[From 8/4 Editorial, Orange County Register]Government ideally would simply recognize contracts between persons and not license marriage.
Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
It appears that the quoted argument may actually be going further than saying merely that there should be no discrimination in whom the government (whether federal or state)
should treat as, or allow to be, married. It suggests that government also should not discriminate between those who are "married" and those who are not "married" -- in which case it doesn't matter who calls the relationship what.
Thus, instead of
statutory rights (inheritance, making medical decisions, married filing jointly tax status, and hundreds of others), there would only be
contractual rights. Which in turn would imply not merely a change in the source of some of those rights but also the content.
The government presumably would still enforce inheritance rights and authority to make medical decisions that were based on contracts. Special treatment for married couples there is often only a default that could be eliminated because married couples could simply contract to assign those rights. Other rights, however, would simply disappear. The most obvious example: If the government doesn't recognize
any "marriage" there no longer is a married filing jointly tax status. The husband and wife (or husband and husband or wife and wife) would only be allowed to file separately, the same as single people. And in some cases, I'm not sure whether the government would allow contractual rights that do not now exist. For example, would the government allow you to assign a survivorship interest in receiving Social Security benefits? Perhaps not; it would make government finances even worse than they are now.
Although I suspect few people would want to give up any of those "rights" associated with marriage, the viewpoint that "marriage" should be irrelevant to how the government treats you certainly is a legitimate one and I think it is consistent with a libertarian perspective. Also, in my opinion, clearly constitutional. At least, I doubt whether a court would hold that eliminating the privilege of filing a joint tax return or survivorship rights for Social Security payments was a violation of your constitutional rights. (Not that Congress would ever enact such a change.)
Of course, if the government didn't recognize "marriage" at all, not only would gay and lesbian couples have had the right to marry without fighting in the legislature and courts, but they might not have cared about being "married."
"My husband" or "my wife" might still mean more (under such a new regime) than "my BFF" . . . but not a
lot more. It might be about the same as the difference (in the eyes of some) under today's regime of a couple being married in a religious ceremony versus being married at City Hall. The Church (and some family members) might not recognize that wedding at City Hall, but everyone else does.
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As a sidenote, I suspect that what some of the opponents of same-sex marriage may feel (although have trouble articulating) is this very libertarian change: that expanding the definition of marriage would begin the process of transforming what they consider a very special institution into merely a choice of a bundle of contractual rights. The relationship could lose some of the meaning that many attach to it. In that fear, society could eventually lose something that arguably is valuable to many people.
Personally, I think that's a possibility although: (a) it's not at all certain it would happen; (b) even if it happened, unlikely until at least another 50 - 200 years, by which time I won't care either way; (c) it's exceptionally difficult to even guess today at the probability and timeline of such a transformation; and (d) something that
might be lost a
long time from now seems a rather weak argument to justify treating gays and lesbians differently in the meantime.