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Ten Persuasive Answers to the Question, "Why Not Gay Marriage?" — Conclusion
By Glenn T. Stanton

Editor’s note:  This is the second of a two-part essay that answers ten Important questions about the dangers of same-sex marriage. Read part one here.

Question 6:  “Is it healthy to subject children to experimental families?”

Not all married couples have children, but most do. And not all same-sex married couples will want children, but many of them will. So the argument for same-sex marriage is the argument for the same-sex family.

No society at any time — primitive or developed, ancient or modern — has ever raised a generation of children in same-sex homes.  Same-sex marriage will subject a generation of children to the status of lab rats in a vast, untested, social experiment.

In The Lesbian Parenting Book, the authors admit that in founding lesbian homes, “our children are not the only ones who may find themselves in uncharted territory.”13

Notice the words “uncharted territory.” That sounds like another word for “experiment.”

They continue: “Many of our visions are still new, even for us. It can be exhilarating — and sometimes scary — to be painting a new and different lesbian family tree.”14

Again, note their adjectives: “scary” and “exhilarating.”  These words seem appropriate for bungee jumping or a roller-coaster ride, but not childrearing.

And here’s what they say about what it would mean to raise boys in lesbian homes: 

It will be interesting to see over time whether lesbians’ sons have an easier or harder time developing their gender identity than do boys with live-in fathers.15

The key phrase: “it will be interesting to see.”

We live in a warning label society — warning labels everywhere tell us no animals were harmed in the testing of this or that particular product. But the warning label on the same-sex family is “it will be interesting to see.”

Do you think it will be “interesting” to subject millions of children to these experimental families?

Question 7:  “But haven’t medical and psychological groups said same-sex parenting is fine?”

We often hear it said that the American Academy of Pediatrics supports same-sex parenting. And so do the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association and the American Medical Association.

“Who are you to say they are wrong?” we’re asked.

Well, the AAP and APA and AMA are wrong. Let’s examine why.

Here’s the American Academy of Pediatrics’ statement:

[T]here is a considerable body of professional literature that suggests that children with parents who are homosexual have the same advantages and the same expectations for health, adjustment and development as children whose parents are heterosexual.”16

Now how did the AAP — all the pediatricians — come to this decision? Did they gather all the best pediatricians together and carefully study the literature, or did they do it another way?

They did it another way.

They made this decision with a select committee of nine people. And once they made this statement, the reaction of the larger membership of the Academy was phenomenal!

Consider this e-mail, written by the lead author of the AAP’s study, and what it says about the larger membership’s response:

The AAP has received more messages — almost all of them CRITICAL — from members about the recent Policy Statement on [same-sex adoption] than it has EVER received on any other topic. This is a serious problem, as it means that it will become harder to continue the work that we have been doing to use the AAP as a vehicle for positive change.17 (emphasis in original)

Consider that last statement: “use the AAP as a vehicle for positive change.” Is this careful science or blatant activism?

The AAP and these other professional medical organizations cannot make statements about how same-sex families serve child-well being. 

Why?

Because we have not performed the experiment yet!

The AAP admits there are no large populations of children raised in same-sex homes to study:

The small and non-representational samples studied and the relatively young age of most of the children suggest some reserve... Research exploring the diversity of parental relationships among gay and lesbian parents is just beginning.18

Yet within sentences of these recognized cautions, the Academy claims:

[T]he weight of evidence gathered during several decades using diverse samples and methodologies is persuasive in demonstrating that there is no systematic difference between gay and nongay parents in emotional health, parenting skills, and attitudes toward parenting.19

It’s also worth noting that while the AAP states the kids who grow up in same-sex homes look pretty much like children who grow up in hetereosexual homes, they are both right and wrong. The fine print of the Academy’s study tells the full story. They report that children who grew up in same-sex homes had outcomes similar to children who grew up in heterosexual divorced and step-family homes.20

That is another way of saying kids who grew up in same-sex homes didn’t look like kids who grow up with their own mother and father!

How did a small group of pediatricians with too little data and conflicting analyses come to such a definitive conclusion about the benefits of same-sex marriage? Isn’t this the definition of prejudice, to draw a conclusion before all the facts are gathered?

But consider what another major study on same-sex marriage says.

