F
frobert
Guest
Sure they can and do when they get married and in 38 states and soon all 50 states gays have and will have marriage equality. But you knew that didn’t you?Wow! Can’t single people access any of those?
Sure they can and do when they get married and in 38 states and soon all 50 states gays have and will have marriage equality. But you knew that didn’t you?Wow! Can’t single people access any of those?
Why are 2 men, say, good friends, having sex?the state benefits in the same manner that it benefits from a man and woman who marry and do not have biological children.
There are laws against incest. Their are no laws against two friends getting married. So what is your point?
In other words, singles can’t !Sure they can and do when they get married and in 38 states and soon all 50 states gays have and will have marriage equality. But you knew that didn’t you?
How many of those cannot be obtained in other ways???Overview of Federal Benefits Granted to Married Couples
There are 1,138 benefits, rights and protections provided on the basis of marital status in Federal law.
Source: hrc.org/resources/entry/an-overview-of-federal-rights-and-protections-granted-to-married-couple
I’m single and so sick of the government giving rights to married people.Sure they can and do when they get married and in 38 states and soon all 50 states gays have and will have marriage equality. But you knew that didn’t you?
actually, as I have already noted, gays can already get married in all 50 states. there are no laws against a gay person getting married. you want to argue for gay marriage, go for it, but this marriage “equality” thing is a complete sham.Sure they can and do when they get married and in 38 states and soon all 50 states gays have and will have marriage equality. But you knew that didn’t you?
I read a document from your Church in support of gay marriage.Overview of Federal Benefits Granted to Married Couples
There are 1,138 benefits, rights and protections provided on the basis of marital status in Federal law.
Source: hrc.org/resources/entry/an-overview-of-federal-rights-and-protections-granted-to-married-couple
Indeed, a durable power of power of attorney, a healthcare directive, a will or trust, changing the beneficiaries on your life insurance or other payment after death assents, a joint bank account, a jointly held property are all accessible to two people of the same sex. The only things that aren’t are federal or potentially some state benefits. Tax (though sometimes being married is not a tax benefit depending on one’s situation) and social security are the big ones. Sometimes a pension (gov) but even those you can usually designate beneficiaries.A durable power of attorney can be given to any person and would erase all of the above “problems” except tax benefits and sharing medical benefits. Neither of those are rights though.
I am divorced and have no “right” to marriage tax benefits. Perhaps that means I’m discriminated against.
Some states do allow sharing of medical benefits with a registered domestic partner which can be homosexual, heterosexual or not sexual in any way.
If I move in with a relative, can I get those benefits? Why not?Wow! Can’t single people access any of those?
Thank you. Some people think getting married is “What can I get out of it, especially financially?” I know a lot of people who are married who don’t have a lot and I grew up around a lot of the same kind of people. The difference? It’s called “being content with what you have,” followed by “willing to do without.”Indeed, a durable power of power of attorney, a healthcare directive, a will or trust, changing the beneficiaries on your life insurance or other payment after death assents, a joint bank account, a jointly held property are all accessible to two people of the same sex. The only things that aren’t are federal or potentially some state benefits. Tax (though sometimes being married is not a tax benefit depending on one’s situation) and social security are the big ones. Sometimes a pension (gov) but even those you can usually designate beneficiaries.
I don’t know about other people, but I didn’t get married for the financial benefits. I got married for love (I wanted to commit and I wanted him to commit, love, fidelity, fecendity) and because I knew that I wanted to have children with my husband. Marriage, besides being the moral way to do this, is also convenient for paperwork. My husband is the presumptive (and real) father and guardian to my children, making things like getting the child a birth certificate, ss number, health care, and educational services easier. As a bonus, it was a convenient way to change my name and to make each other next of kin, though not the only way.
If they have a foreign partner, then they cannot get the usual immigration/residency waivers for a foreign spouse that would be available if they were a heterosexual couple.Compared to heterosexual married couples, what rights do homosexuals miss out on in a state where gay marriage is illegal
This is not a good argument. The Supreme Court has already rejected it in Loving v Virginia (1967). Better to find a different argument, one that hasn’t already failed.actually, as I have already noted, gays can already get married in all 50 states. there are no laws against a gay person getting married. you want to argue for gay marriage, go for it, but this marriage “equality” thing is a complete sham.
uh huh. the supreme court also gave us roe v wade. I did not present an argument to try and win some court case. I presented irrefutable facts.This is not a good argument. The Supreme Court has already rejected it in Loving v Virginia (1967). Better to find a different argument, one that hasn’t already failed.
rossum
That’s because they are not really married.If they have a foreign partner, then they cannot get the usual immigration/residency waivers for a foreign spouse that would be available if they were a heterosexual couple.
rossum
Strange part is all those things you mentioned that gays say they want from marriage were available to them through legal means long before the whole gay “marriage” thing. This is not about rights its about fundamentally changing the basic building block of society.Many of the rights discussed in this context, like inheritance and hospital visitation and medical decision-making, are rights that have been “incidentally” tied to marriage. That is, they are rights that seemed to be the easiest to administer by using the state of matrimony as a convenient criteria. But many of these rights could reasonably be extended to other relationships. There is nothing essential about marriage that would prevent their extension. Therefore when examples of these rights are presented as evidence, there are two possible ways to grant these rights. One is to explicitly extend them as appropriate to the specific right involved. The other way is to extend the definition of marriage to include other relationships.
While method #2 does appear to be temptingly simple, as opposed to the right-by-right consideration of method #1, I think method #1 is the preferable one. It allows the various rights to be optimally extended to just the relationships that are most appropriate for those rights, and avoids the unintentional consequences of the wholesale redefinition of marriage everywhere in law.
Please look again at the OP:That’s because they are not really married.
Your example is not an example of a right that is possessed by heterosexuals but not by homosexuals. For to assume it is the same right, you first have to assume it is the same relationship at stake. But that is exactly what is being debated. So you can’t assume it in order to prove it. That would be circular.
I gave an example of a right that homosexuals miss out on by not being able to marry, exactly as requested.Compared to heterosexual married couples, what rights do homosexuals miss out on in a state where gay marriage is illegal.
Not all rights. The Windsor case (which struck down part of DOMA) was about inheritance taxation. A waiver on estate duty was available to a heterosexual couple married in Canada, but not to a homosexual couple married in Canada. There is no way, other than marriage, to get that particular tax waiver.Strange part is all those things you mentioned that gays say they want from marriage were available to them through legal means long before the whole gay “marriage” thing. This is not about rights its about fundamentally changing the basic building block of society.
Then change the law not marriage.Not all rights. The Windsor case (which struck down part of DOMA) was about inheritance taxation. A waiver on estate duty was available to a heterosexual couple married in Canada, but not to a homosexual couple married in Canada. There is no way, other than marriage, to get that particular tax waiver.
rossum
Since civil marriage is not “true Catholic marriage”, due to the treatment of divorce, then changing the civil law on marriage has no effect on true Catholic marriage.Then change the law not marriage.