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Edited on Sun Aug-29-10 10:50 AM by dsc
We keep hearing about how civil unions would be easier to pass, and cause less electoral trouble, than marriage equality. Over and over again, we gays hear from Obama on down, that we should accept civil unions and STFU about marriage equality. Forgetting about the merits of accepting a seperate but equal status that no one else would, or would be told to; there is another huge problem the compromise shows no signs of actually working.
The following states have used a constitutional amendment to ban marriage equality but have not affected civil unions or domestic partnerships. Arizona, California, Colorado, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, and Tennessee.
The following states have used a constitutional amendment to not only ban marriage equality but to also either ban or greatly restrict civil unions and domestic partnerships. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin
Now, does anyone seriously think that MS and TN have fewer people who hate gays than say Michigan and Ohio? Wisconsin actually has a pretty good rep as a state that protects its gay citizens (it had one of the first ENDA style laws in the nation). Ohio was the very first state which removed its sodomy law. It is very hard to see any correlation between homophobic citizenry and which states did and didn't ban civil unions.
There is exactly one state where an amendment which banned civil unions and domestic partnerships failed but one which only banned marriage equality passed. That was Arizona. But there is a major problem. Arizona has a very large retiree population who have a huge incentive to have some marriage rights but not any on the federal level (due to pension and social security issues). That certainly made the difference. But this is directly opposed to the compromise we keep getting told to take. The people who switched their votes did so because civil unions don't have the federal rights of marriage. Once they did, they would be useless to those retirees.
I don't see a theory for this compromise working, nor to I see any evidence of it working. Yes civil unions poll better than marriage equality. Similarly absolute gun rights polls worse than limited ones. But who succeeds on the gun issue? It is the extremes. On a national level those who want unlimited gun rights have won nearly every major battle of the last decade and a half. In big cities those who wish to ban guns win elections. The middle on gun rights just don't vote on them. Similary does anyone really think there is a huge population of people who will vote for a candidate expousing civil unions that are in every way equal to marriage but against a candidate for marriage equality? Really? A single issue voter on this issue that is that precise? I really don't think so.
So what about political office holders. Surely they are sophisticated enough for this compromise. well try Hawaii where the GOP governor vetoed a civil unions bill because it was too much like marriage. Try Rhode Island where a GOP governor vetoed a bill that would have permitted a gay widow or widower to control the remains of their partner. Why? because he felt that a couple in a one year relationship wasn't enough of a relationship to be allowed to do that. It would undermine marriage.
so the populous shows no sign of accepting this compromise, and neither do the elites. why should we be embracing this again?
On edit Ohio wasn't the first state to remove sodomy laws.
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