The trend just keeps changing...

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Can you really bridge the gap between reality and training? Between traditional karate and real world encounters? Absolutely, we will address in this forum why this transition is necessary and critical for survival, and provide suggestions on how to do this correctly. So come in and feel welcomed, but leave your egos at the door!
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Med Tech
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Post by Med Tech »

Valkenar wrote: But he doesn't have the right to marry someone he loves romantically in those states. Offering him the right to marry someone of the opposite sex is like offering you the right to marry a tree.
Not really. He doesn't have a right to marry a tree either. Romantic love just doesn't cut it for government policy, at least in my book. Polygamists and people who want to marry their brothers and sisters might feel romantic love too, yet the government can say that that is illegal. Like it or not, morality is legislated, and in a Democracy, the majority rules.
What significance do you think marriage has besides love and comittment?
What significance? Well, that's a 'tough issue,' isn't it? It's something that, for the most part, I keep between myself and my immediate family. I have seen this issue tear apart my extended family (I had a gay uncle who died of AIDS. The family was pretty well split in two or three camps after that). For my part, I am sick and tired of being treated like some poor, unenlightened ignoramus for not buying into what I view as GLBT propaganda, and I was glad to have the opportunity to speak out against the decline of our culture with my vote on election day.
Here's a comparison, at one time the majority would have said it should be illegal for blacks and whites to marry. Was that reasonable? Just because the majority believes something doesn't make it right.
Once again, we arrive at that road block. A majority in this country don't view this as a civil rights issue. Since it has yet to be proven that GLBTs are born GLBT, it's a poor comparison, one that has angered black pastors.
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Post by Panther »

ljr wrote:Personally I would like to the word "marraige" be completely stricken from all govenment documents. Everyone would get a "Civil Union" from the government, and a Marraige from their Church... If you want a "civil union" between any two people, whether or not love, children or farm animals are involved you should have it. All a civil union would represent is that these two people will be living as one "legal entity" in the eyes of the government.

If a church believes in a "civil union" between members of the same sex, they can then declare it a "marraige" in the eyes of their "god". If they don't they do not have to recognize the "civil union"
YES! EXACTLY!!!

See folks, no matter where people may pidgeonhole my positions or Ian's, the truth is that (at the very least on this topic) he and I are in COMPLETE agreement! In fact, I stated the very exact same thing previously. While, we may have different reasons for coming to the same conclusion, IMNSHO, that's a moot point. The real point is that we can both agree on the way we "wish" this would be handled. And Ian, Otomodachi... when your time is right, send me an email and let me know where I can send the "wedding" or "civil union" or whatever you want to call it present!

Now, back to the thread... It is interesting that this morning Zogby was projecting Kerry at 311 electoral votes and Bush with just over 227. It went against everything that Zogby was saying yesterday and last night... Anyway, that page (which was linked to by Bill on this thread) is no longer available! I wonder it that page was hijacked by someone or if Zogby just went off the deep end and pulled it because of embarassment... Hmmmm... Interesting none the less...
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Post by Bill Glasheen »

Same feelings as ljr and Panther. But I do see MedTech's point that we can't carry this to an extreme. We do not allow polygamy, and most agree with that. We do not allow bestiality or statutory rape, and most agree with that.

This is a different type of union than a traditional XX vs. XY union. Even if we are talking about procreation, it's different, no? Possible, yes. Different, absolutely. These are apples and oranges, and have to be treated as such.
Now, back to the thread... It is interesting that this morning Zogby was projecting Kerry at 311 electoral votes and Bush with just over 227. It went against everything that Zogby was saying yesterday and last night... Anyway, that page (which was linked to by Bill on this thread) is no longer available! I wonder it that page was hijacked by someone or if Zogby just went off the deep end and pulled it because of embarassment... Hmmmm...
Panther, I saw that yesterday and said "What the f***???" Notice I did not post it. This isn't the first time that I intervened with my pattern recognition skills.

Indeed I thought Zogby had someone hijack his webpage. But a view of it today shows Zogby essentially fessing up to his complete misread of "trends."

