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Gay Marriage in Archie? Why is Boost so happy?

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So a bunch of people are pissed that "Archie" comic is having a gay marriage.

Whatever. I'm all for gay marriage in "Archie" but that's not why I'm happy.

What I'M stoked about is that all the people with their panties in a bunch about the GAY marriage, are forgetting to be mad that it's a BIRACIAL marriage!

Not that long ago people would have been up in arms about comics trying to force biracial marriage on our kids! I guess the key to progress is making sure asshats have someone new to hate. As part of a biracial marriage myself, I want to thank the gays of the world for taking the heat off me.

I look forward to the future where, like Starship Troopers, the only objectionable thing about this comic cover is that a Citizen is marrying a Civilian.

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Bingowings said:

Neither of these gays are whales.

 Is that some kind of joke? Because if it is, how come it doesn't start with people going into a bar?

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Bingowings said:

Neither of these gays are whales.

lol

“It’s a lot of fun… it’s a lot of fun to watch Star Wars.” – Bill Moyers

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Bingowings said:


Neither of these gays are whales.
It took me a while, but I got it.

Star Wars Revisited Wordpress

Star Wars Visual Comparisons WordPress

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Also gays serving openly in the military. Archie is breaking so many taboos!

The blue elephant in the room.

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Archies comics have always been gay. They just weren't overtly so in the past.

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 (Edited)

According to this cardinal changing the law to make civil marriage include the possibility of joining of two people of the same sex (the word marriage just means to join) would change the definition of the words mother and father and be like bringing back slavery under the insurance that there would be no actual slaves.

I think he must post on here. 

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Bingowings said:

According to this cardinal changing the law to make civil marriage include the possibility of joining of two people of the same sex (the word marriage just means to join) would change the definition of the words mother and father and be like bringing back slavery under the insurance that there would be no actual slaves.

I think he must post on here. 

That he does currently or that he should in the future?

Speaking of the ambiguity of language, it's not dumb to attribute a sense of morality to the cultural institution of marriage. Though marriage may be succinctly defined as a joining, there appears to be a broad consensus against joining multiple persons. I think we are entitled as a society to make that kind of determination.

I don't think the moral component of marriage should be stripped from the civil institution. Alteration of marriage laws should be done based on the belief that the kind of joinings are moral. Because there is such vehement disagreement about what constitutes a moral joining, it may seem easier to reduce marriage to a more technical definition but I think this does harm society.

The blue elephant in the room.

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It's dumb to assign a moral component to homosexuality.

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Don't forget one of them is a cyborg, wearing glasses and other technology of evil science.

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TV's Frink said:

It's dumb to assign a moral component to homosexuality.

The blue elephant in the room.

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It may change society but as to wether it would be a change for the worse is something that can only be subjectively assessed after the change has happened.

As a social mechanism you have to ask what is it for?

How does it function?

It clearly isn't just about producing children otherwise we wouldn't allow people who are for some reason incapable of producing children to marry.

The law as it stands in the UK is that same sex civil unions have all the civil and legal benefits and responsibilities of a heterosexual civil marriage but can't call themselves married which seems daft as they are legally joined in the same way.

Union and marriage mean basically the same thing so if the gay rights people are hot under the collar about not having access to that word, just give it to them.

As for extended marriages to groups of people larger than two I have no problem with it ethically but it may be a legal minefield without well thought out legislation.

I can't see why the act of civil union can't be extended to people who don't have any desire to have sex with each other, like siblings.

That way if siblings living together in a shared home would have the same protection in law if one of them died as a husband and wife would.

I also have no problem with childless siblings adopting children as a couple.

There seems to me an unhealthy obsession with sex in most societies and not enough focus on social structures.

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Mrebo said:

TV's Frink said:

It's dumb to assign a moral component to homosexuality.

You'll have to explain this to me.

 

My assumption - that's a rabbilope.  The implication being if we allow gays to marry, it will lead to people marrying dogs, antelopes marrying rabbits...and then this happens.

That argument is utter rubbish of course, but maybe you meant something else.

