On Monday, September
19, 2005, I attended a meeting at
As I listened to the arguments
against same-sex marriage, I couldn't help wonder what the fuss was about.
Although I was too young to remember it, I later learned about the case of
Loving vs.
Thirty-eight years later, Senator Cuccinelli, speaking about same-sex
marriage said that it was "contrary to the laws of God and nature".
Delegate Black called it "unnatural". This has a familiar ring.
Senator Cuccinelli
claimed that allowing same-sex marriage would "rip society apart"
though he didn't supply any justification for this. For the last year,
Many provinces of
All four speakers
claimed that marriage had to be protected.
Over the last year, I have asked several legislators exactly how
allowing two people of the same-sex to get married harms their marriage. I have
yet to get a response. It seems quite the opposite to me. Allowing same-sex
marriage would strengthen marriage by allowing loving, committed couples to
formalize their relationship in a way that would promote strong family values.
They also claimed that
same-sex marriage was a "biological impossibility". They implied that
marriage only existed for procreation and that anyone who had a marriage where
the father did not sire and the mother did not bear the child was living less
than the ideal marriage. Of course, procreation is only one of the reasons
people marry. I know many heterosexual couples that either through circumstance
or choice do not have children. Does this lack invalidate their marriages? All
of them would loudly proclaim that it does not.
Finally, I'd like to
address the one concrete example that was given. Delegate Black said that one
of the reasons that same-sex couples wanted to marry was hospital access. He
went on to say that it was a non-issue, that no hospital had ever banned a
partner from visiting. I suspect he is wrong but even if he were right, he has
missed the most important part of the issue. He said that it was as simple as
the partner in the hospital saying it was OK for the other partner to visit.
What if this person is unconscious? What if medical decisions need to be made?
While a medical power of attorney can prevent this problem, what if the document
is not present? For him to dismiss matters of life and death as mere access is
disingenuous and misses the point. This is just one of many rights that married
couples take for granted yet we are forced to scramble through the legal system
to protect our families because people like Delegate Black refuse to recognize
the legitimacy of our families. His refusal hurts not just lesbian and gay
Virginians but our children.
In closing, I'd again
like to focus on a statement by Senator Cuccinelli. He believes that marriage
is in trouble. He believes that divorce and single-parent families threaten the
family. Yet, instead of trying to solve those problems, he has chosen to
"protect" marriage by keeping it available only to heterosexual
couples. I suggest that he actually focus on the real problem instead of
attacking a group of people because it is politically popular.
In the 1950's it was
common to equate homosexuality with the communist threat. In recent years, some
prominent people have claimed that gays were somehow responsible for terrorism.
The truth is that most gay people, like most straight people, are good,
hardworking people who love their country and their families. Passing the
marriage amendment would do nothing to protect marriage but it would
institutionalize discrimination against gay and lesbian Virginians.