NOM BLOG

Religious Liberty Expert Robin Wilson in SCOTUSblog Symposium

Prof. Robin Wilson of the Washington and Lee University School of Law contributes to the SCOTUSblog symposium on marriage:

Very little is to be gained by Professor Singer’s one-hundred-percent-victory-or-none-at-all stance. Where robust exemptions have not been provided, marriage equality efforts have failed. Moreover, under our proposal same-sex couples receive the services they need from individuals in commerce and government employees – by its very terms, in a straight-up contest between religious liberty and marriage equality, religious liberty yields to marriage equality.

Tune In for Monday's GOP Presidential Debate

CNN Presidential Debate

Dear Marriage Supporter,

You won't want to miss the next GOP presidential debate this Monday afternoon at 3pm EDT!

Hosted by the American Principles Project in Columbia, South Carolina the debate will feature presidential frontrunners and NOM Marriage Pledge signers Gov. Mitt Romney, Rep. Michele Bachmann and Gov. Rick Perry, joined by Rep. Ron Paul, Businessman Herman Cain, and former Speaker Newt Gingrich.

NOM's own co-founder Robert George will join Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) and Rep. Steve King (R-IA) in asking questions of the candidates. The debate's unique format is designed to foster a thoughtful, substantive discussion with the candidates, and will feature one candidate on the stage at a time taking questions from the panel.

I'm looking forward to the extended interaction with the candidates, and hope you'll make plans to join me in watching and evaluating each of the candidates' statements about marriage and the other critical issues of our day.

Here are two ways to watch:

  • Watch the debate streaming live from 3-5pm EDT at www.Townhall.com; or
  • Watch the debate live on CNN from 3-5pm EDT.

We need a marriage champion to challenge President Obama next November, and the Republican frontrunners are already stepping up to the challenge. I hope you'll spend part of your Labor Day enjoying what could be one of the most substantive conversations of this presidential campaign season.

Don't miss it!

Brian Brown

Brian Brown

Brian S. Brown
President
National Organization for Marriage

Britain's Chief Rabbi on Cultural Breakdown Since the 1960s and How to Rebuild

Lord Jonathan Sacks, chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, gets to the heart of the issue:

[The rioting of youth in the UK] was the bursting of a dam of potential trouble that has been building for years. The collapse of families and communities leaves in its wake unsocialized young people, deprived of parental care, who on average--and yes, there are exceptions--do worse than their peers at school, are more susceptible to drug and alcohol abuse, less likely to find stable employment and more likely to land up in jail.

The truth is, it is not their fault. They are the victims of the tsunami of wishful thinking that washed across the West saying that you can have sex without the responsibility of marriage, children without the responsibility of parenthood, social order without the responsibility of citizenship, liberty without the responsibility of morality and self-esteem without the responsibility of work and earned achievement. --Wall Street Journal

Rick Lowry: "There is Simply No Substitute for Marriage"

In his weekly column for National Review:

The great divorce revolution of the 1960s and 1970s has faded. The great cohabitation revolution has begun.

The divorce rate for married couples with children is almost back to the levels of the early 1960s, before the run-up that crested in the early 1980s. Considering the decades of social turbulence buffeting the institution of marriage between then and now, this is a notable restoration.

But it only means that marriage is unraveling in a different way. According to a new study by the Institute for American Values and the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia, cohabitation has increased 14-fold since 1970. About 24 percent of children are born to cohabiting couples, more than are born to single mothers, while another 20 percent experience a cohabiting household at some time in their childhood.

... We want to believe that all relationships, so long as they are loving and well-intentioned, are equal. It feels like an offense against 21st-century mores to say otherwise. Who are we to make invidious distinctions among loving adults? But there is simply no substitute for marriage, for the relative stability and commitment it provides, and for the environment it creates for children.

Is Marriage About Adults or About Family?

In an article produced by Stand For Children out of San Francisco:

The Reality of Marriage: Two Conflicting Understandings

Today, many people see marriage as merely an adult centric institution because there is a cultural rift in the connection between marriage and children. Many people put off having children until later in life. Others have children without getting married. Those married with children, due to smaller families and longer life spans, will spend the majority of their married lives without children at home. And, there are an increasing number of adults who never have children. So, for many:

"marriage is merely the public recognition of a committed relationship between loving adults."

However in reality, marriage is a family centric institution. It is the foundation of a stable family. Therefore:

"marriage unites a man and a woman with each other and any children born from their union."

That is what marriage is; that is what marriage does.

Notice that the first definition describes something just for adults—a private relationship with no public benefit.

