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By
Don Wildmon | AFA Founder/Chairman
Harvard University was founded to educate clergy. The people who
founded it didnt want uneducated ministers leading the flock.
It has strayed a long way from its original purpose, but occasionally
something good still does come out of Americas most prestigious
university.
Mary Ann Glendon is the Learned Hand Professor of Law at Harvard.
Recently she wrote an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal. She
made some telling observations concerning homosexual marriage.
She said that while Massachusetts is cutting back on programs
to aid the elderly, the disabled, and children in poor families,
four judges ruled in favor of special benefits for a group
of relatively affluent households, most of which have two earners
and are not raising children.
She wrote, What same-sex marriage advocates have tried to
present as a civil rights issue is really a bid for special preferences
of the type our society gives to married couples for the very good
reason that most of them are raising or have raised children.
We need to remember that homosexuals dont reproduce, they
recruit.
She says the media has neglected the economic and social costs
of this radical social experiment. Astonishingly, in the media coverage
of this issue, next to nothing has been said about what this new
special preference would cost the rest of society in terms of taxes
and insurances premiums. The costs will be staggering. Canada,
which has legalized homosexual marriage, has been considering this
issue and has concluded that retroactive social-security survivor
benefits alone would cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Same-sex marriage, she wrote, will constitute
a public, official endorsement of the following extraordinary claims
made by the Massachusetts judges in the Goodridge case: that marriage
is mainly an arrangement for the benefit of adults; that children
do not need both a mother and a father; and that alternative family
forms are just as good as a husband and wife raising kids together.
She also warned that religious freedom is at stake. Gay-marriage
proponents use the language of openness, tolerance and diversity,
yet one foreseeable effect of their success will be to usher in
an era of intolerance and discrimination the likes of which we have
rarely seen before. Every person and every religion that disagrees
will be labeled as bigoted and openly discriminated against. The
ax will fall most heavily on religious persons and groups that dont
go along.
Homosexual marriage goes against the laws of nature and natures
God. Every time you go against that law you pay. The problem
is that by the time we admit that we have gone against the laws
of nature and natures God, the damage has already been
done.
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