C
CandideWest
Guest
Thanks but I’m radically under-qualified to start writing up definitions of legal arrangements like marriage. I’ll happily leave that to the lawmakers.Better still…
Why don’t you write out a definition of marriage that includes homosexual couples but excludes all other relationships (adult siblings, adult children and their parents, lifelong friends, polyamorous relationships, grandparent and grandchild) on non-arbitrary grounds?
And yet I have already explained why the state has an interest in marriage of its citizens which is not related to children.… The state has no reason to be involved.
I’m afraid it already is, there is nothing in law which states that infertile people may not marry.A third point is that if ineffectual sexual relationships ought to be included in the definition of marriage …
Strange, are you really under the impression that the purpose of marriage is to allow governments to “regulate the capacity to create new life”.That is the interest that the state rightfully should have in regulating the capacity to create new life to ensure this power is not abused.
What regulatory process? Has someone introduced regulation of sex while I’ve not been looking?Homosexual couples lack any power to create life so there is no fundamental reason for including them in regulatory processes.
And yet you do not appear to be advocating making it illegal for infertile people to get married. Even though they are no more capable of having children than homosexual couples.The basis of law and reason is to treat like things alike and clearly impotent homosexual relationships are relevantly different than fecund heterosexual relationships and should be distinguished as such under the law by definition.
Why not?