A non-religious argument against same-sex marriage

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jmac2112
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A non-religious argument against same-sex marriage

Post #1

Post by jmac2112 »

Greetings! Back on October 22, Joeyknothead started a debate with the following OP:
Many folks object to homosexuals having a right to marriage based on religious reasons - duh.

For debate:

Is there a qualitative difference between the message of the Westboro Baptist Church and "moderate" Christians / theists who oppose homosexual marriage?
I jumped in and started trying to nail Joey down on certain terms, and trying to find out what his theory of rights was. To make a long story short, I eventually started developing my own argument against gay marriage based not on religion or revelation, but on reason. I certainly didn't convince anyone, but I got some interesting responses, and I want to follow up on them. The original thread is now of page 39, and has gone off in a direction that has little to do with what I was attempting, so I thought I would start a new thread to deal with this issue.

In the interest of full disclosure, I am a practicing Roman Catholic, and I will not try to pretend that my views have not been shaped by my faith, and by my experience of living out that faith to the best of my ability. However, I adhere to St. Anselm's ideal of "faith seeking understanding", so I try to explore issues like gay marriage from a non-religious point of view, especially on a site like this. I've never seen the point in arguing about specific Christian beliefs with someone who doesn't believe in God.

Anyway, I'm going to start by quoting part of what I wrote in response to Joeyknothead's challenge, and then take on Autodidact's criticisms of my argument. This will be very lengthy, but I would appreciate it if people would take the time to read the whole thing before weighing in with a response. Also, I realize that there were others who commented on my argument as well, and I hope at some point to get around to addressing the points they raised. I've been really swamped with responsibilities at work and at home lately, so it may take a while for me to formulate my replies.

One final note: I apologize in advance for the fact that my arguments will be offensive to some. It is not my intention to offend, but I believe in what I'm saying, and so I'm not going to pull any punches. In return, I expect nothing less from Autodidact or anyone else on the other side of this issue.


So, without further ado, here is the bulk of my exchange with Joeyknothead:


I wrote:
Other arrangements can be called "family" insofar are they bear some resemblance to the norm, but only recently have people wanted to "decenter" the norm.
Joey replied:
Who determines the "norm" and are they the same bunch who determines who ain't in the center of it?
I replied:
History does not record their names, but they would be the same people who also determined that food, clothing, and shelter would be a good idea.
Joey replied:
Does marriage feed folks? Does it clothe folks? Does it shelter folks?

No. Humans provide these things. Marriage is not required for a human to do any of the above.
I replied:
My point was that marriage is a natural arrangement that has existed since before the dawn of history, and probably for as long as there have been human beings like us. It was obvious to these ancestors of ours that they needed food, clothing and shelter to survive, and it was just as obvious that a situation in which men could have sex with whomever they wanted whenever they wanted without any responsibility was going to lead to a situation in which a) all women would be in danger of getting pregnant with children by men who would abandon them, b) a man would have no incentive to stay with any particular woman, c) that even if a man did have a liking for a particular woman, he would have no natural bond to her children, since they very well might not be his, d) many children would be raised fatherless, and e) as a result there would be chaos. You can actually see a pretty close approximation of this very situation in some areas of large cities today.

Stable society is a good thing. It really does help when it comes to feeding, clothing, and sheltering folks, not to mention protecting them from murder, theft, rape, etc.
To my point that
Men and women have sex,
Joey replied:
So do men and men, and women and women, and men and women and women, and men and goats, but I swear, it was just the once and we were both drunk.
I wrote:
I was talking about the kind of sex that is able to have direct consequences for social harmony. Your kind of sex might upset a few goatherds, and result in low self-esteem on the part of the goats.
To my point that:
sex leads to babies,
Joey replied:
Sometimes. Sometimes it doesn't.
I replied:
True enough, but I suspect you know what I mean. If you got pulled over for driving 100 miles an hour in a residential zone while drunk, I dont think youd get very far with the judge if you argued that such behavior doesnt always end in disaster. Some actions have predictable consequences that occur often enough to warrant broad statements about them.
To my point that:
and some stability must be imposed on this situation for the good of the women, the children, and society as a whole.

This is the reason that governments have always had an interest in sanctioning marriage.
Joey replied:
I propose what would be most "stable" is not oppressing our fellow human beings.
I replied:
I agree that oppression is bad. But again, you are accusing me of oppression without explaining yourself. Its not enough to keep repeating the charge. The fact that I oppose this novel idea that two men or two women have a right to be married does not make me an oppressor. What is oppressive is being accused of oppression by people who dont give any good reason for their opinion.

I dont see what possible interest the government could have in sanctioning the union between gays as marriage, just as I hardly see the point of heterosexual marriage as it is defined and practiced today. Thats why I wrote:
It is only recently that marriage has come to be viewed as Dating Plus, i.e. a relationship of indefinite duration that exists primarily for the emotional well-being of the adults involved, and can be called off at any time for any reason by either party. The kids? Oh, I'm sure they'll be fine with it.
Joey replied:
Are you the sole 'determinator' of what constitutes a valid marriage?
I replied:
Exactly the opposite. Marriage is a long-established social (not primarily religious or political) institution rooted in the nature of men and women; not just in their biological nature but in the way they are known to behave where sexual relations and child-rearing are concerned. For example, theres the saying that men play at love to get sex, and women play at sex to get love, and the fact that in the absence of any incentive, men are often reluctant to make any commitment to women, or to take responsibility for children, especially if they are not sure the children are actually theirs.

