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Why does marriage matter?

The next four years will likely be a time of cultural battle over same-sex marriage.  Despite legislative victories like Proposition 8 in California,  it's likely that judicial fiat will overrule the desire of the people.  Worse, judicial rulings that overturn legislative bans on same-sex marriage summarily dismiss the ages old morality of West and East, as well as the learned morality and wisdom of the people.  The people, incidentally, who are considered unwashed, barbaric, judgmental masses when the vote the wrong way, but enlightened instruments of change when they vote correctly; in presidential elections, for instance.

But in contemplating all of this, I've realized something.  You see, there are often realities behind realities, and questions beyond questions.  And the question I have to ask is this:  if traditional morality is wrong, or oppressive, useless or outdated, then why the angst over same-sex marriage?  I mean this:  if homosexuals consider their activities to be morally reasonable because older forms of morality are outdated and pointless, then why does it matter if they are married or not?

Most persons, even most conservatives that I know, are willing to concede domestic partnership for the purposes of insurance, inheritance, next-of-kin, power of attorney and other such benefits and legalities.  Given that, why does it matter if a gay or lesbian couple is considered married?  Isn't marriage the domain of fundamentalists and right-wing conservative Christians?  And, even so, aren't we always reminded that even Christians suffer from divorces in their marriages?  Why does it matter at all?

I have a couple of ideas:

First, if national legislation deems same-sex couples married, then we all have to accept that legality.  If you can't win hearts and souls, you can always legislate acceptance, I suppose.

Second, if such occurs, and others speak against it, they will be deemed purveyors of hate speech.  So, tolerance of viewpoints and lifestyles will be ever-after a matter of fiat, not morality, not love, not true acceptance.

Third, and perhaps most controversial, everyone knows that old forms of morality aren't outdated and aren't worthless.  They are of inestimable value.  So, stricken with the internal dissonance that accompanies a lifestyle that is inherently in conflict with traditional morality and the traditional religions from which the morality springs, same-sex couples want to find a way to enjoy justification of their own lifestyles.  'Well look, I'm married, aren't I?  I'm moral, aren't I?  You can't judge me, can you?' 

Well, yes, we can.  We can love love them and must.  We can protect them from injustice and violence, for this is our duty for every citizen.  We can treat them as equal citizens, for they are and should always be.  But we can judge what we consider an immoral activity and we can refuse to approve of it by granting it legal acceptance.  This is not discrimination, but discretion.  And if it is discrimination, then we can no longer use infidelity as an argument in divorce proceedings, because all of the old moral orders that concern relationships and marriage will be apparently considered defunct.

So, the next time someone asks you about gay marriage, ask them this question:  'Why does it matter?'

I think it's a very relevant question.

 

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Reserve my room in the political prison

For years now, I've been telling friends that I fully expect to land in prison one day; not because I knock over liquor stores, steal cars, cheat on my taxes or make inappropriate advances towards young ladies.  No, I'll end up there because I have the wrong opinions.  Take this post, cut it out and put it in the time-capsule.  Because we'll have political prisons in this country; probably in my lifetime. 

Why is that?  Because the freedom to express ideas is no longer valued by those on the political left.  Ironically, free speech was a traditionally liberal idea, in the old, noble meaning of liberal as something which advanced human liberty.  Now, free speech is an annoyance.  There are constant attempts to circumvent the 'wrong' opinions, whether through things like the fairness doctrine,  through 'speech police' on university campuses or as in other countries such as Canada and the UK, by calling unpleasant speech a 'human rights' violation and offering fines and imprisonment to those who speak out in unwelcome ways.  Read a bit about columnist Mark Steyn and his struggles in the Great White North,  read about the European and Canadian tendency to prosecute pastors who speak out against homosexuality from the pulpit; if you do you'll know that trouble is a-brewin'. 

'But isn't that extreme?  Political prisons in the land of the free?'  Not a bit.  The reason I know is that I have tried to have conversations or correspondence with ardent liberals, and the interactions often end in shouting, profanity and the ubiquitous, inflammatory word 'whatever,' on the part of the so called progressive. 

Well, if these folks come to power, do you think they'll tolerate engaging and enlightened dialogue?  No, they'll fine first, then censure, then call for re-education and ultimately, for those of us who are 'hard cases,' they'll imprison.  The reason being, 'tolerance' doesn't exist.  And since a good society can't 'tolerate' the wrong opinions, the only way to manage those opinionated folks will be to lock them away and deny them access to other more enlightened humans, or to media outlets. 

If you think I'm wrong, that's fine.  Maybe I'm just too paranoid.  But go to a group of liberals and tell them you don't believe in anthropogenic global warming, tell them you think abortion is murder and tell them you think that homosexuals should not be allowed to marry or form civil unions because it violates scriptural guidelines. Tell them that any sex outside of marriage between a man and woman is sinful.  Tell them that profit is good and socialism is bad; and that you have the historical evidence to prove it. 

Then sit back and watch the lather form.  They won't pull out texts or articles.  For all their scientific atheism and love of rational thought, they won't refute you calmly, or engage in 'dialogue,' over a glass of Merlot while referring to scholarly articles.  They'll fairly explode. 

When intolerance of another opinion becomes that vicious, the only way people (without a spiritual bed-rock of concern for human equality) can manage it is to shut it up and put it away. 

So, reserve my room in the prison.  I think and say all of the wrong things.  And eventually, as is already happening in modern democracies elsewhere, people like me will end up in deep trouble. 

At least I won't have to worry about whether I put away enough money for retirement!

Edwin 



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