OL FU wrote:I agree with Joltin' Joe that it should be a legislative issue. However I really think anyone that uses the potential of legalized bestiality or polygamy to argue against gay marriage is really stretching it. I understand that sex between the same sexes freaks some people out, but I know way to many life long gay partners (married and otherwise) who have wonderful relationships to ever consider arguing against their abilty to be happy in a legally binding relationship.
The legal extrapolation argument is not attempting to equate same-sex marriage with polygamy or bestiality. It's merely the statement that once the original intent of marriage, a creation of a binding contract between two people of opposite sex who join primarily for the purpose of procreation, is eliminated as a defining element of a "marriage", then the door is open for other classes beyond "same-sex" couples to seek inclusion within the definition: Polygamy and bestiality are just examples of other classes. Once the opposite gender element is eliminated, judicially, exclusion of other classes would arguably be unconstitutional.
The solution is to allow non-hetero relationships to be bound with civil unions, then legislatively codify equivalent rights afforded to those in civil unions.
My assertion has been that the LGBT activists would not be satisfied with the civil union solution as their intent is not to have a legally recognized relationship with the same rights provided to "married" couples, but rather to re-define "marriage" to erase the historical tradition of procreating couples. As Jon and I have debated many times, my opposition to much of the "liberalization" of relationship law is not an opposition to same-sex relations, but an absolute opposition to a political movement driven by an intent to devalue the hetero relationship, destroy organizations and religious groups who oppose same-sex "marriage", and seek punitive sanctions and reparations against anyone (or group) who opposes them even when said actions result from religious beliefs: A policy directly in contradiction with the movement's stated purpose of expanded diversity and acceptance of alternative lifestyles and beliefs.
I do agree with Jon about one principal issue re: this debate. I cannot support ANY religious group which excludes from membership or participation any person solely for being LGBT. Thankfully, most modern Christian faiths now have either "reconciled" in part or whole, and despite the denial of a "sanctified" marriage, allow LGBT to be members or, minimally, worship and receive ministerial benefits. In those cases, however, when a religion rejects reconciliation (i.e., holds LGBT as an unforgivable sin), then IMHO, that religion must either be bound to provide "healing" ministry to the LGBT, or genuinely be labeled as non-mainstream, and definitely non-Christian: Exclusion/Non-recognition is not an option for ANY Judaic, Islamic or Christian faith.