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02 February 2012

Repudiation: NOM Fights to Protect Chaplains from Imaginary Foe

Apparently the National Organization for Marriage (NOM) read Elaine Donnelly's column instead of the messages from the DoD.
Did you see this day coming?
Who would have thought we needed a federal statute to protect military chaplains—and other servicemen and women—who believe that marriage is between one man and one woman?
We don't.  Chaplains are already allowed to conduct only those private services that they choose.  Marriages are always private services.
But just months after the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell, there is a full-on battle for marriage raging within our nation's armed forces.
There is not.  But, NOM and a few Republicans would like people to think that there is this battle.  Before continuing with the NOM article, let's quote a bit from yesterday's Politico.
The latest move comes in the form of legislation, filed last week by Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.), which would bar gay marriages on Defense Department property and protect service members who express opposition to homosexuality based on their beliefs from adverse action or possible discrimination.
And it would specifically mandate that military chaplains cannot be “directed, ordered or required to perform any duty, rite, ritual, ceremony, service or function that is contrary to the conscience, moral principles or religious beliefs of the chaplain, or contrary to the moral principles or religious beliefs of the chaplain’s faith group.”
There response is that this is creating a solution for a problem that doesn't exist.
Pentagon officials, though, say there haven’t been any significant problems since the repeal took effect.
“The implementation of the repeal of DADT is proceeding smoothly across the Department of Defense,” Pentagon spokeswoman Eileen Lainez said. “We attribute this success to our comprehensive pre-repeal training program, combined with the continued close monitoring and enforcement of standards by our military leaders at all levels.”
And advocates for gay and lesbian service members have promised to fight Huelskamp’s legislation.
“There is no need for the so-called protections in this bill or the proposed regulations. No chaplain today is being required or pressured to marry anyone, straight or gay. Period,” said Aubrey Sarvis, executive director of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, which has led much of the fight for military benefits for gay families.
“The bill’s ban on use of military facilities and chaplains officiating at ceremonies for gay and lesbian service members is nothing more than plain, old-fashioned discrimination. There is no place for that prejudice in our armed forces or in our country,” he said.
To be clear, there is no document to post from the Department of Defense that indicates that any chaplain might be required to perform any marriage that she or he does not wish to perform.  Back to the lies from NOM:
Last April, the Navy issued new "sensitivity training" guidelines that required Navy chaplains to perform same-sex marriages. Thanks to leadership from Congressmen Tim Huelskamp and Todd Akin, the Navy backed down and rescinded the guidelines.
Nope.  This never happened.  While military chaplains, including those in the Navy, are required to serve all, no chaplain guidelines ever had a requirement that any chaplain ever perform any marriage, a private ceremony, that they did not want to perform.

To be clear, the Navy did provide a directive to the chaplains that they could perform same sex marriages, as reported in the Stars and Stripes.  NOM appears to have trouble distinguishing between permission to do so and requirement to do so.
In September, the Department of Defense issued two more memos, requiring all military facilities to be available for same-sex weddings and allowing chaplains to participate in same-sex ceremonies.
This is true.  There is the provision that marriages may only be performed if it is allowed by state and local laws.  Again, there was an article in the Stars and Stripes.
Recognizing this growing threat to the religious liberty of our armed forces, Rep. Tim Huelskamp of Kansas last week introduced the Military Religious Freedom Protection Act (H.R. 3828). The bill does three things:
  1. Protects military chaplains from being forced to participate in any ceremony or function that is against their conscience or religious beliefs.
  2. Protects our men and women in uniform from being discriminated against because of religious beliefs opposed to same-sex marriage or homosexuality.
  3. Prohibits the use of military facilities for same-sex marriage ceremonies.
Superfluous regulation.  No one's religious liberty was ever threatened.  1.  No chaplains are ever forced to participate in a private ceremony and marriages are always private ceremonies.  2.  This is intended to protect those who discriminate, not protect anyone from discrimination.  3.  This is an imposition on the religious liberty of chaplains who would choose to perform a marriage for two individuals of the same gender.  Explicit discrimination; exactly that from which Mr. Huelskamp's legislation claims to be protecting chaplains.
But President Obama is refusing to do his job as President—picking and choosing which laws are worth enforcing. He refuses to defend DOMA in court and is actively undermining it at every turn. And same-sex marriage activists have been working to leverage the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell to harass and intimidate chaplains and other service members who are standing up for marriage.
The President is doing his job.  He is doing it better than Republicans like considering the nature of the opposition he has faced.  When a law is clearly unconstitutional, the President is serving the country well by not defending a law which will eventually be overturned or declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.  DOMA is unconstitutional.

