Following up on the footnote in my last post.
I'm sure that you've heard the expression "If it looks like a duck, and it walks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck, it's a duck." But have you ever heard the joke attributed to Abraham Lincoln: "How many legs does a dog have if you call his tail a leg? Four: calling a tail a leg doesn't make it one."
The question is whether, under Meadmaker's compromise, same-sex unions are ducks or dogs. Whether the only difference is, as he claims, that we don't use the word "marriage," or whether no matter how equal he claims civil union can be made to marriage, there is still a fundamental difference.
This is the stumbling block that we always come back to in discussions with Meadmaker. He insists that the difference between marriage and civil union is only in the name, and that he suggests the two institutions, not because two are necessary, but because the current generation has certain prejudices about the word "marriage." And they would be more willing to accept same-sex unions -- equal in every way to marriages -- if they did not have to call them marriages.
But he, himself, in yesterday's post, indicated that he sees a fundamental difference in whether his son's future partner is the the same or the opposite sex. Not only that, but he wants the way the government recognizes unions to reflect that fundamental difference, and to encourage the "right" choice over the "wrong" choice.
There are two ways to understand this latest position.
Either he is finally admitting that what he is asking for is two fundamentally different institutions, with same-sex unions being legally inferior. And, in turn, this means he may have been attempting to decieve us about his real agenda. Or, more likely, he has been deciving himself, instead.
Or he believes, philosophically, that there is no difference, but emotionally he, himself, is one of those prejudiced against same-sex unions. And although in his "gut" he wants the government to favor cross-sex marriage, he knows in his head that he is in the wrong.