SIGN PETITION HERE
  Peter Saunders: TEN  REASONS  FOR  REJECTING  HOMOSEXUAL  ‘MARRIAGE’. 
 1. Marriage is the union of one man and one woman Throughout 
history in virtually all cultures and faiths throughout the world, 
marriage has been held to be the union of one man and one woman. 
Marriage existed thousands of years before our nation began and has been
 recognised in our laws as the ‘voluntary union of one man and one woman
 to the exclusion of all others for life’ (Hyde v Hyde 1866). The UN 
Declaration of Human Rights (article 16) recognises that the family, 
headed by one man and one woman, ‘is the natural and fundamental group 
unit of society and is entitled to protection by society and the State’.
 It is not up to governments to redefine marriage – but simply to 
recognise it for what it is, and to promote and protect it as a unique 
institution. 
 2.Same sex couples already have civil partnerships Virtually all 
the legal rights of marriage are already available to same sex couples 
through civil partnerships so there is no need to redefine marriage to 
include them. The President of the Family Division has even described 
civil partnerships as conferring ‘the benefits of marriage in all but 
name’. Such a move would also inevitably lead to calls to open civil 
partnerships to opposite sex couples on the basis of ‘equality’. But 
marriage and civil partnerships have been designed for two very 
different types of relationship and should be kept distinct. It is not 
and should not be ‘one size fits all’. 
 3.Redefining marriage without consultation is undemocratic None 
of the political leaders who are supporting the legalisation of same sex
 marriage announced it as a priority in their election manifestos. There
 is already a huge amount of opposition to the move and pressing ahead 
with legalisation will lead to considerable dissension and division. 
Legalising same sex marriage to appease a small minority is wrong and it
 should not be foisted on the British people without proper consultation
 about whether rather than how it should be done. 
 4.Equality does not mean uniformity In a free democratic society 
we accept that many human activities are not open to everybody. Not 
everyone is allowed to drink alcohol, drive a car, buy property, cast a 
vote, own a firearm, attend university, visit Buckingham Palace or 
participate in a 100m women’s Olympic event. This does not mean that 
those who are not eligible for these activities are in any way 
denigrated or demeaned, but just that there are eligibility criteria. 
Same sex couples do not fulfil the eligibility criteria for marriage, 
which should be reserved for the voluntary union of one man and one 
woman for life. 
 5.Protecting traditional marriage safeguards children and society Stable
 marriages and families headed by a mother and a father are the bedrock 
of society and the state has a duty to protect the uniqueness of these 
key institutions. Though death and divorce may prevent it, children do 
best when raised by a married mother and father. Whilst single parents 
or same sex couples may do a good job in raising children, social policy
 has to be concerned with what is normally the case, and children have a
 right if at all possible to have a married mother and a father involved
 in their upbringing. In general the evidence shows that marriage 
provides a stability for adults and children which is hard to beat in 
terms of outcomes. There is considerable evidence to show that marriage 
leads to better family relationships, less economic dependence, better 
physical health and longevity, improved mental health and emotional 
well-being and reduced crime and domestic violence. By contrast sexual 
freedom and relationship breakdown cost Britain £100 billion annually 
and other models of the family have not been shown to have the same 
stability as traditional marriage. Same sex marriage, in comparison with
 marriage, is an unproven and experimental social model. 
 6.Marriage is a unique biologically complimentary relationship Marriage
 is the only legal union which can naturally lead to children. It takes 
both a man and a woman to produce a baby. The fact that there is a 
natural link between sexual intimacy and procreation is what makes 
marriage distinctive and different. Redefining marriage will undermine 
this distinctness and difference and risks normalising the technological
 instrumentalisation of reproduction and increasing the number of 
families where there is confusion of biological, social and family 
identity. 
 7.Redefining marriage will be complex and expensive Redefining 
marriage could cost £billions and involve amending hundreds of pieces of
 government legislation. Introducing same sex marriage is a legal can of
 worms which cannot be achieved without changing the common and legal 
definition of the word marriage and other words which define it. (eg. 