NOM has a long history of lies, from their misleading name to unfounded accusations against the LGBTQ Community.  The truth is that no clergy, including those serving in the military, will ever be forced to perform marriages of those who do not meet their private criteria.  This means that those who will only marry couples who refuse to paint their toenails will always be allowed that criteria or any other. If one clicks through to the send message page, it has a message to send and a large donate button.  This is about scaring people and fund raising.

Thanks to Joe My God for the heads up.

Praise: SPLC Challenges DOMA

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has been fighting bigotry in the United States for over four decades.  Today they filed a lawsuit on behalf of Sergeant Tracey Cooper-Harris so that her wife may be eligible for spousal benefits with the Veteran's Administration.



Read more about Sgt. Cooper-Harris' situation, from her honorable service in two wars to her health struggles at the SPLC.  While there, check out SPLC's Hate Watch blog and their Teaching Tolerance blog.  Excellent work on behalf of minority groups.

Thanks to Joe My God for the heads up.

29 March 2012:  FollowUp 1.

Humor: You're Fired!



I'm expecting the Democrats to hit Mr. Romney fairly hard on his inability to relate to the common man.  With thanks to Joe My God for the clue that one can, I am now subscribed to the Democrat's Rapid Response YouTube channel.  I hope that treat more of Mr. Romney's gaffes with this type of light touch.

FollowUp 10: Wisconsin Republican Dirty Tricks

The Wisconsin Government Accountability Board has been very busy processing nearly two million signatures on recall petitions, weighing over three thousand pounds, since mid-January.  Last night they posted the petitions on-line.  No new dirty tricks ... for now.



The petitions are between one and ten signatures per page with fifty pages per pdf.  This is a link to a lot of pdfs.

16 November 2011, Original Pedantic Political Ponderings post.
30 November 2011, FollowUp 1.
4 December 2011, FollowUp 2.
11 December 2011, FollowUp 3.
14 December 2011, FollowUp 4.
15 December 2011, FollowUp 5.
30 December 2011, FollowUp 6.
13 January 2012, FollowUp 7.
17 January 2012, FollowUp 8.
25 January 2012, FollowUp 9.

9 February 2012, FollowUp 11.
12 February 2012, FollowUp 12.
18 February 2012, FollowUp 13.
22 February 2012, FollowUp 14.
6 March 2012, FollowUp 15.
12 March 2012, FollowUp 16.
16 March 2012, FollowUp 17.
30 March 2012, FollowUp 18.
31 March 2012, FollowUp 19.
3 April 2012, FollowUp 20.
4 April 2012, FollowUp 21.
11 April 2012, FollowUp 22.
14 April 2012, FollowUp 23.
17 April 2012, FollowUp 24.
21 April 2012, FollowUp 25.
29 April 2012, FollowUp 26.
2 May 2012, FollowUp 27.
6 May 2012, FollowUp 28.
10 May 2012, FollowUp 29.
13 May 2012, FollowUp 30.
23 May 2012, FollowUp 31.
24 May 2012, FollowUp 32.
30 May 2012, FollowUp 33.
2 June 2012, FollowUp 34.
4 June 2012, FollowUp 35.
5 June 2012, FollowUp 36.

Praise: Ed Murray Sponsors Marriage Equality

Washington State Senator Ed Murray was the sponsor of bill 6239 to bring equality to marriage in his state.  There are those who have been crying that their religion is threatened; a quick read of the bill proves this to be a false claim.

Last night the bill passed the State Senate, 28 - 21.  It is expected to easily pass the state assembly next week and be signed into law.

Mr. Murray made comments last night after the vote, as reported by the Boston Globe.
Democratic Sen. Ed Murray, the bill's sponsor, said he knew same-sex marriage "is as contentious as any issue that this body has considered in its history."
Lawmakers who vote against gay marriage "are not, nor should they be accused of bigotry," he said.
"Those of us who support this legislation are not, and we should not be accused of, undermining family life or religious freedom," said Murray, a gay lawmaker from Seattle who has spearheaded past gay rights and domestic partnership laws in the state. "Marriage is how society says you are a family."
Murray mentioned his partner of more than 20 years -- Michael Shiosaki -- as he told his Senate colleagues before the vote "regardless of how you vote on this bill, an invitation will be in the mail" to their future wedding.
I'm not as confident that none who voted against equality are not bigots.  Still, I have tremendous respect for Mr. Murray taking the high road.  I would also wish Mr. Murray and Mr. Shiosaki much happiness in their upcoming marriage.

