Mike Riggs | October 15, 2008
Gay rights advocates fighting Proposition 8 in California have in their corner Fallout Boy, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the conservative Orange County Register, Google, the California Episcopal Church, and a handful of other notables; but who's donating face time on behalf of the anti-Amendment 2 crew in Florida? As of yesterday, Michael Schiavo. Remember him? He's the guy who wanted to remove his brain-dead wife's feeding tube, but—thanks in part to a network of moralizing meddlers—couldn't (then could, then couldn't, then did).
Schiavo's an interesting choice for Progress Florida, which has been the most vocal opponent of Amendment 2. He's more qualified than any celebrity to speak on the repercussions of government infringement in private matters, but I think he gives a lot of Floridians the willies. By the end of the Terri Schiavo case, most Floridians had at best a luke-warm attitude toward him even if they strongly agreed with his right to do what he did. Conservative "murder" rhetoric and 24-hour media coverage pushed a lot of moderates out of the debate, while stirring up the worst in civil libertarians and religious fundamentalists alike. I wonder if Yes2Marriage, the Christian group behind the proposition, is going to air any anti-Schiavo ads to rejuevenate its campaign?
The Schiavo spot [The best line, IMHO: "As a former Republican, I think if the people behind Amendment 2 really cared about respecting a legal marriage between husband and wife, they would've respected mine."]:
Sidenote: On a related post, a handful of commenters conflated lobbying for gay marriage rights with lobbying for expanded government powers. In response, I'd like to suggest that, because there is no viable movement to de-legislate state marriage licensing, gay marriage is an issue where libertarians should vote the lesser evil even if it means expanding government powers.
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"libertarians should vote the lesser evil even if it means
expanding government powers."
Are you fucking kidding me? This is why Reason has had NO impact on
reducing government size and power in the last 30 years.
I think this slogan needs some work--
Gay Marriage: Because someday, the only thing between you and a
huge insurance payout will be that dammed machine pumping life into
your former sex partner.
REASON is in the tank for Obama.The Illuminati must have promised them a privatized road,Whole Foods gift cards,cocaine,green Italian scooters or something.....
have in their corner Fallout Boy, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger
I was going to correct you and say that Arnold was Radioactive Man,
while Milhouse Van Houten played Fallout Boy.
But it was Rainier Wolfcastle, my bad.
It's not really increasing government power to remove an arbitrary restriction on property interests through marriage.
Are you fucking kidding me? This is why Reason has had NO
impact on reducing government size and power in the last 30
years.
Yeah, that's it, genius. The new guy at reason makes a suggestion,
and HE'S THE LONE CAUSE for your completely unprovable and
substance-less claim.
Thanks for that.
Regardless, I agree with Riggs' point; part of government's job is
contract enforcement. AFAICT, government moves to ban gay marriage
are actually denying homosexuals their right of contract.
Honestly, if you think that passing a law forbidding certain
people from entering into a certain kind of contract is a good way
to limit government power government power and promote liberty,
then you can go fuck yourself.
These propositions are about codifying hatred and bigotry and
nothing else.
have in their corner Fallout Boy
OT:
Version 3 of the best videogame of all time "Fallout" is on sale
10/28
Regardless, I agree with Riggs' point; part of government's job is contract enforcement. AFAICT, government moves to ban gay marriage are actually denying homosexuals their right of contract.
Bingo!! My only problem with this is the same I have with pot
legalization before total repeal of the WOsD. Once the largest
minority is no longer ostracized it will be harder for the rest to
gain equal footing (polygamy anyone?)
From a strictly libertarian POV we should be agitating for full
repeal of Government interference in personal contracts but to
ignore an option that will make things better because it's not
perfect is like voting against NAFTA because it's not fully free
trade.
Of course it doesn't prevent someone from entering into a
contract. If you want your gay partner to get your stuff, write a
will. If anything government recognition of marriage restricts your
freedom rather than expanding it. Right now you can write your gay
lover out of your will. Your wife or husband gets a forced share. I
suppose if you really are into it you could write a contract giving
them a forced share.
If you want your gay lover to make healthcare decisions for you,
you write a living will and get a power of attorney. Want them to
own half of what you own, put their name on the titles. Want to get
married? There are lots of churches that will do it, you just don't
get a license from the state.
The only thing you can't do is married filing jointly or put them
on your health insurance. Married filling jointly is a worse way to
file than single, so that is not much of a loss. Further, there is
plenty of insurance out there that covers "domestic
partners".
In the end the gay marriage debate is about a whole lot of nothing.
As a civil rights issue it is pretty far down the list. But since
it is about so little and the stakes are so low, people feel free
to get really angry about it.
That having been said, Schiavo is a hell of an odd choice. Also, could Florida antis not have found a number of more charismatic spokespersons?
The only thing you can't do is married filing jointly or put them on your health insurance.
Or allow them admittance to the ICU when you are on your deathbed.
Family members only (marriage is fine, living wills don't cut
it).
"'libertarians should vote the lesser evil even if it means
expanding government powers.'
nonPaulogist wrote: Are you fucking kidding me? This is why Reason
has had NO impact on reducing government size and power in the last
30 years."
