Protecting Marriage => Protecting Children
David Blackenhorn, a self-professing liberal Democrat, writes a great op-ed piece in today's Los Angeles Times on why he does not favor same-sex marriage. He makes what I believe is the most convincing secular case: heterosexual marriage is the best for children, and hence for society. An excerpt:
Marriage as a human institution is constantly evolving, and many of its features vary across groups and cultures. But there is one constant. In all societies, marriage shapes the rights and obligations of parenthood. Among us humans, the scholars report, marriage is not primarily a license to have sex. Nor is it primarily a license to receive benefits or social recognition. It is primarily a license to have children.Read the whole thing.In this sense, marriage is a gift that society bestows on its next generation. Marriage (and only marriage) unites the three core dimensions of parenthood -- biological, social and legal -- into one pro-child form: the married couple. Marriage says to a child: The man and the woman whose sexual union made you will also be there to love and raise you. Marriage says to society as a whole: For every child born, there is a recognized mother and a father, accountable to the child and to each other.
These days, because of the gay marriage debate, one can be sent to bed without supper for saying such things. But until very recently, almost no one denied this core fact about marriage. Summing up the cross-cultural evidence, the anthropologist Helen Fisher in 1992 put it simply: "People wed primarily to reproduce." The philosopher and Nobel laureate Bertrand Russell, certainly no friend of conventional sexual morality, was only repeating the obvious a few decades earlier when he concluded that "it is through children alone that sexual relations become important to society, and worthy to be taken cognizance of by a legal institution."
(HT: Thabiti Anyabwile)
Related: The Purpose of Marriage: Children and Societal Stability




Comments
I don't get it. Blackenhorn knows that same sex couples can't have children, right? Is he worried *only* about surrogate mothers or something? These and adoption by homosexual couples can happen, at least in CA, with or without same-sex marriage, can't they?
Some of the comments on his article wondered if he was against divorce. I think making divorce harder would be *much* more constructive if we're worried about children.
Posted by: Erik Haugen | September 23, 2008 12:25 PM
Erik,
What secular arguments (if any) would you advance in support of Proposition 8 (in CA)? Or would you argue for Prop 8 on entirely religious grounds?
Alex
Posted by: Alex Chediak | September 23, 2008 05:59 PM
Alex, I know of no secular arguments for prop 8 that hold any water.
Perhaps you could argue that the best environment to raise children is a mother and father, and legal same-sex marriage will make adoption by non mother/father families easier. But a lot of things detract from this argument - first, it was already legal for gay couples to adopt. Is it even *any* easier now? Also, while I imagine it is true, I don't know of any research or evidence to support the claim that mother/father parents are better than father/father or mother/mother. Like I said, though, this issue seems unrelated to whether gay marriage is legalized.
Posted by: Erik Haugen | September 24, 2008 12:18 PM