Sorry for the tardiness Fat. I've made it clear that for this staunch partisan conservative, civil unions are a compromise....between those that want to be hardnosed and call anyone that "marries" anything else, a "marriage", with those who call homosexuality a sin, right up there with adultery. The compromise includes the reference to the name, "marriage", keeping it between a man a woman, while providing all the "benefits" you'd be referring to, for the gay couple. Simple as that. Hope that helped
It did sirs, thank you. As I understand it, you're okay with a civil union having the same benefits as a straight marriage, so long as the gay union is not called "marriage", thus preserving the term "marriage" for straight unions? If so, then we are in agreement with this.
What about Paul's prohibitions in this arena? And, if you do not want to discuss this, I completely understand.
I do want to discuss this Professor, but I need to have some time to talk to my priest and do some research myself, so that I can form an objective opinion and some facts to back up that opinion. So, if it's alright with you, I'd like to revisit this in a couple of weeks or so, and hopefully I won't come across as ignorant of at least the basics. I know a bit about St. Paul's reasoning as to why circumcision and dietary laws aren't mandated, but I'd like the chance to look into it further.
And if they would get off their high horse and accept "civil unions," in 20 or 30 years, everyone will call them "marriages" anyway. Putting up the "BS" fight over the name will just make it take longer to get what they want.
We're in complete agreement Ami. It might surprise a lot of people how many gays feel like I do on this, the ones you see suing and screaming over the word "marriage" are a minority, but extremely vocal. There's actually a split developing in the gay community over exactly this issue.
Unless, of course, what they're really looking for is an argument...
I'm not sure it's an argument they seek so much as they believe that if they can call themselves "married", that they will be legitimized in society. The fact is, there are elements in society that will always oppose homosexuality, whether for legitimate reasons (faith) or illegitimate reasons (homophobia, ignorance). I don't need to call it marriage to legitimize my relationship with my partner, but it is important to me that he is able to inherit my property and make my medical decisions in the case that I'm incapacitated without the interference of my family.