Gay marriage legalised in the whole US by the supreme court

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Anyone else still wondering if koolpc is still on the wind up? I thought he was trolling at first, but my opinion has changed somewhat. I'll keep it to myself though, one suspension a month is enough .
 
Great news, everyone deserves the chance to be married and live a happy life, who cares if its 2 guys, 2 girls or whatever!

Well, yes and no.

"Marriage" is a cultural/religious concept. As such it is sort of a club membership thing. It is wrong for the "State" to define what the rules for such club membership should be.

OTOH, there are serious practical issues here. While I do feel the the issue of "Gay Marriage" is forced and therefore wrong, I have absolutely no problem with the idea of Civil Partnerships, in deed, I feel that the scope of civil partnerships should go far wider than simply people who share a bed.

It is essentially about inheritance and tax liability.

These are not trivial issues!

For instance, If I chose to look after my elderly Mother, Live in her house, care for her needs (And all that) then I think I should have the same tax free inheritance rights rights as a "Civil Partner". Civil Partnerships should encompass this sort of situation too.
 
Well, yes and no.

"Marriage" is a cultural/religious concept. As such it is sort of a club membership thing. It is wrong for the "State" to define what the rules for such club membership should be.

OTOH, there are serious practical issues here. While I do feel the the issue of "Gay Marriage" is forced and therefore wrong, I have absolutely no problem with the idea of Civil Partnerships, in deed, I feel that the scope of civil partnerships should go far wider than simply people who share a bed.

It is essentially about inheritance and tax liability.

These are not trivial issues!

For instance, If I chose to look after my elderly Mother, Live in her house, care for her needs (And all that) then I think I should have the same tax free inheritance rights rights as a "Civil Partner". Civil Partnerships should encompass this sort of situation too.

Since the whole argument is over a single word (and that is what it's about, as shown by civil partnerships in the UK), the simplest solution is to stop using the word.

'marriage' slops three different things together, so why not label them as the different things that they are?

1) Personal. Vows to each other. Call it 'wedding', since that means 'to vow'. This would have no legal status and would be open to any adults.

2) Legal. State recognition of a formalised private relationship. Call it 'civil partnership' as that's what it is. This is where all the legal rights and responsibilities would be. It would be open to whoever the government decides it would be open to. Personally, I think you're right about how the scope of civil partnerships should be wider.

3) Religious. A religious organisation granting approval of the relationship. Call it whatever they like (as long as it isn't something intended to be misleading). 'blessing', maybe. This would have no legal status and would be open to whoever any religious organisation decides it would be open to.

Simple, accurate and fair. So it's useless to people who want a fight and won't happen any time soon if ever.
 
For instance, If I chose to look after my elderly Mother, Live in her house, care for her needs (And all that) then I think I should have the same tax free inheritance rights rights as a "Civil Partner". Civil Partnerships should encompass this sort of situation too.

nopt really cause thatwould just become an inheritence tax doge.

the partners should get the inheritence because its unepected for one to sudenly die on the other and they';re luikley to need the aditional finance.


normal;y p[eople are expected to outlive thier parents by a good few decades so there no reaon to cut inhreetence tax just because yo still live at home.
 
In a statement released Friday, the president of the American College of Pediatricians said the Supreme Court’s decision to legalize same-sex marriage will have a significantly negative impact on children in the United States.

Dr. Michelle Cretella, president of the College, said:

[T]his is a tragic day for America’s children. The SCOTUS has just undermined the single greatest pro-child institution in the history of mankind: the natural family. Just as it did in the joint Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton decisions, the SCOTUS has elevated and enshrined the wants of adults over the needs of children.

The College, which has members in 44 states and in several countries outside the U.S., joined in an amici brief in Obergefell v. Hodges, the case that has led to the legalization of same-sex marriage in all 50 states of the nation.

In the brief, the amici stated what is often the case when sound research is ignored by the left when it fails to support their causes:

Despite being certified by almost all major social science scholarly associations—indeed, in part because of this—the alleged scientific consensus that having two parents of the same sex is innocuous for child well-being is almost wholly without basis. All but a handful of the studies cited in support draw on small, non-random samples which cannot be extrapolated to the same-sex population at large. This limitation is repeatedly acknowledged in scientific meetings and journals, but ignored when asserted as settled findings in public or judicial advocacy.

The College itself has maintained that a significant body of research has demonstrated that “same-sex marriage deliberately deprives the child of a mother or a father, and is therefore harmful.”

http://www.breitbart.com/big-govern...ge-ruling-a-tragic-day-for-americas-children/
 

Just so that you are aware the American College of Pediatricians is not, as its name would suggest, just a professional body for US Paediatricians but a socially conservative organisation.

It is a political organisation not a scientific one, one with a specific Judeo Christian agenda that is Pro-Life and anti-homosexuality.

One of the problems of the internet is it provides too many easily accessible echo chambers for those that want their views confirmed rather than challenged.
 
"The College itself has maintained that a significant body of research has demonstrated that “same-sex marriage deliberately deprives the child of a mother or a father, and is therefore harmful.” - What a load of rubbish.

