Jovan Galtic
Member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2011
- Messages
- 310
Exactly. Similar contract can be signed and executed without government definition of "marriage", like all other contracts.
In a libertarian society marriage and incorporation would be two distinctly different institutions. Marriage would be a religious institution where two people come together to bind their immortal souls in the presence of their creator, government would have zero involvement in such an institution. Incorporation, on the other hand, would be a legal union between consenting adults in the eyes of the State. Adults, whether there are 2, 3, or 10 of them could share their lives, homes, bank accounts, etc. and live in communes (forming a type of voluntary communism) if they so choose. A much different would that would be.
This is simplistic. When you get married, you become family. That person becomes your next of kin, with all of the legal rights and obligations. You are also creating one household, with legal rights over the productivity of the household and legal recognition and protection of any children within the marriage. Marriage isn't about getting something from the government -- it is about protecting the legal rights over the fruit of your marriage (be that monetary or children) you have as a spouse. Most people here agree that a person has the right to the fruit of his labor. Marriage creates a unique contract in which your spouse also has a right to the fruits of your labor because you agree to work together for the common good of yourselves and your children. Often this will require one or both of the spouses spending part of their time caring for children, household needs, or other things that create value but don't earn money. Also, you each automatically get 100% rights over all children issued from the marriage. This is necessary, but also different than non-married people who usually have only 1 person with primary custody.
Ron Paul said:I'd like to settle the debate by turning it into a First Amendment issue: the right of free speech. Everyone can have his or her definition of what marriage means, and if an agreement or contract is reached by the participants, it will qualify as a civil contract if desired. ...
There should be essentially no limits to the voluntary definition of marriage ...
If others who choose a different definition do not impose their standards on anyone else, they have a First Amendment right to their own definition and access to the courts to arbitrate any civil disputes. ...
It is typical of how government intervention in social issues serves no useful purpose. With a bit more tolerance and a lot less government involvement in our lives, this needless problem and emotionally charged debate could be easily avoided. ...
In economics, licensing is designed by the special interests to suppress competition. Licensing for social reasons reflects the intolerant person's desire to mold other people's behavior to their standard. Both depend on the illegitimate use of government force.
That rite has always specified a man and a woman (NOT merely "two consenting parties") being joined together under God's blessing
There can be no such thing as "gay marriage" in the religious rite sense, as there can be gay communion, or gay baptisms.
In a libertarian society marriage and incorporation would be two distinctly different institutions. Marriage would be a religious institution where two people come together to bind their immortal souls in the presence of their creator, government would have zero involvement in such an institution. Incorporation, on the other hand, would be a legal union between consenting adults in the eyes of the State. Adults, whether there are 2, 3, or 10 of them could share their lives, homes, bank accounts, etc. and live in communes (forming a type of voluntary communism) if they so choose. A much different world that would be.
Actually for most of human hisotry marriage was a property arrangement for sale of chattle...women. Most of the history of marriage was dominated by one man marrying many women. They were nothing but property. This is the REAL history of marriage, not the revisionist nonsense religious people like to fantasize about. Marriage is neither monogamous nor voluntary for most of its history.
What is required to prevent two people from getting married today is TYRANNY. Force. Aggression via the state. Statism!
If you can find a preacher/imam/rabbi/whatever to marry you, you should be free to be married w/o state tyranny stopping it. Even if the church worships a toaster oven, and married 5 people to each other, that is legitmate because they are all adults and consent. It takes tyranny to prevent it.
Libertarian 101.
Apparently you don't care if you sound homophobic either.I don't care if homos want to marry
Apparently you don't care if you sound homophobic either.
Apparently you don't care if you sound homophobic either.
Clearly you do not work in law, as the government regulates almost all important contracts. Laws governing different types of contracts are essential for society to work and to preserve equality before the law.
How can he be homophobic for referring to them as homos?
You've created a syntactic PC black hole that threatens to suck your brain into it.
Hey guys, need some liberty related help. I posted something on facebook about how we should privatize marriage and was left this comment
But unfortunately two people need the government to recognize their relationship for insurance, hospital, and family reasons. It's awesome that Obama has evolved his view. I do like Ron Paul, but a recognized legal marriage is more important than the credit he is giving it.
Any good ideas on how to respond?
you don't need the govt to recognize marriage for insurance companies, families, hospitals, etc to/to not recognize it. some companies/hospitals would recognize civil unions, some wouldn't. what's the big deal? you get the freedom to choose the places that cater to you. the libertarian position to marriage is 'i don't fuck with you, don't fuck with me'. ie - go ahead and marry whomever you want, and i'll marry whomever i want. but don't try to push your beliefs on marriage onto me.
This^^ Marriage (in the strictest sense) is a religious covenant, not a legal contract. It's true that people have used it to determine inheritance rights and so on, but that doesn't change the nature of the covenant-it's just stuff governments have added along the way. It seems more rational to separate the legal and religious aspects of marriage to me.Government has no business at all in marriage..it's religious issue. Govt doesn't have to sanction or ban marriages for them to exist AT ALL.