Quote: (05-22-2014 11:18 AM)Deluge Wrote:
Quote: (05-22-2014 10:35 AM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:
That's where you're wrong, because not having the right to call your union "marriage" does not constitute "abridging immunities" or "infringing on life, liberty, or property".
If the government wouldn't let you marry the woman you loved, you would certainly consider that to be infringing on your life and liberty.
I don't think so. The government already doesn't let me marry multiple women and no one feels slighted by that.
Also, the government also doesn't let me refer to my set of rights and obligations to a woman I'm living with as "the unholy pact" or whatever other term that "I would prefer" and no one feels slighted by that. I don't see why gays are experiencing discrimination when they are unable to use a certain word, but I am not.
Unholy pacts for everyone!
Quote:Deluge Wrote:
Quote: (05-22-2014 10:35 AM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:
To compare the harm from someone merely having to use a different name for something to slavery or inquisition is out of proportion! Slavery causes tangible harm and discrimination. Having to call a civil union "civil union" instead of "marriage" does not.
Woah, who the hell compared banning gay marriage to slavery? Go back and read what I actually wrote and the context in which I refused to slavery, Jim Crow and executing apostates before pursuing blatant strawmen.
Your argument was that popular support doesn't make discrimination any less discriminating. Of course it doesn't. But since not being able to use the word "marriage" does not constitute discrimination in the first place, it is a flawed argument. These aren't same categories we're talking about.
Quote:Deluge Wrote:
Quote: (05-22-2014 10:35 AM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:
Assuming a civil union with equivalent rights is available to gay people (which is, from what I know, the case almost everywhere in developed western world), same sex marriage cannot be said to infringe on anyone's rights.
First of all, you're completely wrong about how available civil unions are.
![[Image: 400px-Samesex_marriage_in_USA.svg.png]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7e/Samesex_marriage_in_USA.svg/400px-Samesex_marriage_in_USA.svg.png)
I'm wrong. But the just and reasonable solution still remains to have these states enact civil unions.
Quote:Deuge Wrote:
Of the states without same-sex marriage, only the states in light blue (Nevada and Colorado) have "Domestic partnerships or civil unions granting privileges similar to marriage for same-sex domestic partners". Also, there are literally countless examples of civil unions failing to actually meet the same benefits of marriages. I can't be bothered typing them all out, but arguments 2 and 4 from this pamphlet use examples from civil union systems in New Jersey and Vermont before they legalized gay marriage to dispel that notion.
Other than one example of British medical insurers treating people within civil unions as single and charging them more (which also hurts heterosexual couples in civil unions just as much so it can't be discrimination against gay people), all of these
"failing to meet the same benefit" examples boil down to
"makes me feel uncomfortable". Feelings !=! evidence.
Likewise, a court parroting
"it is discrimination because it is discrimination" is meaningless. It can make things legal or illegal, but not true or untrue. They rely on circular logic. We need to be shown specific examples of how gay people in civil unions suffered financial or other tangible losses, along with explanations why this can't be fixed by amending civil unions or simply saying
"wherever the text in law X mentions 'marriage', it also applies in the same way to 'civil union' and its constituents".
If we water down
"discrimination" to
"feelings", I'm sure heterosexual couples can come up with feeling ashamed that their traditions are now shared with someone else without their consent.
Quote:Deluge Wrote:
But with same-sex marriage being legalized all over at lightning speed (the latest Gallup poll shows 55% of Americans now support it), they'll soon be redundant as they don't have anything else to really fight for but this issue.
Because the same thing happened with feminism.
I'm not against gay marriage at all, nor am I conservative or religious. Let them marry! I'm against illogical arguments and aggressive attitude, which the gay rights' movement has aplenty.
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