‘husband and wife’, ‘consummation’ and ‘adultery’). These changes will 
inevitably change the definition and nature of marriage for opposite sex
 couples by trying to accommodate these two very different kinds of 
relationship under one legal umbrella. According to an assessment done 
for gay rights group Stonewall by a former civil servant, the cost of 
implementing one favoured option would be around £5 billion. This figure
 relates to a theoretical increase in straight couples taking up the 
opportunity of civil partnerships, with knock-on implications to their 
entitlement to pension and tax benefits. This is simply not a priority 
for government at a time of economic recession as it will confer no new 
rights. 
 8.Schools will be forced to teach about the new definition of marriage Under
 existing education law schools will be required to teach children that 
marriage can be between a man and a woman, between two men or between 
two women. This will confuse children whose parents may wish to teach 
them according to their own values and worldview. Those parents who 
object could be undermined in their children’s eyes, stigmatised as 
homophobics and bigots and prevented from full involvement in schools. 
 9.Redefining marriage will not stop with same sex marriage In 
Mexico same sex marriage was followed by two year fixed term marriage. 
In Canada legalising same sex marriage has led to supporters of polygamy
 demanding in the courts for their unions to be recognised. If the legal
 definition is changed to accommodate same sex couples other minority 
groups with a vested interest (eg. Muslims, Mormons, Bisexuals and 
Polyamorists) will have a much stronger case to argue for the 
legalisation of polygamy and group marriages. The best defence against 
this is to keep the legal definition of marriage unique and distinct – 
‘one man, one woman, for life’. 
 10.Redefining marriage will lead to faith-based discrimination We
 have already seen a rising tide of discrimination against people who 
support traditional marriage as a result of the legalisation of civil 
partnerships coupled with new equality legislation. If same sex marriage
 is legalised, faith-based employers who provide special health benefits
 to married employees would be required by law to extend those benefits 
to same-sex ‘spouses’. They would also face lawsuits for taking any 
adverse employment action - no matter how modest - against an employee 
for the public act of obtaining a civil ‘marriage’ with a member of the 
same sex. Faith-based adoption and fostering services that place 
children exclusively with married couples would be required by law to 
place children with persons of the same sex who are civilly ‘married’. 
Marriage counsellors from faith backgrounds would be denied their 
professional accreditation for refusing to provide counselling in 
support of same-sex ‘married’ relationships. All these moves would place
 faith groups in the invidious position of being forced to act against 
their consciences or face marginalisation, exclusion and litigation and 
would further fuel social fragmentation, sectarianism, antagonism and 
civil unrest. 
 “What therefore God has joined together, let not man put asunder” Mark 10:9.
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Well done Hazlett for putting this on site. Currently signatures on the c4,org.uk are registering about 150/200 per hour, and now toal almost 26,000 in two days.
ReplyDeleteA correspondent on a Christian blog expressed something of the moral and legal tangle that SSM will most certainly bring about if legalised. It is such a good example that its worth quoting:
"Accept homosexual 'marriage' and one accepts homosexuality as equivalent to hetrosexual marriage and it follows sex education must cover both if we are to 'embrace diversity'!" (GW indeed so, one cannot fault the logic of that)
You do not go far enough with the conclusion, my lad. homosexual marriage is to 'level' it with heterosexual and by doing so it allows for the homosexual marriage to topple the heterosexual by 'supremacy' of positive discrimination under law as they are still viewed as a discriminated unit and this is proven by it being given equality with heterosexual, which is the accepted norm of society.
(GW thus truth is turned on its head, and real marriage is degraded)
Example..
Married couple with 2 kids..Husband decides he's gay, finds another marries him..has therefore a wife/husband..he is now a wife/husband.
Mother deserted, marries again heterosexually. The husband applies for custody of children with gay husband/wife? Who wins and on what basis under law decides the terms of family life???
(GW The law of unintended consequences is no respecter of persons)
Thank You Tory Party!
Secularism..Where right is wrong and wrong is right, and we are prepared to take you to court to prove it. Just be tolerant or else!"
How exactly will the redefinition of marriage harm people's careers?
ReplyDelete