01 February 2012

Repudiation: Christian Anti-Defamation Commission

It can be argued that the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission is none of the above.  Their first installment in a series of ten proofs that President Barack Obama is not a Christian is filled with lies that neither promote Christianity nor defend it from anything real.  Watch and see.



Lies I caught:
1.  Life is defined by the Bible to begin at conception.
Genesis 2:7 is the first time that the Bible discusses the soul.  The soul is associated with the first breath, not the moment of fertilization.
2.  Death Panels in ObamaCare.
Despite the claims in this video, there are no Death Panels in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (which detractors call ObamaCare).  President Obama said that the death panel claim is a lie.  It is a lie according to PolitifactThe denial of neurosurgery to patients over 70 is a lie according to Snopes.  The caller to the Mark Levin show was telling a lie when he claimed to be a neurosurgeon.
3.  Abortion funding in ObamaCare.
Not true.  President Obama signed Executive Order 13535 that applies the Hyde Amendment to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.  In short, ObamaCare does not include abortion funding.
4.  Reproductive care means abortion.
No.  The World Health Organization says reproductive care should be
access to safe, effective, affordable and acceptable methods of fertility regulation of their choice, and the right of access to appropriate health care services that will enable women to go safely through pregnancy and childbirth and provide couples with the best chance of having a healthy infant.
The only hint regarding abortion is "fertility regulation of their choice", which is best handled through contraception not abortion.
5.  ObamaCare is anti-life.
Exactly the opposite.  But this 501(c)3 that masquerades as a non-political charity is loading in every deception that they have available to distort both the intent and reality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.  While the Act could have been improved, Republicans in Congress made that impossible.  Many of the ideas that were originated by Republicans, including presidential contenders Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, are now disavowed as socialist plots to overthrow America and proof that President Obama is a secret Muslim.

Unlike abortion, telling lies is forbidden in the Ten Commandments.  Thus, one could say that the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission is not Christian or at least not adhering to Christian tenets.  Rather than defend Christianity, the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission is slandering the President of the United States.  Thus, one could say that they are not anti-defamation.  The word commission is a nebulous enough term that we can grant that much.  Still, one might wonder from whence came this commission.  Their history page states who founded them, not who commissioned them.

Thanks to Joe My God for the heads up.

31 January 2012

FollowUp 5: NJ Democrats Call for Marriage Equality

There are six living former governors of New Jersey.  Four are Democrats and two are Republicans.  Unlike sitting Governor Chris Christie, all of them told New York's NBC4 that they support marriage equality.
Democrats Brendan Byrne and James Florio told NBC New York Monday they endorsed efforts in the Legislature to pass it.
"I think the climate is right on a basis of civil rights," said Byrne, the oldest of the former Garden State governors. "I would ask that the Legislature pass it."
Florio told NBC New York, "I have no difficulties with it."
Tom Kean, one of the two Republicans among the six living former governors, called himself a libertarian on the issue.
"There are already people living together, as good neighbors and good people and contributing to the economy of this state, and I don't see any reason why they shouldn't be able to continue with the blessing of marriage," Kean said.
Former Govs. Jon Corzine and Jim McGreevey are both on record as supporting gay marriage.
Among the six former living elected governors, Republican Christie Todd Whitman has a slightly different take.
Spokeswoman Heather Grizzle told NBC New York that Whitman supports equal rights for gay couples, but described her position as more "nuanced" because she doesn't believe government should be defining who is married.
She said that Whitman believes government should simply issue some sort of document for legal purposes to couples, whether they are homosexual or heterosexual.
The New Jersey Senate Judiciary Committee heard testimony from the public last week.  The state Assembly Judiciary Committee will hear testimony on Thursday, according to an e-mail from Garden State Equality's Stephen Goldstein.
This Thursday's Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing is the final hearing on the bill and the second step in bill's prospective passage.  We've had the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, capped by an 8 to 4 vote in favor of the marriage equality bill.  After Thursday's Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing, in the weeks ahead the bill will go to the full Senate and the full Assembly for final floor votes.
Thanks to Joe My God for the heads up.

