Ryan T. Anderson of the conservative
Heritage Foundation argues in an amicus brief before the
Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals that everyone's for marriage
equality, but allowing gay couples to marry would hurt marriage.
In his friend-of-the-court brief,
Anderson sides with Florida officials who are appealing a federal
judge's ruling striking down Florida's 2008 voter-approved
constitutional amendment limiting marriage to heterosexual unions.
While the Eleventh Circuit and the
Supreme Court have refused to block the ruling from taking effect on
January 6, Florida officials continue to defend the ban in court.
“This case is not about whether to
expand the pool of people eligible to marry,” Anderson
writes. “Everyone is for marriage equality – for recognizing
all marriages, properly understood. This case is rather about who,
in our constitutional regime, gets to decide what marriage is, and
about which possible definitions are constitutionally permissible.”
“Law shapes culture, which shapes
people's behavior. Marriage law shapes what people expect of
themselves and others with respect to marriage. So if the law
defines marriage as, essentially, romantic-emotional union, people
can be expected to internalize this view. But because this view
removes any basis of principle for norms like permanence and
exclusivity, and promotes an ideology of expressive individualism
that prioritizes personal emotional fulfillment, its prevalence is
likely to further destabilize the institution of marriage across
society. This would harm the interests – primarily having to do
with children's well being – that involve the state in marriage.”
Anderson adds: “But none of these
harms is caused by recognizing infertile (opposite-sex) marriages,
which cohere with the conjugal view.”
The Eleventh Circuit is expected to
hear arguments in the case early in the new year.
In the never ending attempt by right wing (supposedly) religious conservatives, to demonize homosexuals, they continuously fail to see the elephant in the room.
Once again, they refuse to take responsibility for their own actions...if heterosexual marriages are in such dire straits, then why don't they do the one thing they *NEVER* mention?
Make it harder for heterosexual couples to get a divorce.
That, of course, wouldn't allow them to blame someone else for their own problems.
1 comment:
Whenever I read statement's from all the bigots now I almost feel sad that they can't hear how ignorant they sound. I said almost.
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