First, you left off the first part of the sentence. It was kind of
important.
Second, government powers were expanded when interracial marriage
was allowed. Should libertarians be against this expansion of
powers?
Third, you are a terrible person and I don't understand how you
sleep at night.
Fourth, drink!
"Also, could Florida antis not have found a number of more
charismatic spokespersons?"
You mean like James J. Bullock?
"Or allow them admittance to the ICU when you are on your
deathbed. Family members only (marriage is fine, living wills don't
cut it)."
That is a total myth. One of my best friends died in an ICU and
several of his close friends were there to see him. Further, if
someone holds a healthcare power of attoney and is empowered to
make medical decisions for the person, no way in hell would a
hospital not let them into the room to see them and be with them.
Can you imagine the liability the hospital would be under if
someone started making decisions for someone when they hadn't ever
actually seen that the person was incapacitated? That is just
bullshit.
John: if the family members say that the gay lover has to go, he gets thrown out. If the family members say the wife has to go, tough shit for them. So it really isn't a myth.
The hospital has to remove someone from the ICU when the patient's family objects, even if the patient has granted health care power of attorney to the person? I'm still pretty skeptical about that.
The only thing you can't do is married filing jointly or put them on your health insurance
You're forgetting that whole bit about citizenship for your
foreign-born spouse
You're forgetting that whole bit about citizenship for your
foreign-born spouse
Bingo! Ask Rhywun about this. It's completely unfair and really,
really fucking heartless.
SIV | October 15, 2008, 1:02pm | #
REASON is in the tank for Obama.The Illuminati must have promised
them a privatized road,Whole Foods gift cards,cocaine,green Italian
scooters or something.....
Wow. The majority of the American people, Reason, and now the
Illuminati. You must feel really lonely and impotent, SIV. Maybe it
would help you feel better if you go out and buy some more nice,
stiff guns.
Lamar and John-
If the gay lover is the attorny-in-fact or the health care proxy,
the family has no power to exclude the gay lover. That is the
reality.
The reason a lot of states only allow heterosexual marriage is
because they have a vested interest in that couple's procreation.
Statistically, gays are a lot less likey to have any children. The
state filing allows married couples to receive, in essence,
subsidies from the states. The states don't want to give any money
to couples who won't make babies. This is the same as a ban on
siblings or cousins marrying.
That being said, the states should just stay out of marriage
altogether and return the responsibility to the churches (of any
denomination) or localities (if no denomination).
In the end the gay marriage debate is about a whole lot of nothing. As a civil rights issue it is pretty far down the list. But since it is about so little and the stakes are so low, people feel free to get really angry about it.
Being gay I find your argument complete shit. The word "marriage"
has a lot of legal meaning. Without that word - mine or my partners
parents can pretty much call the shots on any medical decisions or
how to divvy up the property. Writing contracts to prevent this has
already costs thousands of dollars and there is no guarantee it
will hold. Many hospitals will not recognize me unless I bring
documentation with me that proves that I have power of attorney (do
you carry your marriage certificate with you?). And lets talk about
Health Insurance for a moment - without the word "marriage" my
health insurance provided to me by my partners company is taxed as
income.
In Minnesota there are some 514 laws that govern marriage so to say
its "a little thing" shows you are completely ignorant of the
issue.
And if its so far down the "civil rights" list - then just give it
to us now.
Suppose you are the hospital administrator, the hospital CEO or
some other grand pubah, what are you going to do? Call the police
on the gay lover who just happens to be the attorney-in-fact and
the health care proxy and risk facing a multi-million dollar
lawsuit all to placate the bigoted family?
Yeah.
Codifying all of the benefits of a marriage certificate by
having a lawyer draw up all of the relevant contracts will cost
approximately $35,000.
It's real easy for you to say "Get a will, get a living will,"
John. Have you got thirty five grand lying around?
@Brandon
Ah the tired procreation argument. The state has a vested interest
in STABILITY not procreation. Marriage is a structure that promotes
stability.
Outside of that tired argument - I agree that the state should stay
out of it entirely.
@libertymike
They will prevent you from making life or death decisions regarding
your partner and in extreme cases from seeing your partner at all.
It has happened. It happens today. Which is why a few states have
passed laws to prevent it from happening.
"Codifying all of the benefits of a marriage certificate by
having a lawyer draw up all of the relevant contracts will cost
approximately $35,000."
That is a myth Joe. Yeah it would cost you $35,000 if you go to
Arnold and Porter to do it. You can do a living will off the
internet. Those documents are not that hard to do. Further, it is
not like married people don't have to do a living will either.
Since there is a good chance that if you are in a car accident or
some such your spouse will be with you and probably injured with
you, it is a good idea to have a living will even if you are
married.
This is not Jim Crow.
"If the gay lover is the attorney-in-fact or the health care
proxy, the family has no power to exclude the gay lover. That is
the reality."
Yeah, just hope that after the car crash you had enough time to go
home, get your paperwork, and make it back to the hospital before
he bleeds out. Face it: there is a reason that marriage is
important. It is a shorthand for all these contractual
relationships and they are presumed valid. Is a power of attorney
presumed valid when the lover claims to have such papers? What if
they are in Miami and the papers are in Tampa? Is he supposed to
run home and get them?
