Gay Marriage - What's the big deal?

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has the right to marry the one he loves above all others.

does not have the right to marry the one he loves above all others.
Since when do we have the universal right to marry the one we love above all others? To use your (plural, not Emily specifically) language: That sounds like a religious idea to me. We’re talking about civil law here.
 
Well objecting to civil unions can’t be a violation of anyone’s civil rights - they’re a man-made type of relationship. I would not support such a law - I see no need to give people a tax break for living together. That’s my opinion, disagree with me all you want.

Isn’t the “sacredness of marriage” a religious idea? Since you’ve said religious ideas have no place in civil matters, I’m not really sure what you mean by that.

I’m also not quite sure what you mean by “bond of love” but I’ll give it a shot. If a man with a same-sex attraction promised to uphold all his marital vows to the woman he married, I don’t see why there would be no “bond of love”. In fact, such a determination to live up to his covenant despite his SSA would truly exemplify the self-sacrificing love espoused in marriage. That describes a natural marriage. A sacramental marriage is a marriage in Christ; that’s the only difference. So I again see no problem. It’s not what you feel like - it’s what you do. Such a person’s situation is no different from someone who has strong desires to engage in adultery yet remains faithful to his wife.
What I mean by “sacredness of marriage” is religious beliefs are to be kept away from civil law. The CC has every right to define marriage any way they see fit…they have every right to restrict marriage to whom ever they see fit defined by their rules, regulations and religious texts. Civil law should not be governed by religious beliefs or ideals…The CC may define “sacramental marriage” anyway they see fit…but it has no place in Civil law which restricts people joining in unions NOT BASED ON Religious beliefs.

I am all for Civil Unions…I am all for religious freedom to define marriage in each respective religious tradition…but not in civil law. Same sex unions will and have steadily been gaining support…but it is a civil matter…equality under the law is the issue…not based on religious views.
 
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brianwalden:
Since when do we have the universal right to marry the one we love above all others? To use your (plural, not Emily specifically) language: That sounds like a religious idea to me. We’re talking about civil law here.
But it is not a religious idea. Nontheists as well as theists, just as do glbt’s as well as straights, wish to bond for life very often, and with every bit as much commitment and sincerity.

And since when do we have the right? Well, assuming there is consent and there are two parties of different sex, then since the founding of the nation; but I don’t think the founders of the US had taken same sex unions into consideration, the same way they hadn’t taken into account marriage between different races, and how that could be a great point of contention in certain regions.

Mirdath and I have always upheld the idea of civil union under the law of the land. Religious marriage would fall under the purview of various creeds, so there would be no reason for the Catholic church, for example, to marry homosexual couples, and if that is what is important to a Catholic, why then, there won’t BE any Catholic gay marriages. There might be some civil unions between people who consider themselves Catholic, but Catholics can feel free to shun them or whatever it is they do, bar stoning and suchlike.

Publisher, your post reminds me why I am proud to have family among the Friends. Like Mirdath, were I a theist, I would most likely be a Quaker. Such calm, charitable deliberation of the community would be wonderful to know firsthand.
 
I am all for Civil Unions…I am all for religious freedom to define marriage in each respective religious tradition…but not in civil law. Same sex unions will and have steadily been gaining support…but it is a civil matter…equality under the law is the issue…not based on religious views.
So who has established that everyone has a God-given (for lack of a better term) right to marry anyone nomatter what their sex?

Why is someone who claims that marriage under civil law is only intended to be between one man an one woman making a religious claim? Why is someone who claims that marriage under civil law is intended to be between any two people not making a religious claim?
 
