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StJeanneDArc
Guest
I don’t think that the difficulty is weakness of argument, I think it’s from the newness of the phenomenon. Where has SSM ever been tried before? It’s currently being tried in Europe, and so far the results are not good. It’s hard to know for sure, because it’s so recent. As an example, it’s taken 30 years to quantify the deleterious effects of no-fault divorce because societies don’t turn on a dime. There is a sociologist named Stanley Kurtz who’s done a series of articles for National Review Online that examine SSM in Europe. You can see a list of them here: nationalreview.com/kurtz/kurtz-archive.aspAnd might the difficulty in formulating and presenting cogent reasons why society should reject SSM indicate the weakness of the position? Why can’t people of right reason simply list the particular, observable, and measurable detrimental effects they predict from SSM?
I’ve discussed this in another thread in the politics forum, but in a nutshell: Doesn’t it stand to reason that, if the government starts sponsoring SSM in the form of legal recognition, more people will view it as an acceptable lifestyle? When that happens we’ll have to accord SSM the same rights and obligations as marriage, childrearing being the most important of these. Do we really want our society to be neutral as to the family structure for our children? Furthermore, secular laws in many states recognize the sexual component of marriage, stating that a marriage is not complete until it has been consumated. Do we want to get into redefining what that means for SSM? Or do we just remove the sexual component completely, thus formalizing the break of marriage from procreation? What will that do to marriage? These are questions I’ve never heard SSM proponents answer.