If gays can get all the same rights as a straight couple by a series of contracts, then what's the problem with allowing them to get civil unions? Isn't your opposition based on the belief that they shouldn't get the same rights?
libertarians should vote the lesser evil even if it means
expanding government powers.
It has probably already been said, but I will add on that expanding
government powers is always the greater eveil.
Two people want to enter into a certain kind of contract. The
government recognizes and enforces the contract. Is this not a
legitimate function of government?
How, then, is recognizing gay marriages an expansion of government
power?
It's not conflating the issues, and you concede as much in your last sentence. FAIL.
How, then, is recognizing gay marriages an expansion of
government power?
Because it's two penises and it's all icky.
Codifying all of the benefits of a marriage certificate by having a
lawyer draw up all of the relevant contracts will cost
approximately $35,000.
The first one costs 35k. Each additional one costs 6 cents per
page.
The state has a vested interest in STABILITY
This may be the single biggest problem our nation faces (not gay
marriage, but the state thinking they have an interest in
stability).
Hail Eris!
My favorite thing to say lately to those who'd say same sex
marriage is wrong (by Biblical standards) is this:
1 Timothy 4:1-5: Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter times
some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits
and doctrines of demons, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their
own conscience seared with a hot iron, forbidding to marry, and
commanding to abstain from foods which God created to be received
with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth. For
every creature of God is good, and nothing is to be refused if it
is received with thanksgiving; for it is sanctified by the word of
God and prayer.
I'm pretty much conservative, but I'm totally in favor of gay marriage. I say let them get married and have to hire a damn wallet-wiping attorney to get rid of each other like the rest of us do. And I'm tired of them getting insurance benefits for "life partners" at work without having to sell their souls and marry the damn partner.
do you carry your marriage certificate with you?
Im not married, but I have been carrying a wallet diploma around
with me for over 17 years. It was given to me by my Alumni
Association while I was waiting in line to enter graduation. It has
been in my wallet ever since (and I have changed wallets multiple
times). Once, it was actually useful.
In response, I'd like to suggest that, because there is no
viable movement to de-legislate state marriage licensing, gay
marriage is an issue where libertarians should vote the lesser evil
even if it means expanding government powers.
And I'd like to suggest that, because there is no viable movement
to eliminate Social Security, libertarians should support all of us
getting a check every month, even if it means increasing the
payroll tax.
Now, explain why supporting gay marriage is the lesser evil.
Obviously, societies have an interest in promoting hetero-sexual
relationships because in absence of them you don't have a society
for long. What is the comparable interest in promoting gay
relationships?
It's getting really tiring hearing the word "equal" proffered as an
answer to every argument in absence of any meaningful criteria for
quantifying "equal".
All men may be created equal, but their relationships certainly are
not. The law certainly doesn't treat churches as corporations or as
charities or as governments. Without the capacity to "discriminate"
between those relationships, no meaningful law is possible.
I don't have a problem with gay marriage. It breaks my heart to think of them not being able to fuss around planning weddings.
Codifying all of the benefits of a marriage certificate by having a lawyer draw up all of the relevant contracts will cost approximately $35,000.
Sure, the first time. Then you have a nice, form document where you
can insert specifics. This, by the way, is how 99+% of legal
documents are prepared, including documents much more complex than
these would be. I would estimate the total preparation cost for
each subsequent document to be less than $500. Nonetheless, I award
you an 8.7 for trolling.
Hogan,
It breaks my heart to think of them not being able to fuss
around planning weddings.
They can still do that. They just cant file paperwork with the
state afterword.
If
A: I ever find a woman to marry me
B: She is willing to go along with my crazy ideas
C: Our minister agrees
Then I wont be filing paperwork with the state when I get married
either. God is authorization enough for me.
If any of the latter 2 dont happen, I will follow the state's
procedures and grumble about it a lot.
shucks, I know robc. I had originally written out a real explanation of my opinion, but then just felt like makin that joke.
"And I'd like to suggest that, because there is no viable
movement to eliminate Social Security, libertarians should support
all of us getting a check every month, even if it means increasing
the payroll tax."
Nice try, but the gay marriage issue is more like saying, "Since
Social Security isn't going anywhere, can the government rightfully
deny blacks and women Social Security benefits."
Actually, isn't Social Security surviving spouse benefits something that a contract couldn't bestow that is automatic under marriage?
"Well I got rid of my teeth at a young age, because I'm
straight. Teeth are for gay people. That's why fairies come and get
'em."
"If teeth make me gay then sign me up, 'cause I wish I had
'em."
Of course it doesn't prevent someone from entering into a contract. If you want your gay partner to get your stuff, write a will. If anything government recognition of marriage restricts your freedom rather than expanding it. Right now you can write your gay lover out of your will. Your wife or husband gets a forced share. I suppose if you really are into it you could write a contract giving them a forced share.
Right now, if some dude dies, whatever estate passes to his
(female) wife goes there tax free no matter how much it is.
