You missed my point entirely. Show me that the "norm" of plural marriage in Canada isn't Bountiful. Show me that I'm making a caricature of the issue. I'm basing my argument on the facts on the ground. You are basing your argument on an abstract principle. I don't disagree with the principle, but there is no reasonable comparison between the facts on the ground of same-sex relationships (which encompass a spectrum of behaviours, as you pointed out) and the facts on the ground of plural marriage (which, AFAIK, is Bountiful).
Yes, let us ignore entirely the entirety of world history, and the experiences of people in other countries. Let us focus
only on one isolated instance, and use that instance to draw all our conclusions. It worked for discriminating against blacks, against gays, against women...no reason it shouldn't work here.
As cited in the OP, there are people who willingly enter into polygamous relationships that are equal, and do not in any way involve things such as forced marriages, sexual abuse, religious fundamentalism, or any of those other things.
Historically, polygamy has been practiced in numerous cultures. In most cases, those were patriarchal cultures in which the women were subordinated to the men, and abuse
did take place...but the true is same of pretty much every monogamous culture, as well,
until legal measures were put in place to ensure equal rights for both parties in a marriage.
And there's the most important item -- monogamy, in and of itself, is in no way a 'protection' against any of the abuses we see in Bountiful. Not only
can those abuses happen in monogamous relationships, but for the majority of history, they were the norm!
Hell, if I use your argument, then 500 years ago I could reasonably have argued that sexual abuse, religious fundamentalism, forced marriages, and many other such behaviors
were the norm in monogamous relationships...and that therefore, monogamous marriage was wrong, and should be made illegal.
It wasn't the form of relationship, or the form of marriage, that determined those things. It was a combination of the societal norms (what was considered allowable, and what was not) and legal protections. It wasn't that long ago that Canadian law considered that rape within a marriage was not a crime...that it was a man's 'right' to demand sex from his wife. Those were
universally monogamous marriages. The issue of marital rape had nothing to do with monogamy; as is evidenced by the fact that, when laws were created to criminalize it, women were able to seek legal recourse and protection if such abuse took place.
In other words, where is the evidence that the undesirable behaviour isn't the norm? Who, besides the Blackmore clan, are we actually discriminating against by retaining the Criminal Crode prohibitions on polygamy?
Again, sadly lacking in anything approaching logical analyis.
1) Despite the criminal code prohibitions, those abuses are still taking place; primarily because it is seen as a
religious issue, and sadly Canadian gov't officials seem unwilling to tackle the issue of religious freedom even when it involves such abuse.
2) It isn't the polygamy itself that is the problem. "Polygamy" is not defined as "forced marriages with underage girls under the guise of fundamentalist religion". As I said before, these things would be
just as wrong, and
just as illegal, if they were committed within monogamous marriages.
3) Granting consenting adults the right to marry each other in a polygamous relationship would have
no bearing whatsoever on the legality of forcing underaged girls into marriage, or of using a fundamentalist dogmatism to enforce obedience.
4) I won't claim that there are huge numbers of people who want this kind of relationship; but they are out there.
Criminalizing it has no benefit that I can see at all. I do have friends in Ontario who have a three-way 'polygamous' relationship (two men, and one woman, in fact). Two of them are legally married; the third one lives with them as an equal partner, but has no legal protections. When his 'wife' was hospitalized several years ago, he was not allowed in to visit her because he wasn't a family member. Despite the fact that they share money, resources, and property, if they were to separate later, he'd have no legal claim to any of that property.
Legalizing polygamous marriages would not mean legalizing what happens at Bountiful -- forcing girls into marriage would still be illegal. As would sexual abuse. These are entirely separate issues.
If you can show me that evidence, I'll change my mind. In your attack on me, you may have missed my earlier post where I said I am still undecided on how to deal with the real issue of harm in Bountiful.
Then try actually taking a more global view, and
not deriving your entire 'database' from one isolated case.
Would legalizing polygamy mean legalizing forced marriages to underage girls? No.
Would legalizing polygamy mean legalizing forcing adult women into marriages against their will? No.
Would legalizing polygamy mean legalizing sexual abuse within a marital relationship? No.
In other words, all those aspects of what happens at Bountiful that we find most repulsive
would still be entirely illegal. And the gov't would still have the legal means to prosecute them for such abuses...if they had the balls and could get over this Canadian obsession with political-correctness-gone-crazy.
So go ahead...please tell me
one single abuse that takes place at Bountiful that would become legal or defensible if polygamy were made legal, applying all the same legal requirements and constraints that we currently apply to monogamous marriages.