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Bingowings said:

It may change society but as to whether it would be a change for the worse is something that can only be subjectively assessed after the change has happened.

As a social mechanism you have to ask what is it for?

How does it function?

To be clear, I assume you're talking about stripping morality from civil marriage (not gay marriage per se). I think a trend toward a more amoral culture is inherently bad. To be able to finally conclude that is the case after the fact would be too little too late. If becoming a more amoral culture is just fine and dandy, then no harm no foul I guess, but I can't blame those who do care from trying to maintain the moral veneer on marriage.

It clearly isn't just about producing children otherwise we wouldn't allow people who are for some reason incapable of producing children to marry.

That's not exactly true. There are competing legal and moral concepts. If a purpose of marriage is to provide greater stability for children that regularly arise when a man and woman convene (and do not regularly arise when people of the same sex convene), it is not required that the law be very strictly tailored to that purpose. But due to the fact that gay couples do raise children, it is argued that gay unions should fall under the same umbrella to help ensure stability for their children. This doesn't disprove that a purpose of marriage is the raising of children, it adds a dimension that was not previously considered.

Further, notions of privacy would prevent the government from investigating one's child-bearing potential. At least in American law, for purposes of inheritance, the law recognizes the possibility of a fertile octogenarian (though it is generally seen as a fiction).

Still, my argument is that there also is/should be a moral component to the societal conception of marriage.

The law as it stands in the UK is that same sex civil unions have all the civil and legal benefits and responsibilities of a heterosexual civil marriage but can't call themselves married which seems daft as they are legally joined in the same way.

I agree. A federal court in California just ruled that it is daft to grant all the same rights but withhold only the title.

As for extended marriages to groups of people larger than two I have no problem with it ethically but it may be a legal minefield without well thought out legislation.

My question is what is the government's interest in sanctioning a multi-person marriage? I agree it would be a legal minefield, as adoption, custody, taxes, inheritance, etc are all oriented toward a union of two people  - but it is not simply because that is how marriage happened to be defined. There is a broad moral sense about the family unit which is supported by these various laws.

I can't see why the act of civil union can't be extended to people who don't have any desire to have sex with each other, like siblings.

That way if siblings living together in a shared home would have the same protection in law if one of them died as a husband and wife would.

I agree with this. I think civil unions are a good way of extending rights to those who - for whatever reason - do not want to marry but do have a person with whom they share expenses, responsibilities, etc.

Of course, civil unions would be legally distinct from marriage under this scheme. I do not support state-sanctioned incestuous marriages.

I also have no problem with childless siblings adopting children as a couple.

If Donny and Marie have a platonic relationship and simply want to raise a child together, I'm gonna think it's weird, but they have the freedom to do that. Do I want to go down that slippery slope toward sanctioning incestuous relationships? No.

When the gay marriage debate first erupted, there were all kinds of claims by opponents that it would lead to a slippery slope where society would allow polygamous, incestuous, bestial, and vegetal marriages. All of these claims were dismissed as hysterical. But it does seem to me that more and more people are shrugging their shoulders at the prospect of polygamy. I'm not making a value judgment that it is bad that people change their minds, I'm pointing out how a claim used to paint opponents as nuts ends up being acceptable and even possibly a feature of an updated definition of marriage.

You go a long way toward saying siblings should be given all the rights and privileges of marriage. Granted you only speak for your own view and might have held it for quite a long time. But if marriage becomes nothing more than an amoral contract, I see no bar to sanctioning incestuous marriages.

There seems to me an unhealthy obsession with sex in most societies and not enough focus on social structures.

Again, to be clear, I'm not arguing about the merits of including gay unions under the rubric of marriage. The family IS a social structure. I think every culture is fully entitled to express moral choices in the course of their governance.

The blue elephant in the room.

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TV's Frink said:

Mrebo said:

TV's Frink said:

It's dumb to assign a moral component to homosexuality.

You'll have to explain this to me.

 

My assumption - that's a rabbilope.  The implication being if we allow gays to marry, it will lead to people marrying dogs, antelopes marrying rabbits...and then this happens.

