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What Relationships Should Be Called Marriage: A Modest Proposal
Christian Post ^ | 10/1/12 | Dr. Richard D. Land

Posted on 10/24/2012 11:24:21 AM PDT by rhema

The issue of whether Americans should approve "same-sex" marriage continues to be debated heatedly in the 2012 election cycle. President Obama has "evolved" on the issue to the place where he supports "same-sex" marriage, making no distinction between the time-honored institution of marriage as being between one man and one woman and a relationship between two people of the same sex.

The issue emerged recently in a September 20th debate in the U.S. senatorial contest in Virginia between George Allen (R) and Tim Kaine (D). Former Governor Kaine, when asked about the issue, couched his answer in terms of civil rights and equality, stating "that relationships should be treated equally."

Marriage has been defined in Western civilization for at least two millennia now as being a sexual relationship between one man and one woman. Christianity has defined it so historically, most often coupling it with life-long permanence and monogamy. As an Evangelical Christian, I certainly embrace that definition.

However, how do we deal with those who would choose to extend some of the legal privileges our society has accorded marriage to same-sex relationships without shattering the definition of marriage or discriminating against people outside the heterosexual definition of marriage? How do we protect society against those who would extend the special status of marriage to homosexual, lesbian or polygamous relationships? How do we protect time-honored titles, like "husband" and "wife," from being attacked as homophobic or sexist terms to be replaced by spouse #1 and spouse #2 or "Mom" and "Dad" from being reduced legally to caregiver #1 and caregiver #2? Such legal assaults on these time-honored family terms seem inevitable if "same-sex" marriage becomes equal with heterosexual marriage.

I propose that as Americans we declare heterosexual marriage as the only relationship in our society that is to be defined by its sexual nature and that it will continue to be defined as a legal relationship between one man and one woman consummated by sexual intercourse.

If two men or two women are living together in a relationship and they want to ask the state legislature in their state to grant some of the special legal privileges accorded marriage to their relationship the state legislature should respond in the following fashion: "We will consider your request, but the sexual nature of your relationship will be irrelevant to our discussions because marriage is the only relationship in our society that is defined by its sexual nature. Why should other people who are living in committed relationships that do not involve sexual activity be discriminated against or left out?"

In other words, the state legislature would not discriminate against two maiden or widowed sisters who were living together or a mother and a devoted son or daughter who were living together in a platonic relationship. Why should such households and relationships be left behind when legal privileges and recognition are being passed out just because they are not in a sexual relationship?

If the peoples' elected representatives in the various states were to undertake such legislation, it would certainly do much to protect marriage as the unique institution that it is in our society, while according all other relationships that equality that former Governor Kaine so desires.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Maryland; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: culturewar; downourthroats; homosexualagenda; inourfaces; lavendermafia; marriage; moralabsolutes
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To: generally
If two people want to have some sort of personal contract which gives each other various financial and legal rights, that is fine and they can do that with or without marriage.

Your view seems simple and logical. What I think you don't fully appreciate, however, is that government got involved in the marriage contract several centuries ago -- and we have several centuries of law that is based on that contract.

It all got started, I believe, with the need to have an orderly process in distribution of inherited property.

A man's "legitimate" heirs, i.e. a wife whom he had properly married in the eyes of the state, + the children who were born of that legitimate union, were the heirs who had a first claim on the man's property at his death.

The state had a "legitimate" interest in officially sanctioning marriage, in that facilitating a stable and orderly transfer of property within families is beneficial to the state (partly because the state taxes that property).

21 posted on 10/24/2012 1:19:28 PM PDT by shhrubbery! (NIH!)
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To: stroll

Nobody should have to pay a death tax. Everything a decedent owns has already been taxed, often multiple times.


22 posted on 10/24/2012 1:19:48 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Now a hit television series starring Judi Dench!)
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To: stroll
The government shouldn’t be in the business of deciding who does and doesn’t have to pay a death tax.

Another preference: a person cannot be compelled to testify against their spouse in court.

