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Originally posted by BOFH:
In Deuteronomy 17, the rules for a king state he is not to take "many" wives.

Of course, "many" is vague, but it's a great prediction of the downfall of King Solomon.

Tony




one wife is usually enough to be the downfall of a man


Originally posted by Tourgasm:
Sometimes you can mess up a word so bad that spell check doens't know what the hell you're talking about.


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Originally posted by Jay Leno:
Gays in Texas have been heard yelling "Remember Al and Mo!




Originally posted by Tourgasm:
Sometimes you can mess up a word so bad that spell check doens't know what the hell you're talking about.


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Originally posted by Zoom Zoom Diva:
I would consider Kurtz highly suspect as a source. He is well known as a partisan of Republican think tanks (Hoover Institute and National Review), and I do not see him making the case that actual same-sex marriage altered the existing pattern of marriage in those societies (or any case why those societies are relevant to ours).




I certainly see that the factual evidence in his summary, particularly the evidence pointing to most liberal areas of the Netherlands and Scandinavia, clearly indicates that the dissolution of marriage is occurring at a noticeably accelerated rate after the passage of same-sex marriage laws. Look at the numbers and percentages. He didn't create the numbers referred to, he is merely referencing them.

I'd also submit that I would not put Jonathan Rauch in the same category as Kurtz from a social science perspective at least. Kurtz is a highly educated Harvard trained social scientist (PH.D) and scholar, trained in using scientific methodologies to produce objective data based upon sound humanistic scientific methods when it comes to sociology and anthropology. Jonathan Rauch, while educated at Yale, studied journalism/politics and has a BA (I think he may have a law degree from Yale as well now though I'm not certain), and immediately embarked into reporting, journalism, and book writing after graduating from Yale in 1982. He has no scientific background to take note of. That said, he is a very intelligent, well published, and popular man, and he is an interesting mix considering he is an openly gay author/activist yet has written extensively on many topics from a semi-conservative political stance (gay rights being the obvious exception).

Quote:

An opposing viewpoint, though you may be surprised on how much they agree upon:

JONATHAN RAUCH, a senior writer and columnist for National Journal magazine in Washington and a correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, is the author of several books and many articles on public policy, culture, and economics. He is also a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institution, a leading Washington think-tank. In 2005 he received the National Magazine Award for columns and commentary.

His latest book is Gay Marriage: Why It Is Good for Gays, Good for Straights, and Good for America, published in 2004 by Times Books (Henry Holt). It makes the case that same-sex marriage would benefit not only gay people but society and the institution of marriage itself. Although much of his writing has been on public policy, he has also written on topics as widely varied as adultery, agriculture, economics, gay marriage, height discrimination, biological rhythms, and animal rights.

His award-winning column, â??Social Studies,â? is published biweekly in National Journal (a Washington-based weekly on government, politics, and public policy) and covers culture, foreign affairs, politics, and law. His articles also appear regularly in The Atlantic. Among the many other publications for which he has written are The New Republic, The Economist, Reason, Harperâ??s, Fortune, Readerâ??s Digest, U.S. News & World Report, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Post, Slate, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and others.

------------------------------------------------------------

For Better or Worse? The Case for Gay (and Straight) Marriage

The New Republic, May 6, 1996

WHATEVER else marriage may or may not be, it is certainly falling apart. Half of today's marriages end in divorce, and, far more costly, many never begin--leaving mothers poor, children fatherless and neighborhoods chaotic. With timing worthy of Neville Chamberlain, homosexuals have chosen this moment to press for the right to marry. What's more, Hawaii's courts are moving toward letting them do so. I'll believe in gay marriage in America when I see it, but if Hawaii legalizes it, even temporarily, the uproar over this final insult to a besieged institution will be deafening.

Whether gay marriage makes sense--and whether straight marriage makes sense--depends on what marriage is actually for. Current secular thinking on this question is shockingly sketchy. Gay activists say: marriage is for love, and we love each other, therefore we should be able to marry. Traditionalists say: marriage is for children, and homosexuals do not (or should not) have children, therefore you should not be able to marry. That, unfortunately, pretty well covers the spectrum. I say "unfortunately" because both views are wrong. They misunderstand and impoverish the social meaning of marriage.

So what is marriage for? Modern marriage is, of course, based upon traditions that religion helped to codify and enforce. But religious doctrine has no special standing in the world of secular law and policy (the " Christian nation" crowd notwithstanding). If we want to know what and whom marriage is for in modern America, we need a sensible secular doctrine.

