In response to Jennifer Roback Morse’s remarks to the Minnesota house I have asked them the following questions. I post a screen shot of them here since NOM and the Ruth Institute are generally not interested in open civil debate. I don’t expect them to provide any answers to them.
Gay and Lesbian people exist. We always have and always will. Regardless of what NOM, the Ruth Institute, or any of the other discriminatory organizations that continue to turn our own government against us hope to achieve. Sometimes I truly wonder what their goal really is. Is it to try and somehow cure us and eliminate us? I don’t think that there really is a clear answer to that question and frankly if that is the goal, it’s a fool’s goal because it can never be achieved. More Gay and Lesbian Americans are born everyday. Trying to rid America of us makes about as much sense as trying to get rid of everyone with red hair.
So if we aren’t going away what sort of protections do we deserve if not marriage? The reality of the mater is that we do fall in love. We do have children. We do build lives and families together. We buy homes together. We go on vacations together. We worry about paying the bills together just like any other family. Is it right that when one of us dies we have no say over burial or that we have to pay gift taxes on the things we bought together as a couple? If one of us becomes sick do we not have a right to visit our partner? Should we not have any rights to the children we may have spent years raising together simply because the state won’t allow us to adopt our partner’s biological child?
These are questions that can’t be answered by a simple contract other than that of civil marriage. Contracts other than marriage can be and often are challenged in court by family members that may not approve of the same sex relationship.
Without marriage are we just supposed to live a life without love, in solitude, and unhappiness? If you deny us marriage, then what will you allow?
Posts Tagged ‘Same Sex Marriage’
Australia Tries Again.
On Wednesday Sen. Sarah Hanson-Young of Australia?s Green Party, reintroduced a bill that would legalize marriage equality. Previous attempts to pass equality legislation in Australia have failed and the Green Party only holds 5 senate seats.
Meanwhile the Australian state of Tasmania has approved a bill, in a 22-3 vote, that will begin recognizing same sex marriages performed outside of Australia.
New Hampshire ? 2009 is Progress
New Hampshire?s Gov. John Lynch announced Thursday that he would sign the bill legalizing same-sex marriage in New Hampshire if the state legislature added language to the bill granting more protections to religious organizations similar to those in similar laws passed by Vermont and Connecticut.
I have heard, and I understand, the very real feelings of same-sex couples that a separate system is not an equal system. That a civil law that differentiates between their committed relationships and those of heterosexual couples undermines both their dignity and the legitimacy of their families.
I have also heard, and I understand, the concerns of our citizens who have equally deep feelings and genuine religious beliefs about marriage. They fear that this legislation would interfere with the ability of religious groups to freely practice their faiths.
If the New Hampshire legislature passes the language proposed by the governor then New Hampshire will become the 6th state to legalize same sex marriage. The other states that currently have legalized same sex marriages are, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont, and Maine (Vermont and Maine will be effective in Sept, 09).
This would leave Rhode Island the only New England state with out legalized same sex marriage. There are currently two bills in the Rhode Island legislature that are trying to make their way through. One would legalize same sex marriages, the other would ban them by way of constitutional amendment. Even if the heavily Roman Catholic state were to pass a same sex marriage bill, Gov. Don Carcieri would probably veto it. However he can not run for re-election 2010 and many of the potential Democratic candidates have said they would sign a same sex marriage bill if they were elected.
In New York, the state Assembly passed a bill legalizing same sex marriage on Tuesday in an 89-52 vote. The bill is now headed for the state senate where it is expected to face stronger opposition.
In Maine where the law was recently passed there is a movement by opposition leaders to exercise what is called a public Veto. If they get the signatures they need to force the veto referendum, then the law is suspended pending the referendum vote.
Californians are still waiting for the Supreme Court there to rule on the validity of Prop 8. However many supporters are not counting on the court and are all ready preparing to try again with a referendum measure in 2010. Same sex marriages were briefly legal in the state and many look forward to the day when they will be again. The court is expected to make it?s ruling in the coming months.
New Jersey, the only state to ever have an openly gay Governor, is also being targeted by both groups of same sex marriage supporters and opponents. Legislation has been introduced by Gov. Jon Corzine and he has promised to sign it if it gets passed by the state legislature there.
Finally there is Washington D.C, where the city council passed a bill that would recognize same sex marriages performed in other states in the district.
It?s kind of amazing how things have worked out so far in 2009. In January there were 2 states where same sex couples could marry. Since the Iowa ruling in March, it?s like flood gates have been opened. I look forward to the day when it?s legal nationwide.
For more information on same sex marriages around the country and the world, Wikipedia has a lot of information and links to more reliable sources.
For information on Same sex marriage in Iowa, and if you want to help support the right of all Iowans to marry, visit One Iowa. Opponents of same sex marriage in Iowa have vowed to make it an issue in the 2010 elections and to work to overturn the supreme court decision by passing a constitutional amendment. Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean will be headlining a benefit dinner with One Iowa later this month in Des Moines.
Maine legalizes Same Sex Marriage : Updated
Gov. John Baldacci of Maine has signed legislation that has legalized Same Sex Marriage in that state. This makes Maine the 5th state to currently allow same-sex marriage after Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, and Iowa.
Gov. Baldacci had this to say during his comments?
In the past, I opposed gay marriage while supporting the idea of civil unions. I have come to believe that this is a question of fairness and of equal protection under the law, and that a civil union is not equal to civil marriage.
The New Hampshire house is set to vote on a same-sex marriage bill on Wednesday that has all ready passed through that state?s senate. Gov. John Lynch has not made it known as to whether or not he will sign the bill. A bill has also been introduced in New York and their is a bill in committee in Rhode Island however that bill is not expected to pass this year. There is also legislative activity on a bill in New Jersey and the Washington DC city council passed a city ordinance on Tuesday that recognizes same sex marriages performed in other states.
Congratulations to Maine from Iowa.
Update: New Hampshire Legislature has just passed it’s same sex marriage bill and it is on it’s way to the Gov.
Gay New York
Robert over at FiveThirtyEight.com has posted the results of same-sex marriage polls from the state of New York. According to these polls the majority of New Yorkers support same-sex marriage.
