We're talking about the civil view of marriage and law though. My claim is that from the government's point of view marriage is an essential part of a healthy society in a number of ways, some of which homosexual couples can fulfill and some of which they can't.
The fundamental aspect, the need to form families, is not by any means an alien concept to homosexuals. We have no right to stop them, as I see it.
You have my word, I will not prevent homosexuals from procreating.
What's your point here? We're talking about civil marriage.
I disagree. It's a step toward making the institution open to people who otherwise could not experience it in a meaningful way. Meanwhile you've essentially argued that it has no purpose beyond procreation.
I haven't argued that, you've simply twisted my words like so many others in the thread, which is why I wasn't replying to you in the first place.
Therefore, it should be open to just about everyone.
Non-sequitur, we are concerned with what "bolstering families" means.
They simply don't. Homosexual couples cannot procreate.
I'm not sure what you hope to accomplish with this line of denialism. Clearly, homosexuals can have and raise families, with or without children, and it is often better to do so within the constraints of a legally recognized union.
See, I'm not sure what you hope to accomplish with this line of denialism. I've said homosexuals can't procreate, you folks don't seem to understand what that actually means.
I think you may need to brush up on recognizing fallacies. Nothing that I've argued presumes my conclusion.
Asserting "it isn't even part of the process" does just that :idunno:
That's just plain not true. Which makes it like a lot of the other things you've said in this thread, except that it's actually literally written down in laws and court decisions. But if you don't believe that homosexuals can have families, why would you believe that marriage have been opened in many jurisdiction to homosexuals?
You're putting words in my mouth, I've merely said homosexuals can't procreate.
No, we'd expect actual fertility tests. Which we don't have.
No...
Do sterile couples pose a problem for my position? No, they are an exception and not the rule.
I'd say your position doesn't account for the really common exceptions to the rule. Which makes it incomplete. But for some reason you seem to think that the holes in your argument vindicate it.
I thought you came here to make arguments? So far I've seen a lot of emotional attacks, little argument, and less close reading of the points I've actually made.
What "kind" of exception? The laws should be written to apply to people pretty uniformly.
And yet we don't restrict marriage to only the "fit". Sounds like eugenics when you put it that way.
So 90-95% of heterosexual couples are fertile while 0% of homosexual couples are fertile. The government gives benefits to married couples (partially) based on the assumption that the man and woman are capable of reproducing, which is reasonable.
The government primarily gives scholarships to minorities without checking their actual situation. I assume you think the government should screen all candidates before making them eligible.
The government gives welfare to folks making less than x dollars per year. I assume you think the government should screen everyone.
etc. Maybe you're right, maybe in a perfect world the government would screen each couple and micro-manage society (though I think this would be a form of eugenics as you note). Our world isn't perfect, that's not how the government works, 95% and 0% are big numbers.
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