At one point, marriage in secular society was largely a matter of business: cementing family ties, providing social status for men and economic support for women, conferring dowries, and so on. Marriages were typically arranged, and "love" in the modern sense was no prerequisite. In Japan, remnants of this system remain, and it works surprisingly well. Couples stay together because they view their marriage as a partnership: an investment in social stability for themselves and their children. Because Japanese couples don't expect as much emotional fulfillment as we do, they are less inclined to break up. They also take a somewhat more relaxed attitude toward adultery. What's a little extracurricular love provided that each partner is fulfilling his or her many other marital duties?

In the West, of course, love is a defining element. The notion of lifelong love is charming, if ambitious, and certainly love is a desirable element of marriage. In society's eyes, however, it cannot be the defining element. You may or may not love your husband, but the two of you are just as married either way. You may love your mistress, but that certainly doesn't make her your spouse. Love helps make sense of marriage emotionally, but it is not terribly important in making sense of marriage from the point of view of social policy.

If love does not define the purpose of secular marriage, what does? Neither the law nor secular thinking provides a clear answer. Today marriage is almost entirely a voluntary arrangement whose contents are up to the people making the deal. There are few if any behaviors that automatically end a marriage. If a man beats his wife, which is about the worst thing he can do to her, he may be convicted of assault, but his marriage is not automatically dissolved. Couples can be adulterous ("open") yet remain married. They can be celibate, too; consummation is not required. All in all, it is an impressive and also rather astonishing victory for modern individualism that so important an institution should be so bereft of formal social instruction as to what should go on inside of it.

Secular society tells us only a few things about marriage. First, marriage depends on the consent of the parties. Second, the parties are not children. Third, the number of parties is two. Fourth, one is a man and the other a woman. Within those rules a marriage is whatever anyone says it is.

PERHAPS it is enough simply to say that marriage is as it is and should not be tampered with. This sounds like a crudely reactionary position. In fact, however, of all the arguments against reforming marriage, it is probably the most powerful.

Call it a Hayekian argument, after the great libertarian economist F.A. Hayek, who developed this line of thinking in his book The Fatal Conceit. In a market system, the prices generated by impersonal forces may not make sense from any one person's point of view, but they encode far more information than even the cleverest person could ever gather. In a similar fashion, human societies evolve rich and complicated webs of nonlegal rules in the form of customs, traditions and institutions. Like prices, they may seem irrational or arbitrary. But the very fact that they are the customs that have evolved implies that they embody a practical logic that may not be apparent to even a sophisticated analyst. And the web of custom cannot be torn apart and reordered at will because once its internal logic is violated it falls apart. Intellectuals, such as Marxists or feminists, who seek to deconstruct and rationally rebuild social traditions, will produce not better order but chaos.

So the Hayekian view argues strongly against gay marriage. It says that the current rules may not be best and may even be unfair. But they are all we have, and, once you say that marriage need not be male-female, soon marriage will stop being anything at all. You can't mess with the formula without causing unforeseen consequences, possibly including the implosion of the institution of marriage itself.

However, there are problems with the Hayekian position. It is untenable in its extreme form and unhelpful in its milder version. In its extreme form, it implies that no social reforms should ever be undertaken. Indeed, no laws should be passed, because they interfere with the natural evolution of social mores. How could Hayekians abolish slavery? They would probably note that slavery violates fundamental moral principles. But in so doing they would establish a moral platform from which to judge social rules, and thus acknowledge that abstracting social debate from moral concerns is not possible.

If the ban on gay marriage were only mildly unfair, and if the costs of changing it were certain to be enormous, then the ban could stand on Hayekian grounds. But, if there is any social policy today that has a fair claim to be scaldingly inhumane, it is the ban on gay marriage. As conservatives tirelessly and rightly point out, marriage is society's most fundamental institution. To bar any class of people from marrying as they choose is an extraordinary deprivation. When not so long ago it was illegal in parts of America for blacks to marry whites, no one could claim that this was a trivial disenfranchisement. Granted, gay marriage raises issues that interracial marriage does not; but no one can argue that the deprivation is a minor one.