But it is not a religious idea. Nontheists as well as theists, just as do glbt’s as well as straights, wish to bond for life very often, and with every bit as much commitment and sincerity.
That’s exactly the point I was making. Neither is the idea that marriage should be only between one man and one woman a religious idea. Nontheists as well as theists believe it.
And since when do we have the right? Well, assuming there is consent and there are two parties of different sex, then since the founding of the nation; but I don’t think the founders of the US had taken same sex unions into consideration, the same way they hadn’t taken into account marriage between different races, and how that could be a great point of contention in certain regions.
Great, that’s your belief. Keep working to get the law to reflect your belief. I’m going to do the same.
Mirdath and I have always upheld the idea of civil union under the law of the land. Religious marriage would fall under the purview of various creeds, so there would be no reason for the Catholic church, for example, to marry homosexual couples, and if that is what is important to a Catholic, why then, there won’t BE any Catholic gay marriages. There might be some civil unions between people who consider themselves Catholic, but Catholics can feel free to shun them or whatever it is they do, bar stoning and suchlike.
The shunning and stoning comment is absolutely uncalled for. If you believe this to be true, do you believe that Cathoilcs hate everyone? Because I’m pretty sure that everyone sins. But thanks for showing your true, anti-Catholic colors. I hope Midrath doesn’t appreciate you mentioning his/her (apologies again for not knowing) name in the same paragraph. I happen to be friends with a homosexual couple; I helped them move last month and have a dinner reservation with them next week. Additionally, most of my friends and family use contraception. While I disagree with them, I don’t shun or stone them. I’ve committed enough sexual sins in my life to know not to hate anyone for doing so.
 
Which part is unequal under the law? I’m missing something. Everyone gets their voice in making the law. No one is discriminated against.
Except when the laws themselves discriminate. You said, and I quote: It doesn’t define the truth it just reflects the result when we all put our beliefs in the picture. If this system is a violation of equality under the law then many of our laws violate equality. You believe the current law is just; and it is patently obvious that the freedom of action of those who would marry members of the same sex or multiple people and gain legal recognition for the union is infringed upon without due or researched cause. The rights of the minority must be protected just as much, if not more than, those of the majority – not only from infringement but often, as you yourself show, from the majority itself.
I kinda had the opposite experience that you did. I started seeing how everything the Church said about sexuality and marriage tied into all of its teachings. For me it was like “Holy Cow! All those ridiculous things the Catholic Church says that no one in their right mind believes anymore really do make sense!”
I did not leave the Church over its teachings on sex.
We all have to come to our own conclusions - and I respect the serious effort you’ve put into yours - but if you have a good understanding Catholic teachings on the subject, even though you disagree with them, can you really say that no one has put a great deal of thought into it?
People have put an amazing amount of thought into justifying the prohibition of homosexuality (or indeed pretty much anything they don’t do themselves – or at least say they don’t), but they have yet to explain why God would say it is wrong.
Neither is the idea that marriage should be only between one man and one woman a religious idea. Nontheists as well as theists believe it.
Some do. Many don’t. Why is their voice supposed to be shut out? Why should the majority ride roughshod over everyone else?
The shunning and stoning comment is absolutely uncalled for. If you believe this to be true, do you believe that Cathoilcs hate everyone? Because I’m pretty sure that everyone sins. But thanks for showing your true, anti-Catholic colors. I hope Midrath doesn’t appreciate you mentioning his/her (apologies again for not knowing) name in the same paragraph.
Nepenthe, who, for the record, is sitting next to me, is hardly anti-Catholic. We are both strongly anti-fanatic and anti-bigot, and there is no want for people, Catholic, Protestant, and otherwise, who have shown themselves more interested in condemning others’ sexuality than truly setting an example for others to follow.
While I disagree with them, I don’t shun or stone them. I’ve committed enough sexual sins in my life to know not to hate anyone for doing so.
Then you’re doing a lot better socially with regard to people you disagree with than many Christians. Keep it up! 🙂
 
Cite, please?
Don’t have the studies to hand; I read them from psychology journals more than 5 years ago, while at work.