If some dude with a male wife (or whatever you want to call it)
dies, and his estate is over something like $2 million, the estate
tax takes a big bite out of it, unless you do a convoluted and
expensive estate tax planning. (which can't worked around
everything)
Power of Attorney and Health Care Proxies do not guarantee the
rights of gay (or unmarried heterosexual) couples. Miami's Jackson
Memorial Hospital is being sued for denying a lesbian woman access
to her partner despite having all the recommend legal "contracts"
in place. She was told by the hospital staff she was in an
"anti-gay city and state". Her parter died without she and their
children by her side.
This is more than a civil rights issue, it is a human rights issue.
To muse on about this issue without taking into account the real
toll on human dignity is absurd and insulting.
Ask Rhywun about this. It's completely unfair and really, really fucking heartless.
Fuck it--I'm not wasting my time on ANOTHER gay marriage thread.
Either you get it or you don't.
Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital is being sued for denying
a lesbian woman access to her partner despite having all the
recommend legal "contracts" in place. She was told by the hospital
staff she was in an "anti-gay city and state". Her parter died
without she and their children by her side.
it is definitely a hospital-by-hospital thing.
i hope they burn in fucking hell for that. politics is politics and
all but that's fucking horrendous.
The gay marriage thing doesn't get me fired up. It's a small
expansion of government power, nowhere near the order of magnitude
of all these bailouts. I don't vote for or against politicians
based on their stance on this issue, unless they take the totally
libertarian stance of no government involvement whatsoever, in
which case they're probably going to be libertarian on lots of
other issues, too, and get my vote anyway.
That being said, I don't believe in giving government more
arbitrary power over us, to pick and choose which groups get
special privileges and which groups don't. And that is SO what the
conservatives AND liberals are fighting about, both wanting their
people to get privileges while excluding others.
The points that have been raised about ICU visitation and all that
-- I'm all for expanding the right of consenting adults to enter
into mutually beneficial contractual agreements. Put the right to
enter into such contractual agreements on a ballot, while steering
clear of government recognition of gay marriages, and it gets my
vote.
Put a measure on the ballot for the state to recognize gay
marriages, but not polygamous marriages -- i.e., every such measure
ever proposed, IIRC -- I vote against it.
Put a measure on the ballot for the state to recognize gay
marriages, polygamous marriages, or any other marriage arrangement
between two or more consenting adults, and I'd have to think about
it, but I'd be inclined to vote for that, despite the greater power
granted to government, because then EVERYONE who wanted to enter
into such contracts would get to, not just politically power
groups.
Re this: "Ask Rhywun about this. It's completely unfair and really,
really fucking heartless."
What I'd like to ask Rhywun is why every single ballot proposal
I've ever seen to legalize gay marriage does not address polygamous
marriage. If you're claiming the fucking moral high ground while
refusing those rights to a less politically powerful group, you're
being at best clueless and at worst a hypocrite.
prolefeed - because they want those ballot initiatives to pass? I personally agree that any consenting adults should be allowed to enter into whatever marriage contracts they desire. That does not mean I don't recognize that such a law would have a much, much harder time passing than one limited to gay marriage.
why every single ballot proposal I've ever seen to legalize gay marriage does not address polygamous marriage
Why stop at polygamy? Why not incest or bestiality? Is there any
sort of "relationship" that gays are not required to support in
order to get your blessing? Or are you just being disingenuous?
To: prolefeed
I am not aware of any ballot measures to "recognize" same-sex
marriage, only measures to ban them, and prematurely in most cases
since many states already have laws forbidding same-sex
marriage.
I kindly suggest that one who makes such forceful arguments on an
issue which, as a reader might reasonably infer by your comments
has little direct impact on your personal life, either make and
effort to understand the ballot question at hand and vote
responsibly or exercise one's right not to vote on the issue.
If one is to vote on the personal lives and rights of one's fellow
citizens (itself a great injustice for which this country ought be
ashamed) it is, in my humble opinion, one's moral responsibility to
be familiar with what is at stake with one's vote.
These votes are about real people, not politial or religious
concepts.
Concepts make for lively discussion, but your vote has consequences
for your neighbors and possibly (or likely) members of your own
family. What do you cherish more, a concept or the dignity of human
beings?
Some gay people thank God every day for not having the right to get married - "Gee, I'd love to sweetheart, but the man says no". Others aren't as sharp.
The state filing allows married couples to receive, in
essence, subsidies from the states. The states don't want to give
any money to couples who won't make babies.
Then why not ban marriage for anyone sterile, like women who are
post-menopausal or post-hysterectomy or people with their tubes
tied?
Statistically, gays are a lot less likely to have any
children.
Easing adoption rules would go a long way to fix that. And
prohibiting gay couples from marrying won't get society any more
children.
Obviously, societies have an interest in promoting
hetero-sexual relationships because in absence of them you don't
have a society for long.
Bogus. While it's true that a society without H/S relationships
won't produce children, I fail to find any situation in recorded
history where government needed to provide any encouragement to get
people to have sex.
Obviously, societies have an interest in promoting
hetero-sexual relationships because in absence of them you don't
have a society for long.
That's an awfully big "obviously". Oh, look, LarryA said it
first:
While it's true that a society without H/S relationships won't
produce children, I fail to find any situation in recorded history
where government needed to provide any encouragement to get people
to have sex.