To outweigh such a serious claim it is not enough to say that gay marriage might lead to bad things. Bad things happened as a result of legalizing contraception, but that did not make it the wrong thing to do. Besides, it seems doubtful that extending marriage to, say, another 3 or 5 percent of the population would have anything like the effects that no-fault divorce has had, to say nothing of contraception. By now, the "traditional" understanding of marriage has been sullied in all kinds of ways. It is hard to think of a bigger affront to tradition, for instance, than allowing married women to own property independently of their husbands or allowing them to charge their husbands with rape. Surely it is unfair to say that marriage may be reformed for the sake of anyone and everyone except homosexuals, who must respect the dictates of tradition.

Faced with these problems, the milder version of the Hayekian argument says not that social traditions shouldn't be tampered with at all, but that they shouldn't be tampered with lightly. Fine. In this case, no one is talking about casual messing around; both sides have marshaled their arguments with deadly seriousness. Hayekians surely have to recognize that appeals to blind tradition and to the risks inherent in social change do not, a priori, settle anything in this instance. They merely warn against frivolous change.

SO we turn to what has become the standard view of marriage's purpose. Its proponents would probably like to call it a child-centered view, but it is actually an anti-gay view, as will become clear. Whatever you call it, it is the view of marriage that is heard most often, and in the context of the debate over gay marriage it is heard almost exclusively. In its most straightforward form it goes as follows (I quote from James Q. Wilson's fine book The Moral Sense):

A family is not an association of independent people; it is a human commitment designed to make possible the rearing of moral and healthy children. Governments care--or ought to care--about families for this reason, and scarcely for any other.

Wilson speaks about "family" rather than "marriage" as such, but one may, I think, read him as speaking of marriage without doing any injustice to his meaning. The resulting proposition--government ought to care about marriage almost entirely because of children--seems reasonable. But there are problems. The first, obviously, is that gay couples may have children, whether through adoption, prior marriage or (for lesbians) artificial insemination. Leaving aside the thorny issue of gay adoption, the point is that if the mere presence of children is the test, then homosexual relationships can certainly pass it.

You might note, correctly, that heterosexual marriages are more likely to produce children than homosexual ones. When granting marriage licenses to heterosexuals, however, we do not ask how likely the couple is to have children. We assume that they are entitled to get married whether or not they end up with children. Understanding this, conservatives often make an interesting move. In seeking to justify the state's interest in marriage, they shift from the actual presence of children to the anatomical possibility of making them. Hadley Arkes, a political science professor and prominent opponent of homosexual marriage, makes the case this way:

The traditional understanding of marriage is grounded in the 'natural teleology of the body'--in the inescapable fact that only a man and a woman, and only two people, not three, can generate a child. Once marriage is detached from that natural teleology of the body, what ground of principle would thereafter confine marriage to two people rather than some larger grouping? That is, on what ground of principle would the law reject the claim of a gay couple that their love is not confined to a coupling of two, but that they are woven into a larger ensemble with yet another person or two?

What he seems to be saying is that, where the possibility of natural children is nil, the meaning of marriage is nil. If marriage is allowed between members of the same sex, then the concept of marriage has been emptied of content except to ask whether the parties love each other. Then anything goes, including polygamy. This reasoning presumably is what those opposed to gay marriage have in mind when they claim that, once gay marriage is legal, marriage to pets will follow close behind.

But Arkes and his sympathizers make two mistakes. To see them, break down the claim into two components: (1) Two-person marriage derives its special status from the anatomical possibility that the partners can create natural children; and (2) Apart from (1), two-person marriage has no purpose sufficiently strong to justify its special status. That is, absent justification (1), anything goes.

The first proposition is wholly at odds with the way society actually views marriage. Leave aside the insistence that natural, as opposed to adopted, children define the importance of marriage. The deeper problem, apparent right away, is the issue of sterile heterosexual couples. Here the " anatomical possibility" crowd has a problem, for a homosexual union is, anatomically speaking, nothing but one variety of sterile union and no different even in principle: a woman without a uterus has no more potential for giving birth than a man without a vagina.

It may sound like carping to stress the case of barren heterosexual marriage: the vast majority of newlywed heterosexual couples, after all, can have children and probably will. But the point here is fundamental. There are far more sterile heterosexual unions in America than homosexual ones. The "anatomical possibility" crowd cannot have it both ways. If the possibility of children is what gives meaning to marriage, then a post-menopausal woman who applies for a marriage license should be turned away at the courthouse door. What's more, she should be hooted at and condemned for stretching the meaning of marriage beyond its natural basis and so reducing the institution to frivolity. People at the Family Research Council or Concerned Women for America should point at her and say, "If she can marry, why not polygamy?"

