Rendering the Status Quo for Homosexuals

tauruschild8927's picture

Research paper I wrote

Homosexual marriage has long been a heated and debated argument in American culture. The presidential race of 2004 brought the issue to the forefront of American politics as well as around the world. The argument still goes on to this day. Homosexual activists fight for equal rights by redefining marriage, examining and disproving the “gay” misconceptions and proposing different alternatives and ways of achieving equality while anti-homosexual groups fight for status quo. The debate seems to be at a deadlock, but the fight will continue. American citizens have the right to pursue happiness in any shape of form if it does not infringe upon the rights of others. Same-sex marriage infringes on no one.

Today, marriage is defined as a bond between a husband and a wife. Homosexuals and homosexual supporters are trying to change this ecclesiastic definition to include marriage as being between hetero or homosexual couples. The history of marriage dates backs to the Puritans in Massachusetts. They held marriage as a civil institution not as an ecclesiastic or church function. As time went on, religion crept back into the government’s establishment of marriage, so much that married people nowadays are given more rights than people that receive civil unions. Banning of marriage is not a new issue, in fact, bans on interracial marriages plagued America’s history. “In 1967, 72% of Americans opposed interracial marriage and 48% of Americas believed interracial marriage should be classified as a crime” (Cahill 13). Interracial marriage started like same-sex marriage, but the last 30 years, has brought about change. The bans have been lifted for future marriages. Marriage has been defined as a bond between men and women, but a precedent has been set for change.

Like interracial marriage, same-sex marriages face stigmas. Some are rooted in religious intolerance, others in misunderstanding, and the last misconceptions are rooted in stupidity. Some misconceptions that face same-sex couples are: they will ruin the sanctity and institution of marriage, they are unhealthy and unsafe, homosexuals are abusive and are pedophiles, homosexual rights are terrorism, and same-sex marriages will lead to a decline in the population. Where ever these poor excuses or reasons came from is not relevant the fact that each argument has no basis is relevant. Each misconception can be refuted and proved a misconception. Take for instance, the argument that homosexuals are abusive and pedophiles. Numerous studies prove that children blossom in homosexual households (Cahill 33). The pedophile issue is easily refuted as well. A 1998 study found that 90% of pedophiles are men, and 95% of these individuals are heterosexual (Cahill pg 34). Michael Nava and Robert Dawidoff say it the best, “If the opponents of gay rights are truly concerned about predatory sexual behavior, they ought to educate their heterosexual sons, who are the most likely to grow up to be sex offenders, to respect the physical integrity of women and children” (139). In other words, if you want to lower the amount of sex offenders, educate heterosexual men to respect women and children. Most misconceptions about homosexuals are based on myths and lies. Homosexuals are disproving these fictitious stories every day.

Above all the homosexual community’s agenda uses the equality issue as a main backbone for their arguments. Separation of church and state is a big part of the equality issue. This theory is that the church and the government are two separate entities in American culture. Neither should cross the path nor try to hold power in the other institution. Separation of church and state is divided into three different principles: neutrality, equality, and libertarian. Each principle upholds a different aspect of the theory. The libertarian and neutrality principle do not affect homosexuals as much as the equality principle does. “The disestablishment clause (equality principle) serves a double purpose: It protects religion from intrusion by the state and by fostering religious freedom for all without ascendance for any, it protects the state from the warring religious interests that have bloodies history and continue to do so today” (Nava 76). When enforced in this county, the principle is the backbone of separation of church and state and could jeep this debate from escalating into acts of violence. The principle simply asserts that the government cannot give one religion precedence over another.

As a case in point, anti-homosexual activists use the sanctity of marriage as an argument. The word sanctity is smothered with religious connotations and in effect a violation of church and state and an act of discrimination. The word sanctity in any ban or law renders that law unconstitutional. This violation of separation of church and state, and this discrimination gives credence to the belief that anti-homosexual critics believe that homosexuals are not equal and not citizens just because they are homosexual. Banning marriage on the sanctity basis is a violation of the separation of church and state theory.

