Well, it's of course true that the government can make changes to their part of the contract; they can legislate the marital benefits away,
You say that as if it's normal that a contract exists between three parties, where one of them does not exercise any specific discretion in forming it, and with that party able to amend the contract unilaterally by a legislative process.
But as TH has pointed out already, this is exactly the same relationship that the state always has to contracts. The power to regulate.
but as of now they exist and they go right along with marriage.
I don't know of a single subsidy that government offers that's written to imply that any of them are supposed to be controlling of the institution of marriage.
What do you take to be integral to marriage?
The union of two people.
But it isn't just any civil contract.
Right, it's a specific kind of civil contract.
It is a specific agreement between a man, a woman, and the government.
Minus a few general restrictions, such as the prohibition of incest, the state exercises absolutely no discretion in forming the contract. The discretion is entirely on the couple, who are the real parties to the contract. And each restriction the government places on the union must meet Constitutional standards. This is why we rejected the standard that some states had that the union could only exist between people of the same race, and it is ultimately why we should reject the restriction that it may only exist between people of opposite gender.
A homosexual couple can go form a contract for certain things but it isn't marriage and it won't include all that marriage brings.
Sure, they can form a contract. They can sell land to one another, they can buy things together, they can assign power of attorney. But they aren't permitted the sort of world-recognized union that so many heterosexuals enjoy, and that's unfair, unwarranted, and unjustified by our highest laws.
Right. You just prohibit them from getting married at all.
How is that any less discriminatory or more just?
I should probably try to read some state marriage laws.
Not a bad idea.
When you separate out the federal benefits, what comes with state marriage?
Well, that varies a lot by state. If you just look at the chapters of law that define marriage, it's often little more than a definition and a set of regulations for how the marriage may be performed.
If you take a broader look, and consider state laws that reference marriage, you find things like prohibitions of spousal abandonment in many states. It often impacts how welfare works in a number of ways. It obviously impacts prenuptial agreements, and access to divorce.
Many of these things have the potential to save the state money rather than costing it money. For instance, the fact that a person is typically financially responsible for their spouse, it may prevent the spouse from collecting welfare, or it may afford the state someone to reimburse them for welfare paid.
Previously I quoted to Zippy the bits of state law from my home state that define marriage, with a link to the relevant chapter. Not a difficult read.
I didn't intend to say otherwise.
I agree.
:up: