M
Magnanimity
Guest
…so we are continually told today by some. Or, more often, it’s just taken for granted though no one’s arguing for it. In the recent threads on gay marriage within this sub-forum, it is often asserted, but I’ve yet to hear the argument, that gay marriage is a civil right. It seems clear to me that the Supreme Court of the US has (rightly, I think) upheld that marriage itself is a civil right. But, whether we can apply that right to this or that particular “expansion” of marriage (eg, gay, polygamous, etc) is an altogether separate issue.
Given that there is such an overwhelming lack of historical support for attempts to redefine marriage (and hence, the family) to include homosexual unions, even among States which were much more friendly to homosexuality than ours (eg, the Greeks), the general public needs to know what has changed in the course of human history. Why today is gay marriage considered a civil right when it never has been considered such previously?
So, let’s have it now. We’ve got a thread entirely devoted to the most crucial aspect of the overall arguments put forward by advocates of gay marriage. After all, if proponents of gay marriage cannot convince the American public that this novel way of looking at marriage actually is a civil right, they will likely never win the argument here in the US.
Rousseau said, “The most basic of all human institutions, and the only one that is natural, is the family.” (The Social Contract)
Given that there is such an overwhelming lack of historical support for attempts to redefine marriage (and hence, the family) to include homosexual unions, even among States which were much more friendly to homosexuality than ours (eg, the Greeks), the general public needs to know what has changed in the course of human history. Why today is gay marriage considered a civil right when it never has been considered such previously?
So, let’s have it now. We’ve got a thread entirely devoted to the most crucial aspect of the overall arguments put forward by advocates of gay marriage. After all, if proponents of gay marriage cannot convince the American public that this novel way of looking at marriage actually is a civil right, they will likely never win the argument here in the US.
Rousseau said, “The most basic of all human institutions, and the only one that is natural, is the family.” (The Social Contract)