Kid_A wrote:btownmeggy wrote: Churches could choose to marry whom they please.
So your religion gets to decide who can marry? That has to be one of the most ignorant comments I've read here in a while.
Why?
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Kid_A wrote:btownmeggy wrote: Churches could choose to marry whom they please.
So your religion gets to decide who can marry? That has to be one of the most ignorant comments I've read here in a while.
The state would no longer give tax breaks and benefits to two people just because they've had their love approved by a preacher or justice of the peace. The single, divorced, and cohabitating would no longer be financially penalized.
chewyman wrote:The state would no longer give tax breaks and benefits to two people just because they've had their love approved by a preacher or justice of the peace. The single, divorced, and cohabitating would no longer be financially penalized.
Stopper wrote:I say that some legal obligation ought to be attached to that other 50%. Some form of marriage of two is easily the best answer.
Stopper wrote:A free-for-all in the sexual realm would leave those people and their children vulnerable and undefended. In practice, anarchism in personal relationships (and, indeed, anarchy in just about every other sphere) is very definitely un-feminist, to say the least.
unriggable wrote:But there are some rights that let husbands and wives be in more contact, for example the whole money issue, and how they can visit each other in hospitals.
chewyman wrote:You could contend that tax benefits would just be given out to people with children, but that is removing the family aspect of the laws. Once that is gone the government is just supporting child birth and children being born outside proper families (gay or straight) is not something our society is, or should be, ready for.
freezie wrote:So you would give homosexuals absolutly no chances? Since church is too homophobe to let them live their lifes.
No. Just no.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
btownmeggy wrote:chewyman wrote:You could contend that tax benefits would just be given out to people with children, but that is removing the family aspect of the laws. Once that is gone the government is just supporting child birth and children being born outside proper families (gay or straight) is not something our society is, or should be, ready for.
Why, yes, I would contend for tax benefits for people with children, as the US, all of Latin America, and I'd imagine much of the world, have. While I certainly don't think that people would stop having children if the government wasn't encouraging it with tax breaks (LOLZ, who has a child for the point of getting a tax break??), I'm for them because I guess I believe the supposition that having more money makes it easier in many respects to raise a child well, and of course, I want all children to be raised well.
But you're falling into the same trap as Stopper: Why do you think that the family is based upon the state's mandates?? Only in rather recent history has the state (when and if it could be seperated from a national religion) had any say about marriage. There were still families before then! And in places where and in times when there is no government? Ooh, look, families! Everywhere!
btownmeggy wrote:So you think that the fathers of children born out of wedlock do and should have no responsibility to their children? Absolutely not. In the United States today, 1/3 of all children are born to non-married parents. Both parents are still legally and financially (and in the best and the most cases, emotionally) responsible for their children.
btownmeggy wrote:You're saying that it's the influence and the power of the state that keeps people from "anarchy in personal relationships". If you want to back that up, you're going to need to give a more compelling argument as to why that's the case.
Stopper wrote:What I'm saying is that life in your marriage-free whacko-world would be grossly unfair (or less fair than it is now) for a lot of people - mainly those people who have given something up to be with their partners. And most of those people would be women, not men.
That proposal of yours is just as anti-feminist as anything the churches have done to try to prevent the legalisation of divorce and abortion etc etc
btownmeggy wrote:On a side note, I resent your repeated use of the phrase "anti-feminist" in describing myself and my ideas. You use it as a weapon, an insult, and a means of demeaning me, in a way that heightens gender discord, and is truly "anti-feminist."
Stopper wrote:And alimony would be unenforceable without some form of legal contract.
Stopper wrote: I'll be the first to admit I often let my mouth run away with itself. (...) If it's at all in my favour, I do it to everyone, and it's nothing personal.
btownmeggy wrote: The big 4-0, eh?
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