Yes we lack fidelity, so what? Not being exclusive in a pair bond is not unique to pair bonding species.
Hmmm I'll have to re read that section tonight, my recollection is that it suggests we are monogamous.
Yes we lack fidelity, so what? Not being exclusive in a pair bond is not unique to pair bonding species.
Hmmm I'll have to re read that section tonight, my recollection is that it suggests we are monogamous.
We are between Chimps and Gorillias, so more monogamous than chimps but less than Gorillias.
Thanks. Doesn't suggest harems are the norm anyway.
You have to read a lot into evolutionary psychology to think that.
There are plenty of examples in other thread, but I can't be arsed to dig them up, since it's not really that important to me.Really? Most openly? That doesn't feel right, but then again, I can't actually think of any counter examples.
Still, most of what I've seen was him using silly logic to justify silly laws, less than actually being an outright bigot towards homosexuals.
Not to mention one of our most flaming drama queens.No wonder I should be burned at the stake -- I mean, banned; my heresy might spread...
I can't speak to Canada, but here in the US, there's myself, at least half of my friends and aquaintances, and numerous other long-term (as in, over a decade) polyamourous relationships that I'm familiar with through the varous polyamoury mailing lists and webboards. There are also several other Americans, Australians, and IIRC at least one Canadian on this board involved in stable, long-term polyamourous relationships.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?
I think enough people will be living in poly-style relationships that issues of child custody and support will arise, and that will provide the compelling reason. I expect it within a few decades. However, I doubt it will go by the name "marriage". I expect some sort of lightweight partnership/kinship agreement, less restrictive than marriage.
Of course, I've been wrong before, but that's what I expect.
...and I haven't yet mentions the most horrific, evil, consequence of polygamy.
TWO mothers-in-law.
Marriage law should take in the reality of what really happens to real people, not some idealistic view of everyone as perfect decision makers who are fully capable of looking out for their own interests, now and for the rest of their lives. One of the reasons I waffle on this, and gay marriage, and other proposals that affect marriage law, is that I have a hard time balancing the right of people to choose their own path, with the knowledge that letting people choose their own path will inevitably lead to the strong taking advantage of the weak. It is true in every other area of human endeavor. I can't see how it cannot be true for sex and marriage as well.
I can't think of a reason not to. On the other hand, suppose it could be shown, with reasonable certainty, that some lifestyles really are more likely to produce happiness than others?
Is monogamy such a condition? I know that when I look at the people I know who have engaged in polyamorous situations, I wouldn't point to them as the people who really seem to be happy.
Well you would become the responcibility of his nearest male relative.
Traditionaly women can't sign such things. What is next letting them own property? See this whole problems started when women got rights. When they were property instead of being able to own property so many marriage issues were simpler. Homosexual marriage just didn't make sense for one.
Nope, I am not claiming to make them, I just want the deductions. You were suggesting fraud as well, letting people deduct children regardless of their actualy being financialy responcible for them. So if you can deduct children you are not caring for, why can't I deduct donations I don't make?
The idea behind that is that you represent an increase in nessacary costs, while not bringing in money. So that as more money must be spent on nessesities and less on luxuries. So it is considered fair by many people to factor this into the ammount paid in tax in some fashion.
And they still had the same responcibilities and rights as any other married person. How is a system less abuseable when you get to seperate out each individual right? And there are at least some mechanisms in place to try to verify if a marriage is real or just for specific rights(generaly immigration)
Good because that is not my argument. It is that bundeling these rights and responcibilities makes for a better system than having lawyers write up contracts with them freely selectable or ignoreable. You would then see strange checklists "we will consider you sufficiently married if you have 4 or more rights from collum A two more responcibilities from collum B, and at least 6 entries in collum C".
There thing is that no matter how you argue it, marrige is not presently a contract, but it is a status, and that status is set up for two people. By breaking it down into a simple contract, you are makeing a massive change. The main intent of this would be to include far more lawyers in everyones lives, both to write these contracts, but also to read them to determine if they qualify for being considered married or not by the standards of the institution.
You do realize that is a reducto ad absurdem of the traditionalism argument right?
Yes.
How threatenable are the current versions of health care proxy and wills if contested by relatives?
And this is because your mother failed to involve lawyers in every facet of her life, something that you seem to be argueing for.
You seem to prefer spending many bucks on lawyers to that though.
Still lurking.There are also several other Americans, Australians, and IIRC at least one Canadian on this board involved in stable, long-term polyamourous relationships.
There are plenty of examples in other thread, but I can't be arsed to dig them up, since it's not really that important to me.
Not to mention one of our most flaming drama queens.
I can't speak to Canada, but here in the US, there's myself, at least half of my friends and aquaintances, and numerous other long-term (as in, over a decade) polyamourous relationships that I'm familiar with through the varous polyamoury mailing lists and webboards. There are also several other Americans, Australians, and IIRC at least one Canadian on this board involved in stable, long-term polyamourous relationships.
The fact that there aren't more is due to the intense prejudice against them due to ignorance such as yours, and the difficulty of maintaining such a relationship in the face of legal antipathy. I've known more than one group who was forced to deal with substantial legal difficulties due to the law refusing to recognize the validity of their relationship. The legal opposition is so strict, that the only groups who will blatantly engage in such practice de novo, instead of merely defacto as many subcultures do, are the fanatics. Remove the opposition and the fanatics are no longer unique, or even unusual.
Your argumentum ad ignorantiam just shows your own prejudice, not a desire to know the truth.
I'm sorry it took so long to respond to this. Yes, I realized what you were doing...and found it humorous, until I started thinking more about the subject and realized that I know far too many people in my personal life still clinging to "traditional values". I apologize. I worried that I had strayed all over the place in my response, and it seems that I did more than that--I lost focus.
You're right, it seems that I prefer spending much money on lawyers, but that's not at all what I mean. I hope you know that. I do see, though, how contracts made between individuals, without going through an attorney, would open up a whole other can of worms whenever someone becames disenchanted with the arrangement and wanted out.
I just see no way of implementing individualized marriage contracts with out a whole lot of lawers being involved constantly.
What would happen, in practice, is that there would rapidly be a few pretty standard contracts. For example, the major churches would publish versions of the contract that would mimic the old fashioned understanding of marriage.
More progressive groups would create more liberal versions.
I just see no way of implementing individualized marriage contracts with out a whole lot of lawers being involved constantly. The only way to avoid that would be turn marriage contracts into a check list. Then you get the you must have X of these other boxes checked to check this box and such. Even with this you then have to consider not if someone is married or not, but in every situation that marriage is recognized, does their marriage meet the criteria for recognition there.
Having more than one way to give people recognition might well be a good thing, but I am not sure that such individualized marriage contracts would be a workable solution.
Maybe, but there would still likely be clauses added or removed as a common change from those standard contracts. So the individual contracts would still need to be evaluated. You are at the least talking of thousands of different versions of marriage, any any institution that recognizes marriage would need to evaluate which specific contracts meet their standards for recognised marriage vs unrecognised social contract.