mikeymikec
Lifer
- May 19, 2011
- 20,839
- 16,093
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Society does not control procreation at all.
In most Western cultures that I'm aware of, two consenting adults can procreate whichever way they like, regardless of their marital status.
Gay people want to be able to get married in the same way that heterosexual people do (aside from getting married in homophobic religious institutions, who would want to if they're gay, I'm not sure), and for that marriage to be officially recognised in the same way that a hetero marriage is. Some hetero people have a problem with that.
That is all it comes down to.
Some Western countries allow not-quite-marriages (the UK has civil partnerships, for example), but AFAIK these don't have quite the same official status as a marriage, and so a procedure that might be a simple thing to get done for a hetero couple isn't simple for a homosexual couple because the latter's is treated as a "not quite a marriage", when the hetero and homosexual couple both got married for the same reason (public declaration of long-term commitment to each other).
I think the anti-argument boils down to the way it did when I last argued with my parents about it. My parents were fine with gay couples getting "whatevered", and that would allow them all the same rights as a married couple, but they weren't allowed to call it marriage. The simple reason for their "logic" can be summed up in one word: "URGH".
In most Western cultures that I'm aware of, two consenting adults can procreate whichever way they like, regardless of their marital status.
Gay people want to be able to get married in the same way that heterosexual people do (aside from getting married in homophobic religious institutions, who would want to if they're gay, I'm not sure), and for that marriage to be officially recognised in the same way that a hetero marriage is. Some hetero people have a problem with that.
That is all it comes down to.
Some Western countries allow not-quite-marriages (the UK has civil partnerships, for example), but AFAIK these don't have quite the same official status as a marriage, and so a procedure that might be a simple thing to get done for a hetero couple isn't simple for a homosexual couple because the latter's is treated as a "not quite a marriage", when the hetero and homosexual couple both got married for the same reason (public declaration of long-term commitment to each other).
I think the anti-argument boils down to the way it did when I last argued with my parents about it. My parents were fine with gay couples getting "whatevered", and that would allow them all the same rights as a married couple, but they weren't allowed to call it marriage. The simple reason for their "logic" can be summed up in one word: "URGH".
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