There's a vast difference between allowing marriage between blood realtives and allowing two people of the same gender to marry. That you'd even compare the two is asonishing and deeply worrying.Emanuele Ciriachi said:Close enough, but you are right - the real heart of the questions is devising a truly egalitarian way for rights such as tax breaks.Tiamat666 said:I have mostly liberal views and I think everyone should be able to live as they see fit. I have to wonder though why it's so important for homosexuals to marry. Historically, marriage is this religious-cultural thing in which man and woman make a bond for life. As far as I know both the religious and the cultural background reject homosexuality, so why would you want to be a part of that ritual, as a homosexual? Isn't this like an atheist demanding to be allowed to enter a church to meditate?
I suppose there are also real material benefits involved in being married, such as lower tax rate and whatnot. This is why people should be allowed to engage in a marriage-like partnership and receive the same benefits. Just don't call it marriage and keep religion out of it, and maybe this way both sides can be happy.
Certainly, just because someone love someone and that person returns the feeling, he/she shouldn't be entitled to any taxpayers' dough. Because if that was the case, then yeah, I would totally marry my son just to relieve him of any heritage shenanigans.
Otherwise, you would grant additional rights to two citizens simply (I guess) out of their mutual affection, but you are denying the same rights to more than two people in the same situation. Or to blood relatives.
I've said that before, but if two men can marry, despite having no biological ability to reproduce (which some argue is the government's stake in heterosexual marriage) and without having both genders represented as role models in the household (which others argue is the government's stake in heterosexual marriage), then certainly two men and a woman can marry. No one can credibly argue that three people cannot be in love.
If you can't tell the difference between familial love and the romantic love which inspires marriage, then you have serious problems and I'd probably advise the state to remove any children from your care as you are clearly a danger to your own relatives.
In some cultures, several people can engage in polygamous marriage, what's your point?
As for biological reproduction, if a womam and a man love each other, but one or both is infertile, or they dimply don't want to have children, then they should be prevented from marrying? Because that is bascially what your argument boils down to.
Oh and inyour post which was cut-off, you accused someone of being biophobic, what exactly do you think that means? Biophobia is the fear of living things, it has nothing to do with this situation.