Last week’s hottest news item was the historical decision by
the United States Supreme Court to declare the concept of Gay Marriage
constitutional. In that decision, the nine justices who make up the Supreme
Court declared that homosexual people were legally allowed to wed and to live
in holy matrimony.
As expected, the decision provoked intense feelings on both
sides of the debate. The liberals celebrated this as a victory of constitutional
liberation. The religious right claimed this was a sign that God’s wrath was
about to descend on earth. The extremely religious in America even went as far
as to leave Tweet in cyberspace declaring that they would immigrate to Australia,
while the more liberal parts of Australia was aghast that such “hateful” people
were about to descend upon them.
Here in Singapore, we tried to ignore the issue and to
follow the Prime Minister’s advice that for now, “legal ambiguity is best.” The
official stance is that Singapore remains too conservative a society to grant
the homosexuals such freedoms but we’ll wait and see how things turn out.
Personally, I don’t see how secular societies can deny
homosexuals the right to marry. One doesn’t need to be a “Champion” of Gay
causes to see that there is no rational or legally defensible argument against
allowing members of the “LGBT” community to tie the knot.
Ironically, the person who best makes the case for
homosexual marriage is Professor Thio Li-Ann, Singapore’s most famous “homophobe.”
In her 2007 speech in Singapore’s Parliament, Professor Thio declared that, “Homosexuals
are not entitled to special rights, they are only entitled to the rights that
the rest of us enjoy.”
Let’s think about this, every heterosexual has the right to
sign a piece of paper and in many cases, go through a ceremony to tell the
world that they want to spend the rest of their lives with a particular person.
Now, if this is an “ordinary” right for heterosexual people,
why should it be any different for homosexual people? If you strip marriage
down to its basics, you’d realise that what the homosexual community is asking
for is merely the right to legally live with a single person for the rest of
their lives.
In her 2007 speech, Professor Thio went on to cement the
case for “Gay Marriage” when she declared that homosexuals tended to be more
promiscuous than heterosexuals.
Professor Thio’s comments are probably a sweeping generalization
about the homosexual community (there are at the time of writing no statistics
to prove the point), but she has a point. If homosexuals, as Professor Thio
says, more likely to promiscuous than heterosexuals and therefore more likely
to endanger public health, isn’t the obvious course of action to encourage
homosexuals to be less promiscuous?
The record of “marriage” as an institution is not good when
it comes to keeping people sexually loyal to each other. However, it is currently
the only institution that human societies have that encourages sexual fidelity.
So, what is stopping us from expanding this institution to encourage greater
sexual fidelity?
Then there are the economic benefits of “Gay Marriage.”
Heterosexual marriages are big enough business and if we were able to throw in
the homosexual variety, think of how many more times we can expand the
industry?
Saying that we should ban something just because it is “not
natural” or that “people disapprove” is short sighted. When you think of the
social and economic benefits that allowing gay marriages would bring, there’s n
reason why we shouldn’t have it around.
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