23 posted on 10/24/2012 1:24:52 PM PDT by justlurking (tagline removed, as demanded by Admin Moderator)
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To: Tax-chick

We have a gift tax for gifts given above $13,000 a year. Why should a transfer of an inheritance be taxed differently than gifts?

Since I have to pay taxes on income that I earn on a job, it would be unfair that someone who is given money should be exempt from paying taxes on it.

The idea that you should be exempt from a tax because the money has “already been taxed” is a silly argument that can be applied to any tax. Why should I pay sales tax since I already paid income tax on the money I’m spending? My employer already paid income tax on the money he’s paying me, so why should I pay income tax on it again? Why should I pay a property tax since I already paid income tax on the money I bought the house with? You could exempt any tax you want with that argument. It’s meaningless.

I’m for abolishing the estate tax as long as you abolish the income tax along with it. Treating those two forms of income differently makes no sense at all and is grossly unfair to those who earned their income instead of being given it. Nobody likes paying taxes, but the taxes we do pay ought to be fair without putting extra burden on certain people. I’m in favor of tax cuts and lower taxes, but whatever taxes we are paying should be flat and applied equally to everybody.


24 posted on 10/24/2012 1:41:43 PM PDT by JediJones (ROMNEY/RYAN: TURNAROUND ARTISTS ***** OBAMA/BIDEN: BULL $HIT ARTISTS)
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To: delcopatriot

As a society we should be allowed to encourage and incentivize marriage and reproduction between a man and a woman. And we should do it because these things help improve society. Allowing other types of relationships the same privileges totally negates and counteracts the results we’re trying to achieve by giving marriage a special status in society. With the way divorce and single-parent households have shattered our society, we should be doing more than ever now to encourage marriage, not completely throwing it away as a special institution, which this article suggests we do.


25 posted on 10/24/2012 1:48:16 PM PDT by JediJones (ROMNEY/RYAN: TURNAROUND ARTISTS ***** OBAMA/BIDEN: BULL $HIT ARTISTS)
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To: ansel12; 185JHP; 230FMJ; AFA-Michigan; AKA Elena; APatientMan; Abathar; Absolutely Nobama; ...
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Exactly what ansell2 said:

I have a somewhat different suggestion. I would like to see government stay completely out of the marriage business.

That is the pro-polygamy, pro-homosexual agenda position, end civilization's definition of marriage, and let it become whatever anyone wants to define it as.

Marriage has been recognized by government (both local and small and national) for millenia, both for protection of children and wives, and husbands; for legal inheritance and paternity reasons. But the underlying reason is because marriage is the foundation of family, which is the foundation of human society. As far as other legal arrangements, there are enough available to choose from.

26 posted on 10/24/2012 1:52:01 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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To: JediJones
Why should a transfer of an inheritance be taxed differently than gifts?

It shouldn't. Gifts should not be taxed, either.

whatever taxes we are paying should be flat and applied equally to everybody

That's a good principle, but in practice, no tax is going to affect everyone equally.

27 posted on 10/24/2012 2:08:57 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Now a hit television series starring Judi Dench!)
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To: JediJones
We have a gift tax for gifts given above $13,000 a year. Why should a transfer of an inheritance be taxed differently than gifts?

Actually, I don't really think a gift should be taxed either, but thats another issue.

If the inheritance is cash, then it can easily be taxed at whatever rate you choose. The problem is when the inheritance is something not easily divided like a farm or a business. If you have to take out a loan to pay the tax, you may be pushed into bankruptcy if you could even get a loan in the first place. Its not automatic that you'll be able to get the loan in the first place. If you have to sell the farm or the business to pay the tax, then the point of the inheritance is destroyed.

Of course, a large piece of property you may have to sit on a couple of years until it sells, so even that may not save you as you're no doubt incurring penalties and interest as you try to sell it.

Thats the problem with an inheritance tax on anything other than cash, at least from my point of view.

