Virginia, when the Supreme Court declared that it was an Equal Protection violation to have anti-miscegenation statutes. Sex is clearly as much of an immutable characteristic as race, and it seems illogical to prevent people from entering into a legal relationship, such as marriage, on the basis of an immutable characteristic. However, attitudes about homosexuality very rarely seem rational. Instead, they seem to come from another, irrational place, where homosexuality stands as a symbol for some type of greater evil.
For example, opponents of same-sex marriage often talk about the traditional definition of marriage. They discuss the fact that marriage has traditionally been limited to pairs of one-male and one-female. However, these arguments ignore much of human history. First, marriage, as a legal relationship, is a fairly recent component of human experience. People have been coupling off for much longer than marriage has been an institution. These couples have included a wide variety of male-female and homosexual relationships. For example, in Greece, adult males were expected to take female wives in order to have children, but were permitted, even encouraged, to have young male lovers. While I cannot encourage pederasty, romantic and sexual relationships were encouraged between young women and adult men at the same time; there is an evolving age of consent that has made sexual relationships between adults and children taboo in much of the world, which did not exist in ancient times. The salient point is that romantic and sexual relationships between homosexual couples have historically received recognition. More importantly, marriage has not traditionally been what it is in modern America. Modern American marriages reflect a conscious choice of partner, by two willing adults. Until approximately two hundred years ago, the notion of romantic marriage was almost unknown, and marriages were based upon alliances between families. Moreover, throughout most of the Judeo-Christian tradition, which has shaped American concepts of marriage, marriage was a polygamous institution. To suggest that God intended marriage to be a relationship between one-man and one-woman ignores the evidence of marriage that is presented in the Bible, as well as extra-Biblical historical sources.
In fact, I find it difficult to understand Biblical arguments against same-sex marriage. The First Amendment clearly demands separation of church and state. While religious officials can perform marriage ceremonies, a couple is not considered legally married unless or until that couple has complied with a state's legal requirements for marriage. The United States recognizes marriages between divorced people, despite the fact that, for the majority of its existence as a religion, Christianity did not recognize the rights of divorced people to remarry. In fact, the Catholic Church still frowns upon divorce and has restrictions upon the recognition of marriages between divorced persons. To allow any religion to dictate the requirements for a civil arrangement seems so un-American, that it is difficult for me to understand how people could even suggest such a proposition. Because of that, I can only surmise that opponents of gay marriage think it will be a gateway to other things that they perceive as deviant or against the norm. They suggest that gay marriage will threaten the sanctity of marriage, maybe concerned that the already high rates of divorce, domestic violence, and adultery, and marriage-less cohabitation have weakened the institution to such a degree that one more blow may signal the end of marriage.
The Importance of Doctor-Patient Communication
My last visit to a primary care physician lasted less than five minutes with the doctor, though I was in the office for almost two hours. I waited in the waiting room for only about fifteen minutes, and was then shown into an examination room. A nurse came into the exam room, took my vital statistics, and asked me about the reason for my visit. When I explained that I had a sore throat and wanted to rule out both the flu and strep throat, the nurse left the room to get two tests. I waited another ten to fifteen minutes for her to return, and then she swabbed my throat and my nostrils, and then left with the tests. About fifteen minutes later, she returned to the room to tell me that I had tested positive for strep, but negative for the flu, and that the doctor would be in to see me. Another ten minutes passed...
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