Obviously, the "anatomical" conservatives do not say this, because they are sane. They instead flail around, saying that sterile men and women were at least born with the right-shaped parts for making children, and so on. Their position is really a nonposition. It says that the "natural children" rationale defines marriage when homosexuals are involved but not when heterosexuals are involved. When the parties to union are sterile heterosexuals, the justification for marriage must be something else. But what?

Now arises the oddest part of the "anatomical" argument. Look at proposition (2) above. It says that, absent the anatomical justification for marriage, anything goes. In other words, it dismisses the idea that there might be other good reasons for society to sanctify marriage above other kinds of relationships. Why would anybody make this move? I'll hazard a guess: to exclude homosexuals. Any rationale that justifies sterile heterosexual marriages can also apply to homosexual ones. For instance, marriage makes women more financially secure. Very nice, say the conservatives. But that rationale could be applied to lesbians, so it's definitely out.

The end result of this stratagem is perverse to the point of being funny. The attempt to ground marriage in children (or the anatomical possibility thereof) falls flat. But, having lost that reason for marriage, the anti-gay people can offer no other. In their fixation on excluding homosexuals, they leave themselves no consistent justification for the privileged status of heterosexual marriage. They thus tear away any coherent foundation that secular marriage might have, which is precisely the opposite of what they claim they want to do. If they have to undercut marriage to save it from homosexuals, so be it!

FOR the record, I would be the last to deny that children are one central reason for the privileged status of marriage. When men and women get together, children are a likely outcome; and, as we are learning in ever more unpleasant ways, when children grow up without two parents, trouble ensues. Children are not a trivial reason for marriage; they just cannot be the only reason.

What are the others? It seems to me that the two strongest candidates are these: domesticating men and providing reliable caregivers. Both purposes are critical to the functioning of a humane and stable society, and both are much better served by marriage--that is, by one-to-one lifelong commitment--than by any other institution.

Civilizing young males is one of any society's biggest problems. Wherever unattached males gather in packs, you see no end of trouble: wildings in Central Park, gangs in Los Angeles, soccer hooligans in Britain, skinheads in Germany, fraternity hazings in universities, grope-lines in the military and, in a different but ultimately no less tragic way, the bathhouses and wanton sex of gay San Francisco or New York in the 1970s.

For taming men, marriage is unmatched. "Of all the institutions through which men may pass--schools, factories, the military--marriage has the largest effect," Wilson writes in The Moral Sense. (A token of the casualness of current thinking about marriage is that the man who wrote those words could, later in the very same book, say that government should care about fostering families for "scarcely any other" reason than children.) If marriage--that is, the binding of men into couples--did nothing else, its power to settle men, to keep them at home and out of trouble, would be ample justification for its special status.

Of course, women and older men don't generally travel in marauding or orgiastic packs. But in their case the second rationale comes into play. A second enormous problem for society is what to do when someone is beset by some sort of burdensome contingency. It could be cancer, a broken back, unemployment or depression; it could be exhaustion from work or stress under pressure. If marriage has any meaning at all, it is that, when you collapse from a stroke, there will be at least one other person whose "job" is to drop everything and come to your aid; or that when you come home after being fired by the postal service there will be someone to persuade you not to kill the supervisor.

Obviously, both rationales--the need to settle males and the need to have people looked after--apply to sterile people as well as fertile ones, and apply to childless couples as well as to ones with children. The first explains why everybody feels relieved when the town delinquent gets married, and the second explains why everybody feels happy when an aging widow takes a second husband. From a social point of view, it seems to me, both rationales are far more compelling as justifications of marriage's special status than, say, love. And both of them apply to homosexuals as well as to heterosexuals.

Take the matter of settling men. It is probably true that women and children, more than just the fact of marriage, help civilize men. But that hardly means that the settling effect of marriage on homosexual men is negligible. To the contrary, being tied to a committed relationship plainly helps stabilize gay men. Even without marriage, coupled gay men have steady sex partners and relationships that they value and therefore tend to be less wanton. Add marriage, and you bring a further array of stabilizing influences. One of the main benefits of publicly recognized marriage is that it binds couples together not only in their own eyes but also in the eyes of society at large. Around the partners is woven a web of expectations that they will spend nights together, go to parties together, take out mortgages together, buy furniture at Ikea together, and so on--all of which helps tie them together and keep them off the streets and at home. Surely that is a very good thing, especially as compared to the closet-gay culture of furtive sex with innumerable partners in parks and bathhouses.