Zogby is left leaning. He has been so good using his brain as opposed to his heart until just now. He really goofed. Just goes to show how difficult it is to be completely objective.

I'm a scientist and an ENTP who is strong on the T vs. the F. I can compartmentalize easier than most. It's why I do my job rather than some other kind of job.

Fascinating...

- Bill
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Post by ljr »

Panther wrote:
YES! EXACTLY!!!

See folks, no matter where people may pidgeonhole my positions or Ian's, the truth is that (at the very least on this topic) he and I are in COMPLETE agreement!
Panther,
Just wanted to point out that I said this ( "ljr", or Louis if you prefer ) not Ian. Just though I would point this out since this is the second time I notice the confusion.

Cheers!
ljr
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Post by Med Tech »

Valkenar wrote:
...What is truly prevalent is every-day discrimination like Ian talked about.
Ian views a gay marriage ban as discrimination, so obviously, what you view as discrimination, I might not.
That's just it. Marriage isn't being changed. Two people who are married have the same relationship whether there are gay people married or not. It's no different from someone who studies one martial art getting upset because someone else does something differently.
It is different. A family is not a karate class. Countries are much more impacted by the family ideal than by how a martial art is practiced, wouldn't you agree?
Oh yes, people do get upset about this kind of thing, but generally we seem to agree that it's best to just accept that some people do things differently. If you don't like what someone else does with their life, just ignore it if it doesn't affect you.
It does affect me, and it affects my family. It affects my kids at school, myself at work, and it affects the future of my family, if I ignore or affirm an alternate lifestyle. The only thing necessary for evil to win is for good people to do nothing.
I'd be happy to say that the state should have no stake in marriage. Seperate the legal issues and leave marriage for individiuals and to decide within their own faith. But as long as it's going to set up a legal framework it needs to do it fairly.
It is doing it fairly. Everyone in this country can marry any one person of the opposite sex. That's fair.
No, it won't I'm honestly sorry if you felt that was what I was doing. It is not my intent.
The apology belongs to me. I transferred the message I have recieved from others to your words, and you have been very polite. I appreciate that, and I apologize for misjudging you.
As for your question, the first amendment is somewhat relevant. Some religions want to allow gay marriage, and the consitution says Congress shall make no laws respecting religion or its exercise. This argument isn't very strong, however, but I do think it is worth noting since religious freedom is so important.
You're right, it's not a strong argument. As long as the government isn't affirming a particular religion, and rather reflects the will of the majority, who are informed by their own concience, then there is no violation of that principle of seperation of Church vs State, and certainly no hindrance to the 1rst Amendment.
While I don't have a concise statement at the ready to describe the rights that are violated by the prohibition of marriage between same-sex couples, I would suggest that there certainly is a violation. Something along the lines of the right to pursue one's personal life as one sees fit if it doesn't infringe on anyone else. Think also for a moment about whether you would feel your rights violated if the government wanted to declare your marriage anulled. Whatever that right is, that's the one that applies to gay marriage.
The government has numerous restrictions on the books for personal behavior that does not infringe on anyone else. A man can't marry five women, even though it obviously doesn't infringe on anyone else to do so.
If the government declared every heterosexual marriage anulled, I wouldn't have a leg to stand on, would I? How likely do you think that is? I have a right to equal protection under the law, just like anyone else. Just like Ian.
Prohibitting gays from marriage is fundamentally discriminatory. I don't know how you feel about civil union for gays, but allowing civil union but not marriage when the state recognizes marriage is on par with seperate but equal.
I'm against seperate but equal, and I'm against my state allowing civil unions. What other states do, or even private or public corporations do is not an issue for me.
If all else fails, think of it this way: Congress shouldn't ban something just because it can do so without explicitly violating the bill of rights. It should stay out of people's personal business as much as it possibly can, do you agree?
I do agree that government shouldn't ban something 'just because it can do so without explicitly violating the bill of rights.' But I also think that government shouldn't create or modify something 'just because it can.' But as long as others, through the government, continue to fund abortion, strip parents' rights, put pro-gay propaganda in the schools, and persecute public religious activity, then we on the recieving end have a right to use the government to counteract that.
Obviously the preseident is going to push an ideology, and certainly should do so. It's one thing to push your ideology and another thing to push your religion and I think Bush does too much of the latter.
Oh, so as long as Kerry professes to an atheistic ideology, it's okay to push his agenda, but religious people have to check their agenda at the door? You know, there's a thin line between religious freedom and oppression of religion.
Because there are secular organizations that do the same thing. If the government is funding religions that do any proselytizing, then it is, in effect, funding that proselytizing. That is more than dangerously close to the government endorsing religion, given the circumstances.
I look at it much differently. Religion aside, those organizations proven to do the most good, should get the money. With effectiveness as the sole measure, it doesn't matter whether the organization is religious or not. Thus, no violation of Church vs State.

