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November 9, 2007

The Next Step of SSM Dialog, 1: Equal Rights Abide No Arbitrary Boundaries.

Justin Katz

This happens with most highly charged topics, but with the same-sex marriage debate, it seems especially common (making the debate particularly tedious after years of engaging in it): After a few steps setting the mutually understood context, the thread becomes lost in opponents' eagerness to make their total case. To review the discussion thus far:

  • Pragmatist asked why the state shouldn't encourage monogamous homosexual relationships.
  • I replied that I'm not opposed to its doing so, except if done from within the institution of marriage, because modifying the definition of marriage in order to encompass same-sex relationships would undermine the institution, diminishing its ability to encourage stable, monogamous relationships between anybody.
  • Pragmatist asked how incorporating homosexual relationships would undermine marriage.
  • I replied that three corrosive mechanisms would follow a change in the essence marriage from a relationship between a potentially procreative pair to one between intimate adults:
    1. Equal rights abide no arbitrary boundaries. Further changes to the definition of marriage would follow, notably polygamy and intra-family marriages.
    2. We won't abide the government in our bedrooms. The new twist on marriage would be prone to abuse by heterosexuals, who would treat marriage less like a romantic relationship (at least on a temporary basis), and nobody wants the government to be checking to make sure that the relationship is sexual.
    3. Too many won't abide their own children. Muddying the simple definition of marriage as the relationship into which parents ought to enter with each other will make it less effective in creating a cultural expectation that will draw those who might be inclined to shirk their responsibility into stable families.

In short, the argument on the table is that the state should not change marriage in such a way as to include same-sex relationships because doing so will undermine marriage for the three reasons listed. The two possible contrary responses are (A) to argue that equal rights (or some other consideration) make the diminishment of marriage irrelevant to the legitimization of SSM and (B) to argue that none of the three mechanisms will harm the institution significantly. The unfortunate tendency, as an alternative to these two possibilities, is to address each point as if it is intended to stand on its own; the discussion becomes impossible to pin down, because the goal is merely to push the points off the table rather than to address the total argument. It's the difference between testing the strength of a model and rolling marbles onto a pool table.

In this post, I'll endeavor to explain why no responses heretofore made in answer to my assertion of the first corrosive mechanism have any effect on my argument as I've laid it out thus far.

M. Steven, who appears ultimately to come down on my side on the marriage issue, suggests that the "ban on incestuous relationships is already an arbitrary boundary within the current definition... based on moral grounds." In other words, its degree of arbitrariness would not change with the introduction of same-sex relationships into marriage. But this is certainly not true: The arguments against incest are, first, that it does physical and psychic harm to begotten children and, second, that it corrupts other interpersonal roles and affects development. Clearly, same-sex marriage eliminates the concern about the first (which I would consider the more decisive) point, and to the extent that the second point remains, it seems to me to have less force when one pictures two brothers, say, rather than a brother and a sister.

Beyond arbitrariness, though, implicit in the SSM cause is the principle that it is unjust for citizens to impose their moral beliefs on others when it comes to something as personal and inalienable as marital rights.

For his part, Pragmatist takes a broader tack, including social, rather than moral, arguments against incest and polygamy (which M. Steven doesn't address), as well as power dynamics, but I don't think he appreciates the radical change that would be wrought by the separation of gender from marriage. His suggestion, for example, that both incest and polygamy are socially objectionable because "the power dynamics... lead to the exploitation of women, especially young women" is utterly extinguished if marriage ceases to be defined as an opposite-sex affair. Especially with the case for SSM being made on equal rights grounds, and even more so with its leading edge being in the judiciary (what with "rational basis" tests and other attempts at logical adjudication), a definition of marriage that hinges on individualistic love and mutual care offers no justification for an argument from power dynamics.

This consideration also erases Pragmatist's attempt to differentiate homosexual relationships from incest and polygamy because "homosexuals are denied the right to marry anyone they love," as opposed to someone they love (which is supposed all that will be denied of the incestuous and polygamous). I don't think it would disturb his meaning to edit thus: "homosexuals are denied the right to marry anyone they could constitutively love." But the distinction is irrelevant to the legal, or even rights-based, arguments of those who desire incestuous relationships. Is the court (or the legislature) to explain to a man that he may not marry his sister because he has other options?

A person who is truly in love, and who has already chosen a compatible mate, could with reason be termed "that-person-sexual." If, from society's point of view, marriage isn't above all about the children who may be born within the family that it creates — that is, if it is only about the adults' relationship — then the external basis for interfering in the choice disappears. Allowing the someone/anyone distinction would make it valid to argue that barring interracial marriage doesn't interfere with citizens' right to marry someone. "But I don't love any white women," the Caucasian man might say; "I love this black woman."