However, some interesting figures can be found in the following:

Gay Lobby Scrambles to Hide Truth About Child Molestation., By: Sheldon, Louis P., Insight on the News, 10514880, 6/3/2002, Vol. 18, Issue 20

Did the APA misrepresent the scientific literature to courts…, By: Cameron, Paul, Cameron, Kirk, Journal of Psychology, 00223980, May97, Vol. 131, Issue 3
Database:
P. Cameron:
Additionally, the APA disregarded the findings of Lewis (1980), whom they cited on p. 20 of Bottoms I as well as in the other two briefs. Lewis reported:

The younger children focused on the need for secrecy and the isolation a secret imposed on them, separating them from their peers. They felt they could not tell their friends about their mother because they would be ostracized and called “lesie” or “fag” and their friends’ mothers might forbid their playing together. A highly sensitive I l-year-old stated it succinctly: “It’s living a lie.” She was not alone in struggling with a sense of differentness. A 9-year-old proposed that when he becomes older, perhaps “gay will be straight and straight will not be normal.” He seemed to feel that he would always be different. Several younger children used their mother’s gayness as an excuse for not being close to other children. (p. 199)
Lewis’s study (Lewis, K. G. (1980). Children of lesbians: Their point of view. Social Work, 25, 198-203.) may be one of them; the references to it ring bells.
 
Except when the laws themselves discriminate. You said, and I quote: It doesn’t define the truth it just reflects the result when we all put our beliefs in the picture. If this system is a violation of equality under the law then many of our laws violate equality. You believe the current law is just; and it is patently obvious that the freedom of action of those who would marry members of the same sex or multiple people and gain legal recognition for the union is infringed upon without due or researched cause. The rights of the minority must be protected just as much, if not more than, those of the majority – not only from infringement but often, as you yourself show, from the majority itself.
Who decided that humans have a universal right to marry as many people of whatever sex they choose?

I agree that the rights of the minority must be protected. I don’t agree on your set of rights.
I did not leave the Church over its teachings on sex.
I was just telling you a friendly anecdote about how I came to believe what I believe. I used to hold different beliefs concerning homosexual marriage
People have put an amazing amount of thought into justifying the prohibition of homosexuality (or indeed pretty much anything they don’t do themselves – or at least say they don’t), but they have yet to explain why God would say it is wrong.
So everyone you diagree with spends hours coming up with ways to justify their postition and everyone you agree with spends hours putting a lot of thoughts into their beliefs.

For the record, I don’t need to put an amazing amount of thought into why homosexual acts are immoral. I believe contraceptive acts are immoral and I’ve put a lot of effort into coming to that conclusion because it’s something which affects me personally and deeply. Once I came to believe contraceptive acts are immoral, the homosexual ones followed by extension.
Some do. Many don’t. Why is their voice supposed to be shut out? Why should the majority ride roughshod over everyone else?
Well, we as a society have decided on that as the lawmaking process in America. I don’t always get my way out of it, but I don’t knock the system when I don’t. Why should the minority ride roughsod over everyone else?
Nepenthe, who, for the record, is sitting next to me, is hardly anti-Catholic. We are both strongly anti-fanatic and anti-bigot, and there is no want for people, Catholic, Protestant, and otherwise, who have shown themselves more interested in condemning others’ sexuality than truly setting an example for others to follow.
You condemn others religion. Why is it bigoted for Catholics to believe certain sexual acts are immoral but not bigoted for you to believe that orthodox Catholic beliefs are immoral.
Then you’re doing a lot better socially with regard to people you disagree with than many Christians. Keep it up! 🙂
You’re still stereotyping Christians. You can take your compliment back.
 
Gay Lobby Scrambles to Hide Truth About Child Molestation., By: Sheldon, Louis P., Insight on the News, 10514880, 6/3/2002, Vol. 18, Issue 20

Did the APA misrepresent the scientific literature to courts…, By: Cameron, Paul, Cameron, Kirk, Journal of Psychology, 00223980, May97, Vol. 131, Issue 3
A Presbyterian pastor, Kirk Cameron, and a man who was dropped by the APA during an ethics investigation (but claims to have retired of his own free will) and established the Family Research Institute. Forgive me if I mistrust sources like that – the agenda is all too palpable.
Lewis’s study (Lewis, K. G. (1980). Children of lesbians: Their point of view. Social Work, 25, 198-203.) may be one of them; the references to it ring bells.
I’m not familiar with this, and can’t find much on it. Apparently it has a pretty small sample size – 21 people?
 