I have a theory that everyone who opposes gay marriage does so
because deep down inside, the only thing preventing them from
dumping their wives, covering themselves with glitter, and
buggering that hot pool boy, Ramon, is the knowledge that no matter
how well things went, he and Ramon could never be married. They
therefore naturally assume that the same is true of absolutely
everyone else.
I fail to find any situation in recorded history where
government needed to provide any encouragement to get people to
have sex.
My city council has a "Rock Out With Your Cock Out" night.
Bogus. While it's true that a society without H/S
relationships won't produce children, I fail to find any situation
in recorded history where government needed to provide any
encouragement to get people to have sex.
Getting them to have sex isn't the problem. Getting them to take
responsibility for the offspring produced thereby has typically
been a little more problematic. Believe it or not, gratifying your
dick isn't the end-all and be-all rationale for this particular
institution.
Why stop at polygamy? Why not incest or bestiality? Is there
any sort of "relationship" that gays are not required to support in
order to get your blessing? Or are you just being
disingenuous?
So, Rywhun, if I were to marry another woman, you would class that
as being in a class of immorality comparable to bestiality, and far
less moral than a same-sex relationship?
You would be OK with me going to jail for that?
Do you see how it is maybe not disingenuous to oppose government
expansions of power, especially to extend special privileges to one
class of citizens not available to others?
I kindly suggest that one who makes such forceful arguments on
an issue which, as a reader might reasonably infer by your comments
has little direct impact on your personal life, either make and
effort to understand the ballot question at hand and vote
responsibly or exercise one's right not to vote on the issue.
If one is to vote on the personal lives and rights of one's fellow
citizens (itself a great injustice for which this country ought be
ashamed) it is, in my humble opinion, one's moral responsibility to
be familiar with what is at stake with one's vote.
These votes are about real people, not politial or religious
concepts.
Concepts make for lively discussion, but your vote has consequences
for your neighbors and possibly (or likely) members of your own
family.
Minister in CT -- are you suggesting that because this issue isn't
my top priority for deciding which politicians to vote against,
that I somehow don't have a philosophy about it, and haven't given
it a lot of thought?
I also don't care as much about guns as I do about economic issues,
so since I take the same position on guns as I do gays -- that it
is none of the government's business at all, and that they should
butt out entirely and leave us all alone -- that I haven't given my
views on the Second Amendment much thought either?
Or are you saying that because I don't agree with you, that I
couldn't possibly have given this much thought? Are you implying
that only people who agree with you are thoughtful?
What do you cherish more, a concept or the dignity of human
beings?
A false dichotomy. The right philosophical concepts tend to lead to
the greater dignity for human beings. The wrong concepts can lead
to less dignity. So, I cherish both human beings and the concepts
that allow those human beings to lead lives with the most
freedom.
"I am not aware of any ballot measures to "recognize" same-sex
marriage, only measures to ban them, and prematurely in most cases
since many states already have laws forbidding same-sex
marriage."
To what extent that's occurring is an attempt to pre-empt the
state's courts from imposing homosexual marriage by judicial fiat.
It's a direct consequence of the fact that gay activists have been
trying to get the result they want through the judicial rather than
the legislative branch.
It's not that hard to understand the difference in the state's
interest as concerns polygamous relationships vs. homosexual
relationships.
Marriage as it currently exists is simply a package of contractual
and other legal rights that we slap a label onto: next-of-kin
status, inheritance rights, etc. It's a binary relationship in
which each party is equally entitled/obligated to the other, which
is simple. And as we all know, Government is Stupid.
Expanding the availability of this package of rights to homosexual
couples doesn't really give Mungo, er, I mean, Government much new
to sort out.
Adding even one more partner to the relationship complicates things
considerably, however. Are all three equally partners with each
other? What if one is the secondary wife and one is the primary
wife? Do two men share one woman equally while not being partnered
to one another? Suddenly it gets a lot more complicated to
arbitrate in the event of polygamous marriage dissolution. Not to
mention the tax implications of an indeterminate number of people
being able to band together to trade inheritances, file taxes as a
household, not testify against each other in a criminal
trial...
...Polygamous groups don't need marriage; they need Articles of
Incorporation- it's not that I oppose consenting adults living
together in whatever combination they see fit, it's that government
can't suss out the boundaries of that relationship with one
one-size-fits-all civil contract.
I think the Rondroid who responded first misunderstood -- that
happens with them a lot. The "expanded government" referred to was
allowing gays to marry. I think that the Mr. Riggs used bad
language that miscommunicated what he was saying. But the last
people who should be upset are the Rondroids. After all, if
marriage is big government at work then why did St. Ron marry his
wife and stayed married to her for all these years? Or is as evil
as they want to say REASON is???
There is no expansion of government power in allowing gays to
marry. All the powers remain. It just allows a group of people who
couldn't marry to make that choice. Since marriage is voluntary no
is being subjected to those marriage laws except by choice -- would
that taxes be the same.
And some of the reactions (the proper term) are just bizarre. Once
someone starts ranting about the Illuminati I have to pull out my
Thomas Szasz and reconvince myself about the myth of mental
illness.