[Kerry is dead wrong for saying that if Bush had a different policy on stem-cell research we'd have some miracle solution by now.]

Something we agree on.
Even so, Bush's policy isn't based on a belief that stem-cell research is a dead-end.
The Bush policy is based on the results of a bio-ethics panel commissioned by the white house. Bush didn't just put his finger to the wind and decide God didn't like it.
You can question whether the government should fund research at all, but if it's going to, it should do so in the most sensible way.
The most sensible way, yes. Something that shows promise should get the moolah. Those that don't, shouldn't. Adult stem cells, unlike fetal stem cells, have shown promise, and are being funded.
There's no question that we've killed more of them than they have of us.
Let's see. Wrongful murders committed by unlawful combatants; 3,000 on 9/11, 1,000+ over the past year. Wrongful murders committed by unlawful American non-combatants; huh? Yes, we killed a bunch in war, but that's war between countries, and like it or not, an accepted means of projecting public policy.
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Post by Bill Glasheen »

I think it's inappropriate to imply that religion is the determing factor on whether or not the GOVERNMENT has to PAY for stem cell research. As a citizen of any (non)religion, I have a right to say what I believe government should or should not pay for with MY tax dollars, using whatever internal yard stick I choose.

This is the same as the abortion issue. Government allows abortion. But don't expect government to pay for it. Sounds like a deal to me!

And frankly, Bush's administration is THE FIRST to - yes - pay for ANY kind of stem cell research with MY tax dollars. So sorry you feel badly because you don't get a blank check. But given multifactorial issues, I'd rather see NIH money go towards research that has more plusses and fewer minuses. Those of you who've never actually DONE research...pardon me if I get uppity here for a second. You have no idea how hard it is to get government funding for even the most promising research with a virtual guarantee for return. And you want to put this ahead of other vital, life-saving research funds that don't have any of these barriers? I don't think so.

Face it, folks, this was a political football. Leave it to science to settle it, and don't listen to the crybabies who aren't getting all the tax money they want. These stem cell researchers are going to have to get in a very, very long line.

- Bill
Last edited by Bill Glasheen on Wed Nov 03, 2004 7:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by ljr »

Med Tech wrote: It does affect me, and it affects my family. It affects my kids at school, myself at work, and it affects the future of my family, if I ignore or affirm an alternate lifestyle. The only thing necessary for evil to win is for good people to do nothing.
Med Tech,
are you saying that you believe being gay or living an alternate lifestyle is morally wrong or evil?

Just because someone does not want to live a life you see a "normal" does not make them evil.

Should we outlaw divorce? Maybe we should take the "to death do us part" section of the catholic ceremony iterally.

cheers,
ljr
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Post by Bill Glasheen »

Just so that folks are clear...

My position is that different is different, and everyone needs to get over it. Period.

I'm perfectly fine with XX-XX or XY-XY. No reason why they shouldn't be just as happy or miserable as all the XX-XY's.

What I am suggesting here is for all to relax, get government out of this as much as possible, and work out a solution we all can live with. GLB is here to stay (always was, always will be), religion is here to stay (always was, always will be), and government (unfortunately) is here to stay. Stop preaching and work for a practical solution. It is there if you look for it.

Of all people, our heterogenous culture should be able to figure it out. And it'll take the exact same skills to figure out how to deal with issues in the Middle East.

Just my humble opinion.

