asbestosman wrote:Sethbag wrote:It is forbearance, not "conscience", that ought to guide peoples' votes. Consider whether you would appreciate having people ban your own practices, and then act the same way toward them.
That's not quite what's happening here. We aren't making homosexual practices illegal. We are simply refusing to have the government grant those homosexual relationships a special status.
Equal status with heterosexual marriages would be good enough - it doesn't need to be "special". They just want a level playing field, and I don't see why they shouldn't get it.
It would be more like having the government no longer recognize my marriage but continuing to allow the church to perform temple sealings or any other religious ceremony.
I don't think it would be like that at all. Though, I do believe the government should get out of the "marriage" business altogether. They should recognize civil unions that embody the legal benefits that today accrue to marriage, and then let the various religions define what "marriage" means in the eyes of whatever God or Gods they believe exist.
But even citizens such as yourself will insist on enforcing some particular opinions and beliefs on others. Legal age for marriage comes to mind along with statutory rape (and I'm glad the nation agrees on it for the most part)... [and some other laws I'm snipping to save space - Seth ]A free and democratic society needs citizens who are willing to forbear trying to enforce their own particular opinions and beliefs on each other.
This is why I said that the hurdle should be high, not impossible. I think it's very justifiable that there be a concept like legal competence to consent to things, and that laws which forbid things like sexual activity between those able to consent and those unable to consent exist. Rape, underage sex, etc. all fall under the umbrella of things which are forbidden because one party does not or cannot consent. Having a minimum legal age for marriage makes sense because people under that age fall under what our society has defined as an age where one is not legally competent to consent to such a binding arrangement, sexual activity, etc. Such laws ultimately protect the interests of liberty by protecting those who are too young to know what they're doing from being prey to those who should know better. The youth then enter into their adulthood with the most options still open to them.