As I said, marriage is a social institution, in this case a contractual agreement that develops naturally in any community in response to certain undeniable facts about the way that men and women and children relate to one another. From the establishment of marriage it quickly and necessarily follows that there has to be some way of enforcing the contract, or at least providing strong incentives to abide by it. In a primitive society, this might take the form of an understanding that the male relatives of the bride will (ahem) diminish the grooms manhood if he abuses their daughter/sister/cousin, or runs off with another woman, or refuses to support the children. In a more developed society, there will be legal penalties for such behavior, and perhaps incentives to promote marriage, such as tax breaks. In any case, the point of government sanction of marriage between men and women has always been and should always remain the promotion of stable families which can produce good citizens, as well as provide for the legitimate desires of men and women for sex, companionship, and economic security.

A lot of societies, especially Christian societies, have seen marriage as in institution ordained and sanctioned by God (or the gods), and when we think of marriage in the Western world we usually form an image of the bride and groom walking down the aisle of a church. But marriage has been around a lot longer than Christianity, and in America, at least, it has long been possible to go down the courthouse and get hitched by the Justice of the Peace. My point in all of this is to dispel the notion that marriage was somehow invented by a group of politicians or priests. To borrow the saying attributed to Diderot, you could strangle the last king with the entrails of the last priest, and marriage would still survive. So would kings and priests, for that matter, and it wouldnt be long before they were in on the act.

But as I said earlier, our notion of marriage has degenerated to the point of being largely meaningless for the purpose of promoting and maintaining stable unions between men and women and protecting children from the effects of divorce. People have come to accept that marriage is largely about feelings, and maybe about getting your mom to stop making snide comments about shacking up. Im not knocking feelings, but contrary to The Captain and Tenille, love will NOT keep most people together for the long haul, at least not love defined as emotional attachment.

I read somewhere that the divorce rate is declining, which sounded like good news, but then I kept reading. It seems that fewer people are bothering to get married to begin with. Who can blame them? Everywhere they look, marriages are falling apart. The popularity of pre-nups is a pretty good indicator of how couples view their chances. No-fault divorce might sound like a good idea at first, but it greatly reduces the incentive to work things out that couples used to have. Im not suggesting that divorce should be outlawed. Not even the Catholic Church holds that position (Catholic belief is that a valid sacramental marriage ends only with the death of one spouse, but civil divorce is permitted in certain cases, like physical or emotional abuse, or one spouse running off with someone else). Im just saying that our current divorce laws reflect our anemic vision of what marriage is. Many couples still use wedding vows that say until death do us part, but ten years down the line, the husband discovers that his wife doesnt seem to understand him any more, but his secretary does, or the wife meets someone who fills her once more with the thrill of being alive, and pretty soon the rationalizing starts. People want to feel loved and respected, they want harmony, they want fulfillment in their relationships, but in even the best of marriages these things are going to be missing at least some of the time. As my uncle facetiously says Men and women are not compatible. Get over it. He and my aunt have been married for 55 years, because they have been able to accept the level of happiness and harmony that is possible between two people with very different but complementary natures.


Now to the big question, Why not let gays join the party?

1) Two homosexuals living together is not and never has been a social institution, i.e. it is not an arrangement that has any special implications for society. It involves no special duties toward society, and for that reason it has no special legal sanction or legal rights. At one point before I got married, I lived with another man in an apartment. The fact that we shared living quarters did not elevate the status of our relationship beyond friendship. Even if we had been in love and inclined to have sex together, in terms of our relationship to society it would not have changed the fact that we were just two men living together.

2) If sex between men and women never led to babies, the situation of a man and a woman living together would be the same as the two examples above as far as the interest that government would have in it. Society would never make a big deal out of it, and governments would have no more interest in promoting or regulating it than they would in the case of any other roommates. The nature and intensity of the feelings between two people, the sex they have (or dont have), the vacations they take together, and, in a word, all the shared aspects of their lives, are of great interest to the couple in question, but do not have any social ramifications that would cause the government to promote, sanction, or regulate such a relationship.

3) Some heterosexual couples cant have children, some choose not to have children, and gay sex never produces children (barring some cases involving surgery that I think I read about in the National Enquirer; who knows what may become possible through science). On the other hand, legitimate government interest in marriage is due to the fact that most marriages between men and women produce children, and the children need stable, nurturing families. So what about cases where a heterosexual couple cant have children, or choose not to? Should their unions be recognized as marriage by government? Yes, because a) it would involve intolerable government intrusion in order to ascertain the facts, b) sometimes couples change their minds and decide to have children after all, c) sometimes infertile couples find out that they arent actually infertile, and d) infertile couples can adopt.

4) So, why not let gay couples adopt? If you disagree with what Ive written so far, then believe me, THIS is the true impasse. What seems blindingly obvious to those who take my position may be totally denied by those who disagree, namely that the family situation which is has always been the norm among human beings is also the situation which is the best for children. What it takes for a boy to become a well-adjusted man, and what it takes for a girl to become a well-adjusted woman, is largely determined by socialization, and a child needs a father and a mother in his or her life in order to be properly socialized. Other arrangements have always existed due to necessity, such as when children are raised by a mother and grandmother, or a father and an uncle, but who would argue that such arrangements should be positively encouraged by government, enshrined in law as having a status equal to marriage? And yet this is exactly what the proponents of gay adoption argue for, with the added complication that the two men or two women have a sexual relationship with one another. This raises serious questions as to how the children will be affected. Will the parents try to raise the children as straight? How successful are they likely to be in this attempt? Or will they try to raise them as gay? This seems unlikely, since from what Ive heard, most gays would have found life much easier if they were attracted to the opposite sex. Will they allow the children to find their own way? In any case, is it fair to allow this sort of social experiment to be performed on children?


