bring significant penalties on the party that doesn't keep the bargain. Then, if people who are old, infertile by choice or condition, or not of opposite genders also want to play by the same rules, so be it.