The second definition, however, describes marriage as the foundation of a family, the foundation of society. Marriage described in this way incorporates the common human desire, of every person, to know and be cared for by his or her own mother and father. Marriage defined this way not only has a public interest, but also is in the interest of every child without exception. Because of this great divergence of understandings about marriage, it is important to clarify which definition you are using when discussing marriage.

NC Op-Ed: "I Want my Civil Right to Have a Vote on Marriage"

Suzanne Rucker is the former chairwoman of the Cumberland County Republican Party in North Carolina. She writes in the Fayetteville Observer:

For eight years, this amendment has been introduced and ignored by the General Assembly, even though credible polling indicates that 70 percent-plus of North Carolina voters support a constitutional amendment defining the union of one man and one woman as the legal definition of marriage.

... Powerful lobbying groups who donate large sums of money are against this amendment. As a result, for eight years, the General Assembly has denied the voters the right to vote on this amendment. This is wrong. And, in my opinion, denies me my civil right to have a vote on the issue.

Yes, ours is representative government, but, for reasons mentioned above, not in this instance. Were representative government truly applied to the protection-of-marriage amendment, every legislator would vote to give the people of North Carolina the right to vote on whether or not to enact the amendment. That's what the upcoming vote is about - whether or not to allow citizens the right to vote.

NC Chamber of Commerce Mum on Gay Marriage

The Charlotte Observer:

North Carolina Chamber of Commerce leaders aren't saying much about if or how a possible legislative push to ban same-sex marriage would affect the state's business climate.

House GOP leaders want to consider a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage when lawmakers return to session Sept. 12. A proposed constitutional amendment must be decided by voters. To get on next year's ballot, as GOP leaders want, a proposed amendment would need three-fifths majorities of the House and Senate.

... "We haven't heard a lot from our members on this issue - this isn't one of their big concerns," said Erica Baldwin, director of marketing for the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce. "We focused on jobs and jobs creation this session, things to make our state more competitive."

Video: MN Activist Proves Same-Sex Marriage About Fundamentally Changing What Marriage Is

While Denny Smith, Executive Director of Winning Marriage Equality, lists plenty of nice things that happen to be part of marriage (and other deep friendships as well), he is passionately convinced that "marriage is not about sex ... it's not about sex":

Marriage isn't about sex at all? We wonder what married people would think about that claim.

Denny's claim that marriage isn't about sex proves the point our President Brian Brown made in this week's Marriage News:

"Gay marriage is a radical proposal because it cuts marriage off at the root, separating it from its roots in human nature."

Rick Santorum Versus Piers Morgan!

Rick appeared on CNN. Naturally, following the new script Byron York points out, Piers wants to talk about homosexuality.

Making religion and religious people a "wedge" issue in the campaign is the new script and boy is Piers on message.

Rick's finish is particularly strong--when Piers wants to say 'I'm a Catholic," and I'm with the times' he comes back with this magnificent counter-punch:

"Santorum: Piers, Piers, I don’t think the truth changes. I don’t think right and wrong change based on different eras of time. There are some truths that are in fact eternal and are truth and based on nature and nature’s law. And that’s what the church teaches, that’s what the Bible teaches, and that’s what reason dictates. And if you look at it from all of those perspectives, I think it’s a legitimate point of view. I certainly respect people who disagree with it. But I don’t call them bigoted because they disagree with me."

Rick Santorum is one of the best men in American politics, or America.

Rick Santorum Fights Back!

Pier Morgan tries to get Rick Santorum to say he's embarrassed by the Catholic Church's teachings on sexuality:

MORGAN: ...I have to say that your views you espoused on this issue are bordering on bigotry, aren't they?

SANTORUM: No. I think just because we disagree on public policy, which is what the debate has been about which is marriage, doesn't mean that it's bigotry. Just because you follow a moral code that teaches something wrong doesn't mean that -- are you suggesting that the Bible and that the Catholic Church is bigoted? Well, if that's what you believe, fine.

I think that -- I shouldn't say fine. I don't think it's fine at all. I think that is -- that's contrary to both what we've seen in 2,000 years of human history and Western civilization and trying to redefine something that has been -- that is seen as wrong from the standpoint of the church and saying a church is bigoted because it holds that opinion that is biblically based I think is in itself an act of bigotry.

MORGAN: Well, I'm a Catholic, too. I just think, unfortunately, we're in a different era. We're in a modern world. And the fact --

SANTORUM: I don't think -- Piers, I don't think the truth changes. I don't think right and wrong change based on different eras of time. Things are -- there are some truths that are in fact eternal and are truth and based on nature and nature's law. And that's what the church teaches and that's what the Bible teaches and that's what reason dictates.

