Townhall...
A
Change We
Can Hope For
by Ken
Blackwell
Jun 15,
2012
Vice
President Joe Biden is almost casual about ending marriage. It’s
“inevitable,”
he says. He thinks it’s not such a big deal.
But it is a
big deal. Recognizing same-sex couplings as marriages will mean the end
of
marriage. That’s because saying yes to two men or two women marrying
opens the
door to polygamy.
Those who
have delved into the issue know this. George Washington University Law
Professor Jonathan Turley believes that conferring legal status on
same-sex
couples will lead to polygamy—and he says he’s for that.
When Turley
told a packed house at the Newseum in 2008 that he was for polygamy,
his
audience cheered wildly. Those cheering for the end of marriage
included
federal court clerks, grad students, congressional staffers, and
journalists--the Inside-the-Beltway elite. With same-sex couplings and
polygamous arrangements recognized, where would that leave marriage?
Ended,
that’s where. When everyone can marry, no one can marry. There is no
marriage
left.
Advocates
for same-sex couplings have never agreed to bar polygamous groups being
granted
marriage rights. After all, if “marriage equality” is the real goal,
then three
or four marital partners are even more equal than two.
Democrats
might want to think twice before adopting a platform plank to end
marriage.
When they
meet in Charlotte, North Carolina, September 3-6, they may want to look
deeply
into the numbers from the North Carolina marriage referendum.
Those
numbers prove that polls are not votes. The latest public opinion polls
showed
marriage winning by a margin of 55-39%. But the final vote
tally—61-39%--shows
clearly that marriage scores consistently better in the voting booth
than in
the public opinion polls.
In North
Carolina, we saw the heaviest turnout for a primary election. With no
opponent
for President Obama on the Democratic side, and with the GOP contest
already
wrapped up for Gov. Romney, this fact alone should command attention.
The
American Enterprise Institute recently blogged on the marriage issue.
Lazar
Berman and Daniel Berman wrote “Why Young Voters Won’t Tip the Gay
Marriage
Debate Anytime Soon.”
Democrats
should seriously study what the Bermans found in the election returns.
Delegates may learn some amazing facts about the voters of that
state—and the
32 other states that have voted to support true marriage.
Democrats
in North Carolina voted 53% to end marriage. But fully 46% of Democrats
voted
for true marriage. Independents broke 54-46% for marriage.
Women
voters supported marriage by a healthy 59-41%. Who’s really waging “a
war on
women”? Apparently, women don’t think it’s those of us who defend true
marriage.
The racial
breakdown was fascinating. Whites voted 59-41% for marriage, but blacks
scored
even higher, at 65-35% for true marriage. The category “other” must
have
included Hispanics, Asian-Americans, and Indian tribes. This
demographic voted
66-34% for true marriage.
Yes, young
voters were a better group for the marriage enders. But even here, the
18-29
year olds broke just barely for ending marriage, 49-51%. Much media
talk about
how young people support same-sex couplings does not translate into
votes.
There is a silenced minority here. Young people are constantly told
it’s not
cool to be against same-sex demands.
With
Americans waiting longer to get married, it should not surprise us that
the
youth cohort is the least supportive of true marriage. They’re not
married yet.
But what political movement would be prudent to move ahead with a
radical
social experiment based on such a slender majority--51-49%--among the
18-29
year olds?
Candidate
Barack Obama did an amazing thing in 2008. His uplifting talk of Hope
and
Change truly inspired the youth. He was able to bring a surge of young
voters
to the polls to support him.
Defenders
of true marriage need to be equally bold in speaking with younger
audiences.
Candidates need to tell the young the truth: that if they support
marriage
rights for same-sex couplings, they will be voting to end marriage.
The young,
according to all polls, are disproportionately pro-life. That may be
because so
many of them and their friends have experienced the tragedy of
abortion. They
know how heartbreaking a choice it is.
We need to
share with the young this hopeful message: Marriage is the best
protector for
unborn children that we have. Four out of five unborn children who are
killed
in abortion are the children of single parents. If you really care
about unborn
children, protect the institution that best protects them.
Candidates
who embrace the pro-life position, and who defend true marriage, are
not
driving a wedge between age groups or ethnic groups, between men and
women.
These issues are not wedge issues at all; they are bridge issues. They
bring us
together. That’s a change we can hope for.
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