John, who say gay couples can contract their rights, simply don't
understand the magnitude of the problem that gay couples face. It
can't be done. No private contract will allow a gay person to bring
a foreign partner to the US. No private contract can grant the same
right to "not testify" against a spouse. And does anyone have any
idea how many contracts would be required and how many issues need
to be covered?
Even couples who have jumped through these very expensive hoops,
that straights don't have, sometime miss a contigency or don't
think of some unsual set of circumstances. And contracts can be
challenged by "family" in ways that marriage can't. Until
libertarians, who argue against gay marriage, begin divorcing their
partners, I don't take thems seriously. Most of them are married. A
few aren't but they are often so antisocial they don't have anyone
in their life let alone a spouse.
The fallacy in the social security counterargument is obvious.
Social security is mandatory to pay in. Marriage is not mandatory.
So no one is subjected to marriage laws except by choice. Yes, if
social security denied benefits to gays, but they are forced to pay
for it, they should collect. (And they can't collect the same way
straight couples can.). What we have is a lot of people arguing for
the status quo which just happens to give them the same
"privileges" which they want to deny to gays. Yet they are happy to
accept these things for themselves with various arguments
justifying it. If govt. is involved in such matters then it
shouldn't discriminate against gays. Equality before the law and
then lets work together to abolish the bad interventions.
MJ
People tend to cry court activism or judicial fiat when the courts
rule in a way with which they disagree.
The courts, as a co-equal branch of government are not imposing
anything. They are doing what courts are supposed to do... deciding
if current laws violate constitutional rights.
The amendment process cuts the courts out of the equation and lets
citizens, whether informed, apathetic, or ill-informed, rule by
popular vote, the very scenario the founders of this nation sought
to temper by making the courts a co-equal branch of government.
if I were to marry another woman, you would class that as being in a class of immorality comparable to bestiality, and far less moral than a same-sex relationship?
I assume you mean a second woman? No, I do not equate all the
permutations--that's my whole point. You WANT me to, in order to
gain your support for gay marriage. If you want to marry a second
woman, that's your fight, not mine. Again, my point is that
polygamy is no more comparable to gay marriage than the other
permutations that are often dragged out in this discussion, like
bestiality.
Do you see how it is maybe not disingenuous to oppose government expansions of power, especially to extend special privileges to one class of citizens not available to others?
No, because I don't think it's (a) a "special privilege" or (b) an
"expansion of power". Again, you're equating all possible
permutations of "relationship".
On Schiavo, you're discounting the very valid arguments coming
from those against pulling out life support for Terri (who was,
BTW, *NOT* brain dead, just in pervasive vegetative state). Terri
Schiavo was still alive when the courts decided that nutrients and
water isn't suitable for her, only because of her non-written
end-of-life wish testified by her husband and sister-in-law.
The courts should have erred in the side of caution and not taken
the testimony of a man who have clearly moved on and his sister,
and give custody to Terri's parents. That's the least intrusive way
to go about it, the one most consistent with the harm
principle.
And just because most who advocated Terri's continued existence
feel that this arguments is most consistent with what God tells
them doesn't discount these arguments or make them a few steps
short of some brutish, anti-liberty theocracy-supporters.
In response, I'd like to suggest that, because there is no
viable movement to de-legislate state marriage licensing, gay
marriage is an issue where libertarians should vote the lesser evil
even if it means expanding government powers.
I do not see any "viable" movement to legalize
marijuana- so, libertarians should probably just support every
possible excuse for drug testing and mandatory Gov't
rehab as a 'lesser evil' even if it means expanding Gov't
powers...
"Or allow them admittance to the ICU when you are on your deathbed. Family members only (marriage is fine, living wills don't cut it)."
That is a total myth. One of my best friends died in an ICU and several of his close friends were there to see him.
Actually, you're wrong.
If your best friend's parents didn't want those other friends in
the ICU, they wouldn't have been allowed.
I am gay, and I have no doubt my parents would be happy to let my
partner visit me in the hospital; but if I had a set of parents who
were anti-gay, they'd be perfectly within their legal rights to
deny my partner the right to visit me in the hospital, and there'd
be little to nothing he could do about it.
On the subject of wills, there have been cases when judges ruled in
the immediate family's favor when one partner left his stuff to the
other. You get an anti-gay family that pushes hard enough, and they
can have the wishes in a will nullified.
"I do not see any "viable" movement to legalize marijuana-
so, libertarians should probably just support every possible excuse
for drug testing and mandatory Gov't rehab as a 'lesser evil' even
if it means expanding Gov't powers..."
This makes no sense. How does this analogy hold up? What is the
greater evil in your hypothetical? Jail for 20 years vs. mandated
rehab? Hmmm, let me think about which one libertarians would
favor.....
"Your wife or husband gets a forced share."
Not everywhere, friend. You can write your spouse out of your will,
too. They get the "forced share" if you die intestate.
"In the end the gay marriage debate is about a whole lot of
nothing. As a civil rights issue it is pretty far down the list.
But since it is about so little and the stakes are so low, people
feel free to get really angry about it."
So says Marie Antoinette.
Only a heterosexual who actually has marriage rights would say such
a thing. First, if it's a whole lot of nothing, then why not grant
us marriage rights? Shouldn't be a problem if it means
nothing.