Who decided that humans have a universal right to marry as many people of whatever sex they choose?
Who decided they did not? And what reasoning do they have to support this? Rights should be permissive, not restrictive.
So everyone you diagree with spends hours coming up with ways to justify their postition and everyone you agree with spends hours putting a lot of thoughts into their beliefs.
I can’t speak for everyone who agrees with me, but I certainly have – and I have not seen any argument from the other side that isn’t an attempt to justify ‘God says it’s wrong’.
For the record, I don’t need to put an amazing amount of thought into why homosexual acts are immoral.
And by doing so you only validate what I say above.
I believe contraceptive acts are immoral and I’ve put a lot of effort into coming to that conclusion because it’s something which affects me personally and deeply.
How does the bedroom behavior of someone you don’t even know somewhere across the entire world from you affect you personally and deeply?

Homosexuality is not directly equivalent to contraception in any case. One is an active denial of the potential for procreation, the other is merely passive.
Well, we as a society have decided on that as the lawmaking process in America. I don’t always get my way out of it, but I don’t knock the system when I don’t. Why should the minority ride roughsod over everyone else?
Are they? Was the Civil Rights movement riding roughshod over everyone else when, after Brown vs. Board of Education, the National Guard was sent to protect black children being bussed into a formerly ‘white’ school? How is campaigning for equal recognition under the law riding roughshod?
You condemn others religion. Why is it bigoted for Catholics to believe certain sexual acts are immoral but not bigoted for you to believe that orthodox Catholic beliefs are immoral.
Neither is bigoted. We are free to disagree on matters of morality, no? It is the attempt to force one’s specific, detailed morality on others that is an act of bigotry.
 
I’m not familiar with this, and can’t find much on it. Apparently it has a pretty small sample size – 21 people?
ssa.uchicago.edu/publications/advforum/v5n1/v5i1a7.html

“Lewis (1980) examines the effects of societal prejudice against lesbians on children living in eight lesbian-headed households”

apa.org/pi/lgbc/publications/lgpstspec.html

“Interviews with 21 children of lesbians in greater Boston area, ranging in age from 9 to 26, identified several major issues. Problems experienced involved parents’ divorce and disclosure of mother’s homosexuality.”

Note that a compounding problem in at least some of the families (perhaps all) was that the woman attempted to have a heterosexual marriage, which failed. I would hestitate to say without further study that the responses would be representative of children who were raised as children of a same sex marriage that did not end in divorce.
 