- Bill
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Post by ljr »

Bill Glasheen wrote: Just my humble opinion.

- Bill
Yeah! What he said!
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Post by Valkenar »

Med Tech wrote: Ian views a gay marriage ban as discrimination, so obviously, what you view as discrimination, I might not.
...
It is doing it fairly. Everyone in this country can marry any one person of the opposite sex. That's fair.
I'm not sure of what comparison to draw. but the fact is that a homosexual cannot marry someone of the opposite sex. Would you call it fair if the law was that anyone can marry a person of the same sex? I suspect the answer is no. Would you feel that you could get married? Of course not, because you're not sexually attracted to your own gender.

While on the surface it sounds fair, the truth is that it undeniably targets one specific group of individuals. In this way, it is similar to long-gone poll taxes and other overturned voting requirements that were once used to keep blacks from voting. It has a surface veneer of impartiality, but the effect of it is to disproportionately (and in this case, only) affect a certain type of person.

Discrimination is "Treatment or consideration based on class or category rather than individual merit; partiality or prejudice" according to dictionary.com (the font of all wisdom). Therefore, because this marriage effect has the effect of prohibitting from marriage only those persons who belong to the category "homosexual" it must be considered discriminatory.

It does affect me, and it affects my family. It affects my kids at school, myself at work, and it affects the future of my family, if I ignore or affirm an alternate lifestyle.
In what way does it affect you or your family? A gay couple lives together for 10 years and gets married when it becomes legal. What change does that make in your life?
The only thing necessary for evil to win is for good people to do nothing.
I think this is a key statement, though I'm not sure how to respond to it. Can you clarify it maybe?
The government has numerous restrictions on the books for personal behavior that does not infringe on anyone else.
And I think the government is wrong to legislate morality in 99% of those cases. Even though I may agree with the majority opinion I don't think it's the government's place to dictate morality when there is no demonstrable harm.
... government shouldn't create or modify something 'just because it can.' But as long as others, through the government, continue to fund abortion, strip parents' rights, put pro-gay propaganda in the schools, and persecute public religious activity, then we on the recieving end have a right to use the government to counteract that.
Well fighting illegitimate government activity with more illegitimate government activity is not much of a solution. Also, I'm curious what you consider pro-gay propaganda to be? Are you using propaganda as a pejorative, or just descriptively? Is there such a thing as pro-heterosexual propaganda as well? I haven't been in public school for many years now, but I don't remember anything advocating homosexuality and would be very surprised to find that schools are doing so. Note that there's a difference between advocating homosexuality and advocating tolerance of homosexuality.
Oh, so as long as Kerry professes to an atheistic ideology, it's okay to push his agenda, but religious people have to check their agenda at the door? You know, there's a thin line between religious freedom and oppression of religion.
No, Kerry is a catholic anyway. Every president has been religious. My only point is that a president has to balance promoting an ideology while accepting diversity. If I became president you wouldn't see me pressing for legislation that explicitly promotes atheism or agnosticism, even though that's what I am.

I look at it much differently. Religion aside, those organizations proven to do the most good, should get the money. With effectiveness as the sole measure, it doesn't matter whether the organization is religious or not.
That's the problem. The faith-based organizations are not just humanitarian groups that happen to be religious. They are often financially and logistically connected to evangelism. You mention state funding of abortion, which works similarly. The government doesn't fund just abortion, they fund groups that include abortion alongside other family planning efforts.

And I think that matters. You don't want the government propagandizing ideas you don't agree with, right? How would you feel if the government wanted to start a program of some kind, and it just so happened that the Church of Satan had a strong track-record in that area? Would you want your tax dollars spent that way, I know I wouldn't. The fact is that giving money to religious organizations helps to spread that religion, and I don't want to be a part of that.

Also, do you have some proof that religious organizations are proven to do the most good? That seems impossible to quantify.

The most sensible way, yes. Something that shows promise should get the moolah. Those that don't, shouldn't. Adult stem cells, unlike fetal stem cells, have shown promise, and are being funded.
If it was just a question of suitability then he wouldn't have bothered making a pronouncement on the topic. He hasn't made any prohibitions regarding the study of cold fusion, for example.