9 January 2012, Original Pedantic Political Ponderings post.

25 January 2012, FollowUp 1.

26 January 2012, FollowUp 2.

28 January 2012, FollowUp 3.

30 January 2012, FollowUp 4.

3 February 2012, FollowUp 6.

10 February 2012, FollowUp 7.

13 February 2012, FollowUp 8.

18 February 2012, FollowUp 9.

21 February 2012, FollowUp 10.

Repudiation: Patrick Lee on Discrimination

Patrick Lee is a Professor of Philosophy and the Director of Bioethics at Franciscan University of Steubenville.  From his university biography:
In this capacity he defends and articulates the Church’s position on a wide range of human life issues through his writings, debates, and public speaking engagements.
On Monday 30 January the Witherspoon Institute published an article by Dr. Lee in which he articulates the Church's position on marriage equality, The Same-Sex “Marriage” Proposal is Unjust Discrimination.
The conjugal conception of marriage is just and coherent; the same-sex marriage proponents’ conception of marriage is unjust and incoherent.
This opening line (all italic in the original) is the heart of Dr. Lee's argument.  Although no reason is offered, marriage is only real if it is sexual and specifically heterosexual with the possibility of procreation.
The “marriage equality movement”: that’s the name chosen for themselves by same-sex “marriage” supporters. The implicit argument is that the state’s granting marriage licenses only to opposite-sex couples is undue discrimination. The claim has an initial plausibility: the state grants a marriage license to John and Mary but not to Jim and Steve. Isn’t that unequal treatment? But this charge, I will show, rests on a profound confusion about both marriage and equality. A state’s recognition that marriage is only between a man and a woman is not unjust. What’s more, a state’s endorsement of same-sex “marriage” does create an arbitrary and invidious discrimination.
Of course, claiming that equality is "arbitrary and invidious discrimination" is silly.  But, let's not rely on my summation.
A law is unjust only if the distinction it creates is not essentially related to a legitimate purpose of law. But whatever one holds about the morality of homosexual acts, it is clear that the state does have an interest in promoting and regulating marriage as traditionally defined, and that the sexual relationships of same-sex couples are distinct in kind from that. So, even if—contrary to fact—the state did have an interest in promoting same-sex sexual relationships, that interest would be different from the one served by promoting marriage. And so the two types of relationships or arrangements should not be lumped together. Moreover, falsely to equate the two is to obscure the nature of marriage.
Obviously, Dr. Lee finds "homosexual acts" to be immoral.  That is his right.  He and his church can and do set their own morality.  Religious morality is not bad unless it is imposed on the rest of society, including those of other religions that hold to a different morality.

I do not believe that government or society should "promote" any particular relationships.  That is not the purpose of government's interest in marriage, but Dr. Lee has a rather different definition of "the nature of marriage".
What is marriage? The traditional view of marriage is: the union of a man and a woman, who have consented to share their lives, on the bodily (sexual), emotional, and spiritual levels, in the kind of community that would be fulfilled by having and raising children together.
Unlike many who oppose equality, Dr. Lee does not make the mistake of declaring this as the biblical view of marriage.  This recent (a little over a century in the United States) traditional view of marriage is still not quite correct.  The last phrase has long been optional.  Children are not a necessary part of marriage, even "traditional marriage".
Two points need emphasis here. First, marriage is a bodily union, as well as emotional and spiritual. For in sexual intercourse—which consummates the marital union—the spouses become biologically one: they complete each other to form a single subject of a single biological action, the kind of action that could procreate, provided conditions outside their conduct are present. This biological union (a procreative-type act) embodies their procreative-type union (provided they have consented to share their lives in that kind of union).
This point is the heart of Dr. Lee's argument.  No other form of sex, just the insertion of the penis of a man into the vagina of a woman, fulfills the bodily union aspect of marriage for Dr. Lee.
Second, marriage is the kind of union whose fruition is procreation. It is the kind of union that would be fulfilled by having and raising children together; the union of the spouses is embodied, prolonged, and enriched by enlarging into family. Still, marriage is not a mere means in relation to procreation, but a sharing of lives (bodily, emotionally, and spiritually) that is good in itself—and so a man and a woman who have consented to such a multi-leveled union are genuinely married, and have an intrinsically fulfilling marital union, even if it turns out they cannot procreate together.
No.  This may be the Roman Catholic view of marriage, but it is not the government's view of marriage.  The Supreme Court of the United States found in Griswold v. Connecticut in 1965 that married couples have a right to privacy regarding contraception.  While this case is often thought of in terms of unreasonable search and seizure, it was the basis for Lawrence v. Texas which overturned most laws prohibiting same gender sexual activity.  Elderly persons, beyond child-bearing years, and those who are known to be infertile are welcome to wed in the United States.
Now of course not all agree with the traditional definition of marriage. But the point I want to make is simply this: marriage, as traditionally defined, is a distinct type of community and not an arbitrary set. Unmarried cohabitators have a different type of relationship. Alliances to raise children also are not necessarily marriages: a group of celibate religious women running an orphanage, for example, are not married. And, plainly, same-sex sexual relationships are a different kind of relationship: they cannot become biologically one, nor is their relationship of the kind that would find its fruition in conceiving, bearing, and raising children together. (True, same-sex partners can form an alliance to raise children—for example, those from a previous marriage or produced by artificial reproduction; but that alliance is not an extension or prolongation of a bodily-emotional-spiritual union already begun, as is the case in marriage.)
No one outside of Catholicism objects to the Roman Catholic Church restricting marriage to opposite gender couples, those who might procreate.  But we do object to extending that restriction to the rest of society.  He goes on to address how this applies to government.
Now it is precisely the distinctive features of marriage that ground the state’s interest in promoting and regulating it, and that make the general strength or health of marriage a public good. First, marriage is a distinctive way in which men and women are fulfilled, an irreducible aspect of their flourishing, and one that can be easily misunderstood. And so marriage needs cultural support—and can be harmed by cultural confusion about it. Clarity within the general culture about the value and nature of marriage enables young men and women, as well as those already married, to participate more fully than they otherwise would in this distinctive good—just as a clear public understanding of health or learning assists individuals and families to participate more fully in those goods.
While Dr. Lee is correct in each of these points, it is also correct to extend each point beyond the limitation of opposite gender couples.  Same gender couples may find marriage fulfilling, which is why many wed when it is legal to do so.  Cultural support enhances the stability of any relationship.

