Sovereign Dream
Member
This is a non-issue. There's nothing stopping two friends of the opposite sex from getting married under the system you're advocating.
Right, but the state wouldn't allow them to marry on the basis that they are friends; it would allow them to marry because they can form the type of union that is essentially ordered towards procreation.
Heck - in many states, there's often nothing stopping one friend from adopting another. In some, you can even adopt someone who's older than you. Why do you think that there isn't an epidemic of adults adopting each other?
Utterly irrelevant.
That's just false. Individual citizens are part of the public. Even if a government measure does nothing more than making a few people a bit happier, then this itself is a public purpose.
This is just nonsense:
P1.) Individual citizens are part of the public.
P2.) Even if a government measure does nothing more than making a few people a bit happier...
C: Then this is itself a public purpose.
Also, in many countries that have foundational laws that prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender, restricting marriage to opposite-sex couples is illegal. Simply making sure that lower law doesn't violate higher law is a pretty important public purpose all by itself.
Again this is just a series of more non-sequiturs. I can hardly make sense of this. Do organize your thoughts so that I may interact with them.
It's almost a tautology that when two people have inexorably linked their lives together, they ought to be treated as if they've inexorably linked their lives together.
Again, this is just irrelevant and hardly something I can interact with. I don't have a clue what it is you're trying to say here.
Yeah... I don't support the abolition of marriage.
But you should if you think that marriage merely exists to recognize loving commitments as this recognizing loving commitments is of interest neither to state nor the public good.
Same-sex couples have children, too.
I'm trying to make sense of this. Surely you don't mean that same-sex couples literally procreated and have a child for this is impossible. So what you must mean is that, however it happens, some children have found themselves in the care of a same-sex couple. But then what is the point of noting that? I am (conditionally) opposed to same-sex adoption and am unconditionally opposed to surrogacy (or IVF).
Why do you want to have two legal tiers of family?
Again, what do you mean?
And please don't bring out that "single parent" red herring again. The law can't make a missing parent materialize. It can recognize the role a parent is having in the life of a child.
But the law can and should promote the ideal, viz. attaching children to their mother and father instead of detaching them.
Stop with the straw man. Not all loving relationships involve the linking of two lives to the extent that marriage does. Not all people in loving relationships would want marriage.
Point is, Penguin, that there is no non-arbitrary way to distinguish between which lovingly committed individuals to grant marriage to given your starting assumptions!
I find it hard to comprehend false, illogical arguments, so you may have to repeat it a few more times. :sarcastic
You are saying that the right to marry a woman should be allowed to men but denied to women. You are saying that the right to marry a man should be allowed to women but denied to men. On its face, this is discrimination on the basis of gender. Own up to your discriminatory position and defend it; don't pretend it's something it's not.
Lol this is just pathetic. You really cannot make this stuff up. Again ad nauseam: if marriage exists to attach mothers and fathers to their children and to one another, it makes absolutely no sense to declare that disallowing two men or two women to "marry" one another is discrimination. This is just utterly desperate.