comic boy wrote:dwilhelmi wrote:Sorry, but I couldn't resist resurrecting this gem here:
Metsfanmax wrote:The reasoning here is quite simple.
(1) A man who likes women may legally marry the person of his interest.
(2) The Constitution forbids any law from treating some citizens differently from others.
(3) Therefore, a man who likes men should also be able to legally marry the person of his interest.
No part of this reasoning depends on how you feel about homosexuality or tyranny of the majority/minority. Unless some part of it is incorrect, or you like disregarding the Constitution, you are forced to conclude that gay marriage should be legal if marriage for heterosexual people is legal.
End of discussion.
I would argue that both 1 and 3 are flawed in this case. The more accurate version is here:
(1) A man who likes women may legally marry one other adult human of the opposite gender.
(2) The Constitution forbids any law from treating some citizens differently from others.
(3) Therefore, a man who likes men should also be able to legally marry one other adult human of the opposite gender.
If we treat homosexual and heterosexual perfectly equal, then all restrictions for legally recognized marriage must be applied in all cases. If you wish to make the case that one of those restrictions should not be in place, that is fine, but that is not a matter of equal protection nor a constitutional given. That is why, in my opinion, gay marriage is so often compared with polygamy. "Opposite gender" is just as much an arbitrary restriction of marriage as "one other person" is. The first one could argue is "discriminatory" against homosexuals, while the second one could argue is "discriminatory" against monogamists.
You are being absurd , your examples assume that gender must be stipulated and it need not be.
No, I am assuming that gender is currently stipulated, not that it must be. If people would like to change marriage into a union between any two people, because they would like their type of union to be included also, hey great - lets have that discussion. However, that is not the discussion on the table.
Gender is a pivotal, integral part of the tradition of marriage. The very terms used in describing a wedding/marriage (husband,groom,bride,wife,etc) are gender based. It is a much deeper role than race is. Opposite genders is part of what marriage
is - race is an additional restriction added after the fact, with no bearing on the proceedings themselves. It is different.
Gay marriage is a fundamentally different thing from traditional marriage. As a straight man, it is not possible for me to enter into a "gay marriage" with whomever I like, because a union between a man and a woman is not a "gay marriage" - that is not discrimination, it is definition.