Polygamy reenters the discussion with the distinction between a legal relationship and a legal marriage. I wouldn't support the criminalization of homosexual relationships. Does Pragmatist support the criminalization of adult incest? Of extramarital affairs and swinging (i.e., non-marital polygamy)? Or consider this one: extra-marital relationships with mutual care and emotional connection, but not sex? One could point out that the polygamist is free to bring others into the relationship but is only allowed an official marriage with a single spouse. Likewise, on could argue that homosexuals are free to form their relationships as they choose; they are only able to enter into marriage according to its definition: with somebody of the opposite sex. (And nobody is forcing them to have civilly recognized marriages.)

The point is that there is a difference between the denial of marriage rights and the denial of relationships. Pragmatist claims never to have "heard of a genetically predisposed polygamist," but it has seemed a commonplace to me that all men are genetically predisposed thusly. That, indeed, is what makes the following a legitimate concern:

Polygamy undermines the social structure because over time, high-status males will attract multiple partners while low-status men will have no options. Society is unwilling to create a permanent underclass of unmarried males.

Again, though, Pragmatist is apparently unaware of the heterosexist underpinnings of his thought. A man who marries a woman and then marries another man is actually alleviating that underclass. On the other hand, considering that a general takeaway of the reading that I've done with respect to sexual orientation is that women's sexuality is more fluid, it's not difficult to imagine women marrying each other even though they might have some attraction to men. In such cases, even a two-person marriage contributes to the creation of a single-male underclass. If that concern were proven to have a significant likelihood of fruition, would that allow "discrimination" against homosexuals with respect to marriage?

Pragmatist may attack my "reflexive conservative support of what society has adopted in the past," but he's at least as inclined to rely upon precisely that traditional understanding of social implications. In a world with same-sex marriage, old calculations no longer apply. In a world in which procreation is not conceptually intrinsic to marriage, why must marriages be presumed to be sexual at all? Why, for example, couldn't a mother-daughter pair claim a right to the mutual-care benefits of marriage? It would certainly assist them in jointly raising the daughter's child from a failed relationship. Or suppose a gay man and a lesbian create a child together and then seek to share parental responsibility, within the structure of marriage, with their gay partners?

And that brings us to mechanism #2.

Comments

Bobby O.,

I never mentioned anything that justifies your ‘gays were honored in history, pay taxes and fight wars’ response. Of course they did and do. I have said nothing disparaging about homosexuals or homosexuality. You are either mixing up your opponents or just choosing to paint them all with the same wide brush.

It seems to me you aren’t even trying to be persuasive. It’s all just accusations mixed with hyperbole. Based on your arguments, it plays out that you believe any adult arrangement should qualify for “marriage” regardless of gender, relative or number of people. And any dissent is “bigotry”. Is that your position?

“… that you need 2 different sexes to procreate thing is also out the window.”. You cannot be serious.
Procreation = Egg+sperm. Always has been. A woman can carry a child with the genes of another woman, yet the sperm is required. Now I’m not asserting the male+female procreative fact as ‘end of discussion’ with regard to SSM as some are but comments like that won’t gain you any credibility.

Pragmatist,

I enjoyed and respected your response. I responded to Justin’s post in a similar yet not as thoroughly as yours.

I do think there is some relevance to the incest and polygamy arguments in this debate. I agree that some of the arguments and social policy reasons are different buy some are also the same. I think one of them is that the government does not want to condone homosexual relationships. You may not agree. I may mot agree. But it is not simple bigotry to agree. There is legitimate basis for that belief. The government also chooses not to condone incestuous or polygamous relationships. I acknowledge this is an arbitrary line but the reality is that most social policies are based on finding where to draw lines. The best example being allowing alcohol but not drugs.

Also, as you mentioned, the ‘kids’ argument is the strongest. While I agree that all marriages are not child-centric, I would also add that, in my view, just because there exists married couples who do not and/or cannot procreate, does not totally mitigate the procreative argument.

Marriage has always been about the joining of the two sexes – for children, companionship, mutual caring and yes, property rights. Let’s at least acknowledge that changing the definition to include same-sex couples, while it does have benefits, but it is not entitlement based on civil rights. It is a significant and unprecedented change.

Posted by: msteven at November 9, 2007 10:23 PM

Dear MSteven,

My apologies for not being clear about where I was going. I never thought you were being disparaging.

Fighting wars and paying taxes are signs of participating in the Democracy. If you participate, you should share the same Liberties as everybody else.