28 posted on 10/24/2012 2:13:05 PM PDT by marron
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To: generally

Wrong.

For centuries marriage has proven to be a benefit to society and to government. A strong healthy nation is dependent on strong healthy families. For instance; As goes the American Family - so goes America.

Liberals believe just the opposite: A strong healthy nation is dependent on a strong healthy GOVERNMENT. And to attain the goal of governmental dominance, they seek to destroy marriage and the family.

There was a time when America was a strong and healthy economic society. But since the 60’s, LBJ and his Great Society programs have replaced the father with a Welfare check. And look what’s happened.

Leave the religious connotations out of marriage if you wish. But one thing is clear: This country MUST endorse the social values of the marriage contract or we’re doomed.


29 posted on 10/24/2012 2:21:44 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (NO LIBS. This Means Liberals and (L)libertarians! Same Thing. NO LIBS!!)
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To: rhema

No one gets “the legal privileges and recognition” that a married man and woman get.

And while we are at it - no abortions, no drugs and no affirmative action.


30 posted on 10/24/2012 2:42:45 PM PDT by Berlin_Freeper (Winning is Everything.)
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To: rhema
Deuteronomy 22:13-28 is pretty specific.

No doubt many Freepers abide these rules.

31 posted on 10/24/2012 2:49:37 PM PDT by GalaxyAB
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To: little jeremiah

The entire gay agenda is like forcing Jews to eat pork because not eating pork discriminates against pig farmers.


32 posted on 10/24/2012 2:51:54 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (On Sesame Street, Obama is brought to you by the letter O and the number 16 billion. - Mitt Romney)
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To: generally

It’s probably the best solution, but it is never going to happen.

The problem with the state’s involvement, at least in the modern era, is that the definition it uses to recognize the institution is simply whatever judges, pols or the majority thinks it is at any one time. And that’s it, and that’s all it will ever be. Combine that with the fact many have been conditioned to think marriage comes from and is defined by the state and you have what we have today. It was always a danger. Pope Leo XIII warned about it 130 years ago.

The statists won’t give it up, as it is a way to control the culture—look at the state of marriage in a general sense over the past decades and ask why statists might like it that way. The homosexualists won’t give it up, as it is the only way they can punish those faiths who will never buy into things like ‘gay marriage.’ Many others have simply been conditioned to think the institution comes from and is defined by the gov’t, so they accept whatever the state recognizes as marriage—it is denoted by pieces of paper issued by the state, and voided and resumed when the state decides it should be. Many who rightly consider ‘gay marriage’ repugnant and impossible won’t consider any of the drawbacks of state involvement itself in such a vital institution, but have no problem rightly seeing the drawbacks when it comes to other institutions like charity and education.

What I think will eventually happen is that those faiths that consider marriage independant of gov’t mutation and beyond a simple collection of legal strictures and benefits won’t bother with the state. It’s just a shame about the punishments that will have to be taken for not buying into whatever the gov’t calls marriage at the time.

Freegards


33 posted on 10/24/2012 3:02:54 PM PDT by Ransomed
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To: Mrs. Don-o; Tax-chick
abolishing civil marriage would mean abolishing automatic inheritance for spouses, and various insurance and taxation benefits. Maybe you want to do that

No. No way.

I was thinking in terms of the informal arrangements families have always made, taking in orphans or nephews or grandchildren and raising them, taking in family members or friends who had no place to go, but who then become essentially members of the family.

At one time people understood and respected these kinds of informal family arrangements but in the modern era you run into legal issues involving schools, medical care, and the like. I've been through it several times over the years and have had to finesse it various ways.

The kind of "legal space" to define your own household may or may not be practical in the modern era but the need for it is there, anyone who has informally "adopted" people into their families for whatever reason has run into the kinds of problems I'm thinking about. This kind of thing was becoming less common for a few decades but is returning, you are seeing it again more and more.

Thats what I was referring to. But as for marriage, no. Government has no right or authority to try to re-define marriage for all the reasons you refer to and for more basic moral reasons too. On that I'm with you.