The Stacey/Biblarz study is used widely by same-sex marriage proponents to show that such families are not harmful to children. And this is indeed the conclusion the authors offer. But regarding research done on children raised in same-sex homes, they admit,

“Thus far, no work has compared children’s long-term achievements in education, occupation, income, and other domains of life”21 (emphasis added).

How can we draw a conclusion on the long-term impact of same-sex parenting if no long-term research has been done?

Question 8:  “How do we know what kind of families children need?”

All of the family experimentation over the past 30 years — no-fault divorce, the sexual revolution, cohabitation and widespread fatherlessness — have been documented failures, harming adults and children in far deeper ways, for longer periods of time, than even the most conservative among us ever imagined.

Why do we think this radical new experiment will somehow bring good things?

No pediatrician or child development theorist would look at a child, see the problems that child has and say, “I know exactly what that child needs, I’m going to write a prescription for a same-sex home.”

Every child-development theory tells us kids do best when they are raised by their own mothers and fathers. And it’s interesting that even more liberal organizations are starting to understand this.

Child Trends, in a recent research brief, explains:

An extensive body of research tells us that children do best when they grow up with both biological parents… Thus, it is not simply the presence of two parents, as some have assumed, but the presence of two biological parents that seems to support children’s development.22

The Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP), also finds:

Most researchers now agree that together these studies support the notion that, on average, children do best when raised by their two married, biological parents.23

By definition, no child living in a two-parent same-sex home is living with both biological parents. As a result, every child living in such a home is living in a home that is less than best.

Question 9:  “Is the same-sex family about the needs of children or the wants of adults?”

We can learn a lot from the world’s most famous lesbian mom: Rosie O’Donnell.

In an interview on ABC’s “Primetime Live” a few years ago, Diane Sawyer asked, “Would it break your heart if he [Rosie’s 6-year-old son Parker] said, ‘I want a mommy and a daddy’?”

Rosie said, “No. And he has said that.”

Diane said, “He has?”

Rosie answered, “Of course he has. But as I said to my son, Parker, ‘If you were to have a daddy, you wouldn’t have me as a mommy because I’m the kind of mommy who wants another mommy.’”24

Can anyone say that is a good parenting ethic? The child needs a daddy, but he is told “no” because the parent has wants, and those wants come before the child’s needs.

Many people say marriage is about legal benefits and privileges — Social Security benefits and hospital visitation rights, and children should be given these benefits and protections. But little Parker has never asked, “Mama, why can’t we have all the rights and benefits and protections of

marriage?” Parker asks, “Mama, why can’t I have a daddy?”

And again, the answer is you can’t have what you need because I want what I want.

Why does Parker want a daddy?

Not because Rosie enrolled him in a fundamentalist day school where they indoctrinated him with that idea.

He’s reminded of the lack of his father all over the place.  He sees it in the fact that he’s different from all the rest of the adults in his house. When he looks in the mirror, he wonders if he looks like his dad. When he bathes, physically and psychologically he’s reminded that he’s not like the women in his house.

Where is this adult male who is like me, whom I can emulate, whom I can follow after?

Today’s experiment in same-sex marriage is similar to our nation’s experiment with divorce 40 years ago.  Dr. Judith Wallerstein, one of the world’s leading researchers on how divorce impacts children, observes:

We made radical changes in the family without realizing how it would change the experience of growing up. We embarked on a gigantic social experiment without any idea about how the next generation would be affected.  If the truth be told, and if we are able to face it, the history of divorce in our society is replete with unwarranted assumptions that adults have made about children simply because such assumptions are congenial to adult needs and wishes.25

Today, we are making unwarranted assumptions about children simply because such assumptions arise from adult wishes. We must realize how this new gigantic social experiment will change the experience of growing up.

Question 10:  “Does gender really matter?”

This is the question this whole issue comes down to. If same-sex families and male-female families are interchangeable — like vanilla or chocolate ice cream, mere preference — and that

is exactly what our opponents want us to believe, then...

• male or female,
• mother and father,
• husband and wife,

... do not really matter for the family or society. We are told, “you can have a man and women in your family if you want, but neither is necessary.”

The same-sex marriage proponents take what I call a “Mr. Potato Head” theory of humanity: There is no real difference between Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head. They have the same central core, but merely external interchangeable parts.  There’s no real difference.

That’s exactly what many believe. But no.

