Sanctity Of Marriage Vs Gay Rights? Puleeeze!!!!!
This debate, regardless of where you are, and how your country weaves religion and law into the rights of it's citizens , is a multifaceted subject, much like a dice used in many gambling games (craps for instance). Let me get to what I mean.
Since I am from the USA, I will use my knowledge of this country and what I know, and my opinion about it all.
The USA was founded on puritan values when the pilgrims started coming over and creating a government to guide the people that resided there. Due to this, the USA is always having this issue with it's religious freedom, and its deep roots in religion. The pilgrims came to the USA to practice religion how they wanted without being told how to do it. So they created laws to prevent the government from telling them what to believe. This very basic legal building block has been eroding away on a very constant basis for quite sometime. With the two sides taking an ever increasing side to the religious implications to each subject. Take for instance the thread on Abortion that has been going on here on the boards.
So on with what I am getting at. You have people in the USA that do not want to be told what to do, what not to do, or how to live their lives. Yet these same people will jump up and down hold protests, have political rallies to convince whom ever is in power at the moment that what they believe should be forced on others. Gay marriage being the one we are talking about at the moment. On the one side you have people who think the legal coupling of two people is a religious institution. On the other side, you have those people who believe that two people who simply love each other should have the same legal rights as everyone else. Let's flip this entire box inside out. Let's say that Men and Women were not allowed to be married, and that them having any kind of relationship were simply for the procreation of mankind. Let's say that the legal coupling of people didn't have any roots in people aligning a civil matter very often conducted before a legal judge, and not a priest, was the only way to do things. That if a man and woman did fall in love, and wanted to get married, have legal rights to visit them when bedridden in a hospital, or during the untimely death, they felt should be entitled to any finical dependence they had grown to become accustomed to during their relationship.
Then you have the other side of this coin. You have the people who feel that not only should the government not tell us who to marry, but they feel that in no way should people and communities that want to observe the religious background of this country and say the pledge of allegiance be allowed to do so freely without offending some person that didn't live in their community. The people who want to remove any mention of god or religion in any form of government whatsoever. Do they have the right to remove your communities desire to have the ten commandments on the courthouse lawn?
So, it now becomes one of religious beliefs rather than legal basis. It actually has nothing to do with the sanctity of the marriage between man and women. It has nothing to do with marriage being of what is right or wrong. It simply comes down to the ability of others to accept people for who they are.
It has nothing to do with the stability of the realtionship, or basis in the tendency of a certain social group to abuse another. For we have many short term marriages, and far to many abusive fathers or mothers in an established marriage.
Let us ask one final question to those who should say that two people who love each other should not have the ability to get married. Are you going to be that person who throws the first stone, and judge your fellow man? Are you going to be that person who determines the happiness of another human being simply because of how you “think” god would want things? My question to you is, would you want this same judgment passed on you if the situation were reversed?
V/R
ID