Let's not forget that sexual activity is healthy.  This is not limited to the nature of one's sexual partner.  In the 1990s, the British Medical Journal found that men who have more orgasms live longer.  Sexual activity is good for women as well.  A study out of South Korea indicates that well being is enhanced among the elderly when they are sexually active.
Second, while good in itself, and not a mere means to an extrinsic end, marriage also provides the crucial social function of encouraging parents (and potential parents) to commit to each other and to whatever children they may have. A healthy and strong marriage culture will provide the safest and healthiest environment for children. For these reasons it is in everyone’s interest for the state to promote a sound understanding of marriage, and certainly to avoid obscuring its nature.
Indeed, this is true, but not just for opposite gender couples.  See my post on All Children Matter.  It is in the interest of the state to promote healthy marriages, where there is love and commitment for the sake of the couple and for the sake of children if there are any.  So far, Dr. Lee has argued that heterosexual sex is the only bodily union appropriate for marriage which is based on procreation.  The rest of the article compares homosexual couples to polygamous groups and to adult-child relationships, all while claiming that he is not arguing about a slippery slope.
Since a same-sex couple is unable to form the kind of union marriage is, not granting same-sex couples marriage licenses is simply a decision by the state not to engage in a confusing and harmful fiction. Marriage is a certain kind of union. Denying a marriage license—or the privileges, protections, and obligations of marriage—to those who are unable to marry is not unjust discrimination. The state denies marriage licenses to threesomes or foursomes (refraining from declaring polyamorous groups marriages) and denies marriage licenses to twelve-year-olds (requiring valid consent for a marriage). These denials are not unjust because threesomes, foursomes, and twelve-year-olds are unable to form the kind of union that marriage is. But the same is true of same-sex couples. So, just as the distinction between eighteen-year-olds and twelve-year-olds is relevant to the purpose of marriage—because the former but not the latter are actually able to form the union that is marriage—in the same way, the distinction between opposite-sex couples and same-sex couples is relevant to the purpose of the marriage laws, because the former but not the latter can actually form the kind of union that marriage is.
Marriage for a couple, whether of the same gender or opposite gender, is not a fiction.  This is obviously part of where it is Dr. Lee who is confused.  Saying that same gender couples are "unable to marry" does not make it so.

Comparing homosexual couples with polygamists (who traditionally have usually been heterosexual in their polyamory) and pedophiles (who are usually seeking those of the opposite gender) is ugly and inaccurate.  The insinuation is, of course, endeavoring to set up a slippery slope argument that if we allow marriage equality for homosexuals then see what they will ask for next.

The biggest problem with pedophilia is that it is inherently coercive, involving children in sexual activity for which their are neither mentally nor physically prepared.  Same gender couples seeking to wed are adults who are able to reasonably give their consent, both mentally and physically on the same level as opposite gender couples who seek to wed.

