Catholics in US overwhelmingly support homosexual unions [CWN]

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As has been shown so often, both on this forum, and in formal debate settings, a positive is not proved (or justified) by a negative, ever. It’s intellectually invalid and not credible.
So true. What a comparison!
St. Anastasia lost whatever credibiltiy she had with that one.

Let’s see, do we think that we’ll really learn anything from that?

Perhaps a better comparison, one that would be truly beneficial when we found the results might be…

Which would be a healthier enviornment for a child:
A same-sex couple in a stable loving relationship
or a heterosexual couple in a stable loving relationship??
 
So true. What a comparison!
St. Anastasia lost whatever credibiltiy she had with that one.

Let’s see, do we think that we’ll really learn anything from that?

Perhaps a better comparison, one that would be truly beneficial when we found the results might be…

Which would be a healthier enviornment for a child:
A same-sex couple in a stable loving relationship
or a heterosexual couple in a stable loving relationship??
This has nothing to do with the law nor with the debate over gay marriage in the court room (whatever the answer might be). I honestly feel that strong Catholics make worse parents (all else being equal) than atheist parents, but I would never suggest that the law should prohibit them from being married on those grounds. We don’t make laws that permit behavior only in the “ideal” or “best.” There are plenty of categories of parents that are not “best,” but we would never consider denying them the right to marry nor to raise children on those less-than-ideal grounds.
 
I honestly feel that strong Catholics make worse parents (all else being equal) than atheist parents, but I would never suggest that the law should prohibit them from being married on those grounds.
Once again, Larkin, Off-Topic.
We don’t make laws that permit behavior only in the “ideal” or “best.” There are plenty of categories of parents that are not “best,” but we would never consider denying them the right to marry nor to raise children on those less-than-ideal grounds.
That’s because the only situation in which parents can be chosen by others is in adoption. And you best believe that parents who are less than ideal have historically not been chosen by adoption agencies, even long before gay couples were among those asking to be chosen. If you were considered an unfit environment for the child, you were off the list or lower on the list. And unfit could be something as non-controversial as slightly less income than the “ideal” couple, or a lifestyle considered provocative on fairly modest grounds, such as a couple who traveled a lot or spoke several languages, that sort of thing.
the right to marry
There is no constitutional right to same-sex marriage, implicit or explicit. And spare me the citation of Loving, which reaffirmed (not affirmed for the first time but reaffirmed) the right to heterosexual interracial marriage which had been unconstitutionally and arbitrarily removed before the Court reinstated that heterosexual freedom. I have read legal critiques of Loving, and that interpreation of mine is upheld by those critiques.

Actually, the subject of the thread is unions, not marriage. If wording on legal contracts (insurance, trusts, Power of Attorney, everything) is changed to allow any specific other, regardless of marital status (which is the way the contracts should be worded), then there will be no need for gays to seek secular marriage in order to have economic equality with straight couples. This is the way legal contracts should be worded. One should not have to engage in sexual intercourse with someone, or initate a name change for oneself, or revolutionize an entire institution for the raising of children, in order to be named as a beneficiary, a hospital visitor, or a chosen dependent. The entire legal reasoning on the part of gays is faulty, because all their attempts do is to create an additional level of discrimination against single persons of any orientation who shouldn’t need a spouse in order to designate people other than relatives with which to enjoy economic partnerships.

If society were made up only of coupled units, then there would be some logic to their efforts, but the fact is, society is not constructed that way, and there is no reason why homosexual couples should have privileges that heterosexual singles and homosexual singles do not. They don’t want equal rights. They want superior rights.
 
As has been shown so often, both on this forum, and in formal debate settings, a positive is not proved (or justified) by a negative, ever. It’s intellectually invalid and not credible.
For some reason adoption by same-sex couples had been legal in Spain for donkey’s years, long before same-sex unions were legalized.

The Church objected strongly to same-sex union on grounds of family values, yet it had not objected to same-sex adoption! This kind of inconsistency greatly helped supporters of the bill (another example was that a few years previously a member of the royal family married a divorcee without objection, giving an image of one rule for the rich).

It is “intellectually invalid” to judge homosexuals differently from heterosexuals, and every inconsistency will push more people into the supporters camp. If you want to change the hearts and minds of the majority (according to the OP) of Catholics in the States then you must learn the lessons of Spain and apply the same criteria across the board.
 
One should not have to engage in sexual intercourse with someone, or initate a name change for oneself, or revolutionize an entire institution for the raising of children, in order to be named as a beneficiary, a hospital visitor, or a chosen dependent. The entire legal reasoning on the part of gays is faulty, because all their attempts do is to create an additional level of discrimination against single persons of any orientation who shouldn’t need a spouse in order to designate people other than relatives with which to enjoy economic partnerships.