This post has gotten quite lengthy, so I'd better stop soon. But I hope that even those who disagree with me will find my position "qualitatively different" from that of people who scream "God hates f_gs!" at people mourning the death of a family member.

So, that's about as far as Joey and I got with the matter. I will now put up a separate post containing Autodidact's criticism of my argument, and my replies to each point.

jmac2112
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Post #51

Post by jmac2112 »

Well, its getting a little hard to wade through all the accusations of bigotry, lying, hate, prejudice, cowardice, defamation, irresponsibility, etc., directed either toward me directly or toward me by association. Allow me to quote a sampling from Autodidact:
would you rather stick to propaganda from known bigots and hate groups?
Actually, all you offered is bigoted lies from a hate group that has been discredited by every reputable discipline.
Do you have an iota of evidence to support your implication that gay fathers abuse their children, or are you just spreading bigotry around the internet?
I see. Your refusal to accept the facts, the results of hundreds of well-conducted research studies, and your penchant for clinging to myths based on nothing but sheer prejudice is noted.
I don't do argument by link. If you have an argument to make, have the courage and show the effort to make it.
: NARTH is looked on with contempt by every mainstream social science and psychological organization. They are a bunch of liars and bigots, and nothing more. Why would you go to them, unless you were interested in lies and bigotry?
Nevertheless, all the studies that have been done support what I am saying. Somehow, not one of them supports yours. Yet I suspect you will not change your mind. If so, that clearly shows your views are not based on the facts. What are they based on?
Me neither. Please stop doing it. Your statement was false. It is defamatory. It is about an entire group of people, a group of which you know almost nothing. It is on the internet. You took not the slightest effort to find out the truth of the matter, demonstrating a lack of responsibility.
How DARE I question the accepted orthodoxy? How DARE I suggest that the gathering and interpretation of data in such soft sciences as psychology and sociology could possibly be influenced by the bias of the researchers, or manipulated for political ends? I provided links to studies purporting to show that such influence and manipulation do in fact exist, but it seems that anyone who takes exception to the methodology or interpretation used in studies supporting gay and lesbian parenting MUST be a bigot driven by an anti-gay agenda. After all, the pro- gay adoption researchers said it, so it must be so,

Autodidact, I dont think you get it. You seem to inhabit a world where same-sex relationships and adoption by gays and lesbians is a self-evident good. I do not inhabit that world. If you would like to convince me that your view is correct, youre not doing a very good job. When people start throwing around words like bigot and hate and liar and irresponsible and prejudice when anyone has the temerity to question them, I feel that I am dealing with someone who has grown desperate.

I would like to limit this post to one topic, and I have a set of questions for you at the end. Perhaps later I can deal with all the charges that have been thrown at me by you and others in the last week or so. Right now, however, I would like to take you one a journey to show you how I approach one single issue, and to show you why I cant simply accept your assertion that scientific evidence is on your side.

As I have continued to explore the arguments for and against gay/lesbian adoption and parenting, I keep seeing the work of the American Psychological Association cited by various organizations and in various court cases. I decided to see if they had an official statement on the matter, and heres what I found:
http://www.apa.org/about/governance/cou ... nting.aspx

Well, some might say that if a group of psychiatrists and psychologists say that its true, it must be true.

But I was not quite satisfied. I am not a psychologist or social scientist, nor are most people, and I dont have all the time in the world to sift through the hundreds of articles written on the subject, so I thought Id see if the people behind the policy statement seemed trustworthy. First I found the following policy statement from the APA, explaining the process by which the resolution was reached:
http://www.apa.org/monitor/nov04/action.aspx

By all means, read the whole thing, but allow me to quote parts of the statement, highlighting a few here and there:
On July 28, the APA Council of Representatives adopted a resolution supporting civil marriage for same-sex couples and opposing discrimination against same-sex parents. The resolution passed unanimously and in near-record time--only five months after council first proposed a working group on the subject and three months after the working group formed.
Recent debates--and legal action--concerning same-sex marriage in California, Massachusetts and other states spurred the quick action, according to Armand Cerbone, PhD, chair of the working group and a clinical psychologist in Chicago.
"Given the timeliness and urgency of the issue, APA wanted to be able to inform the public debate with research literature as quickly as possible," he says..
The final working group members--Cerbone, Hancock, Beverly Greene, PhD, Lawrence Kurdek, PhD, Candace McCullogh, PhD, Charlotte Patterson, PhD, and Anne Peplau, PhD--met from April 30 to May 2 to review previous APA policies related to same-sex relationships, marriage and families, as well as relevant research. They focused on two areas of research: same-sex relationships and marriage, and same-sex parents and their children..
Researchers have found that sexual identity, personality and social relationships with peers and adults develop similarly in those children as they do in children of heterosexual parents, according to the group.
Next, the working group put its resolution before APA's Board of Directors, asking it for an expedited review process. Often, it can take as long as 18 months for APA's various boards and committees to review a resolution, but this time all comments were received within one month.

