And you disregard the inability of post-menopausal women, and various other infertile people to legally marry, and to marry in the Catholic Church. The ability to have children is not currently a requirement for marriage either legally or theologically.
False. Where do you get this? Post-menopausal women and infertile people are able to marry in the Catholic Church as they are able to marry civilly. The disqualifier is impotence and the intention of not being open to life, should it be the result of marital sex. Please stop repeating a falsity.
“Apart from the evidence showing his innocence, the defendant is guilty.” Those exceptions do exist, and if your theory of marriage does not include those exceptions, then your theory does not correspond to reality. Post-menopausal women do get married. Would you prevent them? If not then you have to drop the “must be able to have children” criterion.
If a post-menopausal woman is not wanting to marry another woman, her brother, a young male below the age of consent, or has a living husband, why should anyone object to or prevent her marrying a man? In the same vein, a man without a pre-existing and permanent impotency problem should not be prevented from marrying a woman who is not otherwise barred from entering a marriage.
Being open to life is the criterion Catholics are talking about, which is of course dependent on the ability to perform the marital act,
not the requirement to have a child. You are engaging in inappropriate dichotomies.
Homosexual unions are inherently closed to life, which is the biggest most basic stumbling block in why there is no reconciliation with the arguments advanced in the idea of same sex partners in marriage, even as some states have allowed it, a mistake by legislators and judges who made it possible.
The
reality is that marriage is a profoundly social institution. The civil institution part of it first and foremost serves the serves the well being of children, which homosexual unions cannot biologically produce. The institution helps and protects the next generation and the good of society. It is not designed to just provide tax benefits to parents, immigration of foreign born partners, and all the individualist theories and exceptions with the incorrect reasoning you attach to said exceptions.
They seem to be too much for Catholic Bishops, who have campaigned against Civil Partnerships in the UK. Are gays in the US allowed to bring their partners into the country to live legally in the same way as married heterosexuals can bring in their spouses? What about treatment for inheritance tax? In the UK there is legal equality between Civil Partnerships and marriage on those issues. What are the options in the US for same sex partners?
Until there is equality, then there is a reasonable argument for legal change.
The part of my post above addresses this in part.
Regardless of the position of Catholic Bishops, in the UK where you are, homosexuals have the same and identical rights as heterosexuals in marriage. The gays there do not have any less rights than their gay counterparts. As far as financial benefits like inheritance tax, gays in America in legal marriages, civil unions, and domestic partnerships have legal remedies to solve that.
Being in the UK, why do you bellyache about financial benefits and immigration of foreign born partners affecting U.S. nationals? What is being envisioned here, a world order where all nations bow to the homosexual agenda now?
Your idea of equality is not a reasonable argument for legal change that enshrines gay ‘marriage’ anywhere, much less across nations, which you would like to see, it would seem. It is a recipe for further social and economic disorder.
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