Continuing on from
Monday's analysis of the gay marriage issue…
It’s important to note that the pro-gay-marriage side is no less susceptible to arguments that are weak, irrelevant, and/or mistaken as the 'anti-'s are. Let's look at the arguments from the other side of the debate.
What the arguments for legalized gay marriage are NOT:
Legalized gay marriage benefits gays
And…legalized slavery benefits
white families, especially poor white families. So?
Just like the ‘homosexuality is a sin’ argument from earlier, gay marriage supporters often state the benefits that gays would receive from legalized gay marriage as if that inherently proves their case. It does not.
I and millions of others would benefit tremendously from a new law that decreed that all Americans with a last name starting with B no longer have to pay income tax. Such a law would provide immediate financial help for me and others, many of whom are undoubtedly poor and struggling, and wouldn’t “hurt” anyone else with different last names, since everyone else’s taxes remain the same (…for now).
If your last name didn’t start with B, would you vote for such a law? I mean, why not--if you recognize that a great many others would benefit from it, with minimal impact on yourself. (In fact, if you didn’t support it, that just proves you’re prejudiced and “hate people with names different than you”, right?)
One can conceive of any number of laws that would benefit one minority group or another. The fact that it benefits
someone is not a reason in and of itself to support such laws. The primary questions are: (1) does this minority group objectively
deserve those benefits such that society has a moral or practical obligation to provide them, and (2) would giving this group this benefit end up hurting any other minority (or majority) group—directly or indirectly—in the process?
Just pointing out that gays would benefit from gay marriage doesn’t mean much—the real question is why should secular society feel obligated to provide those benefits in the first place? The burden of proof is still on the pro-gay-marriage side not just to enumerate things that would be "really, really nice if we had", but to show why they
should.
“People who oppose gay marriage are hypocrites…”
“…because they spend so much effort fighting gay marriage instead of abortion or any other obviously more serious societal problems that we can name, according to their own ‘moral’ standards.”
It is true that conservatives, especially religious conservatives, do get pretty riled up when the issue of gay marriage comes to the fore. And this supposed ‘hypocrisy’ is often brought up from pro-gay marriage supporters who spend a fair amount of time complaining about the ‘moral standing’ of their opponents to oppose gay marriage in the first place, when they ‘should’ be spending their energy somewhere else.
However:
(1) “Hypocrisy” is not an
argument. It neither presents a reason why gay marriage should be legal, nor refutes any of the opposing arguments why it shouldn’t be. It is an
ad hominem attempt to create a distraction--to produce an emotional prejudice against one’s opponents to divert attention away from the real issues, without possessing any actual content that can compel others to support one’s position. (It’s like pointing to someone and saying,
“Well, he’s an adulterer, so *obviously* his views on health care reform are mistaken…”)
(2) There is a very good reason why gay marriage may seem like it receives more emphasis from many conservatives than (for example) abortion: abortion is already legal, gay marriage is not.
There is a HUGE difference between trying to make something legal that currently isn’t, and trying to make something illegal that’s already legal and largely integrated into society. Abortion is not going away any time soon, neither is alcohol or tobacco. And if gay marriage ever becomes legal and widely accepted in society, it’s not going to go away any time in the future. Both sides KNOW this, which is why the battle receives such attention today, as legalization is essentially the point of no return.
Most conservatives know very well there are many things that attack ‘family values’—quickie divorces, abortion, adultery, abuse, and the general societal trend towards self-gratification being the driving force behind all relationships. The problem is the battle has already been lost on virtually all these fronts—what exactly are religious conservatives realistically supposed to do about any of those? Gay marriage receives the lion’s share of attention because it’s one of the only battlegrounds that has yet to be decided. If everything else has already been lost, where else would you expect conservatives to focus their attention?
“Heterosexual couples cheapen the institution of marriage enough as it is…”
“…through a high divorce rate, rampant adultery, quickie Las Vegas marriages that are annulled two days later, and sham marriages for money, immigration, and the like.”
This, of course, is just a variation of the ‘hypocrisy’ argument—saying that straight couples can’t honestly reject gay marriage as ‘cheapening’ the institution of marriage, while they regularly treat marriage fairly frivolously themselves.
The complaints about how non-gay couples often treat marriage are certainly true…but, again, completely irrelevant. Is the pro-gay-marriage side seriously going to suggest that if gay marriage becomes accepted in society, gay couples are NOT also going to do
every single thing on that list?
That:
- No gay man or woman will ever commit adultery?
- We won’t ever see same-sex marriages for money, immigration, or medical benefits?
- Nor “Hollywood” marriages that disintegrate within days?
- Gay couples will somehow be able to maintain a significantly lower divorce rate than straight couples (even though the reasons and motives for divorce will be exactly the same)?
If the gay-rights side has solid reasons other than just wishful thinking to believe any of this will be the case, I’d like to hear them.
It seems obvious that if gay marriage becomes legal, many gay couples will take their vows seriously, and many will not. (By an astonishing coincidence, the same as opposite sex couples!) Meaning in the end, if gay marriage is accepted and ratified, we’ll eventually see exactly the same sort of ‘hypocritical’ treatment of marriage from gays in time, and probably in approximately the same ratio, too. Thus, this argument is another diversionary tactic to discredit the opposition with no real meat behind it.
