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©iStockphoto.com/Wouter van Caspel
By RoseMarie Briggs
On August 9, 2007, an historic event
happened in the United States. This event was not a medical breakthrough
or the discovery of a new planet. The event was an historic marker
for how fast America is falling away from the core belief and social
science proof that homes headed by a mother and a father are good
for adults, good for children and good for society as a whole.
On August 9th nearly all of the Democratic presidential candidates,
including the three front runners, publicly declared their support
for same-sex marriage or its legal equivalent, civil unions, in
a forum sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign, HRC, the nation's
largest gay advocacy group and by Logo, the gay-oriented cable channel.
Logo provided a live telecast of the event to its 27 million homes
and an internet simulcast.
While two of the underdog candidates, Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio
and former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel, publicly endorse national recognition
for same-sex marriage, Sen. Hillary Clinton, Sen. Barack Obama,
former Sen. John Edwards and Gov. Bill Richardson all support civil
unions.
Likewise HRC offered all the Republican presidential candidates
the same forum, but all have declined. Among the Republican candidates,
former New York Mayor, Rudy Giuliani has shown the most support
for legal recognition of same-sex relationships. In 1998 he signed
into law a domestic partnership bill for New York City.
What is the Difference between Civil Unions and Domestic Partnerships?
Depending on how the legislation is written the answer can be nothing
except the name. Currently Oregon (2007), New Hampshire (2007),
New Jersey (2006), Connecticut (2005), California (2000) and Vermont
(2000) have laws which are the legal equivalent of marriage. These
laws provide same-sex couples the same benefits and obligations
as marriage.
New Hampshire, New Jersey, Connecticut and Vermont use the term
"civil unions," whereas California and Oregon use the
term "domestic partnership." Both New Hampshire's civil
union law and Oregon's domestic partnership law will take affect
in 2008.
In general, civil unions are the legal equivalent of marriage for
same-sex couples only. The term domestic partnership is more commonly
used for a range of marriage-like benefits to a broader class of
people. Washington (2007), New Jersey (2004), Maine (1999) and the
District of Columbia (1992/2002) have established domestic partnership
laws that follow this definition.
For example, Maine's domestic partnership law grants inheritance
rights, next of kin status, victim's compensation, and guardian
and conservator rights and is available to two unmarried adults
regardless of gender. Washington's domestic partnership law grants
the benefits of marriage to same-sex couples and to elderly heterosexual
couples. One more term to add to the mix is Hawaii's (1996) "reciprocal
beneficiary" status for same-sex couples.
Several polls including a recent one by the Pew Research Center
confirms that support for same-sex marriage remains about one-third
among American adults, yet there is much more public support for
civil unions. Some see civil unions as a reasonable compromise
on this controversial issue. Family Leader sees civil unions as
the equivalent of marriage and any law that dilutes the meaning
and purpose of marriage hurts adults, children and society.
Five Reasons Why Civil Unions Hurt Marriage
1. Government recognition of civil unions sends the message
to society ? especially the rising generation — that, "You
can get all the benefits of marriage in whatever relationship you
choose whether it be a man and a woman, a man and a man or a woman
and a woman. Man/woman marriage is not unique but rather just one
of the kinds of adult relationships that government endorses and
rewards with benefits."
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has
said, ''That benefits are given to married couples and not to singles
or gay couples has nothing to do with discrimination; it has everything
to do with building a stable new generation and nation."
2. Government recognition of civil unions on the state level
clearly undermines federal policy designed to strengthen marriage.
In 1996 Congress established the Healthy Marriage Initiative (HMI)
and declared "Marriage is an essential institution of a
successful society which promotes the interests of children."
Under the HMI, the federal government spends millions of dollars
each year to strengthen marriage and fatherhood. This includes marriage
education and premarital counseling that is happening in 29 states.
Most of these programs are funded with five-year federal grants
under the $1.5 billion federal HMI. It makes no sense to spend a
billion-plus tax dollars at the federal level to strengthen marriage
while at the same time pass laws at the state level that dilute
the role of marriage as a social good.
3. Government recognition of civil unions is based on the
desires of some adults NOT what is best for children and society
as a whole. Just months ago New Hampshire lawmakers legalized
civil unions. The irony of this new law is that in 2005, a bipartisan
commission released the results of a 16-month study that posed the
question is same-sex marriage or any legal equivalent good for New
Hampshire. The commission's answer came back as "NO."
Historically, government has come to the rescue of motherless or
fatherless families, not deliberately create them. Decades of social
science and government data are absolutely conclusive that children
raised by their married mother and father in a low stress marriage
have the best physical, academic and social outcomes and the best
chance to avoid social hazards like dropping out of school, illegal
drug use and violent crimes.
4. Civil unions pave the way for same-sex marriage.
In 2000, Vermont was the first state to legalize civil unions. Now,
seven years later, advocates are testing the waters for gay marriage.
Earlier this year Washington State legalized domestic partnerships
for same-sex couples. Advocates of the new law, including the bill's
sponsor, have made it abundantly clear that the new domestic partnership
law is the path to same-sex marriage.
Sen. Edward Murray has said, "We'll keep coming back, and keep
telling the story and hope people go Geez, let's just get it over
with, let's pass marriage."
5. Scandinavian countries have proved that once same-sex
marriage or its legal equivalents are established, it's only a matter
of time before marriage loses meaning in society. Heterosexual
couples are less inclined to marry altogether, out-of-wedlock birth
rates skyrocket, and huge populations of children once protected
by the shelter of married parents in a stable relationship find
themselves at risk for poverty, abuse, behavioral and emotional
problems, lower academic achievement, depression and drug use.
Click here
to read "The End of Marriage in Scandinavia."
Go to www.familyleader.net
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© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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