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The root of our problem is not the bigots who seek to deny us the right to marry. The root of our problem is that the government attempts to define what a family looks like through marriage laws, and thus the bigots are empowered (by the government) to deny us the right to marry.
My solution to this problem is to remove marriage from the government entirely. Previously married couples would not be impacted, similar to how LGBT people remained married in CA after Prop 8, however they'd be able to redefine their "marriage" arrangements if they so choose.
Instead of marriage the government merely offers certain contractual benefits. It puts no stipulation on those benefits, and you as an individual are empowered to create a contract with whomever you want. A list of benefits, for example, would include filing a joint tax return, next of kin status, shared healthcare benefits (counts as a "family"), the ability to transfer social security benefits, etc. In general, basically all of the benefits of marriage removed from marriage.
Why create these as contractual benefits? Because it allows each individual to define what their "family" looks like without the government intervening. Maybe you've just started college, and you've joined a Fraternity. Everyone lives in the Fraternity House and pools their income. To make their lives easier, they could go to a lawyer, and draft a contract allowing them to claim each other as sharing an income and co-dependency. This allows the Fraternity to file a single joint tax return, without having to complicate things with all the other obligations of marriage.
What about the Hippy Commune or the Monks in a monastery? They benefit as well, allowing them to draw up contracts that best suit their needs based on the benefits of shared income and co-dependency. The same is true for two elderly sisters, who've moved in together to take care of one another and pool their resources. The same is true for the Muslim who has multiple wives, the traditional gay couple, or the traditional straight couple.
In the end, the government does not define marriage, but rather offers a system that grants benefits to people who depend upon one another for whatever reason. Families are very diverse; too diverse for the government to ever define. Restricting marriage and its benefits to one man and one woman, shuts out every single person listed above including thousands of others of every possible configuration.
Why advocate this over our current methods? Two reasons. The first is philosophical. I don't believe the state should determine what a family looks like. The second is pragmatic. By taking this approach it allows us to broaden our coalition, including cutting deep into the ranks of our foes as it benefits them as well as us, and this ensures that we'd be more likely to achieve a total nation wide victory. Expanding our coalition is critical to that, because even among the LGBT community there are many who simply don't care about the marriage battle.
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