Khross wrote:
My post means exactly what it means. Your position is falsely stated, because you don't want us to challenge your actual assumptions; it also means the incest is an intentional red-herring.
Again, this means nothing. How is my post "falsely stated"? As for not wanting assumptions challenged, neither you, nor anyone advocating a "get the government out of marriage" position (except Leshani) has a leg to stand on in that regard.
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1. Nothing prevents the government from maintaining an incest prohibition for whatever contractual, non-marriage union Kaffis or anyone else supports. In fact, because the incest taboo originates pre-law (as best we know), and because the incest taboo originates in reproductive consequences, incest is illegal for those purposes. The current state of law and prohibition has probably done nothing to mitigate or end the egregious offenses you think would suddenly multiply in the post-union state.
You have no factual basis to think current law has not mitigated it.
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2. You are indeed conflating legality, social taboo, and a consequence-based prohibition. You're using the social invocation of incest to chafe people and appeal to emotion; you're also implicating that psychic response in the legality of incest and the broader reasoning behind its prohibition so as to morally encumber the subject. I mean, if you really want to suggest that incest invalidates their position, I'd point out that other than the reproductive consequence you have little or no rational basis for the objection or taboo at all that does not begin with an assumptive moral position.
I'm not appealing to emotion at all. By claiming that I am, all you are doing is attempting to place the problem of incest out-of-bounds for the discussion. Essentially, you are poisoning the well.
I have not suggested that incest "invalidates their position". I have suggested that incest is not equivalent to homosexuality, nor, for that matter, is polygamy. The fact that you are asserting this indicates you have either not read, or not comprehended my argument. However, since this thread is long and confusing that's understandable, so let's put that canard to rest:
I'll call your attention to Arathain's OP. He is torn because he feels that if this gay marriage bill is passed, then there will no longer be sufficient attention to the matter to ever satisfy the desires of other people that might like to get married in a civil fashion; essentially they are too much in the minority to matter. Those groups, based on his examples, would include polygamists and people wanting an incestuous marriage. In fact, I have seen no other example of
any other group cited, except groups such as these theoretical people that want, for example, to have a marital-like relationship with a sibling but are not sexually interested in them. I have seen no evidence such people exist at all, or that if they do, their numbers are beyond the completely trivial.
Understanding that, I have pointed out that two groups known to exist that would take advantage of a civil arrangment open to "any 2 consenting adults" include the incestuous and polygamists, and that neither group is equivalent to homosexuals in terms of either actual fact or public morality, and in point of fact neither the polygamous, nor the incestuous, nor any hypothetical other person that would want a marital relationship not fitting into the concept of hetero- or homosexual, would still be afforded equal protection because they could engage in marriage under the same conditions as anyone else.
If you'd like to contest that, then let's see what you have. As I said, it seems you have misunderstood my position.
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3. You'll need to demonstrate whether or not Kaffis's proposal changes actual behavior or just visible behavior. Because the incest taboo is one of the oldest and few universal taboos, it stands to reason that anyone involved in breaking it keeps it rather obfuscated. Even if the technical legality of Kaffis's suggestion made possible the union you suggest, social stigma would keep the parties involved from pursuing for fear of ridicule and difficulty in the process anyway.
I need to demonstrate what the actual effects are of a proposal that hasn't happened? No, actually I don't. You are correct, incest is likely to remain underground regardless due to social stigma. However, by creating a "sanctuary" where the people involved are able to openly engage in every other aspect of the relationship yet still insist they are not actually having sex, we greatly increase the opportunity
to actually engage in incest. The problem with your assertion is that while no law is likely to change the desire to engage in incest, law certainly does affect available opportunity. Creating a loophole like this essentially renders the law pointless.
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4. It's curious that you discount entirely the number of people who might have legitimate legal and personal reasons to entire into a non-sexual union; yet, you're certain there exists a significant enough number of incestuous pairs out there to problematize the concept for everyone.
I can find people on the internet openly complaining that their incestuous relationship is not accepted by society; I do not believe it would be acceptable to link to them here, but a simple search for "incest" just to bring up the Wikipedia page ont he topic reveals the prominence of this underground. Moreover, the continuing problem and regularity of sexual abuse indicates that incest is common, and it is very hard to believe it magically stops at age 18 just because that is our designated time for adulthood to begin. Meanwhile, no one has provided me any evidence whatosever of the actual existence of these other people, what their relative unumbers might be, and most importantly how their existence somehow is relevant. Yes, they might exist. However, the bottom line is that their existence does not dispel the existence of incestuous or polygamous people, and none of them are being treated unfairly in any case.
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So, again, since it apparently wasn't clear to you:
Incest is a red-herring: its legality and prohibition have nothing to do with marriage; nor, for that matter, is it a valid consideration in any discussion regarding the legality or nature of marriage or replacement contract unions. It falls outside the scope and intent of the discussion. Incest will be illegal until such a point as it has no genetic consequence and society has no problem with it; or, it'll just stay illegal and be a non-issue because it's such a rare deviance.
Yes, as a matter of fact it is a valid consideration. I have explained why. You are in no position to say anything is out of bounds. You are completely out of line to suggest such a thing.