angellous_evangellous said:
I don't know if the ethical problems associated with homosexual marriage have been discussed.
I misunderstood this post when first reading it. I see no problem for anyone with same-gender marriages.
1) We need to respect eachother's life plans and goals in a free society, as long as the goals do no harm to society. We only get one shot at life that we really know of (irregardless of what you think of the afterlife, we only really know for sure that we need to make the best of this life), so we need to respect what others are trying to do with their lives.
Agree completely.
2) Homosexuals are prevented from very practical rights: hospital visitation and health insurance.
I have seen references to this "hospital visitation" thing before, but now it's about time that I get an explanation. Please tell me, if the USAmerican laws forbids friends, neighbours, Christian volunteers, Red Cross volunteers and whoever, to visit hospitalized persons? That seems incredibly cruel and unnecessary to me.
Once upon a time, when I was a young Christian, on Saturdays some of us used to visit elderly people who weren't able to go to church. We, sometimes 8 or 10 of us, went out in twos and sang a couple of hymns and read one of the Sunday texts. It would have been rather equally possible that we had decided to visit hospitalized persons who did'nt receive visits from relatives. If we had, we would have raised the hell we then believed in, if we had been denied visitation rights.
Another case: one neighbour has had a couple of heart attacks. I find it just impossible that anyone would have tried to prevent me visiting him during his hospitalizations.
My mother (88) had a stroke last year. During the, fortunately, few days she was in hospital, why shouldn't friends and neighbours or whoever be allowed to visit her?
The reason that I got to writing this time is probably that a former fiancée of mine two weeks ago had a complicated operation in a major neck artery. For several reasons, to which she fully agrees, I didn't go to the country where she lives, but I sure would have wanted to be there during her recovery. She's rather all right now, BTW. If I had decided to go there, I would have fought to be admitted.
Finally on this matter, one of the most positive experiences in my life was when I fell ill in India during a course in Hindi. When I was in hospital, receiving IV infusions of several kinds for 8 hours, my classmates visited me. I was 59 years old at the time, and the six of them were girls of some 25 to 35 years. Imagine what I would have thought, if they had been denied access!
I know nothing about insurance in Sweden. It seems that people with an active HIV infection can't get a life insurance. But such decisions are founded on very clever statistics, so it's hard to argue against insurance companies.