Who decided they did not? And what reasoning do they have to support this? Rights should be permissive, not restrictive.
Exactly. There is no unanimous agreement. The best we can do is use government to pass laws to protect rights. Currently that government has decided to protect the right of everyone to marry a person of the opposite sex. This is permissive, not restrictive.
I can’t speak for everyone who agrees with me, but I certainly have – and I have not seen any argument from the other side that isn’t an attempt to justify ‘God says it’s wrong’.
Yes you have. You said you’ve seen the Catholic Church’s argument. The Church’s definition of sexuality is a positive one. It is based on recognizing the great gift of our sexuality and using it properly. You just choose to label it as a ‘God says it’s wrong’ argument. I’ve personally never seen anyone present a higher view of human sexuality than the Catholic Church. I’m open to finding one if you know of one.
And by doing so you only validate what I say above.
That’s the spirit, take my comments out of context. I thought you started commenting on this thread in the spirit of discussion. That’s certainly changed.
How does the bedroom behavior of someone you don’t even know somewhere across the entire world from you affect you personally and deeply?
  1. We’re not talking about people around the world, we’re talking about America - the society we live and are responsible for developing. 2) We’re not talking about legislating what people do in their bedrooms.
Homosexuality is not directly equivalent to contraception in any case. One is an active denial of the potential for procreation, the other is merely passive.
Huh? Refraining from sexual activity is a passive denial of the potential for procreation. Participating in sexual activities which by their very nature have no possible chance for procreation is an active denial.
Are they? Was the Civil Rights movement riding roughshod over everyone else when, after Brown vs. Board of Education, the National Guard was sent to protect black children being bussed into a formerly ‘white’ school? How is campaigning for equal recognition under the law riding roughshod?
The national guard was sent in to enforce the law as decided by the composite of the moral beliefs of Americans. The Civil Rights movement is the type of thing I’ve been advocating for this whole time. America changed its laws to reflect the beliefs of its citizens. The government should enforce the law; sending in the national guard was a good thing. Your example makes no sense unless you’re just trying to associate me with racists. I never said that compaigning for homosexual marriage is riding roughshod over the law. I’ve encouraged you to do so, if that’s what you believe, throughout this whole thread. What I don’t see is why the law should change just because you want it to. When enough people agree with you to fulfill the requirements for changing the law, it will change. It’s already starting. That’s how things work in America.
Neither is bigoted. We are free to disagree on matters of morality, no? It is the attempt to force one’s specific, detailed morality on others that is an act of bigotry.
Yes we are free to disagree, I’ve been open to you expressing your disagreement with me this whole time. In fact I’ve never even challenged your beliefs. All I’ve been arguing is that everyone get to express their beliefs in determining the law. No one is forcing anyone’s specific morality on others. Who’s specific morality does the currently law enforce? It’s not Catholic morality. It’s not Orthodox morality. Maybe it’s some Protestant denomination’s morality, I don’t know what every single one belives. The law reflects all our morality. It’s democratic.
 
You’re right, I missed those :o
Not a problem. 🙂
  1. I don’t believe in an absolute ‘source’ of morality.
I figured that.
  1. We do. You decided certain things were moral or immoral when you accepted Catholic teaching; I decided certain things were moral or immoral when I considered their universal application or potential effect on society.
Since “we” being person(s) who decide what is moral and immoral then that would mean if you were intellectually honest you couldn’t say for sure that Hitler was wrong when he slaughtered millions of Jews simply because his society of Nazis thought that was acceptable moral behavior.
You as a person who is no more superior to another able to tell another person(s) what is moral and immoral?

And, no other person(s) could say with any valid authority over another person (because their is no ultimate authority) what is wrong for the other person(s) since they decide for themselves and that would lead to chaos or anarchy being there would be no final arbiter.
And what you recognize as a bad potential effect on society and what another person recognizes as a bad potential effect on society will at some point conflict, therefore, who is to say which one of the two (or more) conflicting positions is wrong or right?

I accepted many moral teaching first and then I became Catholic Christianity, because I realized there is a higher moral arbiter that has shown us what is wrong and right and or given us direction to what we should or shouldn’t do. Chaos is NOT inherently natural to our behavior as we humans need order; a child inherently knows without anyone else telling them that when they go to bed everything will be alright, it knows it needs order even without knowing what is “order.”
Adults are the same way, we need order and without any absolute source of morality, that only ultimately leads to chaos which is against our human nature.

I believe Dostoyevsky said it correctly when he said…If there is no God then everything is acceptable.
 
Mirdath, The discussion has seemed to have moved to human rights. I think there’s two things I don’t quite understand, can you help explain them to me:
  1. From your perspective, where to human rights come from?
  2. How do we as a society reach a consensus as to what those rights are?
 