34 posted on 10/24/2012 3:14:27 PM PDT by marron
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To: rhema

I find it curious that “civil union” rules explicitly forbid siblings from forming such unions, even though there may be sound reasons for siblings to join together in a household (e.g. if a brother and sister are widowed, and both have children, it may be better for the children to be raised by a parent and an aunt or uncle, than by a parent alone). If civil unions really weren’t about sex, why should their proponents exclude siblings?


35 posted on 10/24/2012 3:56:09 PM PDT by supercat (Renounce Covetousness.)
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To: rhema

Guys, there is a cost to being married.

Maybe women don’t think so but men sure do.

In order to compensate for the cost, we used to provide exclusive benefits for traditional marriage. Legal and prestige benefits, mostly. That’s all now blown away, from brutal divorce proceedings, to others wanting in on the benefits.

Now there is almost no incentive to getting married. So why do the gays want in?


36 posted on 10/24/2012 4:12:25 PM PDT by AdSimp
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Saw a professional photography magazine with the cover date of October 2012.

It covered wedding photography (at least part of the issue did) and even devoted at least one page (and several other photos) to same sex weddings.

There was a list of things that can be different about photographing such ceremonies (often not held in a church, sometimes one or both sets of parents don’t attend so group photos may be unbalanced, using gender neutral terms and avoiding using explicitly traditional couple phrases like “bride and groom” on your website (use “brides and grooms” instead).

Then it went into some photographers who SPECIALIZE in homosexualist wedding photography. We’ve seen the lavender mafia take social conservatives to court for rejecting the photography of a same sex wedding. Would there likewise be a legal challenge if a photographer said (s)he SPECIALIZED in HETEROSEXUAL wedding photography?

Down is up. Wrong is right. This so called tolerance and equality for the politically protected class is BULLSTALIN. There is no tolerance for “diversity”. If you challenge them, you are to be persecuted/prosecuted but if they niche market, they are to be celebrated.


37 posted on 10/24/2012 4:16:05 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Obama likes to claim credit for getting Osama. Why hasn't he tried Khalid Sheikh Mohammed yet?)
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To: ansel12

The Left also wants to ban inheritance and 401k savings plans.

If you “saved” for your retirement, you are demonized for being “rich” even though you draw no pension, unlike the socialist masses on the public trough.


38 posted on 10/24/2012 4:19:18 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Obama likes to claim credit for getting Osama. Why hasn't he tried Khalid Sheikh Mohammed yet?)
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To: marron; Tax-chick
Yes, I see what you're saying. Tax-chick's "household" idea seems very sensible, too.

I seem to remember that sometime in the past few years, the City of San Francisco had an ordinance that all employers had to include gay partners in employees' insurance. The Abp of San Francisco tried to work it out that Archdiocesan employees could designate one person as co-beneficiary on their plan, no questions asked about who that person might be: wife, husband, son, daughter, gay partner, business associate, or random-person-on-the-street.

If I'm remembering correctly, the City's response was: no, not good enough, nyet, ningun, nada.

But admittedly, San Fran is particularly narrow and bigoted that way.

39 posted on 10/24/2012 4:33:59 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Some learn from reading; some by others' experience; the rest just *have* to pee on the third rail.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o; marron

I’ve also suggested that insurance policies might, in place of “employee and spouse,” have “employee and additional adult resident.” That could be a cohabiting nonmarital romantic partner, a parent, a sibling, an adult child, other family member, or whatever. I don’t think that the costs in insurance payout would be greater than “employee and spouse,” because if you limit it to a household resident, a single employee couldn’t add a non-resident parent, for example, to his employer’s policy.

I think it makes sense for the law to recognize that there are other household configurations besides husband-wife-children ... and there always have been. Better, from the insurance standpoint, simply to separate insurance from employment entirely, though.


40 posted on 10/24/2012 5:14:14 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Now a hit television series starring Judi Dench!)
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