Working group member Patterson, a professor at the University of Virginia who studies children of lesbian and gay parents, agrees that this is an important next step.
"Historically, APA has been very much in front on social justice issues of different kinds, and I'm delighted to see us step forward on this," she says.

The first thing I noticed was that Armand Cerbone, PhD, who chaired the working group, not only admits that the policy statement was produced and reviewed in a hurry, but seems to be bragging about it.

The second thing I noticed was that in the research summary of the APAs policy statement, out of the 37 citations to support the statement, the research of Charlotte Patterson, alone or in conjunction with coauthors, was cited 10 times. Youll notice that Charlotte Patterson was a member of the working group that put the statement together. In the bibliography at the bottom of the statement, three of the 20 works were by Patterson alone, and one by Patterson in conjunction with two other authors.

Now, Dr. Patterson is of course perfectly free to cite her own works in a policy statement that she helped to craft. She certainly has done a lot of research on the issue, all of it painting a glowing picture of gay adoption and parenting. As a matter of fact, the same could be said of the other members of the working group. Who better to put together a policy statement in support of gay and lesbian relationships, adoption, and parenting than six people who have spent many years producing research in support of gay and lesbian relationships, adoption, and parenting? But then again, perhaps they should have included a few dissenting voices, at least for the sake of looking impartial. Could they find none? The APA claims to have 154,000 members. Surely some of them must have some doubts about the position that the APA has adopted. The country is full of people with grave doubts about this matter, so it seems odd that the entire membership of the APA should be in lockstep.

I started looking into the members of the working group, and I found the following interesting profile of Dr. Beverly Greene on a site called Psychologys Feminist Voices. This might go quite a ways toward explaining the composition of the working group and the conclusions it reached:
http://www.feministvoices.com/beverly-greene/
Greene points out that psychology is inherently political; that it is not a value-neutral science. Psychology is political when researchers set up their studies; who they choose, who they leave out, what types of students graduate programs accept, and which they reject - these are all political decisions. They are political, according to Greene, because they either include or exclude certain kinds of people. Science can either continue to marginalize certain groups while privileging others, or it could work on an alternative. The alternative is to use science to facilitate social justice and social change. This is something that Greene consistently stresses and works towards. Challenges arise when those of majority privilege fail to recognize the need for change, or create the illusion that these issues have been resolved.
Does this statement seem to you to be irrelevant? To me it seems astounding.

A Candace McCulogh, PhD, is also listed as one of the group members. An internet search turns up no such person, but there is a Candace McCullough, PhD, who is a Deaf psychotherapist and a member of the APA. I think were dealing with a typo here. If this is indeed the same person, then she has some very interesting ideas about gay parenting, as described in this article from the NY Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/05/health/05essa.html
In 2002, for example, The Washington Post Magazine profiled Candace A. McCullough and Sharon M. Duchesneau, a lesbian and deaf couple from Maryland who both attended Gallaudet University and set out to have a deaf child by intentionally soliciting a deaf sperm donor.
A hearing baby would be a blessing, Ms. Duchesneau was quoted as saying. A deaf baby would be a special blessing.
Born five years ago on Thanksgiving Day, the couples son, Gauvin, was mostly deaf, and his parents chose to withhold any hearing aids.
If this is not the same person mentioned as being a member of the APAs working group, someone please correct me.

Regarding Armand Cerbone, the chair of the group, the first thing that popped up was an article celebrating his induction into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame:
http://www.glhalloffame.org/index.pl?it ... =view_item

The article states:
As a psychologist, Armand Cerbone has applied psychological research on sexual orientation to the concerns of lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities in Chicago and Illinois. As a gay man and activist, Cerbone has worked to guide psychology toward an enlightened understanding of the lives of those who are different because they are not heterosexual.
On Dr. Kristin Hancock:
http://www.jfku.edu/News/Kristin-Hancock-Award.html
John F. Kennedy University faculty member Dr. Kristin Hancock has received the 2010 Distinguished Humanitarian Contribution Award from the California Psychological Association (CPA).
Dr. Hancock received the Distinguished Humanitarian Contribution Award with Dr. Linda Garnets from the University of California, Los Angeles, and Dr. Greg Herek from the University of California, Davis, in recognition of the significant impact their voluntary and career work has made toward improving the lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) individuals.
Drs. Hancock, Garnets, and Herek are founding members and leaders in Division 44 (Society for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Issues) within the American Psychological Association, a focal point for research, practice, and education on the lives and realities of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people. In these roles, Drs. Hancock, Garnets, and Herek have fostered professional and public awareness about lesbian, gay, and bisexual concerns and have implemented guidelines to improve the relevance and quality of mental health services available to the LGBT community. Their collective work also has educated the courts and been used in testimony to oppose discriminatory legislation and initiatives aimed at gay and lesbian populations.
Searching for the name Lawrence Kurdek, unfortunately, reveals that he died of cancer in 2009:
http://www.beyondhomophobia.com/blog/20 ... ry-kurdek/
Larry helped to craft the APAs Resolution on Sexual Orientation and Marriage, in which the Association committed itself to take a leadership role in opposing all discrimination in legal benefits, rights, and privileges against same-sex couples. He also helped to develop the APAs Resolution on Sexual Orientation, Parents, and Children, in which the Association went on record opposing any discrimination based on sexual orientation in matters of adoption, child custody and visitation, foster care, and reproductive health services.
I can hear the epithets being flung now, but I do think it relevant to note that Lawrence Kurdek was gay.