And if you look at it from all of those perspectives, I think it's a legitimate point of view. I certainly respect people who disagree with it. But I don't call them bigoted because they disagree with me. --CNN transcript

Go Rick!

Turner Tied with Weprin in Latest NY-9 Poll!

Roll Call:

A new Republican-commissioned poll showed the race to replace ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner (D) in New York’s 9th district to be a dead heat.

A McLaughlin & Associates poll of 300 likely voters found 42 percent would vote for state Assemblyman David Weprin (D) while 42 percent said they would vote for retired businessman Bob Turner (R).

Sixteen percent of those polled said they were undecided with less than two weeks to go before the Sept. 13 special election.

Jewish Voice Endorses Catholic Bob Turner in NY-9

And the editors frame their support of Turner as a protest vote over Weprin's positions, including his choice to vote for same-sex marriage as in the NY Assembly:

Hot-button issues such as the recently passed Marriage Equality Act in the New York State legislature do not escape voters either. Having voted for the law allowing same-sex couples to marry, Assemblyman Weprin, ostensibly an Orthodox Jew, said ”this is not a religious issue” and, taking the separation of church and state line, likened opposition to the bill to those who would seek to outlaw marriages between interracial couples or Jews and non-Jews. Never acknowledging the fact that moral depravity will have egregious effects on the society as a while, Weprin relegates his purported allegiance to his religious beliefs on the altar of political correctness and dances to the zeitgeist of “tolerance and diversity.” Turner, on the other hand, supports the Clinton-initiated Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defines marriage as a union of a man and a woman.

On SSM, Professor Araujo v. Professor Tribe

Prof. John Araujo, SJ at the Loyola University School of Law in Mirror of Justice:

Professor Tribe also makes passionate arguments [in his SCOTUSblog symposium contribution] for the “constitutional inevitability of same-sex marriage,” and some of them are based on polls, evolving consensus, and the transformation of culture. In this context, he asserts that arguments contrary to his on these points necessitate “the Court to cut this baby in half.” I wonder if he would employ this phrase in the arguments he has made in defense of abortion (for there, the baby—millions of them—has been and is plainly cut in half)? He also derides the use arguments against same-sex marriage that rely on what he labels “pseudo-scientific claims.”

He does not identify the reasoning underlying these claims, but I wonder how he would consider this argument: Let us assume that two planets which have not yet been inhabited by humans are to be colonized by them; on Planet Alpha, heterosexual couples only are assigned; on Planet Beta, only homosexual couples. In one hundred years, will both islands be populated assuming that reproductive technologies are not available to either group? I suggest that Planet Alpha will be; but Planet Beta will not. Why? The basic answer is to be found in the biological complementarity of the heterosexual couple necessary for procreation that is absent in same-sex couple. This is a scientific argument, but perhaps it is, in Tribe’s estimation, counterfeit.

John Stossel's Marriage Debate – NOM Marriage News, September 1, 2011

NOM National Newsletter

Dear Marriage Supporter,

Gay marriage is a radical proposal because it cuts marriage off at the root, separating it from its roots in human nature.

After gay marriage, every single feature of marriage becomes questionable and therefore will be questioned anew: Why just two? Why not sisters? Why fidelity?

We've seen the polygamists and the polyamorists attempt to leap on board the gay marriage train.

Perhaps the most difficult question to answer, after gay marriage, is: Why is the government involved in marriage at all?

Why not abolish "civil marriage" altogether?

Back in the seventies, this was a radical left-wing feminist idea.

Now, under pressure from the gay marriage debate, it's being embraced by some conservative libertarians.

I went on John Stossel's show on the Fox Business network last week and we had a spirited debate:

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This week John Stossel has published his own view of our debate, in a piece called "The Gay Marriage Debate."

Now don't get me wrong: I love John Stossel, and he's a voice for sanity on fiscal issues in TV Land.

But what do you say to a man who, when you point out that the reason the government is involved in marriage is that taxpayers and society have a key interest in bringing together mothers and fathers to raise their children together, responds this way:

"Again, so what? I don't care if there are three fathers and six mothers. If it's a stable relationship and the kids are connected with their parents, that's great."

That's a fantasy, not a proposal to take children's needs for their mom and dad seriously.

David Haryansi, a libertarian columnist on Glenn Beck's "The Blaze" who was on the show with me and John, has a fantasy of his own: Private contracts can replace marriage.

"Within five minutes of my idea coming to fruition, a whole industry would be formed with prefab legal documents that would just allow you to have the sort of relationship you want with the parameters you want legally," Harsanyi said.