But humanity is demonstrated in our complementary beings as male and female.

And male and female really mean something.

Our maleness and femaleness go right to the very core of our being. Every person matters as a male or female. Each has what the other needs but lacks.

Love will not be enough to help two dads guide a scared, young girl through her first period or help her pick out her first bra. These men will have very little to say because they’ve never experienced these things. Likewise, what kind of message would two lesbian moms teach a little girl about loving a man or a little boy about growing into a man?

The same-sex family celebrates sameness.

Any family that intentionally rejects either male or female — saying either is not necessary — cannot be viewed as good and virtuous in a society that esteems the unique value of both male and female.

The idea that male and female are replaceable is really an anti-human message.

Recap

These ten questions and answers are summarized in the following points:

• Marriage serves a necessary public purpose and it does so as a heterosexual institution, serving both religious and civic needs.

• If we redefine marriage for this experiment, where do we stop?

• Same-sex marriage is nothing like interracial marriage.

• It is cruel to subject children to experimental families.

• The professional medical organizations that have supported same-sex parenting don’t have enough research data to do so.

• Thousands of studies show that children do best with married mothers and fathers.

• Any family that says male and female are optional is not a good human family, no matter how loving it might be.

• Society needs natural marriage. It has no need for experimental families. This is because both male and female are essential for the family and society.

Finally, here’s a quote that captures this issue:

Let times change, let the weather change, but do not invent an adulterated family and drink from it as if it were the real nourishing thing.26

From the Focus on the Family booklet “Why Not Gay Marriage” written by Glenn T. Stanton.  Copyright © 2005, Focus on the Family.  All rights reserved.  International copyright secured.  Used by permission.

Notes

13 D. Merilee Clunis and G. Dorsey Green, The Lesbian Parenting Book: A Guide to

Creating Families and Raising Kids, 2nd ed. (New York: Seal Press, 2003), p. 60.

14 Clunis and Green, The Lesbian Parenting Book: A Guide to Creating Families and

Raising Kids, 2nd ed., p. 60.

15 Clunis and Green, The Lesbian Parenting Book: A Guide to Creating Families and

Raising Kids, p. 243.

16 “News Release: AAP says children of same-sex couples deserve two legally recognized

parents,” February 4, 2002, http://www.aap.org/advocacy/archives/febsamesex.htm,

accessed 4/7/05.

17 E-mail to select AAP members, from Ellen Perrin, February 15, 2002.

18 Ellen Perrin, “Technical Report: Coparent and Second-Parent Adoption by Same-Sex

Parents,” Pediatrics, 109 (2002), pp. 341-343.

19 Perrin, “Technical Report: Coparent and Second-Parent Adoption by Same-Sex

Parents,” pp. 341-343.

20 Perrin, “Technical Report: Coparent and Second-Parent Adoption by Same-Sex

Parents,” pp. 341, 342.

21 Judith Stacey and Timothy Biblarz, “(How) Does the Sexual Orientation of Parents

Matter?” American Sociological Review,” 66 (2001), pp. 159-183

22 Kristin Anderson Moore et al., “Marriage From a Child’s Perspective: How Does

Family Structure Affect Children, and What Can We Do About It?” Child Trends

Research Brief, June 2002, p. 1.

23 Mary Parke, “Are Married Parents Really Better for Children?” Center for Law and

Social Policy, May 2003, p. 1.

24 Diane Sawyer (Anchor), “Rosie’s Story: For the Sake of the Children: Rosie O’Donnell’s

Crusade on Behalf of Gay Parents Seeking to Adopt Children,” ABC News:

“Primetime,” (March 14, 2004).

25 Judith Wallerstein, et al., The Unexpected Legacy of Divorce: A 25 Year Landmark

Study, (Hyperion, 2000), p. xxii.

26 Alvaro de Silva, ed. Brave New Family: G.K. Chesterton on Men, Women, Children,

Sex, Divorce, Marriage and the Family, (San Francisco: CA: Ignatius Press), 1990, p.19.

 

 

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© 2006 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

Glenn T. Stanton is the director of social research and cultural affairs and senior analyst for marriage and sexuality at Focus on the Family. He is also the author of Why Marriage
Matters and Marriage on Trial: The Case Against Same-Sex Marriages and Parenting (with Bill Maier).

Related Resources:

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