From what I can see, Charlotte Patterson has done the most research on gay and lesbian issues, and Anne Peplau has done quite a bit, too, though she is interested in a broader range of sexual and social issues. Patterson is clearly very much in favor of same-sex relationships and gay adoption, while Peplau seems to take a more objective view, though she clearly has no problem with whatever people want to do with their sex lives.

So, to recap: We have a very influential statement here, crafted by six people who are all in agreement that gay/lesbian adoption and parenting is a wonderful idea.

--Drs. Cerbone and Kurdek are gay activists, one of whom has been inducted into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame.

--Dr. McCullough (if my identification is correct) is a lesbian who considers it a great thing that she was able to use artificial insemination to produce deaf children for herself.

--The statement of Dr. Greene is so amazing that it bears repeating in full:
Greene points out that psychology is inherently political; that it is not a value-neutral science. Psychology is political when researchers set up their studies; who they choose, who they leave out, what types of students graduate programs accept, and which they reject - these are all political decisions. They are political, according to Greene, because they either include or exclude certain kinds of people. Science can either continue to marginalize certain groups while privileging others, or it could work on an alternative. The alternative is to use science to facilitate social justice and social change. This is something that Greene consistently stresses and works towards. Challenges arise when those of majority privilege fail to recognize the need for change, or create the illusion that these issues have been resolved.
--Drs. Patterson and Hancock could fairly be described as activists whose reputations are built on promoting gay and lesbian issues, while Dr. Peplaus research seems to be value-neutral, at the very least (though given Dr. Greene's statement, I am not at all sure about that).

My questions to you, Autodidact: Given what I have just shown you, can you understand the reason that I cannot accept the APAs policy statement simply because it was put out by a large and influential association of psychiatrics and psychologists? Can you understand why I am deeply suspicious of research in the soft sciences by gays and lesbians purporting to show that there is absolutely nothing to worry about when it comes to gay and lesbian adoption? Or why I cant simply accept the word of people whose professional reputations are bound up with the gay and lesbian agenda? Do you see why I am not impressed when you snarl in disdain when I bring up the fact that not all professionals agree with the sentiments expressed by the APA?

I'm sure we'll have an opportunity to discuss individual studies, but I would like for you to understand where I'm coming from, and perhaps to show you that things are not as cut and dried as they may seem to you.

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Post #52

Post by Filthy Tugboat »

jmac2112 wrote:Well, its getting a little hard to wade through all the accusations of bigotry, lying, hate, prejudice, cowardice, defamation, irresponsibility, etc., directed either toward me directly or toward me by association. Allow me to quote a sampling from Autodidact:
If you are sick of debating with others, you could respond to my post, maybe it would take the debate in a direction that you would prefer. It's the second post on the fourth page :D
Religion feels to me a little like a Nigerian Prince scam. The "offer" is illegitimate, the "request" is unreasonable and the source is dubious, in fact, Nigeria doesn't even have a royal family.

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Post #53

Post by Autodidact »

American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry:
All decisions relating to custody and parental rights should rest on the interest of the child. There is no evidence to suggest or support that parents who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender are per se superior or inferior from or deficient in parenting skills, child-centered concerns, and parent-child attachments when compared with heterosexual parents. There is no credible evidence that shows that a parent's sexual orientation or gender identity will adversely affect the development of the child.
American Academy of Pediatrics:
The American Academy of Pediatrics recognizes that a considerable body of professional literature provides evidence that children with parents who are homosexual can have the same advantages and the same expectations for health, adjustment, and development as can children whose parents are heterosexual.1-9 When 2 adults participate in parenting a child, they and the child deserve the serenity that comes with legal recognition.
American Psychiatric Association:
Gay and lesbian couples and individuals should be allowed to become parents through adoption, fostering and new reproductive technologies, subject to the same type of screening used with heterosexual couples and individuals.
American Psychoanalytic Association:
Accumulated evidence suggests the best interest of the child requires attachment to committed, nurturing and competent parents. Evaluation of an individual or couple for these parental qualities should be determined without prejudice regarding sexual orientation. Gay and lesbian individuals and couples are capable of meeting the best interest of the child and should be afforded the same rights and should accept the same responsibilities as heterosexual parents.
Child Welfare League of America:
Applicants should be assessed on the basis of their abilities to successfully parent a child needing family membership and not on their race, ethnicity or culture, income, age, marital status, religion, appearance, differing lifestyles, or sexual orientation." Further, applicants for adoption should be accepted "on the basis of an individual assessment of their capacity to understand and meet the needs of a particular available child at the point of adoption and in the future.
National Adoption Center:
We believe that every child has the right to a loving, nurturing and permanent family, and that people from a variety of life experiences offer strengths for these children."

