AHT: Waiting for the outrage from NOM over marriage being other than one man, one woman! OH WAIT that's not gonna happen the Mormon's are bankrolling them!
There could not be a stranger moment in time. Amidst the excitement
and celebration of the fifteenth and sixteenth states to pass marriage
equality, and the historic passing of the Employment Non-Discrimination
Act (ENDA) through the U.S. Senate, in the remote Western state of Utah,
a federal District Court judge has just ruled part of that state’s ban
on polygamy is unconstitutional.
The 91 page ruling from Judge Clark Waddoups marks the first time ever a United States judge has sided on the side of polygamy.
Jonathan Turley, lead counsel in the case brought forward by the
stars of the TLC show “Sister Wives,” announced the ruling Friday in a blog post, calling it a victory equivalent to Brown v. Board of Education, and Lawrence v. Texas.
And here I am, left wondering if the comparisons between polygamy and
the hard-fought freedoms the LGBT community has recently achieved are
actually comparable.
We’ve heard the comparisons for years, “Gay Marriage leads to
polygamy, bestiality and pedophilia!” How many times have those words
dripped from the mouths of people like Brian Brown, Tony Perkins, Peter
LaBarbera, and Rick Warren?
The potential legalization of polygamy calls into question everything
we know and think of in marriage. The very thought of polygamy is rank
with images of 55-year old men marrying 12-year old girls, of trapped
teenagers beaten and killed for trying to escape polygamist compounds in
the deserts of Utah and Texas.
So what are the implications of this ruling? Is it going to become
the latest sideshow for those culture warriors against equality to hold
up as supposed proof that they were right?
To put it plainly, yes it is.
What’s important to remember are the simple and fundamental truths.
The struggle for same-sex marriage has only been, and will continue to
only be about one thing: equality—that joyful little word that fills our
hearts and keeps us pushing. It’s about leveling the playing field and
being able to say without any doubt that no other human being in our
country has rights that we do not. We were born Gay, or Lesbian, or
Bisexual, or Trans*, and we will always be so. We have every bit the
same right to marry the person we fall in love with that our neighbors
have.
Polygamy? It’s not an innate characteristic, it’s a choice. The
struggle for polygamy is not about equality, but about privacy. It’s a
fight to keep government away from the choices of consenting adults.
It’s an important distinction to make.
Honestly, I don’t know how I feel about polygamy. On one hand I’ve
always felt that the government shouldn’t be in the business of
legitimizing or sanctifying any marriages. On the other hand, polygamy
actually is a redefinition of marriage, and frequently used as an excuse for abuse and persecution of women and children.
But however you feel about it, as the nation no-doubt erupts in
Utah/Mormon/Polygamy jokes over the next few days, it’s important to
speak out about the differences between equality and privacy.
We only want what everyone else already has. Nothing more, and certainly nothing less.
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