bio-chem said:
WoW good rhetoric. you didnt say anything. no one is saying go in and take the children from their homes. honestly when has anyone on this thread said that? when has any leader of the U.S. government said that? stop your bs scare tactics and stick to the facts, your turning yourself into a joke. and all this conservative blah you keep yelping about. it was a liberal who signed the deffence of marriage act. this is well beyond conservative and liberal, as conservatives and liberals alike are voting in favor of these amendments . the same reasons you gave for the government stepping in on polygamy apply to homosexual marriage. come back when you have something worth talking about. or better yet let crazy answer for you she comes up with thoughts that are worth the effort.
I suggest you do a little reading before you start typing ideological nonsense.
Since you contend that the "same reasons you gave for the government stepping in on polygamy (in a territory, not a state) apply to homosexual marriage", one might note that not only are the two types of relationships different but that the government was able to provide a compelling and practical reason for stopping the practice of polygamy. There is no such reason in the case of same-sex marriages. However, when the government did intervene in Utah, people were killed, their homes and families broken up and members scattered.
So who are you kidding in contending that no one advocates going in and breaking up someone's home? That is precisely the intent of a constitutional amendment - to end the marriages in the only state in which they are legal. Since several thousand same-sex couples are legally wed there, are you claiming that conservatives will advocate a morality where "practicing homosexuals" live in sin and continue to raise children without the protections of marriage? Hardly. In fact, if you look at the legislation the Republicans are sponsoring in states that have passed (or in the process of passing) constitutional amendments, the followup immediately addresses attempts at bans of adoption and foster parenting. But these proposals don't simply end at that. . .in many of those states, religious fanatics used stealth tactics to limit or refuse to recognize the existence of anyone living together without being married while banning those people from being able to marry at the same time.
In Alabama and Arkansas, proposals to ban all books that even mention gays have been introduced in state legislatures. In North Carolina, a woman was forced to leave her job at a county sheriff's office because the sheriff said that she cohabitated with a man and it set a bad example by not following an archaic North Carolina anti-cohabitation law. In Virginia, the courts refuse to recognize the parental rights of one partner in an estranged lesbian couple, even though the relationship was legal in Vermont and the Vermont courts ordered visitation rights. Of course, Virginia has banned even basic contracts between members of the same sex, including powers of attorney....but then, the state has also just made wearing lowcut jeans a criminal offense, too - all proposals written and sponsored by Republicans. In Louisiana, the state Supreme Court (yes, that same branch of "activist" judges) had to step in to prevent the erosion of personal contractual rights from their own constitutional amendment. In Georgia, legislators used the passage of the constitutional amendment to pass a law restricting Atlanta's right to protect same-sex couples from discrimination in private club memberships based on the city's own anti-discrimination ordinance. In Ohio, a simple domestic partnership registry in a Cleveland suburb, which voters approved in order to allow unmarried households a means to prove their relationship for private and employer health insurance coverage is being challenged by the same conservative religious legal organization who claims that the "people" should decide what rights gay Americans have in this country. In Michigan, conservatives are using passage of their constitutional amendment to challenge the provision of health benefits to same-sex partners in the Ann Arbor school system. State employees, who had originally negotiated these same benefits in their contract with Michigan, have had them abrogated.
When speaking in support of Virginia's constitutonal amendment, one Republican representative declared that it was acceptable to discriminate against gay and lesbian citizens.
And this attitude isn't limited to just basic protections, including the ones already enacted by voters. In Kentucky, a man was accused of murdering a gay man by luring him to a hotel room, killing him and then packing him in a suitcase and tossing the body into a lake. The charge was reduced to manslaughter because the poor guy was taken by "gay panic."
In only ONE state where constitutional amendments were passed was any attempt made by Republicans to address the issues involving personal property, hospital visitation rights and funeral arrangements which these couples brought up as reasons for seeking marital status to begin with. That proposal was defeated because other conservative legislators contended that "single" citizen provisions are sufficient to cover families who aren't (and now can't) be married. In every other state, Republican legislators insist that these couples and their children must be considered legally "single."
President Bush has increased taxpayer-supported spending on both abstinence programs and promotion of marriage, especially through religious organizations that his Administration recognizes as "truly" christian. This, of course, means funding evangelical groups and ignoring other churches with more accepting programs. Since the President has come out in favor of a federal constitutional amendment, the marriage promotion programs obviously do not provide services for those couples the Administration pretends cannot be recognized as existing on any level.
In Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage is legal, the latest poll indicates that 52% of the people in the state don't even want to see a constitutional amendment placed on any ballot - another reason why conservatives are demanding a national constitutional amendment as the only means of terminating those marriages in Massachusetts, since it appears the voters in that state are likely NOT to vote to ban it.
So this is neither an issue involving the will of the people or a realistic backlash against "activist" judges who dared to interpret a state constitution wording of "ALL" to mean. . .gosh. . .ALL. It is nothing more than a campaign of scapegoating and persecution based on some fluid sense of morality, which, by all measures, will do nothing to protect marriage from a rampant divorce rate, heterosexual irresponsibility, and a growing domestic violence rate. That would really involve promoting personal responsibility and morality.