In light of stunning, sweeping gains for marriage equality not just
in last week’s United States elections but in France and Spain, it was
inevitable that the men in long dresses and funny hats would get their
dander up.
But what’s most laughably ridiculous about the Vatican’s
latest outburst against LGBT rights is that it just can’t let go of one
of the oldest, dumbest arguments against them in the world.
In an
editorial this weekend, Vatican chief spokesman Father Federico Lombardi
— the guy who thinks the Church’s widespread sexual abuse crisis needs
to be viewed within, I’m not even kidding, “the more general context of secularization” — affirmed that “monogamous marriage between a man and woman is an achievement of civilization.”
And then he added, “If not, why not contemplate also freely chosen polygamy and, of course, not to discriminate, polyandry?” Why
not? If two men can pledge their love in a legally recognized union,
who’s to stop a woman from marrying a wedge of cheese, right? I mean,
where does it end?
Father Lombardi isn’t the first person with a
head full of faulty logic to trot out the “This slope! It’s just so darn
slippery!” argument, of course.
Last month, U.S. Rep. Judy Biggert
declared, when pressed about same-sex unions on a campaign stop, “You know, we don’t have polygamy and bigamy and all of these things in, in the federal government. It’s the states that take care of that.”
She lost the election, by the way.
And
why limit the comparing same-sex unions to polygamy?
Why not any
crazy-ass combination at all? In September, Australian senator Cory
Bernardi resigned after remarking, “The next step, quite frankly, is
having three people or four people that love each other being able to
enter into a permanent union endorsed by society – or any other type of
relationship … There are even some creepy people out there … [who] say it is OK to have consensual sexual relations between humans and animals.
Will that be a future step? In the future, will we say: ‘These two
creatures love each other, and maybe they should be able to be joined in
a union’? I think that these things are the next step.”
And last year,
in a piece called “If same-sex marriage, why not polygamy?” in
the American Conservative, Rod Dreher facetiously argued, ”Why, for
example, should a brother and sister who have agreed to undergo
sterilization as a condition of their marital union be denied the right
to marry, if that is their wish?”
That right there is the template for
How These People Think. Civil rights?
What’s next? Dogs and cats, living
together! Mass hysteria!
To those who think a loving union
between two people is like having a compound full of sister wives or
whatever, let me humbly suggest you dial it down a bit.
As Andrew
Sullivan long ago pleaded, ”Spare us this bizarre point that no new line
can be drawn in access to marriage — or else everything is up for grabs
and, before we know where we are, men will be marrying their dogs. It
is intellectually laughable.”
In a Washington Post essay last month,
Emory University religion and law scholar John Witte Jr. explained —
using evidence and science! — that nature suggests polygamous
arrangements produce “rivalry and discord in the home,”
in which “children have to work hard to get attention, affection and
resources which are dissipated.”
He added, “Women and children of modern
polygamy are often poorly educated, impoverished, and chronically
dependent on welfare.”
Polygamy produces scarcity and competition.
Same-sex relationships don’t. Maybe that’s why there’s no huge polygamy
pride parade every June.
Nobody expects the Catholic Church, with
its long-standing history of fear and animosity toward gays, as well as
its sneaky track record of blaming them for its own most despicable crimes, to
go all rainbow flag in the imminent future. Opening hearts and changing
old norms is going to take a whole lot of time and incredible effort.
But it’s encouraging that here in the U.S., it was Catholics who helped push Barack Obama toward victory
last week, defeating Mitt Romney by 50 to 47 percent. Catholics who
believe in marriage equality – oh, and the reproductive rights of our
fellow citizens.
So while here at home bishops may rail “against all forms of its weakening” matrimony,
and back at the Vatican they may try to instill fear that equal rights
will lead to an outbreak of harems, those of us here in the land called
Reality aren’t sweating it.
Frankly, if you’re looking for a reason for
opposing marriage equality and the basic rights and dignity of your
fellow humans, you might as well just stick with, “I don’t know, it just
makes me feel icky, I guess.”
Same-sex marriage doesn’t lead to
polygamy.
And, guess what?
It doesn’t erode hetero unions either.
And if
you want to suggest otherwise, by all means, look up from your lazy
reasoning and just try to prove it.