Since “we” being person(s) who decide what is moral and immoral then that would mean if you were intellectually honest you couldn’t say for sure that Hitler was wrong when he slaughtered millions of Jews simply because his society of Nazis thought that was acceptable moral behavior.
No. I am not a relativist: I believe putting people in ovens and gas showers is universally wrong, no matter who does it. Come now, were I an honest relativist, I would not be here telling you your idea that it’s moral to oppose same-sex marriage is wrong, now would I? It’d be ‘right for you’ and I wouldn’t be able to say anything about it.

However, I am not a relativist. You’re wrong 🙂
And what you recognize as a bad potential effect on society and what another person recognizes as a bad potential effect on society will at some point conflict, therefore, who is to say which one of the two (or more) conflicting positions is wrong or right?
When this happens, let’s do the research and find out who’s correct instead of bickering endlessly, hm?
I accepted many moral teaching first and then I became Catholic Christianity, because I realized there is a higher moral arbiter that has shown us what is wrong and right and or given us direction to what we should or shouldn’t do.
Sure, that’s one way to acquire a moral standard. It’s not the only one.
Chaos is NOT inherently natural to our behavior as we humans need order; a child inherently knows without anyone else telling them that when they go to bed everything will be alright, it knows it needs order even without knowing what is “order.”
Who’s to say we don’t impose that order on our little piece of chaos? If we need it that badly, it’s by no means beyond our reach.
I believe Dostoyevsky said it correctly when he said…If there is no God then everything is acceptable.
I’m not 100% sure that was Dostoyevsky, but it sounds more or less like him. While I admire the man, yeah, he’s completely wrong here, and I am living proof. If you’re interested in finding out why he’s wrong, I suggest first reading the thread (we’ve covered this earlier), then Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals and Hobbes’ Leviathan – for a start.
 
Yes you have. You said you’ve seen the Catholic Church’s argument. The Church’s definition of sexuality is a positive one. It is based on recognizing the great gift of our sexuality and using it properly. You just choose to label it as a ‘God says it’s wrong’ argument.
What part of ‘using it properly’ doesn’t mean ‘God (or the Church) says doing certain things is wrong’?
That’s the spirit, take my comments out of context.
I did address the context a paragraph or two down. The two are not equivalent.
  1. We’re not talking about people around the world, we’re talking about America - the society we live and are responsible for developing. 2) We’re not talking about legislating what people do in their bedrooms.
Yet you say your opposition to gay marriage stems directly from your opposition to contraception (without much of any added thought required), and that is something people do in their bedrooms! Make up your mind!
Huh? Refraining from sexual activity is a passive denial of the potential for procreation. Participating in sexual activities which by their very nature have no possible chance for procreation is an active denial.
And there go all the infertile heterosexual couples again.
All I’ve been arguing is that everyone get to express their beliefs in determining the law. No one is forcing anyone’s specific morality on others.
But what you’ve been saying is that they should be trying to.
From your perspective, where to human rights come from?
The social contract. They’re not God-given, we make them ourselves. And they are not naturally inalienable, we have decreed them to be so.
How do we as a society reach a consensus as to what those rights are?
By figuring out what benefits society and what harms it, what people should be allowed to do and what should be forbidden. As I said earlier, rights should be permissive – that which is not forbidden is allowed.
 
What part of ‘using it properly’ doesn’t mean ‘God (or the Church) says doing certain things is wrong’?



And there go all the infertile heterosexual couples again.
I took your word that you’re familiar with the Catholic teachings about sexuality. Your comments seem to indicate that you aren’t. I expect you to disagree but, given your claim to know the Catholic position, I expect you to do so intelligently. If you’d like an explanation of Catholic sexuality in a nutshell, just ask.
Yet you say your opposition to gay marriage stems directly from your opposition to contraception (without much of any added thought required), and that is something people do in their bedrooms! Make up your mind!
My opposition to homosexual acts stems from my opposition to contraception. I explained this in response to your statement that Christians waste a lot of time coming up with excuses against homosexuality. I have no personal interest in showing that homosexual acts are any worse than other sins; they just fall under the larger category of non-unitive/non-procreative sexual acts.

