I have to present an argument for my comp class. Give me your harshest-
Separation of Church and State. Are you for it or against it? Today it seems too many people are trying to have it both ways. People on the far right would legislate their own brand of morality by outlawing same sex marriage. People on the far left would legislate their brand of morality by forcing private organizations to recognize same sex marriage. While everyone can agree that no one should be able to tell another person what they can or cannot do or say, both sides of this argument are attempting to do just that.
Although there is no actual mention of a "Separation of Church and State" in the Constitution of the United States, what has become known as the Establishment Clause states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." A letter from Thomas Jefferson to a group calling themselves the Danbury Baptists quotes the First Amendment and states, "I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between Church and State." This letter with its quote of the constitution and it’s statement about Separation of Church and State have been combined with the Establishment Clause to show what is generally agreed by the Supreme Court to be the Founding Father’s original intent of the Clause.
What is marriage? A marriage is a relationship between or among individuals, usually recognized by civil authority and/or bound by the religious beliefs of the participants. The fact that marriage often has the dual nature of a binding legal contract plus a moral promise can make it difficult to characterize. While the religious aspect of a marriage is disputable case by case, it cannot be disputed that all marriage ceremonies conducted in a church by a pastor/priest/rabbi, and made official and binding by the state, are religious ceremonies which are sanctioned and observed by the government and therefore unconstitutional. The argument used to excuse this mingling of the affairs of government and faith is that the state is not concerned with the religious aspects of the union, but only the legally binding part of it.
We live in an age of political correctness. It is difficult to get through a day without the "PC Police" telling us what we should do or say or even think. I remember several years ago when there was a big controversy over the Atlanta Braves and their fans doing the "tomahawk chop." This show of support for the team was said to be insensitive to Native Americans and their traditions as well as an unfair stereotype. Why is this practice so obviously insensitive and wrong while at the same time, taking something that so many people devote their lives to (their religious beliefs) and twisting it, in their eyes, into something considered to be an abomination by them and forcing them to recognize it as a legal entity isn't?
Everyone should have the same rights and privileges as everyone else. To say that one group of people can't do the same things as others just because some or even a majority don’t agree with their sexual practices is wrong. People with same sex relationships should have the same rights and responsibilities as traditional heterosexual couples. This, combined with the established rule of Separation of Church and State, requires that the word 'marriage" be stricken from every law book in the land and replaced with the term "civil union." A civil union which cares not what race, religion, creed, or sexual orientation two people are. This would be a legally binding contract that grants all the rights and responsibilities that a marriage does, with all of the religious implications removed.
As has been proven over and over again, there is no such thing as separate but equal. We cannot have marriage for straight people and civil unions for homosexuals. There must be one binding, legal contract that encompasses all relationships between two people, because just as the government has no business in our churches, it also has no business in our bedrooms. Just as the government has no right to single out homosexuals, it also has no right to legislate an "official" definition of a word. Let each church and religion decide what its own definition of marriage is, and let the government legislate what a civil union is.
I see a day when two people who want to make a legal commitment to each other will testify before a civil union hearing, then go to their church (if they see fit) to be married before their god. These would be two distinctly separate actions; neither one dependant on the other. This should effectively make everyone happy, satisfying the homosexual’s right to equality while not breaking the constitution by legislating a definition of a religious ceremony while also maintaining the sanctity of traditional religions.