Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Not if you had read it. Or my other previous posts where you say "I'm not convinced" and I reply "ok."
These constitute the vast minority of your posts. Although I must admire your willingness to continue rather than simply washing your hands of the affair in a show of faux ire that I won't just agree with what you have to say, that doesn't square well with "I don't care" either.
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And I've pointed out that I disagree with your assessment.
Yes, and? I've pointed out why my assessment agrees with the concept of equality. You haven't done the same; you've tried to but you haven't accounted for the fact that just because people want to do something doesn't make it unequal if they can't.
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My arguments against equality are weak mainly because they're nonexistent. I'm not arguing against equality at all. You keep insisting on equality when that's not the issue.
Since I raised the issue, it is indeed the issue.
And it has been more than adequately dealt with. I pointed out that the same rules apply to everyone. That's equality. Continuing to insist that equality is the issue just ebcause you posted about it originally doesn't change that.
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It does. Again, there has to be legitimate reason for restricting access to benefits. There isn't.
You're engaging in a circular argument. The only apparent reason you have for the reasons to be legitimate is the fact that they limit access to benefits.
More importantly, since the law offers the same benefits to everyone, they are not "restricted".
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No, the magic of get off your *** and solve the problem. The magic of I'm not afraid to confront a paperwork issue. The magic of paperwork and bureaucracy is not a legitimate reason for restricting access to a contract. The magic of I'm quite confident such minor issues can be resolved.
No one is restricting access to any contracts. People can engage in a contract for whatever they want. You're arguing for
societal recognition of a contract by everyone else which is what marriage does. If all you want is a contract, go write one, get some powers of attorney done, whatever.
Society does not need to "solve" these problems just because your notions are offended. Why should anyone get off their *** and solve problems that are created only to satisfy the extreme minority of you that "inequality" has been dealt with, especially whent hat "inequality" doesn't seem to conform to any known idea of inequality in the first place?
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Except that's not what they want to do. I fail to see why you or anyone else should dictate what they do.
So what? What they
want to do is irrelevant. Lots of people want lots of things, just because we don't give it to them doesn't mean its unfair.
If we give it to others, and deny them for no legitimate reason, I think that may be the definition of unfair.
We aren't giving them to others and denying them. We're offering them to everyone, and "they" are saying "no I want different benefits to exist".
As for legitimate reason, you've given no indication of what you think IS a legitimate reason, leading me to believe that you think any reason is
inherently illegitimate.
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They can still "marry" religiously and act like husband and wife. What they can't do is extend the legal benefits of marriage to more than one pairing - like everyone else. Why should they be allowed to? Accommodating married couples costs money to all kinds of people, especially employers and taxpayers.
More imaginary problems.
Ahh, costing money to third parties is now "imaginary" because Arathain Says So. Just as I suspected, no problem is too large to be handwaved.
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Yes, I'm assuming consenting adults, since that's the basis of the discussion. More slippery slope nonsense. Furthermore, what contract are you referring to? The contract I'm referring to does not exist yet, would have to be created, and would obviously not be regulating sex. You know this, since I've said numerous times the government should not be regulating sex.
You have yet to give a good reasont he government shouldn't be regulating sex, given the number of different types of sexual assault and abuse that can and do occur. Second, you cannot assume consenting adults as the basis of the discussion. I'm contesting the validity of the consent in question. What you're doing is begging the question, Third, this is not a slippery slope; these problems already exist.
As for this "contract that doesn't exist" that's just re-naming marriage and pretending to solve a problem that doesn't exist anyhow. You can already have that contract now; it just doesn't obligate third parties to do anything. Simply re-naming marriage as a "civil union" or whatever, pretending it's
only a contract and then telling everyone "See? Problem solved! No more government in marriage!" is just insulting everyone's intelligence and calling it a "solution".
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Um, your definition of "freaking out" needs work. "Freaking out" =/ starting a discussion. Furthermore, if you'd read my posts, you'd know I'm not particularly concerned about polygamy and could be swayed either direction on that based on a GOOD argument.
