On Marriage
I’m posting this on its own, with a clear title rather than my typical goofy titles, because I don’t want this message lost within another nor unfairly tainting the content of another.
My take on marriage, same-sex or otherwise, is this – “Marriage” is the province of religion, and I am not certain why secular government takes any position on it at all.
There are many good reasons for the state to allow and establish familial relationships between consenting adults. These reasons include, but certainly are not limited to, concerns regarding taxation, assignment of property, rearing of children and related parental duties, speaking on another’s behalf in time of crisis, establishment of privileged access with respect to 5th Amendment rights, and so forth.
These are all concerns in which the state has a valid, vested interest, and this all remains unequivocally true for all consenting adults* without regard for race, creed, color, age*, or gender. If the state sees fit to establish such ties in the name of civil union at all, there is no secular reason to deny those ties based on arbitrary demographics, whatever those might be. There is also no good secular reason to confuse the state’s needs in said civil unions by invoking the religious notion of marriage in its description.
I understand that the needs and views of a church or religious order might be different. That’s fine, the church is under no obligation to perform the ceremony. A justice of the peace, however, as a public servant, should be, and under the guidance of our 1st Amendment rights, no church or other religious influence should be in a position to establish public policy to the contrary.
I understand that you find it icky, or morally repugnant, or depraved, or what have you, but it ain’t your relationship. Mind your own.