Second, you are actually wrong -- it does mean a whole of of
something. With regards to rights, you have certain constitutional
rights when you are married, you have rights to your spouses social
security, certain taxes rights and so on that ONLY come with
marriage. There are in fact about a thousand rights and advantages
that only marriage can confer.
"John, who say gay couples can contract their rights, simply
don't understand the magnitude of the problem that gay couples
face. It can't be done."
True. First, there is the enormous cost of drafting up all those
contracts, and it can be different in each state. What if I travel
to another state? I should keep 50 different contracts on every
single aspect of our lives in the car just in case? What if we get
into a car accident, and I left the living will papers and so on at
home? Or I can't find them? Why should I have to go through that
burden when it can be eliminated with a simple: We're
married.
Sorry, but denying gays marriage is just about some fear that gays
.. . . just shouldn't get married.
"Believe it or not, gratifying your dick isn't the end-all and
be-all rationale for this particular institution."
ah yes. Gays only want to get married so that we can have sex. Like
we can't have it at all without marriage!
Thanks for hitting the nail on the head, so to speak. The fear
about gays getting married is that they will just have sex and not
children, and that's just not fair!
"All men may be created equal, but their relationships certainly
are not. The law certainly doesn't treat churches as corporations
or as charities or as governments. Without the capacity to
"discriminate" between those relationships, no meaningful law is
possible."
This statement, of course, wins the prize for the most ridiculous
bit of sophistry!
All married couples have different relationships. Some marry for
love, some marry for money, some for the citizenship, some because
there was no one better to marry, and many other reasons. Heck,
some people get married interfaith and/or interracial! We should
therefore discriminate among all those different relationships, or
else the whole concept of marriage is not possible.
But somehow, it still is. Now why is that?
And worse -- Massachusetts has had gay marriage for several years
now. So has Canada, S. Africa, Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands.
I guess, according to you, there is no possibiolity in those places
for a meaningful law regarding marriage. Please tell us how society
survives in those places.
"If the gay lover is the attorny-in-fact or the health care
proxy, the family has no power to exclude the gay lover. That is
the reality."
Not exactly true. A gay couple had all the paperwork, yet one died
in the hospital and was buried according to his wishes. The family
has sued the surviving partner to have their son reburied and to
deny him his rights under the will. They have lost in every court,
yet the legal fees have left him bankrupt, and he might give up for
lack of funds to continue to defend himself. So the family may win
*despite* having the attorney in fact and the health care proxy,
and the will and everything else.
That is the reality when you don't have gay marriage.
This issue illuminates the classic cosmotarian/paleolibertarian divide. For cosmos the moral imperative is about equal protection under the law. For the paleos, the more important issue is that the law itself is morally repugnant. Calling each other names isn't really going to get us anywhere. Just accept the fact that paleos are more radical in their defense of liberty and aren't going to support pro-state measures no matter how pretty the dress you put them in.
"That is a total myth. One of my best friends died in an ICU and
several of his close friends were there to see him. Further, if
someone holds a healthcare power of attoney and is empowered to
make medical decisions for the person, no way in hell would a
hospital not let them into the room to see them and be with them.
Can you imagine the liability the hospital would be under if
someone started making decisions for someone when they hadn't ever
actually seen that the person was incapacitated? That is just
bullshit."
***************************************
Wrong. It depends on the state you live in, and also what judge you
go before if it gets that far. Families here in Greensboro, NC,
have successfully denied hospital visitation or decision making to
domestic partners of sick or injured glbt adult children. The paper
here has reported that in some cases, gay partners have not even
been allowed to know where their loved ones have been buried.
I personally know of glbt people who have gone through the
paperwork, hired the lawyers and signed the dotted line...and still
get sued by vengeful family members when a partner dies. Again,
depending on the state and the judge, I know of glbt people who
have literally been thrown off their own property after a judge
awarded it to the blood relatives of the deceased and disregarded
the power of attorney and will etc between the domestic
partners.
There is no substitute for marriage.
People keep calling the allowing of gay marriages an expansion
of state power.
What about this:
If gay marriages are illegal, then it means that the state has the
power to restrict a certain class of people from entering into a
certain type of contract. Specifically, homosexuals are restricted
from entering into a matrimonial contract with the person of their
choosing.
Absent any compelling interest involving protection of rights
(e.g., protecting minors from being coerced into such a contract),
I don't want the state to have that power, to enforce such
a restriction. Just like I don't want them to have the power to
restrict interracial couples from marrying. Recognition of gay
marriage is not an expansion of state power, it is a
contraction of state power.
John-
I am a registered nurse and I can vouch from personal experience
that if people in the hospital don't like you- you will not see a
patient and having a Medical Power of Attorney means very little.
They can make you bring a new copy every time you request to see
the patient, they can make you get it notarized every day, they can
tell you that you need to have the copy approved by Risk Management
(who if often gone after hours). Hospitals are pretty confident
that a jury of 12 will have at least one person who hates gays. If
you are gay, then your family will make your medical decisions.
