| |
Is
Gay Marriage Next?
By Michael J. McManus, Syndicated Columnist
July 12, 2003
Days after the Supreme Court declared a Texas sodomy law unconstitutional,
Newsweek's cover story, asked: "Is Gay Marriage Next?"
My answer, alas, is probably. Canada just took that step.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court is likely to recognize same sex
marriage in the next week or two. Two years ago Vermont passed a law legalizing
"civil unions" for same sex partners, giving them virtual marriage
with a different name.
Both houses of California have passed a similar law and it sits on the
governor's desk. Undoubtedly, he will sign it right after Massachusetts
upholds same sex marriage.
If Massachusetts recognizes same sex marriages, thousands of gays and
lesbians will flock there to get a marriage certificate. Many will then
go back to their home states, and file legal cases demanding recognition
as a married couple. They are likely to cite the recent landmark Supreme
Court case, Lawrence v. Texas, which says:
"...liberty
gives substantial protection to adult persons in deciding how to conduct
their private lives in matters pertaining to sex."
What's wrong
with that?
I must say at the outset that I agree with the court's conclusion that
homosexual conduct is not criminal. Dangerous, but not criminal. Justice
Anthony Kennedy, writing for the majority, incredibly states that anal
sex "does not involve persons who might be injured." Has he
not heard that anal sex is the primary way AIDS has spread , killing a
half million Americans?
I am profoundly concerned that this case will be used to further whittle
away at the institution of marriage itself. Historically, state government
has limited marriage to the joining of a man and a woman, believing that
the best place for children to be born and nurtured is in a home with
both a mother and a father.
However, the issue is far larger than the gay challenge to marriage. "There
have been a series of steps since the 1960s to abolish the institutional
nature of marriage that has as its core purpose, the rearing of children,
says Dr. W.
Bradford Wilcox
of the University of Virginia. "We have to recover an understanding
of the civilizational purpose of marriage that makes it clear why Christians,
Jews, Muslims and conservatives are concerned about same sex marriages.
"The issue is not health care benefits, but making sure that we have
generations of children that are born and reared well. Mothers and fathers
bring different gifts to parenting, and make a lifelong commitment for
the sake of the children."
In that light, divorce is a far more grievous blow to marriage than today's
challenge by gays. Ronald Reagan, a divorced Governor of California, struck
the most serious assault of marriage in 1969 when he signed the first
"No-Fault Divorce Law." Similar laws which enabled one person
to unilaterally divorce another, swept virtually every state in the 1970s
and the number of divorces doubled in a decade, rising from 639,000 to
1,189,000.
More than a million children have seen their parents divorce every year
since 1972. As 35 million children of divorce grew into adults, most formed
unions with the opposite sex by cohabitation not marriage. Nearly half
broke up short of marriage, but those who married are 50 percent more
likely to divorce than couples who never lived together.
What's this got to do with gay marriage?
The Boston Globe editorialized Tuesday, that "It is hard to see how
anything other than an animus toward gays and lesbians prevents them from
obtaining the same `benefits and protections' enjoyed by heterosexual
couples."
If conservatives are to be believed when they denounce gay marriage, I
want to know where they stand on No-Fault Divorce.
For example, Ken Connor, president of the Family Research Council in Washington,
said that "Unless the American people rise up to defend this indispensable
institution, we could lose marriage in a very short time." Roman
Catholic leaders in Massachusetts assert that a high court ruling redefining
marriage "will have devastating consequences here and nationally."
I agree. But where were the Catholic bishops when No Fault Divorce laws
swept the nation? Silent or ineffectual. And what are Catholic bishops
and Family Research Council saying now about the need to reform divorce
laws?
Almost nothing.
I have argued that a marriage should not be terminated, if children are
involved, except by mutual consent, unless there is evidence of grievous
fault such as adultery or physical abuse. What was entered into by two
willing adults should only be exited by both adults. The reform of No
Fault Divorce is Mutual Consent Divorce.
I also oppose same sex marriages that can not provide a proper home for
children.
Copyright
2003 Michael J. McManus.
http://www.marriagesavers.com/Columns/C1141.htm
|
Petition | Plea | Mission
| Action | Resources
| Signers |
|
|