The two biggest problems with polygamy are coercion of children not ready for marriage (sounds like pedophilia again) and legal complexities.  Same gender couples are not pedophiles (see my last paragraph) and have none of the legal complexities of polygamy.  In fact, the only change from opposite gender marriage is that both individuals are the same gender.  Nothing else changes from a legal perspective.
According to same-sex “marriage” proponents, the public interest served by marriage laws is the stability of households. For example, in striking down California’s pro-marriage constitutional amendment called Proposition 8, Judge Vaughn Walker claimed: “The state regulates marriage because marriage creates stable households, which in turn form the basis of a stable, governable populace.” Stability of households might of course be a legitimate public aim, but laws to promote that (and to provide benefits and privileges for stable households as such) are not marriage laws. Such laws, benefits, and so on, would—if applied justly—have to be given also to groups who do not have sexual relationships and groups not pledging permanence and exclusivity.
No.  Laws that promote stability of households are not religious marriage laws.  Dr. Lee is confusing the concept of holy matrimony within a religion and civil marriage.

The reasons for the state to encourage stability of same gender households do relate to permanence and exclusivity.  Monogamous couples results in a more stable tax structure with greater home ownership, reduction in the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, and greater societal cohesion resulting from that stability.
Clearly, though, same-sex “marriage” supporters want much more than certain benefits and privileges. Discussion of concrete benefits such as hospital visitation, inheritance rights, and so on, is really a side issue—such benefits could be secured by other means for individuals who need them (for example, a durable power of attorney for health care, a will, etc.). Nor—contrary to how it is usually portrayed—is the same-sex marriage proposal aimed at tolerance, since persons with same-sex attractions are already free to engage in private sexual behavior and to establish for themselves long-term romantic and sexual relationships. Rather, what proponents of same-sex “marriage” principally desire is the social affirmation and endorsement of homosexual relationships as such. Judge Walker indicated this point clearly in his Proposition 8 decision: “Plaintiffs [some same-sex couples] seek to have the state recognize their committed relationships . . . . Perry and Stier seek to be spouses; they seek the mutual obligation and honor that attend marriage.”
There is a law suit under way right now in New Jersey because endeavoring to enact concrete benefits such as hospital visitation and such failed under a non-marriage approach called civil unions.  Inheritance rights are blocks on the national level by the so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) that legislates discrimination and prevents the IRS from granting equal tax consequences to same gender couples.
So, the proposal is for the state to promote something called marriage, and that marriage is to be understood in a way that will include same-sex partners. This sounds like old news. But what, on their view, is the thing called “marriage,” and why should the state promote it? What distinguishes marital unions from others, such that the state should promote them? One cannot just pronounce that these couples will now count as married; there must be something one means by “being married,” something held in common by all married couples. But the same-sex “marriage” position cannot provide a coherent account of what that something is.
Love and commitment are a coherent and common bedrock to all real marriage.  That Dr. Lee cannot imagine that my partner and I have a bond of love and commitment is Dr. Lee's failing, not ours.
If marriage is not a bodily, emotional, and spiritual union of a man and a woman, of the kind that would be fulfilled by procreation, then what makes a union marriage and why should the state support it? It is not simply a union that is formed by a wedding ceremony: that would be a circular definition. Nor is every romantic and sexual relationship a marriage, and certainly there is no point in the state promoting all such relationships. Perhaps one will say that it is a stable, committed, and exclusive romantic-sexual relationship. But how stable would a romantic-sexual relationship need to be in order to be a marriage? Suppose John and Mary have a romantic-sexual relationship while college students but plan to go their separate ways after graduation: is that stable enough to be a marriage? If not, why not?
Marriage is a bodily, emotional, spiritual, and legal union of two persons.  Gender designation is not required.  Procreation is not required.  A ceremony is not required.  Marriage does imply stability, unlike Dr. Lee's college student example.
Or suppose Joe, Jim, and Steve have a committed, stable, romantic-sexual relationship among themselves—a polyamorous relationship. On what ground can the state promote the relationship between couples, but not the relationship among Joe, Jim, and Steve? The argument here is not a slippery slope one. Rather, the point is: There must be some non-arbitrary features shared by relationships that the state promotes which make them apt for public promotion, and make it fair for the state not to promote in the same way other relationships lacking those features. Without this the distinction is invidious discrimination. The conjugal understanding of marriage has a clear answer: (a) marriage is a distinct basic human good, that needs social support and that uniquely provides important social functions; (b) marriage’s organic bodily union and inherent orientation to procreation distinguish it from other relationships similar in superficial respects to it. But the same-sex marriage proposal’s conception of marriage has no answer. In fact, its conception of marriage is actually an arbitrarily selected class, and so the enactment of this proposal would be unjust.
Polygamy, whether heterosexual or homosexual or some combination thereof, is not my issue.  It is a complex legal consideration, particularly when it comes to issues of divorce and inheritance.  And Dr. Lee is wrong; he is using this as a slippery slope argument.  I, above, and many others have given a clear concept of marriage that Dr. Lee does not accept because as soon as heterosexual procreation is removed he does not acknowledge that there is a valid relationship, particularly not a marriage.  That is fine for Dr. Lee and for his church, but not acceptable for the whole of society.
The problem is not solved if one adds to one’s description or definition of marriage, that it must be a permanent commitment (as Judge Margaret Marshall did in her decision striking down Massachusetts’ marriage law: “It is the exclusive and permanent commitment of the marriage partners to one another, not the begetting of children, that is the sine qua non of civil marriage”). For it is fair to ask: why should the commitment be exclusive and permanent? The college students’ relationship (lacking permanence) and the celibate monks’ relationship (lacking exclusivity—others can join the religious order), both form households and contribute to social stability. In contrast, the conjugal understanding of marriage allows a clear answer to these questions: since marriage is a bodily and procreative-type union, and an irreducible basic good, it is non-arbitrarily distinct from other types of relationships. The promotion of this kind of relationship, for its own sake (because it is a basic good), and for the sake of children generally (since a strong marriage culture provides a safe haven for children), makes it in accord with justice to recognize, as marriage, only a relationship between a man and a woman, pledged to be permanent and exclusive. The conjugal conception of marriage is just and coherent; the same-sex marriage proponents’ conception of marriage is unjust and incoherent.
Commitment and love are at the heart of marriage.  Judge Marshall was correct.  Dr. Lee is welcome to a heterosexual and procreative marriage.  No one is trying to deny him that.  If my partner and I wed, marriage is enhanced without harm to Dr. Lee or any heterosexual couple.  That his narrow definition of marriage cannot encompass loving couples who are of the same gender is Dr. Lee's flaw.  Love is not a zero sum game, we all benefit when there is more.

