zulemara
<font color=royalblue>Oh Boy! I'm a WDW sailor!<br
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2007
- Messages
- 2,350
The biggest problem with this issue is that a lot of people confuse the legal and religious portions of marriages or unions or whatever you want to call it. They think it's all one thing, when it isn't. In the U.S., there is a legal part to it, the part where you go down to the courthouse and register, and then the religious part, the ceremony in the church. These two should be considered separate things. ANY two people over the age of 18 should be able to go down to the courthouse and register for legal rights as a union or "civil marriage" or whatever term we want to use. And then, as the other part, every church individually should have the right to choose to whom they want to grant a religious marriage ceremony. Or not to grant a religious ceremony, that is their choice as our freedom of religion.
I believe this would make both sides happy, if just everyone would become informed. Some organization needs to come out with a big program that stresses this. Eventually the courts will hopefully rule that the civil registration is a basic human right. And we don't have to call the legal part a "marriage" if it will make some people happier. But it should be equal for everyone on the legal side.
that's my EXACT philosophy! Finally someone else who realizes this! You are dead on, but it takes not only the bigots, but the gay community to realize this before anything will come of it.