For a start the debate around same sex marriage is not the same as the debate around same sex parenting, something which can occur inside or outside of marriage.

The entire basis of the argument is logically incoherent.

Just so that you are aware the American College of Paediatricians is not, as its name would suggest, just a professional body for US Paediatricians but a socially conservative organisation.

It is a political organisation not a scientific one, one with a specific Judeo Christian agenda that is Pro-Life and anti-homosexuality.

One of the problems of the internet is it provides too many easily accessible echo chambers for those that want their views confirmed rather than challenged.
Indeed.

Without even knowing the details on the American College of Paediatricians it's plainly obvious that their assertions fall flat under critical scrutiny.
 
nopt really cause thatwould just become an inheritence tax doge.

the partners should get the inheritence because its unepected for one to sudenly die on the other and they';re luikley to need the aditional finance.


normal;y p[eople are expected to outlive thier parents by a good few decades so there no reaon to cut inhreetence tax just because yo still live at home.


So, you are suggesting that the inheritance rules should be waived should the partners in a "marriage" be of significantly different ages (which is not uncommon)

Civil partnerships should be about people who choose to share their lives, not about people who simply share a bed. And that should include extended families in my book
 
As RDM pointed out there is a big difference between:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_College_of_Pediatricians

That one is a right-wing conservative group of nutters, and

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Academy_of_Pediatrics

That one is a professional academy of Pediatricians.

And specially for all the 'special' OCUK members who aren't the brightest buttons in the box (because let's face it they've done this several times before) paediatrics/pediatrics is about the provision of medical care to people under the age of 18 and nothing to do with kiddy-fiddlers ...
 
Well, in a sibling relationships there is a huge potential for the abuse of power in the case of older siblings/given authority by parents for one over another. A family is a hierarchy, it's also the environment in which different family members at times play the roles of teachers & guides.

There are not always ideal situations & some taboos are still socially useful to create a barrier to prevent abuse.

Not that it's relevant, it's largely red herring & a slippery slope fallacy.
 
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"Marriage" is a cultural/religious concept. As such it is sort of a club membership thing. It is wrong for the "State" to define what the rules for such club membership should be.

This was maybe true until the church which pays no tax to the state got marriage incorporated into the state to the extent that only married couples can receive certain financial benefits from the state or be allowed by the state to raise children as a family. Religion can't claim a monopoly on tax breaks or family, and they can no longer claim a monopoly on "marriage".

Further, the church does not even globally say marriage is between a man and a woman, many gay couples are religious and have religious weddings!!

Your argument is invalid, marriage most certainly is a matter for the state to define and they aren't defining it against the wishes of religion.
 
3) Religious. A religious organisation granting approval of the relationship. Call it whatever they like (as long as it isn't something intended to be misleading). 'blessing', maybe. This would have no legal status and would be open to whoever any religious organisation decides it would be open to.

Simple, accurate and fair. So it's useless to people who want a fight and won't happen any time soon if ever.

What absolute tosh, marriage pre dates religion, and in Christianity wasn't even official recognised till the council or Verona.
 
Not that it's relevant, it's largely red herring & a slippery slope fallacy.

Countries which allow incest between consenting adults include France, Spain, the Benelux and Portugal. Ok just a red herring & a slippery slope fallacy. :rolleyes:
 
Countries which allow incest between consenting adults include France, Spain, the Benelux and Portugal. Ok just a red herring & a slippery slope fallacy. :rolleyes:

Next stop on the progressive train is incest, all the same arguments apply and you can call Christians Bible bashers (but don't call Muslims quran bashers yet as that's islamophobia and we use it against oppressors)
Incest between children is illegal in those nations, not to mention many of those laws date back quite a long time & recent changes have actually tightened the law on the matter.

If you mean relationships between two consenting adults then in most nations that is indeed legal, but I fail to see how it's got anything to do with the legalisation of gay marriage.

Are you implying that if we legalise gay marriage we must therefore legalise everything without consideration to the potential risks? (Incest has fundamentally ingrained risks regarding the abuse of power due the he family dynamic & potential abuses of power), it's not straightforward like gay marriage which posses no additional risks compared to heterosexual relationships.

But what I do find telling is that you seem to believe them to be comparable.
 
What absolute tosh, marriage pre dates religion, and in Christianity wasn't even official recognised till the council or Verona.

I'm sure Angilion will be along to say but I didn't read it in that way, he isn't saying that marriage is specifically a religious issue but merely that there are three elements which are conflated in a typical marriage ceremony. There is a legal element - binding your worldly possessions together and setting up a legal relationship between the partners, there is a personal element - the commitment between partners but also there can be a religious element which is the partners being seen to be wedded together in the sight of their god.

Countries which allow incest between consenting adults include France, Spain, the Benelux and Portugal. Ok just a red herring & a slippery slope fallacy. :rolleyes:

If you want to present it as compelling evidence against homosexual marriage then you really need some evidence to link the two things because otherwise it could just be a slippery slope fallacy and irrelevant to the current topic. As already said there's also a lack of comparability here.
 
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