California Supreme Court overturns gay marriage ban.
I'm trying to think of something here that hasn't already been said on Family Guy or The Simpsons. Apparently I need to get out more. What do you guys think? Horrible crime? About frickin' time?
{Edit}Ok, backstory time. During the World Wars and immediately afterwards, San Fransisco was the US Military's main processing point for troops in the Pacific theater. All troops going through the west coast ended up somewhere near the Presidio. The Army paid the way of anyone coming to the bases, on the assumption that every single one of them was fit for duty. Those who were not fit for duty, whatever the case, were released. In some cases, such as physical impairment, provisions were occasionally made for return to wherever they started. This was not the case for anyone suffering from mental illness, or those released for psychological reasons, the two biggest being homosexuals and conscientious objectors. Which is why the Gay Rights and Hippie movements both started here. As you hit the 60s, the Military's "human refuse" was reaching middle age and decided to make a better life for themselves and the like-minded younger generations they were attracting to the city. So, for those who wonder "why's this always happen in California", there you go.
I guess the question this brings up, is whether gay marriage is in some way "atonement" for past injuries, sort of like the oft-suggested "slavery reparations". Does taking someone away from home, dropping them off in a new place, and making it virtually impossible for them to return home without having to expose themselves as an outcast mean that you now have some kind of responsibility to let this person create a "normal" life for themselves elsewhere? If you were in the closet in Kansas, for example, no one would ever know you were gay unless you decided to out yourself. If you had to miss the biggest war on the planet because of something the military found out, though, how would you explain that? You can't really hide anymore. Now, granted, the people currently pushing cases like this weren't even alive during WWII, but does that change anything? Do people like you and I owe some sort of debt to the gay rights movement because our parents, grandparents or great grandparents were straight and these people weren't. Does the fact that our family lines dodged that particular bullet make us indebted somehow to those who didn't?
I bring that up because while I consider myself a good, straight, single Presbyterian, I've never been able to reconcile the whole "sanctity of marriage" argument with that thought. I've never been married, so I guess I don't understand the concept well enough to decide whether gay people marrying somehow erodes the whole institution. On principle, however, I can't seem to justify banning it outright for someone, especially gays. I feel like I owe them somehow. What do you think?
I'm trying to think of something here that hasn't already been said on Family Guy or The Simpsons. Apparently I need to get out more. What do you guys think? Horrible crime? About frickin' time?
{Edit}Ok, backstory time. During the World Wars and immediately afterwards, San Fransisco was the US Military's main processing point for troops in the Pacific theater. All troops going through the west coast ended up somewhere near the Presidio. The Army paid the way of anyone coming to the bases, on the assumption that every single one of them was fit for duty. Those who were not fit for duty, whatever the case, were released. In some cases, such as physical impairment, provisions were occasionally made for return to wherever they started. This was not the case for anyone suffering from mental illness, or those released for psychological reasons, the two biggest being homosexuals and conscientious objectors. Which is why the Gay Rights and Hippie movements both started here. As you hit the 60s, the Military's "human refuse" was reaching middle age and decided to make a better life for themselves and the like-minded younger generations they were attracting to the city. So, for those who wonder "why's this always happen in California", there you go.
I guess the question this brings up, is whether gay marriage is in some way "atonement" for past injuries, sort of like the oft-suggested "slavery reparations". Does taking someone away from home, dropping them off in a new place, and making it virtually impossible for them to return home without having to expose themselves as an outcast mean that you now have some kind of responsibility to let this person create a "normal" life for themselves elsewhere? If you were in the closet in Kansas, for example, no one would ever know you were gay unless you decided to out yourself. If you had to miss the biggest war on the planet because of something the military found out, though, how would you explain that? You can't really hide anymore. Now, granted, the people currently pushing cases like this weren't even alive during WWII, but does that change anything? Do people like you and I owe some sort of debt to the gay rights movement because our parents, grandparents or great grandparents were straight and these people weren't. Does the fact that our family lines dodged that particular bullet make us indebted somehow to those who didn't?
I bring that up because while I consider myself a good, straight, single Presbyterian, I've never been able to reconcile the whole "sanctity of marriage" argument with that thought. I've never been married, so I guess I don't understand the concept well enough to decide whether gay people marrying somehow erodes the whole institution. On principle, however, I can't seem to justify banning it outright for someone, especially gays. I feel like I owe them somehow. What do you think?
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