My opposition to homosexual marriage stems from my belief that it’s not marriage. It’s not dependent on homosexual acts being immoral. For example, I don’t believe two heterosexual same-sex friends should be able to marry even though they wouldn’t be committing any homosexual acts. Just because they live together and make vows to share their lives forever doesn’t mean they meet the requirements of marriage. Feel free to disagree with me - that’s how laws end up getting made.

But anyway, the main focus of our argument isn’t whether homosexual acts are moral or immoral. We’re talking about whether or not homosexual marriage should be recognized by the government. As far as I know neither the current laws nor proposed changes discussed in this thread have anything to do with with what people do in their bedrooms.
[Concerning people forcing their morals on others…] But what you’ve been saying is that they should be trying to.
Well, that’s how our legal system works. It’s based on the principal that morals are absolute and apply to everyone. It expects that some people’s morals tell them that marriage, for everyone, can only take place between a man and a woman. It expects that some people’s morals tell them that marriage, for everyone, can take place between (or maybe among) anyone. In this sense one cannot hold morals without projecting them onto everyone. No one has the authority to determine who’s right; but we do the best we can to reflect the composite of what the members of society believe to be true.

What our legal system doesn’t suppose is that morals are relative. If it did then maybe our laws would be built on the concept that for some people marriage is only between a man and a woman and for others marriage is between any two people. In such a system you may be correct that individuals have no right to project their morals on others. But I think such a system would create huge problems in other areas of the law.
[On where human rights come from…] The social contract. They’re not God-given, we make them ourselves. And they are not naturally inalienable, we have decreed them to be so.
So why have you been saying that Catholics violate human rights by fighting to keep marriage between only a man and a woman. As far as I know, our government hasn’t ruled definitively either way. We’re in the middle of a debate to determine precisely what that right is. All voices need to be heard. Going back to the OP, that’s why Catholics make such a big deal about homosexual marriage.
[On how we reach a consensus as to what our rights are…] By figuring out what benefits society and what harms it, what people should be allowed to do and what should be forbidden. As I said earlier, rights should be permissive – that which is not forbidden is allowed.
And the process by which we figure out what benefits society and what harms it is lawmaking. In the U.S. human rights fall under the federal government, so the process is to make a constitutional amendment protecting that right. If you think an individual has the right to marry anyone, use that process to do so. I’ve been encouraging you to this all along.

On the whole permissive thing. Anyone can live the familial and sexual lifestyle that they please. As you say, that which is not forbidden is allowed. I don’t see where we have a human right to receive a benefit for our living situation. If the government wants to give a benefit to some it can and if it wants to give a benefit to others it can. Just like the government can give benefits to people who drive hybrid cars or run their own small business or whatnot.
 
Grace & Peace!
Well, that’s how our legal system works. It’s based on the principal that morals are absolute and apply to everyone…What our legal system doesn’t suppose is that morals are relative.
At the risk of getting a bit off topic, I wanted to address this briefly. A quick overview of the development of legal structures in the US will indicate that a movement from a common law bias to a social engineering bias has been underway for some time now. Civil laws were never meant to be moral authorities–that job was justly relocated to the community and its various authorities: the teacher, the mother, the father, the priest. The moral development of the individual was accomplished through the collective work of family, church, and school, not through the threat of the invocation of state power through law.

With the disintegration of the importance of community, law became the last resort for ensuring that good citizens were created. State power was invoked toward social engineering ends with the implication that the only thing that could be trusted to produce moral or good citizens was the government. Civil Rights legislation, though certainly a good, is nonetheless the fruit of this impulse that people in community cannot be trusted to determine the right course of action with regard to minorities. A law-suit nation is another result of this impulse.

And all of this is why I find conservative insistence on the defence of marriage (for instance), or the legislation of morality in general, to be absurdly hipocritical–if it is indeed true that the government is best that governs least, appealing to government power for the solution to moral problems is an untenable position. To be honest, I believe the Federal Defence of Marriage Act needs repealing, and the States themselves need to determine their position on this issue on their own.