If religious extremists didn't care about gay marriage, why would anyone else? "Don't tread on me" is a pretty good slogan. In short, it's none of your business who someone marries. Not so much bigotry as much as interference in someone's life that you cannot defend outside of a religous context.

The changes are neither significant, since they exist de-facto already, nor unprecented since we have seen them before. In order to hold to your position, we must revise great amounts of history. Is it your position that in order to "preserve" something that doesn't exist, we should revise history in order to achieve the goal??

Lastly, you really do need to catch up with the science. Lesbian couples are getting pregnant all over the place. Hence, thanks to sperm banks, procreation is generally available to all without a male in the relationship.

Justin,

This tells us everything we need to know about you:

I wouldn't support the criminalization of homosexual relationships.

Thanks for reminding us of your bias.

Posted by: Bobby Oliveira at November 10, 2007 7:26 AM

BO,

I'm confident that readers will not fail to find edifying the contrast between your inane commentary and the points being made by others participating in this discussion, on both sides.

In short, it's none of your business who someone marries.

Thank you for illustrating my point about incest and polygamy. It is everybody's business what marriage is.

The changes are neither significant, since they exist de-facto already, nor unprecented since we have seen them before.

You are simply wrong, here. There is not and has never been a culture in which marriage was legally or culturally defined to include same-sex relationships in the way that homosexuals desire. Most examples cited in history are tremendously distorted, laying our modern assumption of sex on the platonic relationships of the past. The American Indian examples that some folks cite involved a man who behaved as and otherwise took on the role of a woman (and still brought a measure of stigma on his spouse. Even cultures that normalized homosexual behavior to some degree treated it as something other than marriage.

thanks to sperm banks, procreation is generally available to all without a male in the relationship.

From where do you think the sperm is being drawn? Children thus born are manifestly not the melding of the two adults who contract for their creation. If they want to know about their genetics or about their ancestry, they'll have to bring the men into the relationship, at least as contributors. Attempting to erase the humanity-linking interest in genealogy is one of the many ways in which folks like you would destroy our civilization if given free rein.

Lastly: my bias? What — that I generally support individual freedom? That my arguments about marriage aren't linked with a forceful agenda of actual oppression? Happy to remind everybody about such biases.

Posted by: Justin Katz at November 10, 2007 8:14 AM

Bobby O.

You don’t really make any sense. Justin already blew open most what you said. The ‘procreation is available without male in the relationship’ comment totally misses the point – which is that procreation comes from a female egg and male sperm. It is that comment which ignores basic biology and science.

So if it is no ones business who someone marries, why have the state involved at all in marriage? Really, you can be with anyone you want. But you want unlimited choice in your relationships and the state to stamp anything you do “marriage” because of “Liberty”.

The reality is that there are some legitimate debate-worthy arguments for SSM, normalization and other legal acknowledgment of gay relationships. You just haven’t used any of them.

Posted by: msteven at November 10, 2007 2:09 PM

Justin said, The unfortunate tendency, as an alternative to these two possibilities, is to address each point as if it is intended to stand on its own; the discussion becomes impossible to pin down, because the goal is merely to push the points off the table rather than to address the total argument.

That is the tendency, for sure, when SSMers talk of responsible procreation while omitting the responsible part and dividing it from integration of the sexes.

The core of marriage, its nature, is the combination of responsible procreation and sex integration. But SSM argumentation takes marriage apart and then points at the bits and pieces as if they were unrelated and optional things. A social institution is a coherent set of ideas, principles, and practices. At its core is the definitive requirement that both sexes participate.

Nonmarital arrangements may have merit, based on their natures, but not when merged with marriage.

In the case of SSM, the best that I have seen offered is a claim that gay identity makes some nonmarital arrangments superior to other nonmarital arrangements. Maybe someone here can explain what makes gay identity the basis for special treatment.

Certainly the man-woman criterion does not bar gay and lesbian people from entering the social institution of marriage. If it is not something they'd choose to do, that's fine. That choice is a liberty exercised, not a right denied.

Posted by: Chairm at November 11, 2007 3:14 AM

Justin: One could point out that the polygamist is free to bring others into the relationship but is only allowed an official marriage with a single spouse.

Small factual correction here. Living as if polygamous (called "unlawful cohabitation" in the Edmunds Act) is illegal even if no official recognition is sought. This is different than the legal status of same-sex couples, who are allowed to live as they see fit. Most modern day prosecutions of polygamists, most notably the "Short-Creek Raid" of 1953 in Arizona are pursued under this mere appearance rule since polygamists generally stopped seeking multiple marriage licenses from the government long ago.

Posted by: op-ed at November 11, 2007 7:33 AM