CUDA wrote:CONGRESS Passed legislation in 1878 that said they can regulate who gets married. IT IS LAW
The SCOTUS upheld that LAW as Constitutional in 1878. and that law has not been overturned.
No one is questioning that the government HAS been regulating marriage. We are questioning if they SHOULD.
To go back to a previous example, the Dread Scott decision was also a SCOTUS decision, and upheld the right of people to own other people as slaves, even if they were in a free state.
OBVIOUSLY the government currently authorizes marriages. The argument is whether we would be better off if they didn't.
Spidey wrote:If the government is no longer involved in licensing marriage, please tell me just who is going to do the vetting?
I think perhaps you are misunderstanding the model we are suggesting. Currently if you wish to get married, you must have a license from the state. With that license comes certain legal rights and obligations. Many people also choose to have a church wedding.
What is being suggested here is a clearer separation of those two functions. If you want to get married, you first get a "Domestic Partnership" (or "Civil Union" or whatever they decide to call it) contract. After it is properly witnessed, notarized, and signed by both parties, you have a legal contract. That contract spells out certain rights and obligations the signers have to each other. LEGAL rights. Such things as joint property, right of attorney, inheritance, possibly child support/custody as well. I'm sure there will be different versions of the contract. That's the governments angle, and now the government and courts will be ready to enforce the contract on both parties.
Some couples will be satisfied with this and stop here. They will have the equivalent of a "Justice of the Peace" wedding. But many people who view marriage as a religious issue will insist upon a church wedding. Different churches will have different requirements for whether they will wed a couple. Episcopal churches will probably marry same sex couples. Catholic churches may refuse to marry anyone who has been previously divorced for any cause other than adultery.
So, there really won't be any difference from the current system when the average couple comes to your hotel.
Spidey wrote:Kilarin, Lothar…when you go on vacation, and you want to stay at my hotel, you will need to rent two rooms (a legal contract)…one for you and one for your girlfriend. And don’t go running to the government, remember…they’re out of the loop.
If your hotel refuses to let people who have not been married in a church stay in the same room, then you will have to also decide which church marriages you will recognize. Catholic, Protestant, Mormon, Jewish, Muslim?
What IS the downside of the government regulating the legal aspects of marriage as a contract, without regard to who enters into that contract, while religious institutions and individuals continue to decide for themselves on the moral and ethical aspects of marriage?