30 January 2012

FollowUp 4: NJ Democrats Call for Marriage Equality

New Jersey is reacting to Governor Chris Christie comments on using a referendum to achieve civil rights and the Governor responded today, as reported on nj.com.



Mr. Christie has a well-earned reputation of being a political bully.  Calling a legislator "numbnuts" does nothing to improve that reputation.  But it turns out that the Governor has pulled quite a dirty trick in the current round of New Jersey considering marriage equality.

I previously commented that appointing a gay man, Bruce Harris, the recently elected Mayor of Chatham Borough, to the New Jersey Supreme Court provided Governor Christie a certain amount of political insulation for when he vetoes the upcoming marriage equality legislation.  It turns out that the appointment included an agreement that Mr. Harris will recuse himself from such cases.

With apologies for the obvious pun:  Chris Christie has taken a path where he can have his cake and eat it too.  Obviously he does so quite often.

9 January 2012, Original Pedantic Political Ponderings post.

25 January 2012, FollowUp 1.

26 January 2012, FollowUp 2.

28 January 2012, FollowUp 3.

31 January 2012, FollowUp 5.

3 February 2012, FollowUp 6.

10 February 2012, FollowUp 7.

13 February 2012, FollowUp 8.

18 February 2012, FollowUp 9.

21 February 2012, FollowUp 10.

30 January 2012: Marriage News Watch



Links:  American Foundation for Equal Rights, Marriage News Watch.

23 January 2012: Marriage News Watch.

6 February 2012: Marriage News Watch.
13 February 2012: Marriage News Watch.
20 February 2012: Marriage News Watch.
21 February 2012: Marriage News Watch Special Episode.
27 February 2012: Marriage News Watch.
12 March 2012:  Marriage News Watch.
19 March 2012: Marriage News Watch.
26 March 2012:  Marriage News Watch.
2 April 2012: Marriage News Watch.
5 April 2012: Marriage News Watch, Surprise Advance.
16 April 2012: Marriage News Watch.
23 April 2012: Marriage News Watch.
30 April 2012: Marriage News Watch.
7 May 2012: Marriage News Watch.
10 May 2012: Marriage News Watch, 2012's Biggest Marriage Milestones So Far.
14 May 2012: Marriage News Watch.
21 May 2012: Marriage News Watch.
28 May 2012: Marriage News Watch.
4 June 2012: Marriage News Watch.
5 June 2012: Marriage News Watch, Prop 8 Rehearing Denied.
11 June 2012: Marriage News Watch.
18 June 2012: Marriage News Watch.
25 June 2012: Marriage News Watch.
2 July 2012: Marriage News Watch.
10 July 2012: Marriage News Watch.
16 July 2012: Marriage News Watch.

