Andrew Sullivan alerted me to this interesting idea by Tom Ackerman on his blog. What if we recognized nobody's marriage?
Yesterday I called a woman’s spouse her boyfriend.She says, correcting me, “He’s my husband,”
“Oh,” I say, “I no longer recognize marriage.”
The impact is obvious. I tried it on a man who has been in a relationship for years,“How’s your longtime companion, Jill?”Fun. And instant, eyebrow-raising recognition. Suddenly the majority gets to feel what the minority feels. In a moment they feel what it’s like to have their relationship downgraded, and to have a much taken-for-granted right called into question because of another’s beliefs.
“She’s my wife!”
“Yeah, well, my beliefs don’t recognize marriage.”
Just replace the words husband, wife, spouse, or fiancé with boyfriend, girlfriend, special friend, or longtime companion. There is a reason we needed stronger words for more serious relationships. We know it; now they can see it.
A marriage is a lot of things. Culturally, it’s a declaration to the community that two people are now a unit, and that unity should be respected. Legally, it’s a set of rights and responsibilities. And spiritually, it’s whatever your beliefs think it is.
That’s what’s so great about America. As a Constitutionally secular nation, or at least in reality a vaguely pluralistic nation, we can all have our own spiritual take on what marriage is. What’s troublesome is when one group’s spiritual beliefs deny the cultural and legal rights of another.
An interesting suggestion, but most of the straight people *I* know do believe and support gay marriage, so why would we pubish them by not recognizing their relationship? Is that just collateral damage in a campaign to get the "mushy middle" to understand what it means for them to vote not to legally recognize mine?
What do you think?
Naw--I'm too much of a pussy-willow librul to engage in such tactics. I'll too-readily recognize ANYONE's marriage.
ReplyDeleteBut I will cop to a delicious second-choice political fantasy in which the California Supreme Court, after ruling that Proposition 8 IS a constitutionally valid amendment, then invokes the California Constitution's Equal Protection clause to invalidate ALL marriages performed in the State of California after November 4, 2008.
Now that would be "do unto others" with a vengence.