The other benefit of marriage--caretaking--clearly applies to homosexuals. One of the first things many people worry about when coming to terms with their homosexuality is: Who will take care of me when I'm ailing or old? Society needs to care about this, too, as the aids crisis has made horribly clear. If that crisis has shown anything, it is that homosexuals can and will take care of each other, sometimes with breathtaking devotion--and that no institution can begin to match the care of a devoted partner. Legally speaking, marriage creates kin. Surely society's interest in kin-creation is strongest of all for people who are unlikely to be supported by children in old age and who may well be rejected by their own parents in youth.

Gay marriage, then, is far from being a mere exercise in political point- making or rights-mongering. On the contrary, it serves two of the three social purposes that make marriage so indispensable and irreplaceable for heterosexuals. Two out of three may not be the whole ball of wax, but it is more than enough to give society a compelling interest in marrying off homosexuals.

There is no substitute. Marriage is the only institution that adequately serves these purposes. The power of marriage is not just legal but social. It seals its promise with the smiles and tears of family, friends and neighbors. It shrewdly exploits ceremony (big, public weddings) and money (expensive gifts, dowries) to deter casual commitment and to make bailing out embarrassing. Stag parties and bridal showers signal that what is beginning is not just a legal arrangement but a whole new stage of life. "Domestic partner" laws do none of these things.

I'll go further: far from being a substitute for the real thing, marriage- lite may undermine it. Marriage is a deal between a couple and society, not just between two people: society recognizes the sanctity and autonomy of the pair-bond, and in exchange each spouse commits to being the other's nurse, social worker and policeman of first resort. Each marriage is its own little society within society. Any step that weakens the deal by granting the legal benefits of marriage without also requiring the public commitment is begging for trouble.

SO gay marriage makes sense for several of the same reasons that straight marriage makes sense. That would seem a natural place to stop. But the logic of the argument compels one to go a twist further. If it is good for society to have people attached, then it is not enough just to make marriage available. Marriage should also be expected. This, too, is just as true for homosexuals as for heterosexuals. So, if homosexuals are justified in expecting access to marriage, society is equally justified in expecting them to use it. I'm not saying that out-of-wedlock sex should be scandalous or that people should be coerced into marrying. The mechanisms of expectation are more subtle. When grandma cluck-clucks over a still-unmarried young man, or when mom says she wishes her little girl would settle down, she is expressing a strong and well-justified preference: one that is quietly echoed in a thousand ways throughout society and that produces subtle but important pressure to form and sustain unions. This is a good and necessary thing, and it will be as necessary for homosexuals as heterosexuals. If gay marriage is recognized, single gay people over a certain age should not be surprised when they are disapproved of or pitied. That is a vital part of what makes marriage work. It's stigma as social policy.

If marriage is to work it cannot be merely a "lifestyle option." It must be privileged. That is, it must be understood to be better, on average, than other ways of living. Not mandatory, not good where everything else is bad, but better: a general norm, rather than a personal taste. The biggest worry about gay marriage, I think, is that homosexuals might get it but then mostly not use it. Gay neglect of marriage wouldn't greatly erode the bonding power of heterosexual marriage (remember, homosexuals are only a tiny fraction of the population)--but it would certainly not help. And heterosexual society would rightly feel betrayed if, after legalization, homosexuals treated marriage as a minority taste rather than as a core institution of life. It is not enough, I think, for gay people to say we want the right to marry. If we do not use it, shame on us.

------------------------------------------------------------
That said, I believe the purpose of the state is to promote the maximum degree of liberty and freedom for all. The state only exists for the people, and to promote their freedom.




Interesting article, though I would submit that Kurtz's point overrides the tone of this article in that everything that Rauch is writing about is purely theoretical and his own opinion on same-sex marriage. The studies coming out of Scandinavia and the Netherlands, and hopefully Canada as time moves foward, will prove out the reality of same-sex marriage. So far, the real numbers from the sociological studies directly dispute what Rauch has written, which is that the dissolution of marriage as the bedrock of two societies on this earth is occurring at a markedly increased rate after the passage of same-sex marriage laws. I look to factual evidence, in reality I could care less about the arguments, even if I do spend some time participating in them if for no other reason than the fact that I enjoy the debate and perhaps will make people think more actively about the issue. That said, I do disagree with a few of the points he made in his article, I will address them below:

Quote:

If love does not define the purpose of secular marriage, what does? Neither the law nor secular thinking provides a clear answer.