Therefore, it is the policy of the National Adoption Center that no person should be denied consideration in the adoption process solely based on marital status, sexual orientation, lifestyle, disability, physical appearance, race, gender, age, religion and/or size of family.
National Association of Social Workers:
Legislation legitimizing second-parent adoptions in same-sex households should be supported. Legislation seeking to restrict foster care and adoption by gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender people should be vigorously opposed.
North American Council on Adoptable Children:
Children should not be denied a permanent family because of the sexual orientation of potential parents. Everyone with the potential to successfully parent a child in foster care or adoption is entitled to fair and equal consideration.
Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute:
Reviews of nearly a quarter-century of research on parenting by non-heterosexual adults is extraordinarily consistent in indicating that they are just as competent and well-adjusted as their heterosexual counterparts and that the children in their households show no meaningful differences in psychological adjustment from those who grow up with straight parents (Gartrell, Peyer, & Bos, 2011; Goldberg, 2010; Patterson, 2009; Patterson & Wainright, 2011; Stacey & Biblarz, 2001).
Although less research has been conducted on outcomes for lesbian and gay adoptive families, the findings of these studies, to date, are consistent with the conclusions noted above. Specifically, research has found no differences in psychological adjustment in adopted children of lesbian, gay and heterosexual parents. (Erich, Leung, & Kindle, 2005; Erich, Leung, Kindle, & Carter, 2005; Averett, Nalavany, and Ryan, 2009; Farr, Forssell, & Patterson, 2010a) Furthermore, one study reported no differences in the strength of attachment between adolescents and their adoptive parents, or with their peers, in these three types of families; nor did adolescent life satisfaction vary as a function of parent sexual orientation (Erich, Kanenberg, Case, Allen, & Bogdanos, 2009). In addition, quality of parenting behavior has not been found to differ among lesbian, gay and heterosexual adoptive parents (Erich et al., 2005; Erich, Leung, Kindle, & Carter, 2005; Farr et al., 2010a). In fact, research has shown that parents in all three groups show an increase in perceived parenting skill as they make the transition to adoptive parenthood, with gay men showing the greatest positive shift in parenting confidence from pre-adoption to post-adoption (Goldberg & Smith, 2009a). Post-adoption relationship satisfaction also appears to be similar among these three groups of adoptive parents (Farr et al., 2010a; Farr, Forssell, & Patterson, 2010b), as is the extent of help they receive from their support networks (Erich et al. 2005; Erich, Leung, Kindle, & Carter, 2005; Ryan & Cash, 2004).

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Post #54

Post by JayDeist »

There are close to 14 million children living with gay or lesbian parents in the United States, and there is nothing that could conclusively show that they are worse off than heterosexual parents. With numbers in the millions, obviously there are a lot of people that disagree with you. I think you have a problem with gays and lesbians myself. With the multitude of studies showing that statistically children with a gay or lesbian parent has just as much of a chance to be raised correctly as children in a straight home. There are hundreds of thousands of children in foster homes who would love to be adopted by a straight or homosexual couple. The foster care system has done such a poor job of placing children in good homes, that some places, like Utah, have been placed under federal court supervision.

You can search out one study that matches your personal biasness, or you can correlate the results from all studies. Given the amount of studies that favor lesbian and gay parenting, the percentages all point in favor of gay and lesbian couples. The results of these studies show almost conclusively that children of homosexual couples grow up to be just as succesful as children from heterosexual couples.

To quote, key findings of these studies include:
There is no evidence to suggest that lesbians and gay men are unfit to be parents. Home environments with lesbian and gay parents are as likely to successfully support a childs development as those with heterosexual parents.

Good parenting is not influenced by sexual orientation. Rather, it is influenced most profoundly by a parents ability to create a loving and nurturing home -- an ability that does not depend on whether a parent is gay or straight.

There is no evidence to suggest that the children of lesbian and gay parents are less intelligent, suffer from more problems, are less popular, or have lower self-esteem than children of heterosexual parents.

The children of lesbian and gay parents grow up as happy, healthy and well-adjusted as the children of heterosexual parents.
It comes down to ignorance and biasness more than anything. Most people will tell you that your sexual preference has nothing to do with parenting skills.
Last edited by JayDeist on Mon Nov 28, 2011 11:15 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Post #55

Post by Autodidact »

jmac:

You made an affirmative declaration about an entire group of people. That declaration was false. You have not provided a shred, not a single iota of evidence to support it. If you cannot support your statement, I would appreciate it very much if you would withdraw it, as it slanders a group to which I belong, a group of hard-working parents doing our best to raise our children in an adverse environment, and contributing to that adversity.

I'm sure you agree that when someone makes a strong, negative statement about another group of people, they should be able to support that statement, or withdraw it, correct?

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Post #56

Post by Clownboat »

Jmac. If homosexuality is a choice like you seem to claim, you should be able to look at someone of the same sex and "choose" to get aroused.

I just can't do it. So that tells me that it is not a choice. Can you "choose" to get aroused by someone of the same sex?

Not only that, but I should then be able to choose to no longer be attracted to females (opposite sex in my case), and that is also something I cannot choose to do.

Forget all the studies that suggest you are wrong and just answer the questions above if you would please.
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Post #57

Post by Goat »

Clownboat wrote:Jmac. If homosexuality is a choice like you seem to claim, you should be able to look at someone of the same sex and "choose" to get aroused.

I just can't do it. So that tells me that it is not a choice. Can you "choose" to get aroused by someone of the same sex?

Not only that, but I should then be able to choose to no longer be attracted to females (opposite sex in my case), and that is also something I cannot choose to do.

Forget all the studies that suggest you are wrong and just answer the questions above if you would please.
I will also note that the experts that Jmac quotes all are involved very vocally with being Christians. Now, it seems that when looking for 'non religious' reasons to oppose homosexuality, he uses experts that are very vocally active in being Christians, or discredited organizations that are heavily populated with very conservative and vocal Christians (such as Narth). Part of the 'therapy' that is suggested by narth is 'pastoral care'.