Let's see. Wrongful murders committed by unlawful combatants; 3,000 on 9/11, 1,000+ over the past year. Wrongful murders committed by unlawful American non-combatants; huh? Yes, we killed a bunch in war, but that's war between countries, and like it or not, an accepted means of projecting public policy.
No, I don't accept this war as legitimate. What we're doing is wrongful murder. Even if it's not, I was just talking about the raw numbers of Americans killed versus middle-eastern people killed. But either way, this has been rehashed a million times. I was trying to make a little sarcastic joke, I don't really think killing all the arabs is Bush's aim for peace in the middle-east. I think he's going to grow a giant pumpkin, bake it into giant pies and send one to each side.

Bill:
If embryonic stem-cell research is a dead-end that's fine, I have no particular attachment to it. I totally agree that it's a political football and that's precisely why I don't like that Bush has made a pointless rule about it. I recognize that there's a long line for government grants and that they're given out based on merit (when the system works). I couldn't agree more that the government should just leave the political element out.
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Post by Gene DeMambro »

Leave it to science to settle it
The problem is Pres. Bush's complete contempt for any type of scientific process or discovery. He never has - and never will - use any type of quantifiable, verifiable scientce in his decision making. He's completely blind to it.
Oh, so as long as Kerry professes to an atheistic ideology, it's okay to push his agenda, but religious people have to check their agenda at the door? You know, there's a thin line between religious freedom and oppression of religion.
Religious people need to check the "because the Bible says so" rationale at the door. While relgion may have a role in determining public policy , it can't be the first and last word on the subject.

And we aren't a majority rules. The rights of the minorty must also be protected, which means that sometimes the majority might get pissed off if a mixed race couple want to get married, or if colored parents wish to send thier children to a neighborhood school that happens to be all-white. Extreme hisorical examples, to be sure. But they illustrate the point. We follow the wished of the majority, protect the rights of the minority and provide equal rights for all.

No one citizen, Bill, gets to decide what money gets spent where. That job belongs to Congress. Ordinary folk like you and me do not have veto power over the budget. That's whu we have a Republic.

Gene
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Post by Bill Glasheen »

The problem I see, Gene, is that folks here cannot fathom the concept of using multiple drivers to make a decision. As both a professional scientist and somewhat of an expert on multivariate statistics, I see no problem with decision making that you view as "unscientific."

What comes to mind is simple old Rodney King stepping in and asking folks if they can't get along.

Folks need to use both the left and the right side of the brain here. Folks need to respect the spirit of Mr. Jefferson's bill guaranteeing religious freedom. Folks need to understand what drove many people to this country in the first place.

I get told "No" all the time here at work even though my ideas may seem brilliant to me. I get used to it and learn to deal with it partly because I've slowly developed an ability to think like those who have different beliefs than my own. The concept shold not be foreign to anyone who's ever read Covey or Goleman. The goal at the end of the day isn't to be right or to win. The goal at the end of the day is to be effective, and to make the best idea win.

- Bill
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Post by Bill Glasheen »

No one citizen, Bill, gets to decide what money gets spent where.
Oh yes I do, Gene. And I exercised that power yesterday.

- Bill
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Post by Panther »

ljr wrote:Panther,
Just wanted to point out that I said this ( "ljr", or Louis if you prefer ) not Ian. Just though I would point this out since this is the second time I notice the confusion.
D'OH! My bad... I don't know why I associated ljr with Ian... Gee... OK... Here's my (very lame) excuse... The little "l" looks like the capital "I" and I had a braincramp... :mrgreen: Anyway, offer still stands... for you AND Ian... so there!

Take care and be good to each other...
==================================
My God-given Rights are NOT "void where prohibited by law!"
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Post by IJ »

You really only need the last 5 paragraphs since the rest deals with nonarguments.

