For several days now, I?ve been in a running argument with an individual who goes by the name of ?On Lawn? over in the comments sections of the blog ran by anti-gay equality group National Organization for Marriage. In several comments here, here, and here, this person seems to imply that procreation, or at least the potential for procreation, is a requirement of marriage. I?ve tried several times to get this person to explain this concept but they keep brushing off the question calling it absurd. When I tried to point out that there is no link between marriage and procreation they came back with this.
Well, there shows the damage they want to do to the institution. If marriage can?t look equally at the interests of all involved in the practice of human mating, then you tell me what can.
Prehistoric humans didn?t marry before they mated, they just found a bush did it. When you look at the whole of human history, marriage is a relatively new creation, only being a few thousand years old. Our very existence proves that marriage is not a requirement or an essential element of the human mating process.
Society
Civil Rights
On November 4th the people of California voted in a heavily funded and tightly contested election. I’m not talking about the Presidential election, as it was almost a forgone conclusion that Obama would win the traditionaly blue state. What I am talking about is Proposition 8.
Generation X – Lost?
I just realized something… Barack Obama is the First President to be elected from Generation X. He was born in 1961 which is, according to some references, the start of Generation X. (Note that some references place the start of Gen X at 1974.) But what might be even more profound is the fact that it wasn’t Gen X that really elected him.
Luke Russert does a great job of breaking down the results and you see that it was really the Millennials that elected him.
For several election cycles now, the youth vote, which in 2000 and 2004 would have been us Gen X’ers, just wouldn’t show up to the polls in large enough numbers to make a difference. Some how I can’t get over the feeling that we got skipped, either by design of the generations preceding and following us, or by own cynicism.
I know the question has been asked before but is Generation X, my generation, truly a Lost Generation?

I find myself not too happy with Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) today. It appears that on Wednesday he went on to the liberal talk radio show of Bill Press and said?