Now, it seems to me that the thread is 'non-religious' reasons to oppose homosexuality, yet all the people who are quoted have some very prominent religious connections.

It seems that 'arguments' and motivations for opposing same gender marriage is are religiously motivated.
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Post #58

Post by Donray »

Sonclad wrote: If we take God out of the equation (as per this discussion), then it's all about human reproduction and survival of the species, wouldn't you agree? Should home duality ever become the preferred norm as you suggest, refer back to my 1st argument as that will be the end of the human species.
You are totally incorrect. It is all about legal matters.

People have babies without marriage all the time so marriage has nothing to do with survival of the species. Are you saying that you and the majority of your church would become gays and lesbians if the marriage laws in this county were changed to allow homosexuals to have them marry and have all the legal rights that married heterosexual couples have?

Second, why do you think allowing a few homosexuals to get married will stop every woman from having a baby? You have never addressed this point and that seems to be the crux of your argument.

So, the first thing you need to do is prove that all woman and men would become homosexuals and never have sex with the opposite sex. So, give up on your proposition until you are able to prove this point.

For tens of thousands of years marriage was nonexistent and yet the spices survived.

Marriage came about only to clarify the legal standing of a woman and offspring in relation to the man.

Why don't you address the legal issues associated with allowing only selected people to get married?

So since you base assumption is totally wrong about people will no longer have babies please explain how you reached this conclusion? Will you become gay if the marriage laws are changed to allow woman to marry woman and men to marry men? Explain why if gay marriage was legal you and the other in your church to become gay and lesbians?

You totally failed to address the reason for marriage which is a totally legal matter. Why have you failed to address this?

So, in addition to explaining why you become gay if gay marriage is allowed could explain why you feel that some people that are in love should not have the same legal rights as other couples.

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Post #59

Post by jmac2112 »

Autodidact,

You object to a statement that I made about a group of people. The statement you are referring to seems to be part of the post in which I proposed ten scenarios that could be studied:

I wrote:
1) Two gay men adopt a boy unrelated to either of them.

2 Two gay men adopt a girl unrelated to either of them.

3) Two lesbians adopt a boy unrelated to either of them.

4) Two lesbians adopt a girl unrelated to either of them.

5) A gay/bi man has a boy with his wife, divorces his wife to be with his lover, and they adopt the boy.

6) A gay/bi man has a girl with his wife, divorces his wife to be with his lover, and they adopt the girl.

7) A lesbian/bi has a boy with her husband, divorces her husband to be with her lover, and they adopt the boy.

8) A lesbian/bi has a girl with her husband, divorces her husband to be with her lover, and they adopt the girl.

9) Two gay men have child involving the combination of the sperm of one of them with an egg from a female donor (Im stating it this way to cover whatever possible methods exist) and have either a boy or a girl.

10) Two lesbians have child involving the combination of an egg from one of them with the sperm of a donor (again, by whatever method) and have either a boy or a girl.

The statements that I see being made in favor of gay/lesbian adoption seem very broad. For example, you quoted the American Academy of Pediatrics as saying:
The American Academy of Pediatrics recognizes that a considerable body of professional literature provides evidence that children with parents who are homosexual can have the same advantages and the same expectations for health, adjustment, and development as can children whose parents are heterosexual.1-9 When 2 adults participate in parenting a child, they and the child deserve the serenity that comes with legal recognition.

Now, from what I have seen so far, I am not convinced that all ten of the scenarios I mentioned would have equally positive outcomes, to say the least. I have presented reasons based on common sense which suggest that some of them are likely to present problems for a child, such as in cases of artificial insemination. I would make the same argument in the following cases:
5) A gay/bi man has a boy with his wife, divorces his wife to be with his lover, and they adopt the boy.

6) A gay/bi man has a girl with his wife, divorces his wife to be with his lover, and they adopt the girl.

7) A lesbian/bi has a boy with her husband, divorces her husband to be with her lover, and they adopt the boy.

8) A lesbian/bi has a girl with her husband, divorces her husband to be with her lover, and they adopt the girl.

I can't see how such a situation could fail to put a child in a very uncomfortable position, especially if the child was old enough to know what was going on.

As I've stated elsewhere, I think that a great many heterosexuals have lost their minds when it comes to their views on marriage, no-fault divorce, and the way that divorce impacts children. Some of the situations Ive described are much more complicated and awkward than regular divorce. If you can't see how it would be mortally embarrassing for a child to have to explain "Well, my dad was married to my mom, but then he left her for another man", and how awkward it would be for the child to find himself (herself) living with two dads who have sex with one another..... What can I say? Is there no one out there who can see where Im coming from?

Or again, what about the situation where a child is conceived by artificial insemination, and is raised by one biological parent and his/her same-sex lover? This is not like cases in which a child is up for adoption due to the parents thoughtlessness or some other unfortunate circumstance. Most of the adopted people Ive known love their adoptive parents, consider them their real parents, and at the same time have conflicting feelings about the mother (or both parents) who gave them up, however necessary it may have been. But imagine the day when a child raised by two gays or two lesbians realizes that there is someone out there who is responsible for their existence, who gave them a large part of their identity, and who did so by letting himself or herself be used by two men or two women who wanted a child on their own terms, as part of a novel sort of family. There is no oops here, no tragedy, no necessity which brought this situation about. Am I the only person who can see a difficulty here?