A lot of interesting posts. Basically, what it all comes down to is that same sex marriages make people nervous still, because same sex relationships make people nervous still. And they don't want the same sexers equated with them, because they don't want to share the same bathtub. Too personal. You know how many more people are perfectly fine with gay marriage so long as it doesn't have the same name? All you have to do is tell some people "it's ok, it's not a marriage, its a civil union. There there. The M word is still solely yours." And this makes them feel safer. I don't know about you, but this is an astonishingly situation. To me, it makes the point that this is a psychological issue, a matter of unease, a matter of learned culture. Not of principle and government policy.

What points have you made to support your argument, Med Tech? The numbers are on your side by votes counted... ok, but so? People voted for anti miscegenation laws that proibited blacks and whites from marrying not very long ago. People had established laws that made it ok to rape your wife, because sex between the married was never rape no matter how much she protested. These wrong minded conceptions of the fooundations of marriage were defeated about 30 years ago. Now they're abhorrent, then they were law. Then they had the popular vote. Never made em right.

What were the others... LGB's aren't proven to be born that way. Ok, so what, again? I suspect that MUCH of character and desire is written into our genes and may eventually be proven to be so. But no matter how long our society lives on, no matter if it is proven that pedophiles are born that way, raping children should never be right, because it's wrong--children, by their nature, can't consent. The rightness is intrinsic to the action, not to whether the impulse was inborn. When, in the history of our country, has some group been asked to show that they were born that way to deserve protections? I'll give you an example who not: religious people. They're trained, and that's fine, and I think they should have every civil right. Even tho they haven't "proven" that their condition was inherited (?!).

We also heard that I can marry a woman if I want, so my rights are preserved. This remarkable assertion can be approached two ways: I can ignore this right, emphasizing that marriage really is not available to ME, just as it would not be available to Laura Bush if I pushed through an amendment preventing her from being married to George Bush, even though the law provided she could marry--well, how about a gay doctor and Uechi student? Or I could marry someone, try to live a charade, have some kids, and then watch the whole fiasco collapse under the weight of the lie, affecting the children, the wife, and several families, causing obvious harm to the structure of our civilization (the family) of a kind same sex marriage opponents can never invoke. GREAT options, both. Med Tech, let me ask you this: if you needed to give your dying patient drug A, and the government had told you this was intrinsically wrong, so you could only use drug B which other techs felt were as good but you knew was not right for your patient, would you view your medical practice as unrestricted?

But as others have recognized, te only key argument made has been this:

"It does affect me, and it affects my family. It affects my kids at school, myself at work, and it affects the future of my family, if I ignore or affirm an alternate lifestyle. The only thing necessary for evil to win is for good people to do nothing."

This is it: the assertion that (no specifics, no facts, nothing but the weight of personal opinion) LGB people are evil and that MT is against us. Rather than reply, I have a reminder, and an invitation. The reminder: Med Tech, *I* do not find your opinions, or your religious beliefs, the way you live your life privately or publicly so long as others are not harmed, at all subject to my whims or opinions or those of the majority, and no matter how much power I or the majority some day has over YOUR personal business, I will work to support your rights and the concept that civil rights are not meant to be voted on in a popularity contest, but upheld.

The invitation: last night, the homosexuals met at my home in san diego to further their radical agenda. My partner and I, both hardworking UCSD physicians, taxpayers, and halloween candy hander-outers, made a delicious thai stirfry with hot basil sauce served over jasmine rice which we served to our law abiding and committed visiting friends from boston, a brigham and women's intern and his partner, the architect, and talked about going to the zoo today. You might have been bored off your chair. If you EVER want to come and see what "evil" we are brewing, you can come, bring your family as appliable, sit down at our table and relax among friends you know will NEVER challenge your civil rights or describe your most cherished relationships as "evil," or otherwise challenge the legitimacy of your relligion and your beliefs no matter how you treat us.

"Stop preaching and work for a practical solution. It is there if you look for it."

Here's mine, as previously stated: Let RELIGION and the interested parties decide who is married without restriction (in other words, get completely out of this business and let the citizens deal with it). Let GOVERNMENT decide who is legally partnered without bias. Before we go down the silly slippery slope argument that people will partner 2 year olds, everyone recall that you have to be able to consent to form legal relationships. I think this is along the lines of what ljr and Panther had mentioned--thanks to you both.
--Ian
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