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Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Ellen Goodman started her career as a researcher for Newsweek, and moved on to become a reporter for the Detroit ...
Read more about Ellen Goodman.
Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Ellen Goodman started her career as a researcher for Newsweek, and moved on to become a reporter for the Detroit ...
Read more about Ellen Goodman.
The Gay Divorce Fandango
Ellen Goodman
BOSTON -- I suppose there is something charming about watching
conservative politicians in Texas trying so ardently to preserve a
same-sex marriage.
How else can you explain their passionate opposition to a court ruling last week that would allow a couple legally wed in Massachusetts to be divorced in their state?
This tale of same-sex love and marriage, horse and carriage, and the difficulty of unhitching began in 2006 when two men known as JB and HB were wed with the usual set of hopes and dreams. A year later, one of them was transferred and they moved to Texas. There, the marriage went on the rocks.
Last January, the couple made an amicable agreement to divide their property. But when they went to court to formalize it, Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott leapt in. Since same-sex marriage was banned by a constitutional amendment, he argued, the state couldn't dissolve a marriage it didn't recognize.
Judge Tena Callahan saw things differently. Texas, she ruled, could grant divorces to couples legally married in other jurisdictions. Indeed, on this "limited issue" of divorce, she said, the state's four-year-old gay marriage ban violated the federal right to equal protection.
At that point, Abbott swore to appeal the case in order to "defend the traditional definition of marriage." The governor, Rick Perry, and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, who's running against him, were equally full-throated in their attempt to keep JB and HB together till death do them part.
As Evan Wolfson of Freedom to Marry says, "the irony is that the anti-gay forces are so opposed to gay relationships they won't even let us out of them."
Let us stipulate that JB and HB did not set out to challenge the ban. Nor did they want to become the poster couple for same-sex divorce. But divorce happens. Same-sex marriages are as likely to end as are straight marriages. One of the less heralded set of legal protections offered by marriage is, well, divorce. And one of the strange side effects of the patchwork of gay-straight laws governing marriage is their impact on ending marriage.
Same-sex marriage is now legal in Vermont, Connecticut, Iowa and Massachusetts. In January, New Hampshire will join the roster. The District of Columbia may well be next if legislation introduced this week passes. And the issue is on the ballot this November in Maine. Meanwhile, 29 states ban it.
Men and women also get married according to state laws, but they are not suddenly single when they cross state borders. Under the principle of comity, their marriage can be recognized -- or dissolved -- anywhere. This is not necessarily true for gay couples. Indiana and Rhode Island have both denied divorce to gay couples who were married elsewhere, while New Jersey has allowed it. That's just the beginning.
The refusal of one state to recognize the legal marriage of another state leads to some pretty impractical, unfair and nutty conclusions. The B's, for example, would have to move back to Massachusetts for a year just to get divorced.
That's nothing compared to the scenarios imagined by Northwestern law professor Andrew Koppelman, author of "Same Sex, Different States." On his list? If a man has a husband in Iowa, he might take a wife in Texas without being charged with bigamy. If a married couple from Connecticut has an accident in the Lone Star State, a woman could be barred from her wife's hospital bedside because she isn't family. Indeed, Koppelman adds, Texas could become a safe haven for the gay deadbeat dad who empties the joint account in Vermont and runs out on his husband and kids.
What we're seeing are all sorts of potholes on the uneven road to equality. Remember the so-called compromise on gays in the military: "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"? Now, military researchers call it a "costly failure." It's the law, not gay soldiers, that's undermining morale.
Remember DOMA, the Defense of Marriage Act that created a strange dual citizenship for gay couples -- entitled to marriage benefits under some state laws, denied them under federal law? Now, Bob Barr, the former congressman who wrote DOMA, disavows it and Bill Clinton, the president who signed it, publicly favors gay marriage. There's a bill to repeal it.
But for sheer perversity, nothing quite beats the current Texas divorce fandango. There, the very people who insist they would like nothing more than to end gay marriage are the ones doing their utmost to keep one gay couple joined in unhappy perpetuity. For better or for worse? That's an easy call.