If society were made up only of coupled units, then there would be some logic to their efforts, but the fact is, society is not constructed that way, and there is no reason why homosexual couples should have privileges that heterosexual singles and homosexual singles do not. They don’t want equal rights. They want superior rights.
I first read you as promoting promiscuity by wanting to do away with all unions on the grounds they discriminate against single people. :eek:

OK, I assume you can’t be arguing for that :), but think you miss a point.

A heterosexual couple can stand before their family and friends and vow their love for each other, and then have their union recognized by the state. Homosexuals want the same right. Obviously they can’t do this before God in some religions, but a civil ceremony is still meaningful. The case is that precluding them is iniquitous and denies them dignity within society.

That’s a very simple argument of the kind that sways hearts and minds. You need an equally simple counter-argument.
 
Once again, Larkin, Off-Topic.
No, it was ON-TOPIC – the argument was that the inferior example of a homosexual set of parents is a reason to deny marriage to them. This was clearly and fully implied. I countered it with the direct claim that in law we do not deny rights on grounds of inferiority. And then I gave an example that I thought would be recognizable to this forum: Catholic parents.
That’s because the only situation in which parents can be chosen by others is in adoption. And you best believe that parents who are less than ideal have historically not been chosen by adoption agencies, even long before gay couples were among those asking to be chosen
I am discussing gay marriage. Are you discussing gay adoption? That is a different set of laws, because it is a business practice.
If you were considered an unfit environment for the child, you were off the list or lower on the list. And unfit could be something as non-controversial as slightly less income than the “ideal” couple, or a lifestyle considered provocative on fairly modest grounds, such as a couple who traveled a lot or spoke several languages, that sort of thing.
Yes, that is true. But not relevant to gay marriage argument. Unless you are suggesting that for the same reasons that some heteros are denied adoptions we should also deny heteros the ability to marry. Are you claiming this? My sense is that you would like only to hold this argument against gay marriage.
There is no constitutional right to same-sex marriage, implicit or explicit.
No one said that there was. There is no “right” to any kind of marriage written anywhere. We make laws that go beyond “rights.” Our Constitution requires that laws be just.
And spare me the citation of Loving, which reaffirmed (not affirmed for the first time but reaffirmed) the right to heterosexual interracial marriage which had been unconstitutionally and arbitrarily removed before the Court reinstated that heterosexual freedom. I have read legal critiques of Loving, and that interpreation of mine is upheld by those critiques.
Nice dismissal. FYI, Loving WILL be discussed in every case about gay marriage whether you would like to dismiss it beforehand or not.
Actually, the subject of the thread is unions, not marriage. If wording on legal contracts (insurance, trusts, Power of Attorney, everything) is changed to allow any specific other, regardless of marital status (which is the way the contracts should be worded), then there will be no need for gays to seek secular marriage in order to have economic equality with straight couples.
I don’t see any reason why YOU should be deciding for other groups what they can or should seek in the legal arena. It is rather presumptuous of you.
This is the way legal contracts should be worded. One should not have to engage in sexual intercourse with someone, or initate a name change for oneself, or revolutionize an entire institution for the raising of children, in order to be named as a beneficiary, a hospital visitor, or a chosen dependent. The entire legal reasoning on the part of gays is faulty, because all their attempts do is to create an additional level of discrimination against single persons of any orientation who shouldn’t need a spouse in order to designate people other than relatives with which to enjoy economic partnerships.
The State should do away with ALL benefits to married persons. I agree. They are unjust.
If society were made up only of coupled units, then there would be some logic to their efforts, but the fact is, society is not constructed that way, and there is no reason why homosexual couples should have privileges that heterosexual singles and homosexual singles do not. They don’t want equal rights. They want superior rights.
True. The same superior rights that hetero couples presently enjoy, and should be forced to give up.
 
I first read you as promoting promiscuity by wanting to do away with all unions on the grounds they discriminate against single people. :eek:

OK, I assume you can’t be arguing for that :), but think you miss a point.

A heterosexual couple can stand before their family and friends and vow their love for each other, and then have their union recognized by the state. Homosexuals want the same right. Obviously they can’t do this before God in some religions, but a civil ceremony is still meaningful. The case is that precluding them is iniquitous and denies them dignity within society.