Period. If your parent disagrees with your idea of end of life care
your best bet is to give a MPOA to a sibling. Giving to your gay
spouse- useless. You might as well give it to your dog. Also, there
are many rights that you can not arrange by contract. The biggest
difference is Probate. As spouse does not have to inherit, because
the assets are held jointly, upon death the spouse has access to
everything immediately. If you die and leave something to someone
in your will the estate needs to be settled in probate court which
can take YEARS! By the time you get access back to the house you
lived in or the cars, business ect over a year may pass. And that
is if the executor didn't take tons of fees and create obstacles.
Also spousal privilege, pensions, insurance and the ability to
transport your body back home if you die on a trip- just a few of
the things you can not arrange with contracts. Shiavo is a saint.
He went to nursing school to learn how to take care of his sick
wife. He brought her to a program in California for rehabilitative
care. He came to see her everyday until she died. When was the last
time most of you guys did something so selfless for your
spouse?
"""The courts should have erred in the side of caution and not
taken the testimony of a man who have clearly moved on and his
sister, and give custody to Terri's parents."""
Courts shouldn't err. They should follow the law. If you are
married, your spouse gets to make those decisions. Your over 18 and
no longer live at home so your parents don't count.
I'll tell you what destroys marriage, divorce.
Since I don't hear anyone defending marriage from divorce, I can't
take you seriously as a defender of marriage.
What..hhahah Michael Schiavo....who cares what he thinks or if
he thinks..he sure isnt a poster child for marriage of any
kind...
Come on guys, you can think you want if your an adult you should be
able to love whomever you want. Marriage allows you to leave what
you want to a person you have built a life with.
But as foe Michael Shiavo....shut up
" Just accept the fact that paleos are more radical in their
defense of liberty and aren't going to support pro-state measures
no matter how pretty the dress you put them in."
Yup. Always easy to deny someone else their rights. You can dress
it up in high minded sophistry, but it all comes down to denying a
right that you have to another person.
When the paleos find a cause whereby they are willing to give up a
basic right in defense of liberty, then I'll believe that they
actually mean what they say. Until then, it's just a whole lot of
BS.
Any medical professional needs to understand that refusing to
obey a power of attorney for health care is considered a willful
(not negligent) decision under their professional insurance.
In other words they've assumed unlimited personal liability for
their actions - in most states, their wages can be garnished for
the rest of their life.
As the Schiavo case shows, marriage doesn't mean squat when there
is a controversy over care.
Gay or straight, if you don't have advanced directives (health care
POA & durable POA), you face even more expensive options
later.
Obtaining guardianship is not cheap, and there's always the
possibility of a decade-long court fight like with the Terri
Schiavo case.
Given their earliest testimony, I have no doubt that her parents
would still have challenged a written advanced directive, but the
court fight would have been relatively short.
That is the reality when you don't have gay
marriage.
Let's straighten out the distinction between traditional marriage
and gay marriage.
Traditional marriage: An institutional concession to a biological
imperative. I expect I'm pretty safe in assuming that everyone
reading this is the product of a hetero-sexual relationship.
Society provides a mechanism for protecting hetero-sexual
relationships for the simple reason hetero-sexual relationships are
necessary for the survival of society itself.
Gay marriage: A political sop to an interest group for a type of
relationship that in 10,000 years of trying hard, has demonstrated
exactly zero benefits to society. Essentially a demand that a
relationship of exactly no value to society be regarded as equal to
one that society couldn't exist without, or, in other words, a
demand of something for nothing. Generally a cause celebre with
trendy liberals and cosmotarians eager to demonstrate their
enlightenment and tolerance.
The takeaway: anytime you hear the words "enlightened" and
"tolerant", reach for your revolver.....
Horselips: So you've demonstrated that you have no respect for
gays. Great. But you haven't said anything about why society should
NOT recognize gay marriages, just as they have in Massachusetts,
Canada, Spain, S. Africa, Belgium and the Netherlands.
If we are so inconsequential, then why oppose us? Even if
everything you say is true, allowing gay marriage won't affect
traditional marriage on iota. Gay and straight marriage can and
does exist together.
Unless, of course, you have any evidence that in Mass and those
other countries that traditional marriage can't live with gay
marriage.
But I think you will find that most gay people will deeply resent
your characterization of our relationships as having no value. When
two people love each other and pledge their lives together, there
certainly is value there, even if you are so blind you can't see
it.
a type of relationship that ... has demonstrated exactly
zero benefits to society
Attaboy. We libertarians respond so well to appeals to the
"benefit to society". We totally emphasize collective,
societal benefit over the benefit to the individuals who are
party to the relationship, don't we?
Attaboy. We libertarians respond so well to appeals to the
"benefit to society". We totally emphasize collective, societal
benefit over the benefit to the individuals who are party to the
relationship, don't we?
Nobody is telling you what kind of relationships you can form. If
you have such a contempt for society, then why are you appealing to
it for recognition of your relationship? We're not interfering with
your freedom to form a relationship. You're attempting to interfere
with our freedom to assign a value to it, and respond to it based
on the value we assign to it.
And I'm not a libertarian. Libertarianism demands reality be
discounted in the service of it's dogma. The way I see it, when a
political philosophy comes into conflict with reality, it
discredits the political philosophy. It doesn't discredit
reality.
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