By Mark Tooley on 8.15.06 @ 12:08AM
The real goal of marriage expanders seems to remain: anything goes!
WASHINGTON -- Advocates of same-sex unions of course argue that
they only want equality for homosexual persons. Conservative
skeptics surmise that the campaign to redefine marriage is about
considerably more than simply legal recognition for same-sex
couples. In fact, they suspect, the ultimate goal is to set aside
marriage altogether as a repressive and patriarchal anachronism. In
its absence, all consensual sexual arrangements will be
legitimate.
The suspicions will find confirmation in a new statement from a
coalition of sexual pioneers called, "Beyond Same-Sex Marriage: A
New Strategic Vision for All Our Families & Relationships"
(www.beyondmarriage.org). Released last month, the
statement specifically endorses "committed, loving households in
which there is more than one conjugal partner," among many other
sexual alternatives.
Organized by a "diverse group of nearly twenty LGBT
[lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender] and queer activists," the
several hundred signatories include a predictable list of
homosexual rights advocates, sexologists, self-professed pagans,
and practitioners of polyamory, among other colorful categories.
But it also includes Rabbi Michael Lerner of Tikkun,
Cornel West at Harvard, Gloria Steinem of Ms. magazine,
and a smattering of rabbis, Unitarians, Quakers, ex-nuns, and
leftist Protestant clergy.
"We offer this statement as a way to challenge ourselves and our
allies working across race, class, gender and issue lines to frame
and broaden community dialogues, to shape alternative policy
solutions and to inform organizing strategies around marriage
politics to include the broadest definitions of relationship and
family," the organizers explained.
In their statement, they advocate a "new vision for securing
governmental and private institutional recognition of diverse kinds
of partnerships, households, kinship relationships and families."
This new vision, they hope, will move the nation "beyond the narrow
confines of marriage politics" as they exist today. Naturally, they
want a "flexible set of economic benefits," regardless of the
nature of the association, "conjugal" or otherwise.
The brave pioneers of relationship innovation, standing with
people of every "sexual identity" throughout the world, are
striving to resist the "structural violence of poverty, racism,
misogyny, war, and repression, and to build an unshakeable
foundation of social and economic justice for all, from which
authentic peace and recognition of global human rights can at long
last emerge." It's an ambitious agenda!
SAME-SEX MARRIAGE RIGHTS are only "one part" of a larger effort to
legitimize and gain benefits for "diverse" households and families.
Indeed, families and relationships "know no borders." There is no
norm. Most Americans do not live in traditional nuclear families,
they assert, lumping together widows living with grown children
with more exotic associations. All households "struggling for
stability" will be helped by separating basic forms of legal and
economic recognition from the requirement of marital and conjugal
relationship.
Besides fighting for relatively conventional "domestic
partnerships," the movement affirms the rights of a wide range of
"non-traditionally constructed families and non-conventional
partnerships." And do not forget the "the transgender and bisexual
movements!" Too often, the statement warns, they have been left
behind or left out by the "larger lesbian and gay movement." But
the transgender and bisexual movements have "powerfully challenged
legal constructions of relationship" and "include members who
shatter the narrow confines of gender conformity."
For the government to define as "legitimate families" only
couples in conjugal relationships is a "tremendous disservice" to
other "kinship networks," we are told. Among these other
arrangements are seniors citizens living together, children caring
for elderly parents, grandparents raising grandchildren, single
parent households, blended families, "queer couples who decide to
jointly create and raise a child with another queer person or
couple, in two households," and the ubiquitous "committed, loving
households in which there is more than one conjugal partner.
According to this crowd, there is apparently no possible
assortment of people who should not be recognized as "family" and
therefore entitled to a wide range of legal benefits. It is nice
that they are concerned about elderly people and grandparents, but
economic benefits for the alternative sexual relationships seems to
be the chief emphasis of their advocacy.
"Marriage is not the only worthy form of family or relationship,
and it should not be legally and economically privileged above all
others," they explain. They generously insist that they "honor
those for whom marriage is the most meaningful personal -- for
some, also a deeply spiritual -- choice," but they also insist on
recognition for their other households.
Unfortunately, they note, their larger drive for social justice
has much to fear. The litany includes: "corporate greed, draconian
tax cuts and breaks for the wealthy, and the increasing shift of
public funds from human needs into militarism, policing, and prison
construction." Civil rights for all people is under assault by the
Right, we are warned. The larger "conservative agenda" is pushing
for "coercive, patriarchal marriage promotion, "heterosexist
definitions of marriage" and limits to government funding for
"reproductive services."
THE PUSH TO "PRIVATIZE Social Security and many other human needs
benefits" also is "at the center of this attack," the statement
asserts. "Many of us, too, across all identities, yearn for an end
to repressive attempts to control our personal lives. For LGBT and
queer communities, this longing has special significance." The
signers want to "repudiate the right-wing demonizing of LGBT
sexuality and assaults upon queer culture," and advocate on behalf
of full "gender and sexual diversity." They want "freedom from a
narrow definition of our sexual lives and gender choices,
identities, and expression."
At a time when the Right is asserting a "scarcity of human
rights," the movement for "Beyond Same Sex Marriage" plans to fight
to "make same-sex marriage just one option on a menu of choices
that people have about the way they construct their lives." It is a
sweeping agenda!
"Beyond Same Sex Marriage" could be dismissed as marginal, if
not silly. But in fact, its conglomeration of issues and interest
groups is quite edgy and even clever. Throw in special benefits for
one parent families and the elderly with legal recognition for
multiple sexual partners. Align everyone who is not in a two-parent
with children household as a coalition, from the spinster sisters
living together to the pagan polyamores. This new coalition's one
unifying characteristic would seem to be resentment aimed at people
in conventional marriages.
Political movements based on resentment are often powerful and
long-lived. Do not expect this one to go away quietly.
topics:
Social Security, NATO, Unions