Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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What gay marriage looks like.

The election is almost here.

For the most part, I try not to get political, both because I don't have the bandwidth for the arguments, and because I'm just so tired from being angry all the time. But I'm hearing the usual "oh, the bad storm that has done so much damage is because of ALL THE GAY," and according to the Mitt Romney campaign...

"As president, Mitt will not only appoint an Attorney General who will defend the Defense of Marriage Act—a bipartisan law passed by Congress and signed by President Clinton—but he will also champion a Federal Marriage Amendment to the Constitution defining marriage as between one man and one woman."

Gay marriage is now so terrifying and troublesome that it needs to be banned constitutionally? What?

So let me tell you what gay marriage looks like to me.

Same sex marriage was legalized in California in 2008. It was rendered illegal that same year, by Proposition 8, but before that happened, thousands of gay and lesbian couples were able to sign their marriage licenses and take their wedding vows. My middle sister, the one I call Young James Dean, was one of the happy women who took the hand of the woman she loved and promised, legally, to stay with her forever.

It was not a fancy marriage. YJD and her girlfriend (now wife) were both worried that same sex marriage would be made illegal before they could formalize their union. So I, my mother, and my youngest sister joined YJD, her girlfriend, and her girlfriend's family at the city courthouse.

They were both nervous and terrified and ecstatic. They signed their papers and affirmed that they knew what they were doing, and we were all escorted up to see the Justice of the Peace.

It was a hot day. No one was dressed particularly fancily. YJD had a silver sixpence in her shoe that I'd bought from a local rare coin dealer; there were no other wedding accoutrements in place. We didn't need them.

The Justice of the Peace asked if they would do all the things a spouse is meant to do: they said that they would. And they were pronounced married in the eyes of the State of California. Both of them kissed the bride. We had the wedding dinner at Denny's. Bride of YJD's father paid for it. For their wedding gift, I had their marriage certificate nicely framed, and it hangs in their front hall. They are raising Bride of YJD's three children together. They have bought a house together. They're happy, and they're healthy, and if any God really and truly disapproved of same sex marriage, He (or She) wouldn't have shown it with a hurricane: that's inefficient. We live in earthquake country, after all.

But the ground didn't shake. Every day my sister wakes up, loving her wife, and the ground doesn't open up and swallow them whole. They've had their problems—all marriages do—but none of those problems have been scored for Locusts in C Minor, accompanied by Plague of Frogs.

Look: I can appreciate the religious angle. I can appreciate saying "my church says this isn't cool." But my church does think it's cool. My church thinks it's awesome. And the separation of church and state means that giving my sister a marriage license and a big box of legal protection to be used on the day when, Great Pumpkin forbid, something happens to Bride of YJD...that didn't do a thing to change the churches. Individual churches can perform same sex marriage, or not, as their scripture demands.

Young James Dean's marriage has not damaged my relationships, or the relationships of our youngest sister. They have not undermined the lives and loves of those around them. The only thing gay marriage has done to my family is bring us more love, every day.

The world needs more love.

And I am so glad my sister found her wife.
Tags: contemplation, family
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  • 208 comments
Well, they're going to be crazy regardless. But their crazy doesn't make it any less reasonable to decouple the religious part and the civil part. Then it's entirely up to a given church whether or not they consider someone "married", and it doesn't matter to anyone else what one group thinks. That's more what I was getting at, not having two separate legal categories; "separate but equal" isn't equal. But given how religiously charged this debate has become, I don't know if there's going to be a way, in the long run, to eliminate that religious connotation from the word, so it's better just to get the government out of it altogether.
The UK is currently considering whether or not they should have gay marriage instead of civil partnerships. It is complicated by the fact that we don't have separation of church and state.

Currently:

A legal marriage can be performed in churches/synagogues/mosques/non-religious licensed venues.

A legal civil partnership can be performed in non-religious licensed venues, or approved religious licensed venues. This does not currently include my own denomination, the Church of England (we'll get there. It'll take a bloody long time, but we're working on it) but if you're in a legally-approved Unitarian church or Quaker meeting house or Reform synagogue you can get civilly partnered there with your same-sex partner of choice.

Marriage in the UK is a bit of an incoherent legal mess, due to the aforementioned intertwining of church and state.

I think the easiest option would be to have two distinct kinds of marriage:

1. Civil marriage. Which takes place between consenting adults in a civil venue.
2. Religious marriage. Which takes place between whoever your particular religion says it can, as long as they're also consenting adults, in wherever it is your religion does weddings.

Which is what they do in France, IIRC. You have a civil marriage, so you get all the legal protections, and then, if you choose, you can have a religious (or not) ceremony in a church or a synagogue or mosque or hilltop or your back garden, or take all your clothes off and dance around in a field, but the latter part is irrelevant to the legality of your marriage. (Unless you get busted for public indecency, I guess. You're still legally married, but now you're also in jail.)

And I don't know about anyone else, but in my circle if you get a civil partnership we tend to call you 'married' and 'spouses' and 'husbands' and 'wives' regardless.