The Dude wrote:"Separate-but-equal" is seen as a fallacy by many civil rights advocates. Remember the separate public schools for black children? Equality could not be ensured or maintained. If I recall correctly the California Supreme Court used this kind of reasoning to call the domestic partnership laws unconstitutional.
It's a fair point and I can see the parallels. But I honestly think the parallels only work so far.
Enforcing seperate schools for different races has a very practical consequence. Kids of different races don't mix etc.
But what is the actual practical difference in terms of a different name for the same set of laws / rules?
It'd be like - I donno - instead of segregated buses, a law that stated that the chair a white person sits on is called a 'seat'. But the chair that a black person sits on is called a 'rest spot'.
...it's fairly daft - sure. And it would indicate that there is still an residue 'issue'. But where is the real
practical harm? My main concern is making sure that homsoexuals have the rights in relation to their partner that they should have. ASAP. I feel like quibbling over the term 'marriage' is actually making things harder at this stage...
And sure - the constitution may complicate issues. Not really an expert on the US constitution, so not sure how much I can contribute on that point.
beastie wrote:I think the crucial difference is what dude mentioned before - society pulls for marriages to succeed, and offer a great deal of support to try to ensure that. I doubt that the same could be said for civil unions.
Well, we have the equivalent of civil unions over here in the UK. I don't know that anybody really 'looks down on them'. I haven't noticed any real complaining from homosexuals that they have to call their 'union' something other than a 'marriage' over here. (At least in legal terms. I think a lot of them call it a 'marriage' in everyday talk anyway...)
It might be that religion is just taken less seriously over here in general. The main issue with the term 'marriage' seems to be the historical and religious baggage that comes along with it. But since not many people over here particularly care about all that, I don't think it's considered a big deal by anybody - including the homosexuals...
beastie wrote:However, I think civil unions are a fine first step in societies where gay marriage is greatly feared, and maybe once society embraces civil unions and sees it used by nongays as well, maybe "marriage" will no longer even be necessary for that benefit.
I believe this too. I think worrying too much about the word 'marriage' at this point could actually be counter-productive. Let the religious have the term 'marriage' - if it helps them with their moral-superiority complex. Who cares - as long as the rights involved are sorted out... That's the most important priority from my perspective...
While 'segregation' was wrong, it was better than slavery! Sometimes, these things have to happen in stages...
And a difference in name is certainly FAR better than separation with actual, practical consequences.