Again, I have to stress that the statements I'm seeing from professional organizations seem to talk about gay/lesbian adoption or parenting as though that phrase represents a single, straightforward issue, when in fact it does not.

The most defensible situation, and the one that most of the "pro" research seems to be focused on, is the one in which two lesbians are raising a child, usually obtained by adoption rather then artificial insemination (unless Im missing statements to the contrary). I'm not seeing nearly as much research on gay men raising a child, but the blanket endorsements of same-sex adoption appear to cover them as well. The American Psychological Association's statement admits that there hasnt been much research on some key points regarding children of gay fathers, but that doesnt seem to bother them much:
http://www.apa.org/about/governance/cou ... nting.aspx
Studies of other aspects of personal development (including personality, self-concept, and conduct) similarly reveal few differences between children of lesbian mothers and children of heterosexual parents (Perrin, 2002; Stacey & Biblarz, 2001; Tasker, 1999). However, few data regarding these concerns are available for children of gay fathers (Patterson, 2004b).
But in either scenario, a child is being raised either without a mother or without a father.

I am not ready to accept that the only thing that matters is that a child should have two parents, regardless of gender and/or sexual involvement with each other. I have not had a chance yet to look at more than a little of the research, but I do know two things:

1) Researchers who start with a hypothesis that a difference between two groups does not exist sometimes state (or imply) as their conclusion "No differences were found, therefore no differences exist." In my limited understanding of research in the social sciences, such a conclusion is not valid; the fact that a particular study does not find a difference does not prove that there is no difference, especially if the researcher is biased. It's fairly difficult to establish that something does not exist, and it would take a lot of research to do so. As I understand it, a major part of the way that responsible researchers go about establishing that a difference between two groups does not exist is by also trying to prove that a difference does exist. If they still can't come up with any evidence that a difference exists, then they can state that there is strong evidence that no difference exists. Otherwise, they are just dealing with preliminary suggestions. It will be interesting to see what I find. It seems that researchers who try to prove that there is a difference in outcome between heterosexual and homosexual parenting are often dismissed as bigots.

2) In my last post, I think I provided ample evidence that the working group in charge of writing the American Psychological Association's statement on Sexual Orientation, Parents, & Children was likely to have been biased due to their personal and/or professional interest in the issue. The quote from the interview with Dr. Greene, which speaks of her desire to use science to facilitate social justice and social change, makes me especially skeptical about the whole enterprise.

I can understand why supporters of gay/lesbian adoption and parenting would be skeptical of research done by people who are known to have religious convictions. I hope that such people can understand my skepticism as well.

So, to clarify my position, I am not yet convinced that the research supports even what I consider the most defensible position, namely adoption and/or parenting by two lesbians, let alone all the other things that could be included under the heading "gay and lesbian adoption and parenting". I think that, based on the evidence I have seen so far, legislation permitting any and all of the scenarios I have described would be doing a disservice to a great many of the children involved.

I am not accusing any individual of intending to harm children, although it may have sounded that way. In particular, I have no reason to doubt that Autodidact has been a good mother. My contention, however, is that having two mothers or two fathers is not the same as having a mother and a father, and I am not ready to agree that intentionally putting a child in that position is in the best interest of the child. My own mother was raised by her mother and grandmother after her alcoholic father ran out on the family. She turned out very well, but she knows that her situation was far from ideal. That situation came about due to the deplorable actions of her father, not because her mother and grandmother decided that they would prefer to raise her without a father. Needless to say, my grandmother and great-grandmother were not sexually involved with one another either.

I will certainly continue looking into the research, as time permits. And there are many other posts that I would like to reply to, but again, time is an issue. In a couple of weeks, Ill have more freedom for this sort of thing.

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Post #60

Post by Autodidact »

The statement that you made is:
What seems blindingly obvious to those who take my position may be totally denied by those who disagree, namely that the family situation which is has always been the norm among human beings is also the situation which is the best for children. What it takes for a boy to become a well-adjusted man, and what it takes for a girl to become a well-adjusted woman, is largely determined by socialization, and a child needs a father and a mother in his or her life in order to be properly socialized.
(emphasis added)

This statement is false. Further, it is an affirmative claim on your part. The burden is on you to support it with research, the same high quality research that you are seeking to disprove it. If you cannot find any, then you should withdraw this claim. It is not on me to support anything. Yet I have produced research and meta-studies, all of which come to the same conclusion. Not only are you wrong, but if there is any difference, it favors lesbian parents, not heterosexuals. Children of lesbian parents do AT LEAST as well as children of heterosexual parents. In fact, parenting experts are now looking at lesbian families to see what they're doing right, so that heterosexual parents can learn how to do better. Yes, like everything I claim, I can support this with citations, so just ask me if you feel the need.

Further, I provided position statements from every major child health and welfare organization in the country, including those whose aim is to provide healthy families for children who need to be adopted. There is a reason these organizations support gay and lesbian families--they provide stable, supportive care for children who need it.

Therefore it is now incumbent on you to produce some research to defend heterosexual parenting, which seems to be deficient in comparison to lesbian parenting.

You reject all the research that has ever been done, and ask us to believe it's on methodological grounds. It is obvious that you reject it merely because you do not like the conclusion. That is less than honest, don't you agree?

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