Homo and heterosexuality are but a tiny fraction of the spectrum in which people’s sexual and emotional attachments may fall. What about those poor souls who happen to love a married person, more than one person, a cousin, their father, someone who does not love them, a child, a dead person, an object, an animal, or a celestial body.
Is their love somehow less valid? Certainly denying them a marriage is bigotry.
Someone who happens to love a married person: Comparison fails, since the married person would not want to get married to them, therefore it is not a consenting relationship.
More than one person: Legal marriage involves economic arrangement between two people. A gay person with a pension and a health insurance plan is incapable of extending those benefits to his or her partner. He or she can’t file a joint tax return. That’s not fair. A polygamous marriage, however, puts a group of persons in a position to claim more economic benefits than the traditional heterosexual couple. That doesn’t appeal to our sense of fairness. Again, the comparison fails.
Cousin: This opens up the questions regarding problems that can occur from icestuous relations. We’re not debating that here. Again, comparison fails.
Someone who does not love them: Consent issue. Comparison fails.
Child: Again, consent issue. Comparison fails.
Dead person, objects, animals and cellestial bodies: Again, the problem that the other party cannot consent and cannot sign a marriage agreement. Comparison fails.
Bottom line is that if you want to debate polygamy or incest, start up a new thread. The slippery slope argument always fails.
“Aww hell, we can’t give rights to Blacks, otherwise the Hispanics and the Mexicans are gonna want them too.”
“Let women vote? Are you crazy? If we let women vote, the kids are gonna start wanting to vote! And then after kids, why not my dawg?”
Heterosexual conjugal visits in prison are allowed in six states. They should be allowed in all states and all federal prisons. So your objection would thus be invalid if conjugal rights were made valid everywhere. In that case, gay conjugal rights could still be denied because gays cannot produce children with each other.
Since when did we start doing fertility tests on couples and asking of their intentions to pro-create?