Ok, well since I have provided a solid secular justification for rejecting SSM, the thread could really now be closed. And proponents of SSM should stop claiming that only religious people can have any objections to it.
Where did you provide a "solid secular justification for rejecting SSM"? It can't be anything to do with children because having children is not a requirement for children nor are children the reason the government sanctions marriage. It also was definitely not in post #108.
To continue on other arguments against it, we really should change the thread title to "Any more secular arguments against SSM?" Of course, as several posters here have amply demonstrated (eg. posts #2 and #125), many proponents of SSM are not actually interested in considering whether there may be arguments against their position, still less in listening to them. However, for those who are, let's continue with the discussion.
Skaloop,
Since we agree that introducing or restricting SSM is not at heart a justice issue, then the rhetoric on both sides can be toned down, and a calm measured debate can be had without trying to make out that the other side is basically evil. We are considering instead what is best for society as a whole. I would argue that maintaining marriage as it has been traditionally understood is best for all, particularly for children.
You have given no reason to think that same-sex marriage would be any worse for children than 2nd marriages, step-marriages, or any other type of legal marriage other than first marriages. You have just asserted that it is so.
I don't recall marriage having been defined to exclude interracial marriage. It may have been socially unacceptable in some places, but it would still have been understood as marriage.
Interracial marriage was explicitly forbidden by law for more than 200 years in many states in the US.
Which is the constitutional right to gay marriage?
The movement is by stealth if it isn't honest about the scale of the change that is being made, and if it seeks to tell people that they are morally wrong to oppose it rather than it being a morally neutral question of what kind of norms we want to have in our society.
The discussion
is about what kind of norms we want to have in our society (in the US at least).
I'll deal with the slippery slope question at the end of this post.
Cearbhall,
That there is nothing in statute defining marriage is irrelevant. You ignore the point that the US, as the UK, is a common law system. Therefore ancient traditions don't need to be codified to be understood. Murder isn't defined in statute either, but we all know what it is.
Since you don't understand the polygamy argument, let me try to help you. Under the traditional definition of marriage - that it is about creating a framework within which two people can raise their biological children together - I can easily explain why it is one man and one woman for life, and why I can't marry a man (because we can't have children together), and I can't marry two people (because at least one of us would not be the aprent of a child raised in that context), and why I can't marry my sister (because it would be bad for the offspring so produced).
Why do you exclude 2nd marriages, step-marriages, etc. from your argument? They have the exact same effect on children being raised by their biological parents as does same-sex marriage.
Earlier you were claiming that unless proponents of same-sex marriage also considered polygamy, we should let marriage stay unchanged. By your logic then, unless opponents of of same-sex marriage also consider 2nd marriages, step-marriages, post-childbearing marriages, and childless by choice marriages and explain why they should not be made illegal but same-sex marriages should be illegal, then we should change the definition of marriage to include same-sex couples.
Alternatively, if there is some reason why SSM should be permitted but plural marriage should not, then please explain what this is. What is special about the number two that means that two people can get married but three cannot? I can explain the logic of my position on the basis of the traditional definition of marriage; I want to know whether you can explain the logic of your position on the basis of your new definition.
There is nothing special about the number two in marriage in and of itself. However, the entire legal framework of marriage is based on their being only two participants. If that entire framework can be successfully changed to encompass multiple partners, I have absolutely no problem with polygamous/polyamorous marriages. But don't pretend that changing the law to encompass them is a simple as it is for same-sex marriages.
Moreover, you should also explain why marriage is still being regarded as something for life.
Because (most) people who enter into marriage desire it to be that way.
Now, about slippery slopes. The slippery slope argument is actually important. Let me give the historical example of abortion. When this was legalised in the UK in 1967, it was to deal with the really hard cases like rape, incest and severe foetal abnormality. Proponents at the time said that 'abortion on demand' was not their intention. The effective use of abortions for social reasons was unthinkable. But now, even the MP who introduced the Abortion Bill in 1967 says that he is shocked at the way his bill is now being used. Fewer than 2% of abortions in the UK now are carried out for the reasons intended by those who passed the original Act.
This backs up the point I was making earlier about sloppy law. It is really important to think carefully not just about what changes you want to make now, but also about how those changes will impact in the future. Changing the law does not just change what people are allowed to do; it also changes, over the long term, the very way people think. We need to look ahead, and consider whether the changes we make now will lead to consequences that we don't think should come about.
When civil partnerships were introduced in the UK in 2004, we were told that there was no need for gay marriage, and that such a change was not just around the corner. Just nine years later, the Same Sex Marriage Act was being passed. Although I think civil partnerships were probably right, I have a lot of sympathy for those who feel it was a Trojan Horse, being used as the thin end of the wedge (sorry for the mixed metaphor).
Responsible citizens need to think carefully about the long-term consequences of the changes they are making. And if they see danger in those long-term consequences, they are perfectly entitled to be opposed to the current change. There is no human right to SSM. There is nothing inconsistent or immoral about a state deciding it wants to retain traditional marriage. No injustice is being committed - especially not if some kind of civil union is available for same sex couples.
That statement goes to the very heart of the problem, at least in the US. Here, no state offers a civil union that exactly matches the rights, privileges, and protections as those offered by marriage.
Also, here in the US most people have a cultural distate for any governmental institution that smacks of "separate but equal".