Look at the thread title.Isn't an argument against marriage in general also an argument against SSM?
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Look at the thread title.Isn't an argument against marriage in general also an argument against SSM?
I'm aware of that, but you are proposing a standard for legislation that has nothing to do with the American system. There is nothing in the Constitution demanding purely economic justifications for government action...
For instance, the end of slavery might have been bad economics, but that wouldn't be a compelling reason to have kept slavery as an institution...
It is not at all clear that:
1) That is bad economics.
2) Bad economics ought to be the standard of legislation.
3) How precisely this standard is to be defined and understood.
It all just seems to mean what people's values are for society. If one's value is that homosexuals shouldn't get married, then all money spent on gay marriage looks like a waste. If one's value is that they should be able to get married, then all that money looks like money well spent. "Economics" is all about means, not ends, and it doesn't carry any normative weight all by itself.
It could just as easily be that equality is a higher standard for legislation -- for instance, in order to remove special privileges -- and that this is a proper guide to legislators. That would make sense for a liberal republic, and is in the spirit of the end of slavery and other efforts to make people equal under the law.
So, the argument from bad economics seems like a bad one to me.
This. ^ If we lived under a more communal philosophy and we weren't hitting the replacement rate, then you could justify it. But in our society, where opposite-sex couples are free to have or not have children, there's no secular reason.IF mankind were in danger of dying out then I could come up with a reason. In that case there would be a secular reason.
You would think. But we had a thread on this, and I was told that even with no one else left in existence, I would have a moral obligation to reproduce for the sake of future humans. As in, the ones that wouldn't ever exist if I were to refuse, and therefore could not suffer as a result of my refusal. Talk about circular reasoning.Why would this be relevant to ethics?
Suppose I and a woman are the last two people on Earth. We decide not to procreate and thus the species ends with us. Why would this be a moral question? Isn't it amoral -- neither good not bad?
This. ^ If we lived under a more communal philosophy and we weren't hitting the replacement rate, then you could justify it
This one has been used in the US a lot lately, and it always makes me laugh. Are they also in favor of immediately putting kids into foster care if Daddy dies in a car accident? Do these people hear themselves?Finnish parliament just voted on SSM some days ago and I watched the parliament discussions for while, and these are what people opposing SSM used mostly:
- Kids have right for father and mother of both sexes
Are you trying to claim that heterosexuals wouldn't use this exact same argument if someone tried to take their right to marriage away?It is a response to the "we love each other" / "I have the right to marry the person I love" / "people do not choose who they love" argument that has frequently been made specifically in support of legal same-sex marriage.
You would have to go much further than that for this argument to be logical. Starting with the criminalization of divorce.This one has been used in the US a lot lately, and it always makes me laugh. Are they also in favor of immediately putting kids into foster care if Daddy dies in a car accident? Do these people hear themselves?
You would have to go much further than that for this argument to be logical. Starting with the criminalization of divorce.
Are you trying to claim that heterosexuals wouldn't use this exact same argument if someone tried to take their right to marriage away?
One thing I notice about ethical conversations with Christians is they can give me a non religious explanation for Christian ethics - except when it comes to Gay Marriage, in which case their opposition seems to rest entirely on a handful of bible verses.
Can anyone provide a reason for opposing gay marriage - without invoking scripture or theology?
This. ^ If we lived under a more communal philosophy and we weren't hitting the replacement rate, then you could justify it.
I have never understood why people say that marriage is a right.
I probably do not know much about constitutional law, but I think that it is safe to say that there is nothing in the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing government-sanctioned marriage. If, say, the state of New Mexico decided to get out of the marriage business and stopped issuing marriage licenses I doubt that the U.S. Supreme court would find such action to be unconstitutional.
I have not read the U.S. Constitution from beginning to end, but I believe that it contains language guaranteeing the right to enter contracts. If the marriage contract was created by states for convenience, and if the U.S. Constitution guarantees equal protection under the law, then every citizen must be given that convenience. But I doubt that there is anything in the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing the right to convenience. So if states decided to get out of the business of making a bunch of unrelated legal paperwork convenient and stopped issuing marriage licenses then they would not be violating the letter or the spirit of the U.S. Constitution.
But a marriage contract is not just about reducing or streamlining paperwork. A marriage contract, as the debate over same-sex marriage in the U.S. clearly shows, is about resources being redistributed in the form of tax breaks, Social Security benefits going to the surviving spouse rather than back into the system, etc.
Nobody has a "right" to resources redistributed by the government. The government could reduce taxes so much that after spending tax revenue on what is needed for the government to function there would be no money left for anything like Social Security.
Where does anybody get the idea that they have the "right" to marry, let alone the "right" to marry "the one I love"?
Sexual orientation has nothing to do with any of this.
The Supreme Court has said so on many occasions, most notably Loving v Virginia.I have never understood why people say that marriage is a right.
You are correct that if states got out of the marriage business, that would not be unconstitutional. The problem is that when states do enter into the marriage business, they must do so in a non-discriminatory way.I probably do not know much about constitutional law, but I think that it is safe to say that there is nothing in the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing government-sanctioned marriage. If, say, the state of New Mexico decided to get out of the marriage business and stopped issuing marriage licenses I doubt that the U.S. Supreme court would find such action to be unconstitutional.
I have not read the U.S. Constitution from beginning to end, but I believe that it contains language guaranteeing the right to enter contracts. If the marriage contract was created by states for convenience, and if the U.S. Constitution guarantees equal protection under the law, then every citizen must be given that convenience. But I doubt that there is anything in the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing the right to convenience. So if states decided to get out of the business of making a bunch of unrelated legal paperwork convenient and stopped issuing marriage licenses then they would not be violating the letter or the spirit of the U.S. Constitution.
Tax breaks are not resources, money from taxes are resources. Social security benefits are something a person pays for.But a marriage contract is not just about reducing or streamlining paperwork. A marriage contract, as the debate over same-sex marriage in the U.S. clearly shows, is about resources being redistributed in the form of tax breaks, Social Security benefits going to the surviving spouse rather than back into the system, etc.
This is completely irrelevant to the question of same-sex marriage. Completely.Nobody has a "right" to resources redistributed by the government. The government could reduce taxes so much that after spending tax revenue on what is needed for the government to function there would be no money left for anything like Social Security.
As already noted, the idea comes from multiple Supreme Court decision saying exactly that.Where does anybody get the idea that they have the "right" to marry, let alone the "right" to marry "the one I love"?
If s group of people are denied their civil rights because of their sexual orientation, then sexual orientation has everything to do with this.Sexual orientation has nothing to do with any of this.
This is completely irrelevant to the question of same-sex marriage. Completely...
If s group of people are denied their civil rights because of their sexual orientation, then sexual orientation has everything to do with this.
I'd love to know what people who are opposed to same-sex marriage think they're defending marriage from.