You're the one that's "torn" over this, not me. You're the one that wants to argue with my reasons why you should vote for the bill rather than just think to yourself "OK, well, noted, but I don't agree with DE" or even just
say that. My definition of freaking out is obviously pretty good.
As for polygamy, I keep pointing out the problems associated with allowing polygamous marriage and the potential for abuse, fraud, and general confusion associated with it and you just keep saying "Nope! Nope!" without giving any reason other than "but it's not equal!" and when that's dispelled you go on to "legitimate reasons" which apparently is a highly fluid goalpost where you can simply claim any reason is "illegitimate".
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/facepalm. Seriously, man, what part of "consenting adults" are you missing? I'm not talking about being able to contract with someone that doesn't want to contract with you. You've done this several times now. Is the only way to make your case to distort the argument?
Because you don't seem to get this. Marriage is not exclusively a contract. It
includes a contract, but it also creates obligations on third parties; anywhere the couple is allowed to be considered jointly, or anywhere one spouse gains access to by right of marriage to the other. If it's just a contract, that creates
only obligations to each other. Next time you go to file taxes jointly you're **** out of luck.
>>>
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If a brother/sister wanted to adopt, why does it make sense that two unrelated men should be able to, whereas a brother and sister should not?
People who are not married can already adopt. I'm not entirely sure anything DOES prohibit a brother and sister from adopting together. That does, however, create the problem that your mom and dad are now also your aunt and uncle. Why do we need to turn our basic family structure on end just so people that can't figure out they are not supposed to **** their sister can have whatever they want?
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Status quo is not a legitimate motivation for denying access to benefits.
Yes it is. Changing the status quo would create a burden on everyone else, and the status quo is not unfair or unequal. That's the difference between this and gay marriage; allowing gay marriage does not impose such a burden.
No undue burden has been established.[/quote]
Yes it has. There is no legal or social imperative to create any burden at all, therefore any burden is undue. Gay marriage imposes no burden on anyone and so does not create a problem.
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You keep trying to pretend that this is exclusively a question of contracts. Marriage is not a normal contract. When two people are married, it obligates 3rd parties in ways that other contracts do not.
The contract in question would have to be written in such a way that deals with these minor issues.
You keep saying they're "minor" as if you've established this. Creating a contract that binds nonsignatory parties is hardly a minor issue. You, in fact, can't do it without it becoming more than a contract.
As for how it would be written, you haven't established that it can be satisfactorily written at all. You want everyone else to "not be lazy" and "solve the problem", but it's a problem you're concerned about. You quit being lazy. You solve the problem.
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And yet, as you say, the disabled individual already has the right to get married. So from the 3rd party perspective, why do I care if they marry their brother or someone they aren't related to? How does that affect me?
You now have to provide any benefits that pertain to couples. If they marry more than one person, your costs go up as you have to provide to more and more people. As a taxpayer, you must pay the bill for government benefits of the same nature, and if they are of the same family, the social problems and possible birth defects of incest must be paid on your dime too.
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I started the thread, and I'm happy to discuss. As for if you think I have a flawed understanding or not - don't care. Your certainly not swaying me with poor comparisons and slippery slope fallacies.
I haven't made any slippery slope fallacies. We already know that sexual assault, sexual abuse and other problems exist.
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No, I'm not supporting giving an individual more rights than others - quite the opposite, please pay attention. Your example here has you suggesting you should be able to do something everyone else cannot. That's not comparable at all.
No, my examples suggest no such thing. I'm paying attention just fine. You're just not able to comprehend that the concept of equality does not extend to making everyone happy - or rather, you're demanding equality of outcome.
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Nobody's suggested incest - why are you bringing that up?
You've used numerous examplees involving brothers and sisters and the like. Oh, because they aren't having
sex? How do you know they aren't? Furthermroe, how is it anything but incestuous, sexual or not? Are you aware of some more appropriate term? Or is this just being pedantic?
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What's the difference between two men who are unrelated and two men who are related? What is so different that justifies giving one pair access to a domestic contract and not the other? The only answers relate to things the government should not be regulating.
Except that they relate to things the government should be regulating. Society says so. We have government of, by and for the people, and we have state governments that are permitted to regulate such things. The only way they shouldn't be is if the citizens of that state don't want it.