Actually, the law clearly defines in DOMA the exact definition of both marriages and spouses, I quoted that exact definition from the law in a previous post. He may not like it, he certainly is ignoring this fact in this article, but it is the truth, and it is written law on the books at this point in time, and largely remains unchallenged by the courts to date.

Quote:

So the Hayekian view argues strongly against gay marriage. It says that the current rules may not be best and may even be unfair. But they are all we have, and, once you say that marriage need not be male-female, soon marriage will stop being anything at all. You can't mess with the formula without causing unforeseen consequences, possibly including the implosion of the institution of marriage itself.




The early indicators from the sociological studies to date, as I mentioned above, from two countries that have already in fact legalized same-sex marriage, directly conflict with his theory here. I choose factual state sponsored and state gathered objective evidence over strict opinion when it comes to imploding a bedrock of society. Once again, we should not rush into this issue, if other countries have already taken the steps, IMHO it's always in our best interest to learn from other people's experiences, especially when the early indicators are not positive indicators.

Quote:

Wherever unattached males gather in packs, you see no end of trouble: wildings in Central Park, gangs in Los Angeles, soccer hooligans in Britain, skinheads in Germany, fraternity hazings in universities, grope-lines in the military and, in a different but ultimately no less tragic way, the bathhouses and wanton sex of gay San Francisco or New York in the 1970s.




I hear what he is saying here, and to an extent I agree with him. Being a conservative Christian myself who ministers to teen groups both inside and outside of my own local church, it would be my contention that this is largely not the case when young men and women learn to really embrace the ideals I outlined in a previous post, which are courage, conviction, belief in ourselves and in something greather than ourselves, and perhaps most of all being others-centered, learning that self-centered and greedy behaviors that the author is alluding to above, when embraced, do not in fact bring happiness, love, and a sense of belonging, they largely bring a sense of isolation, loneliness, and despair long term, and such behaviors often in reality significantly increase the likelihood of long term struggles with addictive behaviors that can have life threatening consequences. For better or for worse, we cannot discount the inherent value of the various religions and the moral standards imparted from them. While gov't can legislate morality into the legal codes, it cannot teach society what it means to be a good productive citizen. That comes from the family unit, hence the area of concern surrounding this topic in light of the data provided from the study Kurtz has written about. The old adage comes to mind "all that is needed for evil to succeed is for good men to do nothing," in reference to the "bad boy" behaviors listed in the article.

Quote:

The other benefit of marriage--caretaking--clearly applies to homosexuals. One of the first things many people worry about when coming to terms with their homosexuality is: Who will take care of me when I'm ailing or old? Society needs to care about this, too, as the aids crisis has made horribly clear. If that crisis has shown anything, it is that homosexuals can and will take care of each other, sometimes with breathtaking devotion--and that no institution can begin to match the care of a devoted partner. Legally speaking, marriage creates kin. Surely society's interest in kin-creation is strongest of all for people who are unlikely to be supported by children in old age and who may well be rejected by their own parents in youth.




This is a tough topic to deal with here. In modernized countries, the issue of AIDS is largely a gay community issue. Yes, there are issues related to drug use, and there is an increasing problem among the poor (most of all blacks/hispanics) but when you look at the real numbers, by far the majority of the approximately 950,000 AIDS infections are due to promiscuous gay sex (i.e. without protection or failed protection). This is not stated to be judgemental, just stating what I've read based upon data at the CDC provided by our government over time. Even if other studies don't support what I've asserted, one thing is certain, the spread of AIDS can be easily prevented by abstention from drug use and/or promiscuous sex (homo or hetero). Amazingly, even in our modernized society, people still refuse to make these wise choices for their own benefit. In contrast, the black plague, which wiped out about a third of Europe's population way back when, was found to be caused predominantly by oriental rat fleas that travelled on black rats. In other words, the black plague was caused by unclean societal standards. As soon as this was discovered, the entire European population dramatically cleaned up their cities and towns, and effectively wiped out the rat population in the process, which wiped out the black plague and it's potential to return. In other words, they eliminated the behaviors from society that caused the problem (lack of cleanliness standards - water/waste management, etc.). Interestingly enough, many people in modern society refuse to take that step. They continue to have promiscuous sex and use dirty needles, even with the full blown knowledge of the potentially deadly consequences. Instead, we want to spend billions and billions of dollars to develop drugs and, hopefully someday, a vaccine, against the AIDS virus, all to support, as this author indicates, 3-5% of the people in our society. If you look at the amount of money spent by gov'ts on AIDS research as compared to, say, heart disease and/or cancer, which every year kill a staggeringly larger number of people than AIDS, the numbers are quite frankly ridiculous when looked at objectively on a "per person" basis. Please understand I am not saying that AIDS is not a tragic disease, it is, and death from AIDS is a horrible way to die, but no more or less horrible than watching an innocent child die of cancer at a young age, which gets much much less funding on a per person basis and much less media attention. I won't get into the political reasons for this huge dichotomy here (i.e. the lobbying that produces this lobsided funding result, and political pandering to a minority population, etc.), nor will I address the potential long term social impacts and financial impacts of same-sex marriage from the perspective of medi-care, social security, and the eventual required tax increases that we will all have to bear to support the financial impacts, etc, but these are also important issues that we all need to be aware of and discuss.

