Dilbert_X wrote:
Cybargs wrote:
Macbeth wrote:
Marriage has always been a legal matter. It has been about property rights since forever. I don't get where you guys are getting this idea that marriage has just been a religious event.
coz dilbert hates gays and thinks preventing gays getting married will stop gayness in this world.
Not especially. I do object to:
Government time being wasted on this trivial rubbish. If they're really hung up on demanding the word 'marriage' be used instead of 'union' then thats going to take a hell of a long time to get past the various religions, not to mention a proportion of middle-of-the-road hetersexual couples who object to 'marriage' being hijacked.
Clogging up govt time with this crap is both gay and retarded.
Special interest groups demanding their lifestyle be subsidised by my taxes. I don't really see why any couple should get a tax subsidy, less so gays.
First off I would like to point out that the fact that this debate continues and still reaches the ferocity it does is because
this is a matter that means something to people. It may be trivial to you but your own apathy has no impact on anyone else's feelings. I know there are lots of people who see marriage and civil unions and ask "what's the big deal?" The problem is that the homosexual community want equal rights with every other person and 'same-but-different' has been proven to be inadequate. How can I tell? Because the debate is continuing.
What's more I don't think it will take much to get past the religious aspect or even old societal unease about same-sex marriage. Opinions differ among those with faith as it does among those without which is remarkable when you consider that the faithful are supposed to be singing from the same song book. Meanwhile Obama was openly and widely praised for his recent announcement while Aussie PM and winner of 2010 most unconvincing heterosexual kiss award Julia Gillard has been openly criticised for her refusal to move on the issue. While this doesn't confirm that there is a majority supporting same-sex marriage it does reflect that the stigma has changed and is now attached to those that object to same-sex marriage.
And your concentration on tax matters is, to be honest, insulting. To suggest that a group would fight and face persecution for decades because they want a tax cut is too cynical even for me.
Otherwise I'd like the government to legislate for my right to have a bar-mitvah in a mosque and all the tax subsidies which go with having three children seeing as I have a cat.
You're again missing the point, marriage is both a civil and religious institution. A Bar Mitzvah is simply a coming-of-age ceremony. They are not comparable. Furthermore your argument is dangerously close to the "slippery slope' argument which does you no favours. You're smarter than that Dilbert.