Homosexual Marriage

1568 Words4 Pages

Once upon a time people were married and lived happily ever after, or did they? Many scholars argue that marriage in ancient times was used as a means to determine land and property rights, protect and promote nobility, and as a means to inherit more favorable financial circumstances.The notion that a man and a woman meet, fall in love, and wed is a very recent idealistic theory in practice. While most favorable to a more harmonious society, heterosexual unions are not always so easily consecrated, upheld, and protected. In an effort to establish stability and monogamy for the benefit of their state, many countries choose to recognize the marriage relationship for the benefit of child rearing and social welfare by offering tax incentives, health benefits, or other social service perks. In recent years the fundamental global definition of marriage as a union between one man and one woman has been challenged. The continuous evolution of marriage poses new arguments pressing for equality that ultimately must be answered by an open-minded but logical society. Should gay marriage be recognized by the state and achieve marriage equality? Simply put gay marriage should not be equalized as it does not contribute to the perpetuation of society through natural reproduction, has unknown social and economical consequences, and has a negative impact on children.
One of the foremost reasons gay marriage cannot be granted the government sanctioned equality heterosexual marriage is afforded, is its innate inability to naturally produce offspring. The role of marriage in society though disputed has always included one man and one woman for the sake of healthy reproductive child rearing. Equating a relationship that is unable to manifest offsprin...

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