In any case, I appreciate the article you posted. Ironically, Kurtz and Rauch have actually battled back and forth on the nationalreview, here's links to some more interesting reading from these two particular authors:

http://www.nationalreview.com/contributors/kurtz080801.shtml

http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-rauch081001.shtml


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Originally posted by svt4stv:
Originally posted by BOFH:
In Deuteronomy 17, the rules for a king state he is not to take "many" wives.

Of course, "many" is vague, but it's a great prediction of the downfall of King Solomon.

Tony




one wife is usually enough to be the downfall of a man




AMEN!!!

LOL, I know I can't handle the one wife I've got half the time, I can't imagine trying to handle any more!


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Originally posted by t-red2000se:

Let's flip this around a bit...
Moses: One wife, Zipporah.(Ex. 2:21)






You don't remember what happened to Zapporah, do you. How about Lot's one wife. But then again, Lot's daughters raped him in his drunken sleep. I have a feeling he knew what was going on, wink wink nudge nudge.

Picking out those examples as some sort of indication that God frowned on polygamy is stretching it quite a bit. Bad things may have happened, but for the most part the Old Testament's polygamists were considered godly men.

Last edited by Beowulf; 11/11/05 06:58 PM.

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Originally posted by dnewma04:
Davo obviously likes to stir things up, and is always a welcome contributor, because he gets people involved. I dont like his methods sometimes like calling people out for not addressing his points, and then doing the same to others, but it's entertaining nonetheless.




This is why I will not "debate" with Davo. If he wants debate, he has to address points not skate around them.


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Thak you for posting Kurtz's article as well. It states a great deal of information about two European societies. I do not see his numbers making the case for any change to the rate of the dissolution of marriage (a larger historical view at the very least is necessary to determine that). I also see coincidental evidence at best that same-sex unions or marriage were the reason for any acceleration which may have occured. I saw more of a case for social tolerance of any unmarried state and a decline in conservative preachers.

I also still do not believe he makes a case for how these numbers can be applied to other societies, particularly ours. Kurtz presents numbers, I don't challenge the numbers. I just don't feel he made enough of a case to have those numbers support his conclusions.

Rauch addresses the issue of marriage "equivalents" and the toleration of non-marriage living arrangements... that tolerance being a major difference between our society and that of Scandinavia and the Netherlands.



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The issues you have made with AIDS you could make with heart disease and cancer as well. People are not making the necessary lifestyle changes to greatly reduce their risks of those diseases either.

I would be very interested to read your cases of these supposed financial costs government would have to bear for same-sex couples. Considering gay men are the second leading concentration of wealth in this country, I think same-sex marriage would actually enhance government financials versus harm them.


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Even more so. Heart disease, cancer and other diseases taken singly still kill many more than AIDS does.

And the suggestion that is it primarily a "gay" disease is strictly due to a common misconception that resulted from many of the first cases being reported in the gay community.

If you take a jaunt over to Africa, it is decimating heterosexual men and women. I beleive I recall reading that homosexuality is far less common there. If this were a "fag killer" as many bible thumping firebrands tell us, why would it be killing so many non-homosexual Africans?

Maybe God is like George Bush and hates black people.


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Originally posted by Beowulf:
Lot's daughters raped him in his drunken sleep. I have a feeling he knew what was going on, wink wink nudge nudge.




Are you saying that Lot was a blind bat?


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