You know, Sovereign Dream... I get the distinct feeling that what you truly want is to express your passionate feelings of rejection of what you see as illegitimate marriage.
Maybe it is unfair of me to think that, but it sure is how your writing comes across.
Expressing passionate feelings is all fair and good. I sure can't claim to never have needed it.
I will however advise you to attempt to seek either that expression or feedback from others at any given time. Seeking both at the same time is not likely to work well.
It is ok if you have to brace and shield yourself before asking for feedback. It
can be a taxing task, and all the more worthwhile for it.
Just try to be aware of whether you want to listen or to be heard at any given moment, and do not confuse the two if it turns out that you need to choose.
Alas the absurd is embraced. And not even consistently, at any rate.
It is true that many marriages are indeed absurd. Then again, it is a very personal matter, and it can be very difficult for those from outside to accurately tell whether any given pairing makes sense as a marriage or not.
See, the only reason that marriage has been limited to two people has been precisely because of the union between a man and a woman and its inherent link with children.
That may well be true for many people. It demonstrably isn't
always true.
You may attempt to show why it
should be always true, why such a conception of marriage centered on the idea of a nuclear family is definitely superior to all others. Assuming that anyone else takes that as a given is not likely to help your case, though.
Now, supporters of ssm will want to have nothing to do with talk of children and procreation (lest they admit that their position is groundless), so they will do away with any sort of procreative criterion. But there lies the rub; if you do away with the procreative criterion, then you have no non-arbitrary way to restrict "marriage" to just two people.
Marriages are always arbitrary. That is their reason for being, you know.
Heck, I often kid that all marriages are discriminatory. And it is true, too: one is hard-pressed to find even a single person who does not give differentiated treatment to his or her spouse
For, if marriage just is the recognizing of "loving commitments," then logic demands that, say, 5 individuals who are "lovingly committed" should be able to "marry."
Which they should. We will probably reach that point someday.
Indeed, there simply is no non-arbitrary way to disallow any conceivable configuration of individuals who are "lovingly committed" to be able to "marry."
Yep.
And that is not a problem.
So logic demands that you would be committed to, say, allowing 50 individuals who are "lovingly committed" to be able to "marry." Or the entire state of California to be able to "marry," and so forth. In principle, there would be no non-arbitrary basis for disallowing any conceivable configuration of individuals who are "lovingly committed" to "marry."
True.
Why does it incense you so much that marriages are inherently arbitrary?