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Ellen Goodman's e-mail address is ellengoodman1(at)me.com
Copyright 2009 Washington Post Writers Group
This news arrived on: 10/08/2009
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Posted Comments:
10-11-2009 01:27
JCE wrote:
I notice that not a one of the anti human rights and anti civil rights people answered any of the questions posed in the column. Especially in keeping a gay person married. Which they are. You can deny the rain is falling, but it still falls. You can look in the Bible, where it says the earth is round, and yet, you can see that most of the history of Christianity shows the Christians murdering people for saying it was round, and insisting that the believers accept the earth as flat. Same thing going on here with human rights.
10-11-2009 01:22
JCE wrote:
Go online. Anyone who can get on ArcaMax can find that info in less than 5 minutes, with just a few key words. It is all there, with pages of info, and sources to check it out, backing it up. None of it is any surprise, except to those who don't want it to be true. Common sense, and just reading the news shows that it is true. There are plenty of places that show the different amounts of all those problems, state by state.
If God is part of the equation, he would want a natural way to slow down the population growth when it became too crowded for the planet to support the population. The Christians don't give God credit for planning well, for knowing how man would act, and they put words in Gods mouth, just like they would take out of the Bible. Man wrote it, and keeps changing it. Just read the different versions.
Since places where gay marriage is legal have less divorce rates, and still have a high marriage rate of straight people, obviously gay marriage doesn't hurt straight marriage at all. It might even help it. I am looking for evidence. There seems to be no evidence for it, but plenty to suggest it doesn't hurt it at all.
So Christians who fight human and civil rights, and go against the teachings of Jesus, are they just brainwashed to think that way? Simply not educated with the truth? Seems to be. But, it is the church where they get their "truth" and their "brainwashing." Interesting. That does explain a lot.
If God is part of the equation, he would want a natural way to slow down the population growth when it became too crowded for the planet to support the population. The Christians don't give God credit for planning well, for knowing how man would act, and they put words in Gods mouth, just like they would take out of the Bible. Man wrote it, and keeps changing it. Just read the different versions.
Since places where gay marriage is legal have less divorce rates, and still have a high marriage rate of straight people, obviously gay marriage doesn't hurt straight marriage at all. It might even help it. I am looking for evidence. There seems to be no evidence for it, but plenty to suggest it doesn't hurt it at all.
So Christians who fight human and civil rights, and go against the teachings of Jesus, are they just brainwashed to think that way? Simply not educated with the truth? Seems to be. But, it is the church where they get their "truth" and their "brainwashing." Interesting. That does explain a lot.
10-10-2009 23:22
I wrote:
If God is part of the equation, then same-sex marriage is repugnant. After all, in Genesis, it is recorded that He made them male and female with the command to populate the earth. That is not possible in a same sex union.
However, if God is not part of the equation, then anything goes. Then you've got a mess.
I personally believe that those who think they are homosexual have been brainwashed to believe they are so. They simply have not been eduacated with the truth - that not all men are left brained oriented nor are all women right brained oriented. Learning to live in the parameters that have been given to you is the hard part - especially when girls are suppose to like playing with dolls and boys are suppose to like football.
What happens when they don't? Assume they must be geared wrong? Not!
However, if God is not part of the equation, then anything goes. Then you've got a mess.
I personally believe that those who think they are homosexual have been brainwashed to believe they are so. They simply have not been eduacated with the truth - that not all men are left brained oriented nor are all women right brained oriented. Learning to live in the parameters that have been given to you is the hard part - especially when girls are suppose to like playing with dolls and boys are suppose to like football.
What happens when they don't? Assume they must be geared wrong? Not!
10-10-2009 23:19
wrote:
JCE just makes up things to suit his arguments -- just like this bull I just heard from Biden.
10-10-2009 23:13
choddie buchanan wrote:
gay marriage ruins marriage
i am against gay marriage. i don't understand how christians can support it.
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