There are a lot of practical problems with this argument. Marriage is a status, not just a private contract: The government obligates third parties to respect and recognize your marriage, it does not merely enforce your private and personal agreements.

But the problem with this view go deeper than the practical.

In Harsanyi's view, marriage can be anything any adult wants.

The one thing it cannot be, under those circumstances, is an authoritative public institution with enough power to change the way men and women behave toward each other and toward their children.

And that institution is the only thing standing between children and a whole lot of heartache.

Mark Sanford has been making the rounds on TV this month, pushing a new book, and perhaps testing the waters for the next phase of his career.

I don't want to be hard on the man: We've all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God

But do we all have to go on TV afterwards and talk like this?

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Mark Sanford says he knows and regrets that he has harmed his boys, and gestures to the breaking up of the "sacred" family unit. But in the end he says that the one lesson he has learned is not to judge?

If marriage is going to matter, society needs to acknowledge that adultery is wrong, that having children without marriage hurts them, that children long for their mom and dad in one home rather than a fragmented family, and that adults have a serious obligation to conduct their lives--including their sex lives--in such a way that their children are not deprived of this great good.

As Maggie wrote in her column this week, "The restless search for soul mates is not really compatible with making your child feel he or she is the center of your world, infinitely beloved."

Government got involved in marriage because the well-being of children is intimately connected to marriage. Our marriage culture is under profound challenge from multiple sources, and privatizing marriage is not a serious answer to this challenge. Redefining marriage so it is whatever adults want is not the answer either.

"I still don't get his argument," Stossel confesses at the end. That's okay, John, millions of Americans have shown repeatedly at the ballot box that they do!

One person who does get the argument is Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, president of the Ruth Institute (which is a project of NOM).

The Ruth Institute's mission is getting the word out to the next generation: Lifelong, life-giving married love is possible!

One of the latest in a series of creative projects to develop emerging marriage leaders is "I commit!"

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Rep. Dale Folwell of Forsyth County, Speaker of the North Carolina House, also gets it. He writes in the Winston-Salem Journal that the people, not the politicians, should decide the future of marriage in this country:

"Elected officials have lost the public's trust. Voters are fed up with business as usual in politics. Pushing the decision and power to constitutionally define marriage out of Raleigh and into the voters' hands will help restore confidence in our political system and our society.

"The 120 members of the N.C. House of Representatives and 50 members of the N.C. Senate have two choices. They can either trust the state's 6 million voters to define marriage, or they can abdicate the decision to one activist judge. It will be a vote over who our elected officials think are more important, themselves or the voters of North Carolina."

Contrast that to Iowa's Senate majority leader, Sen. Mike Gronstal, who has just reiterated in an interview with the Associated Press that he will never ever permit the people of Iowa to decide for themselves what marriage is and should remain.

Throwing your body between voters and the ballot box is strange behavior for a politician dedicated to "civil rights."

Bob Vander Plaats, who heads the conservative group The Family Leader, responded this way:

"I think my political assessment of his decision is it will lead to his defeat in 2012," said Vander Plaats, who led the campaign to remove the three Iowa Supreme Court justices. "Obviously he'll be a top target of ours."

"Anytime you stifle the people's voice, people are going to hold you accountable," said Vander Plaats.

That's my job too here at NOM: Holding the powerful accountable to your voices and your values.

New York, Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, California--and in the halls of power in Washington, D.C. Wherever the fight is, I promise you, we will be there too!

As I write, the news has just broken: CNN will televise Gov. Rick Perry's first presidential debate in South Carolina, at the APP forum which will be moderated by NOM's own founding chairman, Princeton Prof. Robbie George.

September 5 on CNN. Watch it!

Thank you for all the good work that your support, your prayers, and your sacrifices have made possible.

God bless you!

Brian Brown

Brian S Brown

Brian S. Brown
President
National Organization for Marriage

P.S. With your help, we can fight for marriage and we can win! Please consider what you can give, today, to defend marriage for this generation and the generations to come.

Mexican Presbyterians Sever Ties with U.S. Congregations Over SS Ordination

AP:

Presbyterians in Mexico are breaking ties with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) because of differences over homosexuality.

The theologically conservative National Presbyterian Church of Mexico voted to stop working with the U.S.denomination.

The PCUSA voted in May to remove barriers for ordaining people in same-sex relationships. The U.S. and Mexican churches share a 139-year history and a network of social service ministries.

Presbyterian leaders in the United States said they're saddened by the decision and hope to find a way they can continue helping the needy in Mexico and along the border.