29 January 2012

FollowUp 7: Republican Denial of Climate Change

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ), owned since 2007 by News Corporation (the same company that owns Fox News), is a conservative newspaper.  The WSJ claims to be a source for unbiased news.  When it comes to reporting on climate change, they are not.  On Friday 27 January, the WSJ published an article titled No Need to Panic About Global Warming.  It was filled with errors.  The Union of Concerned Scientists called it Dismal Science.
To take just one example, the authors claim there has been a “lack of warming” for 10 years. Here’s what we know: 2011 was the 35th year in a row in which global temperatures were above the historical average and 2010 and 2005 were the warmest years on record. Over the past decade, record high temperatures outpaced record lows by more than two to one across the continental United States, a marked increase from previous decades.
So where should decision-makers and the public turn to understand what the vast majority of scientists with relevant expertise really think about climate change?
They should start with the US National Academy of Sciences, established by President Lincoln to advise our nation’s leaders on matters of science. In May 2010, a major NAS  report requested by Congress concluded  that  “Climate change is occurring, is caused largely by human activities, and poses significant risks for—and in many cases is already affecting—a broad range of human and natural systems”.
Greg Laden, writing the on Science Magazine blog, held no punches.
The Wall Street Journal has published one of the most offensive, untruthful, twisted reviews of what scientists think of climate change; the WSJ Lies about the facts and twists the story to accommodate the needs of head-in-the-sand industrialists and 1%ers; The most compelling part of their argument, according to them, is that the editorial has been signed by 16 scientists.
The scientists who signed to WSJ editorial are:
Claude Allegre, former director of the Institute for the Study of the Earth, University of Paris; J. Scott Armstrong, cofounder of the Journal of Forecasting and the International Journal of Forecasting; Jan Breslow, head of the Laboratory of Biochemical Genetics and Metabolism, Rockefeller University; Roger Cohen, fellow, American Physical Society; Edward David, member, National Academy of Engineering and National Academy of Sciences; William Happer, professor of physics, Princeton; Michael Kelly, professor of technology, University of Cambridge, U.K.; William Kininmonth, former head of climate research at the Australian Bureau of Meteorology; Richard Lindzen, professor of atmospheric sciences, MIT; James McGrath, professor of chemistry, Virginia Technical University; Rodney Nichols, former president and CEO of the New York Academy of Sciences; Burt Rutan, aerospace engineer, designer of Voyager and SpaceShipOne; Harrison H. Schmitt, Apollo 17 astronaut and former U.S. senator; Nir Shaviv, professor of astrophysics, Hebrew University, Jerusalem; Henk Tennekes, former director, Royal Dutch Meteorological Service; Antonio Zichichi, president of the World Federation of Scientists, Geneva.
Emphasis added to underscore the fact that this is a group of older and often retired weathermen, engineers, or otherwise not-climate-scientists.
Forbes Magazine, hardly a bastion of liberals, includes a link to the Union of Concerned Scientists article and notes that the WSJ rejected a letter from 255 scientists, members of the National Academy of Sciences, that offers a defense of the scientific method used to approach climate change and concludes that climate change is real and affected by human activity.
But the most amazing and telling evidence of the bias of the Wall Street Journal in this field is the fact that 255 members of the United States National Academy of Sciences wrote a comparable (but scientifically accurate) essay on the realities of climate change and on the need for improved and serious public debate around the issue, offered it to the Wall Street Journal, and were turned down. The National Academy of Sciences is the nation’s pre-eminent independent scientific organizations. Its members are among the most respected in the world in their fields. Yet the Journal wouldn’t publish this letter, from more than 15 times as many top scientists. Instead they chose to publish an error-filled and misleading piece on climate because some so-called experts aligned with their bias signed it. This may be good politics for them, but it is bad science and it is bad for the nation.
Science magazine – perhaps the nation’s most important journal on scientific issues – published the letter from the NAS members after the Journal turned it down.
The letter in Science magazine is about a page in length followed by half a page of the names of scientists who signed it.  No doubt we will hear one or more of the Republican presidential contenders cite the WSJ letter as evidence that there is no climate change occurring.  The WSJ was wrong as will be those who depend upon them for truth.

Thanks to Boing Boing for the heads up.

1 October 2011, Original Pedantic Political Ponderings post.
10 October 2011, FollowUp 1.
11 October 2011, FollowUp 2.
17 October 2011, FollowUp 3.
21 October 2011, FollowUp 4.
27 October 2011, FollowUp 5.
30 November 2011, FollowUp 6.

15 February 2012, FollowUp 8.
18 February 2012, FollowUp 9.
2 March 2012, FollowUp 10.
11 March 2012, FollowUp 11.
4 June 2012, FollowUp 12.