Essentially, gays are saying,
“We deserve the opportunity to treat the institution of marriage just as lightly and cheaply as you do.” That’s...not exactly a great rallying cry to enthusiastically jump on the gay marriage bandwagon, is it?
Gay marriage will encourage fidelity among gay couples
…you mean, just like it does among straight couples? Didn’t we just
hear a second ago about how many ways straight couples DON’T take their marital vows seriously?
“Fidelity”, or ‘loyalty’, in and of itself, is not significant. One can remain faithful to the same dentist for years and years (in comparison to being ‘promiscuous’ and visiting a different dentist every six months) but to what end? If someone wants to remain loyal and faithful to one dentist, so be it—it’s a great benefit to that dentist, certainly--but that’s hardly something that society should feel compelled to encourage or enforce through law and social policy.
Likewise, whether or not state-recognized marriage has a significant encouraging effect on fidelity (arguable), there’s still a larger question: why should society care whether gay couples stay together or split up?
The pro-gay-rights side rejects the assertion that homosexual behavior is sinful by saying ‘morality’ is relative and the absolute condemnation applied to them by many religions does not apply. But by what principle can the gay community then turn around and say promiscuity and infidelity are, essentially, ‘immoral’ and need to be protected against through secular law. Why shouldn’t gays (or anyone) be allowed to be promiscuous if they want to? (In other words, why is gay sex okay, but LOTS of gay sex not okay?)
(Many non-LDS churches do the same thing with a relative view of the Law of Chastity, where ‘some’ pre-marital sex is okay as long as you’re not ‘promiscuous’…with absolute no way of determining where the line is between them.)
Using ‘fidelity’ as an argument is incomplete: why should society care if gay couples stay together, or break up? Especially if society is NOT supposed to care that many gays left their opposite sex partners to form the gay partnership in the first place.
The gay community can’t have it both ways: If it is not only expected but encouraged for a person with same-sex attraction to leave any opposite-sex partner for a same-sex lover, then what’s wrong with that same person later leaving their same-sex spouse for another same-sex lover, if they're more attracted to the second? Why should society expect fidelity in same-sex relationships if fidelity is entirely optional in opposite-sex relationships?
“What about the spread of AIDS and STDs?”
This has the makings of a fair argument. Society
might care about 'fidelity' if there is a significant public health component.
Let’s divide all gay couples, though, into four groups:
- Gay couples that won't ever get married, whether its legal or not.
- Gay couples that would get married if it was legal, but are of the sort that they’re not going to remain faithful to each other over time, regardless of any marriage commitment.
- Gay couples that wouldn't remain faithful to each other without a binding commitment from the state such as legal marriage, but will feel compelled to be faithful if they are in such a binding legal relationship.
- Gay couples that are completely faithful to each other now, even without marriage, and would, of course, continue to be faithful to each other within marriage as well.
Note that from a ‘reduce promiscuity and the spread of STDs’ standpoint, legalizing gay marriage has absolutely no effect on groups (1), (2), and (4). Therefore, any strength of the STD argument is entirely dependent on how large you think group (3) is—the couples where being in a legally binding relationship will actually produce a change in their behavior.
When you add in the fact that legalizing gay marriage has no effect on any of the four groups’ sexual behavior BEFORE they get married, the likelihood that gay marriage will have a significant impact on the STD rate among gays enough to inherently justify its existence is fairly small.
As with heterosexual relationships (where the spread of STDs is still a problem despite marriage), more evidence is needed that legalized marriage will actually have a significant impact on community health. It is possible that some minor slowing of the spread of STDs may be a small fringe benefit of gay marriage if it comes to pass, but certainly not to the extent that it can stand as a strong argument for making gay marriage legal in the first place.
"Won't someone PLEASE think of the children?"
We saw previously that NOT having legalized gay marriage probably won't avoid any negative effects on children growing up in gay households. Turning it around, then, what about positive effects on those children, in terms of 'stability'?
If we accept the statistic mentioned in the previous article, there are 1 million or so kids growing up in gay households, the vast majority of which (upwards of 95%) are the biological children of one of the gay partners.
Extrapolating an equally important statistic:
0% of those kids are the biological child of BOTH gay partners.
Which leads to the same question as the 'fidelity' issue above: if society is supposed to care about kids having a more consistent 'partner to dad/mom' in the home for stability's sake, shouldn't society
also care about dad/mom originally splitting up with those kids' other biological parent in the first place?
If stability for children is to be the guiding principle in setting marriage policy, wouldn't having those children living in a household with their biological parents be by far the most 'stable' environment? If so, does that point us
towards or
away from legalized gay marriage?
As discussed previously, it's not a given that legalized gay marriage is going to inherently
cause separation from biological parents--since that's clearly happening regularly enough without it--but the fact that gay marriage only becomes a possibility after children have already been separated from their other biological parent undercuts (if not contradicts completely) the idea that 'stability for children' is the primary principle at play.
As with 'fidelity', the pro-gay-marriage side has a higher burden of proof--explaining why society should care about keeping gay couples together 'for the sake of children', but not care about those kids being separated from their biological parents to begin with...
Next: The RIGHT argument against gay marriage