Ah yes. Let’s use that argument (I’m sure a clever, creative criminal defense attorney will) the next time a murderer claims that out of frustration (not achieving sufficient “love and acceptance”) he murdered someone, held someone hostage, etc. because he was “forced to the brink.” In fact, many murderers allege precisely that. And in the civil arena as well, frustration over lack of love is not a legal justification for usurping rights given to others, demanding rights, or asserting rights not granted in the founding documents or existing legal decisions.
you are misrepresenting what i said. i was not making a legal argument, rather i was responding to the charge that “gay people only want to get married for legal and moral acceptance” which i think it actually quite correct. what you are doing is essentially quote mining, and it’s weak support for your position, also.
but in the civil arena, how does expanding marriage rights to gay people usurp your rights? furthermore, how do you think black people were given their civil rights? it was through fighting for their rights. that’s how it works. this founding documents argument is ridiculous, because nobody in their right mind would actually want to go back to the constitution as it was originally written (women can’t vote, black people are actually only worth 3/5th of a person).
@UnworthyApostle: Stanley Kurtz isn’t a reliable source. his methodology is all jacked up, see
here and
here. how does gay marriage affect out of wedlock births?
The main evidence Kurtz points to [supporting his theory that gay marriage is the end of the world] is the increase in cohabitation rates among unmarried heterosexual couples and the increase in births to unmarried mothers. Roughly half of all children in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark are now born to unmarried parents. In Denmark, the number of cohabiting couples with children rose by 25 percent in the 1990s. From these statistics Kurtz concludes that " … married parenthood has become a minority phenomenon," and—surprise—he blames gay marriage.
But Kurtz’s interpretation of the statistics is incorrect. Parenthood within marriage is still the norm—most cohabitating couples marry after they start having children. In Sweden, for instance, 70 percent of cohabiters wed after their first child is born. Indeed, in Scandinavia the majority of families with children are headed by married parents. In Denmark and Norway, roughly four out of five couples with children were married in 2003. In the Netherlands, a bit south of Scandinavia, 90 percent of heterosexual couples with kids are married.
as to your fear that your children learn that there are gay people, it’s just a fact. your children will also learn that there is no santa claus, but i think they will weather that storm, too. but how exactly is it bad for society if all of our kids learn to accept people for who they are? it won’t turn them gay, and it doesn’t affect their chances of getting to heaven. i mean, you can’t save everybody, so if a few gays slip through the cracks, how does that affect your personal salvation? that’s something i don’t understand about this debate, is how straight people (that think they don’t know any gay people) are so emotionally involved in a topic that doesn’t affect their life at all.
First, this is the problem when the rights of people are rooted in humaity and not God. When humans assert what is right and wrong, anything goes.
anything does go, you just want it to go your way. see, you (a human) are trying to assert what is right and wrong, but you want to have the added weight of god on your side. well, let me appeal to the great juju of the mountain, and we’ll call it a wash, and now we have to debate the topic in earthly terms, since the discussion is on civil law and not canon law or catholic principles. i’m not asking catholic people to change their attitudes, i’m trying to debate civil, secular, gay marriage.
i’ll recap: denying gay people the right to marry hurts them, hurts their children, and does not hurt the institution of marriage or those already married. those are the three points i’m making in favor.
as far as i can tell, the opposition is that gay marriage is unnatural (refuted through other examples), marriage isn’t a right (refuted by the us supreme court), that gay marriage will lead to more divorces (refuted through empirical evidence), that gay marriage is bad for children (refuted through more empirical evidence), and that god hates sin (probably true, but irrelevant to the topic of civil law).
@Elizabeth502: the courts don’t say “heterosexual marriage.” you are making that up. it is not the case.
here are links to the decisions that call marriage a “fundamental right” without qualification. the word “heterosexual” does not appear at all in any of those 3 decisions, but fundamental appears over and over again. so you have to concede the point in the interest of honest debate (or, you could argue that it was
assumed, though not implied, that the court was dealing with straight marriage, and then i’ll remind you how making assumptions can be silly). and please be assured that i’m not calling you dishonest, i am using it in a narrowly defined way related to debate:
There are two intellectually-honest debate tactics:
- revealing errors or omissions in your opponent’s facts
- revealing errors or omissions in your opponent’s logic