That argument is utter rubbish of course, but maybe you meant something else.

xD The image above features a rabbit and an antelope which were literally "married" in the technical definition of that word. My point is that a technical definition of the word doesn't capture what marriage is as a social institution.

I am not making an argument against gay marriage. In my most recent post, I do reference bestial and vegetal marriage as proposed absurdities and I do not think those ideas have any merit.

I am arguing about preserving the morality attendant with marriage as a social construct. I do think gay unions could be included in marriage on a moral basis. Your statement that "It's dumb to assign a moral component to homosexuality" misses the point. I guessed correctly that you were not calling homosexuality immoral.

The blue elephant in the room.

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In which case to avoid dragging the subjective moral values of some into the domestic arrangements of others wouldn't it be better to abolish civil marriage altogether and just have civil partnerships for anyone regardless of their sexual intensions, religious affiliation or lack of said?

That way a heterosexual couple of the Roman Catholic persuasion could have a church wedding and sign a civil document of union which is the same as the one a homosexual couple would sign if they announced their union a meeting of the Society Of Friends or at a ceremony of their own design etc.

That way the marriage would be a ceremonial rite of choice subject to whatever moral stance the organisation performing it may hold and civil union would a legal/economic contract with the state.

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I suppose it's the same as how I feel when extreme right wing politicians like Santorum proclaim themselves as the "moral" choice.  He uses the word in the context of "according to the will of God" as he interprets it.  I use it as "doing the right thing."  Since homosexuality hurts no one, I see nothing immoral about it.  And that extends to marriage.

Also, Boost's original point has been upheld.  None of us are discussing interracial marriage. ;-)

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But there has been a nod to interspecies marriage of which my only objection is verification of informed consent.

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Mrebo said:


When the gay marriage debate first erupted, there were all kinds of claims by opponents that it would lead to a slippery slope where society would allow polygamous, incestuous, bestial, and vegetal marriages.


What exactly are vegetal marriages? Is it marrying non-consenting human vegetables, or literal vegetables?

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Bingowings said:

In which case to avoid dragging the subjective moral values of some into the domestic arrangements of others wouldn't it be better to abolish civil marriage altogether and just have civil partnerships for anyone regardless of their sexual intensions, religious affiliation or lack of said?

That way a heterosexual couple of the Roman Catholic persuasion could have a church wedding and sign a civil document of union which is the same as the one a homosexual couple would sign if they announced their union a meeting of the Society Of Friends or at a ceremony of their own design etc.

That way the marriage would be a ceremonial rite of choice subject to whatever moral stance the organisation performing it may hold and civil union would a legal/economic contract with the state.

Should divorce be difficult to obtain, or just let the couple get a piece of paper notarized? There is a law of unintended consequences. People will change their behavior if marriage is a more casual union under the law.

You express theoretical support of bestial marriage and apparently do support polygamous and incestuous marriage. Granted you are not endorsing the underlying behaviors. I appreciate where you're coming from on a philosophical level and I disagree. This is the kind of argument that furthers fears that gay marriage is about tearing traditional society asunder, rather than an issue of justice and liberty. I think a society should have a strong moral compass and be able to express their morality in their governance. A constitution and laws can help ensure personal liberty, even if a minority feels offended by a moral view of the majority.

@Duracell, I did mean vegetable vegetables.

The blue elephant in the room.

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Then it is perhaps your choice of morals I have a problem with.

A set of principles that places the activities of one set of consenting adults over that of another for the sake of tradition alone.

I despise and cast out the clerical snoop and the holy peeping Tom.

If you define the marriage of members of two different but sentient consenting sapient beings as bestial then I defy that too.

Some of my best friends are alien half breeds and I view with contempt any cad who dares call them beasts.

How on Earth do you get through your day by calling two siblings living together incest? It's just sound economics and frugal living.

It's only incest if the have sex with each other and not everyone who is married has sex with each other (in my experience hardly any of them do).

But no... it's all sex with you isn't it?

Sex, sex, sex, sex, sex!

 

 

 

*can I have your telephone number?*