This is a great article, from queer writer Sally Kohn, on the real connection between same-sex marriage and full marriage equality.
On more occasions than I
can count, overwhelmed straight parents have proclaimed how much they
wish their family had two moms and, thus, extra help. This conversation
often bleeds easily into a “the more the merrier” logic followed by some
joke about polygamy. Like, “I’d sleep with 10 wives and husbands as
long as it meant I could actually sleep in once in a while!”
[...] Back in the early days of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
movement’s push for marriage equality, this slippery slope to polygamy
was pragmatically taboo. After all, arguments about gay marriage leading
to polygamy were lobbed almost entirely with the purpose of derailing
the gay rights agenda. And there was also something inherently offensive
about making the connection, along the same lines of suggesting that
gay marriage would lead to people marrying goats. [...]
Still, people often mention polygamy and gay marriage in the same sentence (not to mention the same essay). Recently—in, surprise, Utah—a judge struck down a part of that state’s anti-polygamy law. Mind
you, the Utah law makes it a felony punishable by up to five years in
prison when someone “cohabits with another person” to whom they aren’t
legally married. This makes me wonder whether Utah also outlaws the
combustion engine, the Internet and other realities of modern life, but
anyway there you have it.
The legal challenge came after the state sued the stars of Sister Wives, a TV show that follows the real life of one husband, his four wives, and their 17 children. Now here’s the thing: Sister Wives premiered
in September 2010, but Kody and Meri married in 1990, Kody and Janelle
married in 1993, and Kody and Christine married in 1994. In other words,
all those marriages predate even the earliest adoption of gay marriage
in America, which was in Massachusetts in 2004. And second, in the Sister Wives family, Kody married each of the women, but the women didn’t marry each other.
In other words, polygamy, as it generally is practiced in the United
States, is a predominantly heterosexual enterprise [though not if you
include polyamory] — like heterosexuality (or the male ideal of
heterosexuality) on steroids. After all, while the percentage of married
women who have affairs has risen in recent decades, married men still
do most of the cheating. Conservatives concerned about the high rate
of divorce in America should stop blaming gay marriage but instead
heterosexual infidelity—a prime culprit in 55 percent of divorces.
If couples want to bring cheating out of the deceitful shadows and
instead incorporate it openly into their relationship—plus have more
hands on deck for kids and more earners in the household in a tough
economy—who are we to judge? Seriously, I’m a bit too traditional
and jealous for that sort of thing, but I’m also too traditional to wear
jeggings outside the house. Still, you (mostly) don’t see me judging
anyone else for doing so.
In 2013 when the United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of marriage equality for same-sex couples, pro-polygamy groups heralded the ruling as
a step away from the conventional one-man one-woman definition of
marriage and, thus, as opening the door to polygamy. I get that, and to
an extent pro-polygamy activists may be trying to latch their
still-widely unpopular cause onto the increasingly victorious rainbow
bandwagon.
But while it’s mildly understandable that some see these
conversations as conceptually linked—“If we’re changing the marriage
laws to include gay couples, how else might we change them?”—polygamy
doesn’t inherently flow from gay marriage. If anything, what polygamy does flow from is a general opening up of options.
We increasingly allow Americans to define their own families for
themselves while removing coercive public policy and judgmental social
norms. And this idea, which is at the heart of everything from
increasing access to birth control to the striking down
anti-miscegenation laws to so much more, is exactly what conservative
religious extremists have always opposed.
There are interesting arguments to be made for legalizing
polygamy, from protecting children from secretive non-consensual
multiple-marriage situations to how being “feminist” actually means not
protecting women from these marriages but letting them choose for
themselves. All compelling points. But the truth is, I don’t really care.
I won’t be entering a polygamous relationship anytime soon. I live in
New York City, so I simply don’t have the space for more wives. And
just like I don’t have the ass for jeggings, I don’t have the heart for
non-monogamy. But I do have a soft spot for allowing consenting
adults to make their own decisions, and to be supported by their
government in doing so, not constrained.
(Also, Sally Kohn is pretty awesome.)
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