Before I get started, lemmie say I have no problem with same-sex marrage. So that said, my post is asking for comments on something I'd read earlier today in a blurb on the state supreme court's review of the state prohibition against it. The item that struck me, that I hadn't thought of before was the presidence of establishing arbitrary
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I know the reasons behind the original prohibitions, the point was that in the end, they were set up out of a particular world view/ethic position (the cousins issue beginning long before they knew why it was a bad genetic idea) and not for anything more solid than it was the morality position of the day.
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I believe marriage is a vow for lifetime companionship...through good and hard times, chosing to stick together regardless... and that VOW is taken before God/dess...ceremony shouldn't matter.
so...to me, it doesn't matter who is taking the vow...one, two, more, man, woman, transgender, etc and if they break that vow (and even the vow can be determined by the people involved) then they and their God/dess will have to settle the issue.
...as you said, I now believe the only legal function should be that is must be consenting adults.
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2. It really depends on the prohibition. Again, what is the historic basis behind the prohibition, and does it still apply logically? Looked at as an issue on its own, does it make sense for our society today?
3. Post-sex change individuals fall into the same category of every consenting adult: They're people. Love doesn't distinguish between race, gender, or the history of one's gender, therefore our society has no right to deny two people the right to join themselves together.
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