That’s a very simple argument of the kind that sways hearts and minds. You need an equally simple counter-argument.
The underlying reason for state recognition of heterosexual couples is the ability of heterosexual couples to procreate. It is meaningless, from a societal standpoint, to recognize a pairing of homosexuals, since they have no intrinsic ability to procreate. It is impossible for them to have the same right…unless you are in a Monty Python movie, fighting for Stan’s right to have a baby, even though he has no womb.

Now, some will trot out the same tired counter argument that we allow infertile heterosexual couples to marry, but that is not the same question. Currently, the law allows any heterosexual couple (only one man and one woman with age and sometimes relation restrictions) to marry. No one is demanding to restrict it to fertile couples, as they don’t feel state intrusion would be a good thing.
 
The case is that precluding them is iniquitous and denies them dignity within society.

That’s a very simple argument of the kind that sways hearts and minds. You need an equally simple counter-argument.
No one denies “them” dignity, any more than denying it to people who believe in multiple marriages or underage marriages are denied “their” dignity when society fails to enshrine their proclivities.

What society has so far failed (for the most part) to dignifiy is sodomy itself. Is there some truly important reason why this society should enshrine it and pretend that sexual perversion is something other than sexual perversion?
 
the argument was that the inferior example of a homosexual set of parents is a reason to deny marriage to them.
No, the example you chose was religion. Religion has nothing to do with marital status, from a legal point of view. Nor is this any argument related to gay marriage. Nor has any legal argument been provided to Courts that links religion (a sect, or even a lack of religion) to gay marriage as being “inferior” to heterosexual marriage. It is your (faulty) interpretation that this is an argument about inferiority; whereas it is an argument in fact about an illegitimate reclassification, based on a hijacking of the purpose of marriage from the State’s point of view. If the legitimacy of marriage were based on some projected litmus test of parenting, then anyone could join in the qualifications test: a great teacher, a great coach; a great family friend or friends.
I am discussing gay marriage. Are you discussing gay adoption?
No. I’m telling you that the concept of ‘inferior’ parents (a subject you brought up) only becomes an issue in the case of adoption, because only then is a third party involved to make a formal judgment about what kind of a family unit, of those family units available at that time, will provide the best choice for that child at the moment… Despite the blind and hilarious idealization of gays as supposedly perfect parents, gays are just a flawed as straights. Human beings make imperfect parents, some more imperfect than others, and that imperfection is not related to their sexual orientation. However, the completeness of the family unit is very much linked to the propriety of parenting. By definition, a gay couple is incomplete.
No one said that there was.
Actually you said it, in your paragraph with the O/T religion tangent.
Nice dismissal.
Not my dismissal. The dismissal of legal experts, and since I’ve been trained to read legal arguments, I understand those arguments.
FYI, Loving WILL be discussed in every case about gay marriage whether you would like to dismiss it beforehand or not.
I only dismiss it because legal experts correctly dismiss it. So it will continue to be appropriately dismissed as long as it inappropriately applied, out of convenience to the gay lobby.
I don’t see any reason why YOU should be deciding for other groups what they can or should seek in the legal arena. It is rather presumptuous of you.
Except that (again) legal experts agree with me. 😉 Contract law regarding partnerships is not dependent on sexual relationships, nor should it be. There’s no “presumption” involved.
The State should do away with ALL benefits to married persons. I agree. They are unjust.
One area of agreement. 🙂
True. The same superior rights that hetero couples presently enjoy, and should be forced to give up.
I have no problem, as you see, with an equalizing legal platform, but I have a huge problem with terminology, becaues of the family unit aspects. This is related only to official terminology. As I’ve said on other threads, people will call their loved ones whatever they want to call them. This has been true for centuries. One cannot control, nor should the State try to control, be interested in controlling, what people call their relationships. There have been many cohabitating couples of both orientations, who decades earlier – and today – have called themselves married, or have called the lover the spouse. And before there were any legal efforts to formalize arrangements, such couples often held informal ceremonies, or more formal religious ceremonies of some sort with an approving institution. This shouldn’t be the concern of the State when people want to do this.
 
A heterosexual couple can stand before their family and friends and vow their love for each other, and then have their union recognized by the state. Homosexuals want the same right. Obviously they can’t do this before God in some religions, but a civil ceremony is still meaningful. The case is that precluding them is iniquitous and denies them dignity within society.
Which is what most of us on CAF have always suspected as the subtext of gay “marriage.” The true purpose of the movement has nothing to with legal “rights,” which is of course why Unions, or Registered Domestic Partnerships (which have the exact same tax advantages in some States, for example) is an insufficient gesture for gays. This has everything to do with social acceptance, except that the Constitution does not guarantee social acceptance, and the State is not in the business of engineering social acceptance.
 