In the meantime, the status quo harbors ill will for the future. Unless one side concedes, this argument will continue and fester to greater proportions. More actions of violence and atrocities like those that have plagued America’s history will stem from this prolonged discourse. Thus, the status quo must change. The definition of marriage should be changed from its ecclesiastic definition to one that defines the civil aspect of marriage. The government is required to give the same rights to all married couples. These are to include social security, immigration, adoption, and other basic rights. Separation of church and state should be upheld and revered in modern culture. In addition, the misconceptions must be displayed as fallacies. Equality is the main obligation that the United States of America has to its citizens. There is no just reason for discriminating against homosexuals. Equality must prevail if we are a nation that gives the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In summation, America must change its viewpoints on marriage to uphold the integrity of separation of church and state, and to grant equality to homosexual citizens.

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Works Cited

Audi, Robert. "The Separation of Church and State and the Obligations of Citizenship." Philosophy and Public Affairs 18 (1989). JSTOR. 24 Oct. 2007.
Beth, Loren. "Toward a Modern American Theory of Church-State Relationships." Political Science Quarterly 70 (1995). JSTOR. 24 Oct. 2007.
Cahill, Sean. Same-Sex Marriage in the United States: Focus on the Facts. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2004.
Nava, Micheal, and Robert Dawidoff. Created Equal: Why Gay Rights Matter to America. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994.
Snyder, Allen. "Banning Same-Sex Marriage Violates Church-State Separation." Dissident Voice 15 Mar. 2004. 29 Oct. 2007 .

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Ceila30's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

Very well done. The only thing you missed was the misconception that same-sex marriage will lead to people wanting to (and being allowed) to marry multiple partners, animals and inanimate objects. LOL.
Have a nice day,
Ceila -- http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ceila30
"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored."
-- Aldous Huxley(1894-1963) Author

tauruschild8927's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

I wanted to add it in but I did not want to seem too harsh. I also dont have a problem with polygamy unless it includes minors so I could really add that in.

Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth!~JFK

engkatiemarie's picture
Volunteer for the Progressive U Alumni Association

Polygamy is unsuitable for the American economy.

chillbill's picture

Expand your unsupported claim please.

engkatiemarie's picture
Volunteer for the Progressive U Alumni Association

The way our system works, dependent on insurance and marriage tax benefits, it would be unable to support multiple spouses. It's an unrealistic scenario.

JuliaP's picture

http://www.progressiveu.org/090204-dont-miss-this-chance

Wow, are we off topic or what? How did we switch from homosexuality to polygamy? I have never seen both in society. Does that exist anywhere? Homosexual polygamists?
DISCLAIMER: I am not being rude. I'm stating my opinion. No personal attacks are meant. Please give some leniency on how you take my words. imagine me saying them with a smile. ^__^

tauruschild8927's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

it could work.

Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth!~JFK

engkatiemarie's picture
Volunteer for the Progressive U Alumni Association

It would probably be more successful.

No messy children... and more fun for everyone!

chillbill's picture

Does seem to be equally justifiable by every one of these arguments.

Children might be better off in pluralistic marriages where more adults could share supervision as they once did in multi-generational extended families more often than they do today. Just as gay marriage exists in fact just not by law these multiple marriages exist irregardless of law as well. Who are any of us to tell consenting adults what they cannot do?

Animals and inanimate objects (I heard a guy advocating marrying robots on the radio just the other day) introduce different issues altogether.

tauruschild8927's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

I think polygomy between consenting adults is fine. If everything works outyour good. THere are more people to watch over kids and more revenue for a family. I see no pitfalls.

Marrying robots is just totally stupid.

Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth!~JFK

truelife90's picture
Volunteer for the Progressive U Alumni Association

You know, I always wonder...why do people think gay marriage will become a domino effect that will lead to other types of marriages?

My professor said homosexuals are beginning to act more like heterosexuals now these days. Acting more like heterosexuals in a sense that they want to get married, settle down, have kids, join military, etc. Even black people started to blend themselves and their behaviors comparing to whites when the human rights movement began back in those days..like how immigants are starting to become Americanized, or how Asians are being Westernized for the most part. (Can these things be compared? lol)

I think this is why the gay movement started in the first place. Because we (gay community) want to have same rights as heterosexuals and get treated the same way too. However, I'm starting to realize that perhaps there is no such thing as seperation of church and state...
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Allie_the_Neko's picture

*applause* Good job!

tauruschild8927's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

very much

Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth!~JFK

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