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There you have it. Arguments against come down to government regulating family. I can't buy into that. I *like* the idea of a traditional family unit, but recognize it's not my place to enforce this on others.
We're not talking about the government "regulating family". We're talking about a benefit that is there to make having a family easier, and why it is not unequal if it's not available for other purposes.
As for regulating family, the taxpayer picks up the tab when a family disintegrates, so there certainly should be regulations on family. Inhenerntly problematic types of relationships, such as incestuous ones, should not be permitted.
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Of course it is subjective. And no, I'm hardly concerned enough about this issue to make it a crusade. So on this point you are entirely correct. Actually, I stated this in the OP. If gay marriage is approved, this issue dies. Nobody cares about the remaining portion of the population.
Yes, and that is because being a polygamist or wanting to be in an incestuous relationship is not equivalent to being homosexual or bisexual.
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Nobody's talking about incestuous people. And it is not these minor issues that keep people from supporting polygamy. It's people's lack of support for polygamy.
And people don't support polygamy because of these issues, because they are not minor to anyone but you and a small minority. As for incestuous people, you used various close family relationships repeatedly throughout this post. We are talking about them. That is the height of dishonesty.
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In other words, I'm torn about whether to vote for or against the gay marriage bill, which you just admitted was a big deal.
Yes. The reasons you're torn on it, however, are not, except to you.
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None of the rest are major social issues.
So every reason and issue surrounding a major social issue must in and of itself be a major social issue? WTF are you talking about?
I said no such thing and have no idea what you're talking about. Try and stay on topic.
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Practically no one seriously thinks that polygamy is ok; it's practiced by people in the habit of marrying off 14 year olds to older men and people on reality TV that don't seem to be altogether stable either, and that's just in THIS country.
Swing and a miss. This argument fails at "consenting adults". Try again.
BZZZT. Wrong. You cannot assume consent where there are existing power and family dynamics, just like you could not assume that 14 year old was consenting just because they suddenly reached 18. You don't seem to understand that when people engage in relationships in these kinds of dynamics such as polygamy or incest, there is a very, very high likelyhood of underlying problems. People are normally biologically programmed to avoid relationships that are too close in blood relationship; that's why most guys do not consider their sister hot even if she's hot to practically everyone else. In the case of polygamy, that contains power elements that do not conform to our ideas of gender equality and are unavoidable.
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Swing and a miss. This argument fails at "domestic union not involving the regulation of sex". Incest could still be illegal, if found appropriate, which I'm dubious about. We're not talking about regulating sexual relationships, we're talking about a domestic contract.
No we aren't. We're talking about marriage.
If you only want a contract, you can create one as it stands. What you want is not just a contract, but one that includes all the benefits of marriage as well. Here's a hint: The marriage contract is not what provides the benefits. Benefits are what you get from everyone else who is
not a party to the marriage contract and since other people provide that, they get a vote int he rules under which you can marry.
All you're talking about is re-naming marriage as something else, then telling everyone else "you still have to provide the benefits, but you can't 'regulate' anything." Essentially, you're just advocating robbery of the taxpayer and calling it "equality".
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and there is the simple fact that we cannot necessarily assume that an adult is capable of consenting to a relationship with a close family member due to myriad psychological issues involved.
Swing and a miss. Argument fails at "consenting adults".
You cannot refute an argument that calls consent into question by claiming "we're talking about consenting adults". We aren't. We're talking about adults, the consent of whom is unknown.
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I'm not going to waste time convincing you that there are psychological issues surrounding incest either; if you're going to insist that I simply re-cite a bunch of scientific work to your satisfaction just because it contradicts your positions then you're too pedantic to bother with.
No, please pass, since nobody's talking about incest but you.
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You can stop lying now. We've been talking about incest since the beginning and you just now decided to claim we aren't. You keep claiming we're "not regulating sex", and talking about wanting brothers and sisters to be able to have this "contract" with each other. The fact that some who aren't interested in each other sexually would want it does not change the fact that those who are would flock to it.
Keep on about this mysterious domestic contract, though. What exactly is stopping you from creating it yourself?