The underlying reason for state recognition of heterosexual couples is the ability of heterosexual couples to procreate.
You’ve given another reason why the opposition to legalizing same-sex union failed in Spain. Many heterosexuals just don’t accept that procreation is the only or prime reason, and arguing otherwise can then backfire by making them more, not less, sympathetic to legalization.

Sorry and all that, I’m just telling you what didn’t work here. 🙂
 
What society has so far failed (for the most part) to dignifiy is sodomy itself. Is there some truly important reason why this society should enshrine it and pretend that sexual perversion is something other than sexual perversion?
Yes 🙂 calling it a perversion doesn’t make it so. Any half-adequate lawyer or politician would find it very easy to bury an opponent who tried to use that argument. Unless everyone agrees on exactly what is a perversion, it sounds like it’s dressing up a prejudice.

The opposition to legalization in Spain tried all kinds of arguments without adequately exploring the possible adversarial counter-arguments. The result was that in some cases they increased sympathy for the very cause they were against. Again, sorry, just telling it like it is.
 
For some reason adoption by same-sex couples had been legal in Spain for donkey’s years, long before same-sex unions were legalized.

The Church objected strongly to same-sex union on grounds of family values, yet it had not objected to same-sex adoption! This kind of inconsistency greatly helped supporters of the bill (another example was that a few years previously a member of the royal family married a divorcee without objection, giving an image of one rule for the rich).

It is “intellectually invalid” to judge homosexuals differently from heterosexuals, and every inconsistency will push more people into the supporters camp. If you want to change the hearts and minds of the majority (according to the OP) of Catholics in the States then you must learn the lessons of Spain and apply the same criteria across the board.
“intellectually invalid”? How so? In the United States, there was a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual used by psychiatrists that was changed by nonscientific vote in 1973. That was intellectually invalid. What is also intellectually invalid is hearts and minds propaganda. The people of the United States voted down gay marriage, and twice in California. The people here fully understand the situation. The United States is not Spain.

If only judges and politicians approve this, and not the people, then it will not be intellectually valid to ignore the people.

God bless,
Ed
 
If only judges and politicians approve this, and not the people, then it will not be intellectually valid to ignore the people.
I’ve not visited the States for a while and so don’t know the feeling on the ground, I’m just going by the statistics in the OP, which indicates there is now some support amongst the people.
 
Yes 🙂 calling it a perversion doesn’t make it so. Any half-adequate lawyer or politician would find it very easy to bury an opponent who tried to use that argument. Unless everyone agrees on exactly what is a perversion, it sounds like it’s dressing up a prejudice.

The opposition to legalization in Spain tried all kinds of arguments without adequately exploring the possible adversarial counter-arguments. The result was that in some cases they increased sympathy for the very cause they were against. Again, sorry, just telling it like it is.
Except, of course, that we’re not making legal arguments here. This is a Catholic site and it’s perfectly proper to talk about morality here, even though a society dominated by secular relativistism, doesn’t want to give it any validity.

In a way, when one approaches such things from a relativist viewpoint, you really can’t make an argument that anything at all is perverse. I can’t remember who the supreme court justice was who declared that he couldn’t define pornography, for instance, he just knew it when he saw it.
That’s what one gets when one requires that morality have no place in public affairs. “What I think about it” rules as soon as a majority (sometimes even just a majority on a court) agrees on “What I think about it”, no matter what it is.

Inasmuch as Spain has a catastrophically low birth rate, it isn’t terribly surprising that Spaniards couldn’t see a connection between marriage and procreation. They’ll find out differently when, in a few decades, they are ruled by Sharia law, which they inevitably will.
 
I’ve not visited the States for a while and so don’t know the feeling on the ground, I’m just going by the statistics in the OP, which indicates there is now some support amongst the people.
If an act is immoral, but is supported by the populace does not make it moral. The nature of reality is not determined by the consensus, although Kant might claim otherwise.
 
You’ve given another reason why the opposition to legalizing same-sex union failed in Spain. Many heterosexuals just don’t accept that procreation is the only or prime reason, and arguing otherwise can then backfire by making them more, not less, sympathetic to legalization.

Sorry and all that, I’m just telling you what didn’t work here. 🙂
I could care less what worked or didn’t work in Spain. We aren’t Spain. If the Spanish are unable to accept reality, that is their problem.
 
I could care less what worked or didn’t work in Spain. We aren’t Spain. If the Spanish are unable to accept reality, that is their problem.
It is a much more Catholic country than this one, that is for sure.
 
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