- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Most sensible thing I'v ever read about this whole affair:
http://freewillblog.com/
http://freewillblog.com/
Seperation of Marriage and State
If he hasn't said it before, Glenn Reynolds just said what I've been saying for two years:
The solution to all of this, of course, is to separate marriage and state. There's no reason why the government should be involved in this sort of thing (the origin of Tennessee's statute requiring marriage licenses, it turns out, was a desire to ensure that county clerks got fees, not exactly an overwhelming justification) and there's no reason why people's private living arrangements should be part of public debate. That's my take, anyway.
If you look back into late medieval records in many European countries trying to figure out who your ancestors were, you'll often find that it's quite difficult to discern, because marriage at the time frequently consisted entirely of two people declaring themselves married for the benefit of friends and family, and that was the ballgame. It wasn't until 1563 that the Council of Trent decreed that marriages didn't count unless a priest was there, so if there was a record, it was likely going to be a Church record, not a government one. (This was apparently mainly an attempt to delegitimize Protestant marriages, but if you weren't Catholic, of course, the Council of Trent didn't count, so this was perhaps less effective than anticipated.)
The whole notion of the state having some ancient obligation to "protect marriage" is ludicrous because the notion of the state being the major player in marriage is itself novel to Western civilization: Marriage "licensing", as the Professor so rightfully points out, was constructed entirely as a fundraising method, and mostly not until the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the United States. So, activists of any type who see the state as the "guardian" of marriage (whether they believe that the state should be incorporating gay marriage or opposing it) are misguided, since it was never the state's to guard. There's no legitimate rational, legal, or moral basis for the government to license and register people's private romantic and sexual relationships. Historically, marriage has been an agreement between two parties (and, for those who want religious recognition for their union, their church) on their own terms. It's not really anybody else's business.
The only reason I'm particularly opposed to gay marriage is because the gay marriage movement has made it about state recognition of gay marriage, and that only further serves to perpetuate and extend an attitude and level of government intervention in private life that is needless, baseless and wrong. (What's even more incredible is that if you try to point this out to gay marriage advocates, that you believe a lot of conservatives would get behind them on a movement to deregulate marriage, a lot of gay marriage advocates will tear your head off. If it isn't controversial, if it isn't done by the government, and if it might actually work, I guess it's not a good liberal cause.)