Also, it was not Dostoevsky, but Hassan-i-Sabah who, legendarily, claimed, “Nothing is true, everything is permitted” on his deathbed.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

Deo Gratias!
 
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brianwalden:
I took your word that you’re familiar with the Catholic teachings about sexuality. Your comments seem to indicate that you aren’t
I assure you, Mirdath know the Catholic sentiments about sex and sexuality very well. But not everyone in the US is Catholic, not even close. And perhaps you were being unclear. Just what is your objection again?
Well, that’s how our legal system works. It’s based on the principal that morals are absolute and apply to everyone.
Uh, no it does not. It is based on the principle that the law is absolute in its application to all, unless and until it is formally changed with all due ceremony.
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brianwalden:
It expects that some people’s morals tell them that marriage, for everyone, can only take place between a man and a woman. It expects that some people’s morals tell them that marriage, for everyone, can take place between (or maybe among) anyone.
No, it ‘expects’ no such thing.

Also hey, Deo Volente, been a while! 🙂 And nice post – I have a few quibbles about the states-rights aspect, but in the main, I concur.
 
I took your word that you’re familiar with the Catholic teachings about sexuality. Your comments seem to indicate that you aren’t. I expect you to disagree but, given your claim to know the Catholic position, I expect you to do so intelligently. If you’d like an explanation of Catholic sexuality in a nutshell, just ask.
Oh, I am. There are plenty of things about it that just don’t make a lot of sense. For instance, the idea that a couple is still ‘open to life’ after a hysterectomy is utterly laughable. Remember, I’m approaching Catholic thought from an outsider’s perspective: I don’t believe in miracles. I don’t believe, in the words of Monty Python, that ‘every sperm is sacred’ or that onanism is an affront to life itself; men can and do just make more semen, and that’s not even going into the thirty-nine million, nine hundred ninety-nine thousand, nine hundred ninety-nine lil’ buggers that just go to waste in there if one lucky spermatozoa makes it to an egg – and that’s on the low side!
Well, that’s how our legal system works. It’s based on the principal that morals are absolute and apply to everyone.
How it works now is a corruption of its original intent: to allow free expression of religious and, by extension, moral beliefs so long as these do not impose upon the free expression of others. The way it is now is not how it should be, or how it was supposed to be. And the best way to achieve the original goal, in my opinion, is for the law to forbid only activities that are directly detrimental to society. Having everybody squabble over whose morals get to be legislated only makes the problem worse.

You yourself admit that same-sex marriage will probably eventually be legalized over your objections. If anything becomes law that you disagree with, do you just let that right or that privilege slip quietly into the night, content with your fate as an American whose rights and privileges are decided by the whim of the voting majority?
What our legal system doesn’t suppose is that morals are relative. If it did then maybe our laws would be built on the concept that for some people marriage is only between a man and a woman and for others marriage is between any two people. In such a system you may be correct that individuals have no right to project their morals on others. But I think such a system would create huge problems in other areas of the law.
Actually, that doesn’t come from moral relativism but from free expression. You guys can keep your sacramental marriage between one man and one woman; after all, it’s a religious definition and you have the freedom to practice your religion as you like. The rest of us are not required to subscribe to that religious definition.
So why have you been saying that Catholics violate human rights by fighting to keep marriage between only a man and a woman.
Where civil marriage is concerned, yes.
I don’t see where we have a human right to receive a benefit for our living situation.
Then let’s take away the benefits that come to heterosexual married couples! Equality under the law! I’d be content with that, but I see no reason to bring one group down when we can raise everyone else up.
If the government wants to give a benefit to some it can and if it wants to give a benefit to others it can. Just like the government can give benefits to people who drive hybrid cars or run their own small business or whatnot.
The government cannot give benefits to a Baptist marriage and not grant them to a Catholic marriage. It is not to discriminate, and since it is currently doing so, it is in the wrong.
 
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