https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/16/AR2006031601312.html
I was listening to NPR and during one segment (don't know which one) they mentioned that possible gay rights measures would open the door for polygamy. So, other than anti-LDS bigotry and American xenophobia, what's wrong with polygamy?
And now, polygamy.
With the sweetly titled HBO series "Big Love," polygamy comes out of the closet. Under the headline "Polygamists, Unite!" Newsweek informs us of "polygamy activists emerging in the wake of the gay-marriage movement." Says one evangelical Christian big lover: "Polygamy rights is the next civil-rights battle."
Polygamy used to be stereotyped as the province of secretive Mormons, primitive Africans and profligate Arabs. With "Big Love" it moves to suburbia as a mere alternative lifestyle.
As Newsweek notes, these stirrings for the mainstreaming of polygamy (or, more accurately, polyamory) have their roots in the increasing legitimization of gay marriage. In an essay 10 years ago, I pointed out that it is utterly logical for polygamy rights to follow gay rights. After all, if traditional marriage is defined as the union of (1) two people of (2) opposite gender, and if, as advocates of gay marriage insist, the gender requirement is nothing but prejudice, exclusion and an arbitrary denial of one's autonomous choices in love, then the first requirement -- the number restriction (two and only two) -- is a similarly arbitrary, discriminatory and indefensible denial of individual choice.
I was listening to NPR and during one segment (don't know which one) they mentioned that possible gay rights measures would open the door for polygamy. So, other than anti-LDS bigotry and American xenophobia, what's wrong with polygamy?