Marriage, real marriage, is societal approval and legal endorsement of a specific sexual act, the act that can and does produce offspring, and when this happens within marriage—which is committed to be permanent and exclusive—then the children will be raised by their own mother and father, which is something society has an interest in promoting.  
Homosexuals do not—cannot—engage in that sexual act with one another; it isn’t physiologically possible. It isn’t infertility that makes them unable to reproduce in their sexual relationship; it is that they cannot in that coupling do what nature requires in order for humans to reproduce. No, I am not providing a footnote for this obvious point; any human biology text will provide ample detail.  
Since this point is so obvious, and since National Organization for Marriage and various other pro-civilization groups lobbied on this issue prior to the final vote on Friday, it can hardly be possible that the senators weren’t aware of the physiological differences. It must be that they do not care about the differences.  
The issue gets rephrased to appear as though a bunch of bigots are keeping homosexuals from enjoying the freedoms that other people enjoy. Again, this is obfuscating the basic facts. No one prevents a person with same-sex attraction from marrying in the same way that a heterosexual person can. They can choose a partner of the opposite sex, promise to remain faithful, have the requisite sexual act with that spouse, and enjoy the possible offspring that may result—and receive not only the respect of society as a whole, but the legal encouragements of that relationship from the many laws related to protecting families. Biologically and legally there is no impediment or unfairness.  
What they claim is unfair is that they cannot “marry” the person of their choice. Isn’t that a basic right of all human beings? Actually, no. I mentioned a number of the limitations on Friday. Society doesn’t grant the honor of marriage to anyone, heterosexual or homosexual, who chooses someone already married, someone who is a close relative, someone who is too young, etc. Why? Because society doesn’t benefit from those sexual relationships in the same way it benefits from marriage. Confusing parenthood and lineage, introducing genetic disorders through too close relationships, etc., bring about more societal problems, rather than solving them the way intact, functional families do.  
So the question is not, shouldn’t homosexuals be allowed to marry the same as heterosexuals do? The question should be, why should homosexuals get special privileges? At the very least, we should be asking, what is it about homosexual sex that so benefits society that we should honor it with the same legal and societal benefits as married father/mother relationships?  
Comments started coming in within a day on news and blog sites. I’m not too concerned about liberal comments; I don’t consider liberals persuadable until they have undergone a serious conversion to freedom and civilization. But I am bothered by various conservative commentators, mostly styling themselves as fiscal conservatives, who don’t understand the connections between freedom, free-enterprise, and civilization. If you've read the Spherical Model, you know that without civilization, you just don’t get the other two.  
These self-described open-minded conservatives usually ask, “How is this gay couple’s marriage possibly going to affect my marriage?” So, I’d like to answer that.  
Let’s say I lived in New   York   
Up until now, in the state of New York New   York   
Despite this New   York   
I can go into the expected costs to society (because there is a great deal of evidence worldwide and historically) of what happens when a society degrades marriage. But I’ll do that another day. I can also go into how this affects me in Texas, where I actually live   
For now, the question is, what can we do in the face of this additional travesty against the will of a free people? (In a recent poll, a solid 57% of New Yorkers supported traditional marriage, so the legislation was indeed against the will of the people.) In two of the six states where “same-sex marriage” has been imposed on the people, the people have put the issue on the ballot and rescinded the decision. These two are California  (you remember Prop 8, I’m assuming), and Maine New York   
One last word of thanks to Senator Ruben Diaz, a Democrat from the Bronx, also a Pentecostal Minister, who was the only Democrat among the 29 voting against the bill, and the most vocal opponent from the floor of the state senate. He expressed his disappointment that there were Republicans who failed to keep their word, and failed to protect the will of the people. We need more people like him, whatever their party.
 
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