In regards to marriage being a right, when you think about it, marriage is not a right and never has been. …
lucky for me, i don’t have to think about it, because the supreme court has already ruled otherwise. it was first recognized as a “fundamental right” in loving v virginia, and reaffirmed in various other cases after that. so with all due respect, you are wrong.
onmywayagain: This is sourced from John Riggs who is a doctor. Not my own sources. So if you want to debate his research then contact him, not me.
it was pointed out already by rossum, but your figures are irrelevant. they are not related to gay marriage. furthermore, even if they are still correct, how would allowing marriage between gay people increase promiscuity? one of the reasons that some gay men may be promiscuous is probably related to their being forced into the closet. if you feel like you are some unlovable freak, that probably hurts your self esteem, which often leads to more risky sexual behavior. the stigma attached to homosexuality is more likely to cause promiscuity than just being gay. i’m only speaking anecdotally, but most or all of the gay people i’ve met would choose a stable, monogamous relationship over a party lifestyle.
something you seem to be missing is that gay people are just like you and me and everyone else. they want basically the same things as everyone else, with love and acceptance ranking near the top. but the stigma attached to who they are, by bigots and homophobes and people that quietly assent to that discrimination, forces many gay people into dangerous and undesirable positions, just as it would force any other normal person to the brink. and so i’m not misunderstood, gay people are normal.
pardon the analogy, but if you beat a dog for years, the thing turns into mean, snarling beast. and if you treat a person like subhuman garbage, they start to feel worthless and act accordingly. but to be honest, i sort of laid a trap for you. i knew that when i asked for actual unhealthy reasons against gay marriage that there weren’t any, and that you would be forced to come up with something along the lines that you did. so i’m sorry if i deceived you, but try to imagine that you belonged to the last class of people that are legally discriminated against, and how that might affect your outlook and behavior.
JimG: And of course, my original point that homosexual marriage is simply not possible remains valid. There can be no marital relations, and no marriage, between non-complementary sexes. You can’t make a square triangle. It’s not possible.
the discussion is about civil law, not what the catholic church requires for a marriage to be valid. various people have pointed out instances were the “marital act” (sex) is not required, such as the very old, the impotent, the paralyzed, and perhaps even, those people that don’t want to have sex.
gay marriages are not looking for catholic sanctions, just legal ones. please explain how sex is a requirement for marriage. or actually, don’t, because it isn’t a requirement under civil law. if you can find some court case or a law from the last century that supports what you are saying, then fine, but otherwise you have to concede the point. otherwise, you risk adopting the position of putting your fingers in your ears and going “la la la la la” really hard. and by the way, gay people do have sex. i know, just take deep breaths, relax, it doesn’t effect your life one iota;p
JimG: Rather I am pointing out that marriage would be of little interest to gays if it had not already devolved into a nearly meaningless word retaining little of what it meant 50 years ago.
… have already brought marriage down to such a state that gays are willing to claim it, not for what it once meant, but for what they think it will mean to them now–legal and moral acceptance of their lifestyle.
But it won’t do that. It will just make the word even more meaningless.
i think there is something interesting in here, but i’m not sure if i follow you exactly. you seem to be saying 2 things (cmiiw):
- legal gay marriage would make the word (idea?) of marriage, which is already nearly meaningless, even more meaningless.
- legal gay marriage wouldn’t afford gay people legal and moral acceptance anyway.
i see a few problems with these lines of reason, especially the second. if gay marriage were legal, it would be legally acceptable as a matter of course. i know i’m throwing down a tautology here, but i think that it’s valid. as for moral acceptance, whose moral acceptance? it probably won’t make every single individual happy, but morals are more flexible than most people will readily admit. and the laws tend to shape morality more than any other influence.
take the case of slavery. it used to be legal and moral in the south. but it was illegal in the north, and over time it became morally indefensible. then the civil war happened, and the laws changed in the south. but the morality didn’t. it took morality 100 years to catch up with the law, and it was dragged there kicking and screaming. so, if you legalize gay marriage now, in another hundred years, most people will probably look back and think “wow, that was really barbaric the way we used to legally discriminate against 10% to 15% of the population for no logical reason. strange that it was those that claimed to be the most loving and charitable among them that led the charge against equality.”
as to the first point, the evidence seems to indicate the opposite of what you are saying. see the figures i provided in my earlier post.