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Polygamous Montana Trio Applies For Wedding License

Please provide evidence to support this notion. Any evidence.

Why would it not? There are so many more independently wealthy women in the world today. Society is no longer treating woman as property as we used to, at least as a whole. Additionally, we already have polyandry families out there not to mention polygamy marriages with mixed genders (more than one of each), so there is no reason to assume they would not come forward as much as the other polygamy families would should it be made legal. If they could do it why would wealthy women not hoard men as the wealthy men were hoarding women?
 
Society is no longer treating woman as property as we used to, at least as a whole.

And its destroying the planet quite frankly. Truly a shame.
 
Unsupported counter. Look at the number of billionaires and millionaires who are men compared to women.
Oh no! The 0.0001% of Americans that are billionaires are going to take all the women!!
 
Along with incestuous relationships, and relations between humans and animals, these are unique family set-ups that mostly apply to conservatives in the "car on the lawn states." Most Americans don't know on a personal level incestuous or polygamous couples, therefore the fight for their rights won't be in the forefront of American politics.

Hmmm... trying to figure out if you're more of a bigot, a racist, or just a hater.
 
Would your children? Would your grandchildren?

Americans Continue to Shift Left on Key Moral Issues

Depending upon the conditions and assuming my wives and husband are no longer around, yes I might. Of course your post is based upon a presumption of sex and fails to recognize that legal marriage has no requirement of sex and can be obtained for the legal benefits only. And indeed there are many legal benefits that come from the spouse legal relationship as opposed to the family legal relationship. And to answer your unasked question, no I would not have sex with my children. Marriage and sex are not automatically linked.
 
Depending upon the conditions and assuming my wives and husband are no longer around, yes I might. Of course your post is based upon a presumption of sex and fails to recognize that legal marriage has no requirement of sex and can be obtained for the legal benefits only. And indeed there are many legal benefits that come from the spouse legal relationship as opposed to the family legal relationship. And to answer your unasked question, no I would not have sex with my children. Marriage and sex are not automatically linked.
Heh, I think you misinterpreted my post. I was responding to another poster who claimed that polygamy would be extremely rare, even if legalized, I suggested that acceptance was growing, and that even if he might not consider such an arrangement, there's a chance his children or grandchildren would, should this trend continue to grow.
 
Why would it not? There are so many more independently wealthy women in the world today. Society is no longer treating woman as property as we used to, at least as a whole. Additionally, we already have polyandry families out there not to mention polygamy marriages with mixed genders (more than one of each), so there is no reason to assume they would not come forward as much as the other polygamy families would should it be made legal. If they could do it why would wealthy women not hoard men as the wealthy men were hoarding women?

Fine. Once we have as many wealthy women wanting to practice polygamy as wealthy men, we can legalize it.
 
Oh no! The 0.0001% of Americans that are billionaires are going to take all the women!!

Weak debate ability when you have to ignore half my post to make an irrelevant argument.
 
Weak debate ability when you have to ignore half my post to make an irrelevant argument.
Lol, you're the one arguing that polygamy shouldn't be legalized because a bunch of extremely rich guys will marry way too many women.

(BTW, the number of male vs female millionaires is not all that different)
 
We had the discussion on slavery before and decided to allow it. Then we had a discussion and decided to abolish it. You can apply that argument to any number of things that have changed in the US over it's life span. What always has been is not necessarily what will be. History has proven this.

That is because we move forward to more enlightened positions, and these tend to work better for EVERYONE. We move forward to morally superior positions. We have not moved backward, thanks to the supreme court.

maquiscat said:
Yes they should all be covered, but the question then is should we still be providing all these benefits that are currently. Those are two separate debates, although starting the poly debate could well be the impetus for starting the debate on benefits

You have not even proffered an argument an argument why recognition of polygamy is a move forward for society so it does NOT follow than numerous wives should be covered by state and federal benefits, when the systems clearly were not designed to support that type of relationship. The statistics don't work is you radically change the underlying assumptions. So, why do you think they should all be covered when the systems were not designed to do that?

maquiscat said:
So why should I have to pay one cost for a spouse and 9 kids and a different one for 9 spouses?

The answer is obvious. You will not have children with your 9 children, but in most cases you will have children with your spouse or spouses. Therefore in most cases, a plural marriage would end with many more than nine people in it. That is why if you enter a plural marriage, you should pay a higher "family coverage" health insurance rate. Its the same reason that family coverage costs more than single, or employee + spouse coverage. More people potentially and generally spend more on health care, therefore the premium increases. That is the way insurance works.
 
Lol, you're the one arguing that polygamy shouldn't be legalized because a bunch of extremely rich guys will marry way too many women.

(BTW, the number of male vs female millionaires is not all that different)

You assume that wealthy women have an interest in marrying many men. I see little evidence to support it. And really all I need it a rational state interest. A societal imbalance makes that cut easily.
 
I find it quite amusing that homophobes seem to think the polygamy and SSM are related. The truth is that polgamy is only legal in muslim countries that deny gays even basic rights. So the truth is the legalization of SSM makes polygamy even less likely to accepted. None of the 21 countries that have endorsed SSM have allowed polygamy too. The idea that we will be the 1st is laughable.

That isn't a very good argument. You are arguing that polygamy and SSM are not the same in US law because they aren't the same in Islamic law.... You need to go back to the drawing board with that one.

The point in bringing up polygamy is that the rationale for SSM in the American courts is exactly the same as the argument that will be in the courts for polygamy. By ruling favorably on the broad, lazy argument of the gay marriage movement the SCOTUS has left no argument against any marriage.
 
You have not even proffered an argument an argument why recognition of polygamy is a move forward for society so it does NOT follow than numerous wives should be covered by state and federal benefits, when the systems clearly were not designed to support that type of relationship. The statistics don't work is you radically change the underlying assumptions. So, why do you think they should all be covered when the systems were not designed to do that?

That is one silly argument. Answer your own question: Why is recognition of SSM a "move forward" for society? What does gay marriage actually offer the society as a whole? The one solid argument in favor of SSM is actually a detriment to society. The ability for a gay couple to qualify for each other's Social Security spousal benefits is the one thing that a normal contractual agreement couldn't accomplish... but that is just an added drain on a program already in dire straights, so it doesn't really benefit society to create more SS beneficiaries.

The answer is obvious. You will not have children with your 9 children, but in most cases you will have children with your spouse or spouses. Therefore in most cases, a plural marriage would end with many more than nine people in it. That is why if you enter a plural marriage, you should pay a higher "family coverage" health insurance rate. Its the same reason that family coverage costs more than single, or employee + spouse coverage. More people potentially and generally spend more on health care, therefore the premium increases. That is the way insurance works.

You missed the point. Insurance charges more per person in a single coverage than in a family plan, especially since most plans cap premiums at 4 family members. 9 individual plans would be far more expensive that a plan for 9 family members.
 
That isn't a very good argument. You are arguing that polygamy and SSM are not the same in US law because they aren't the same in Islamic law.... You need to go back to the drawing board with that one.

The point in bringing up polygamy is that the rationale for SSM in the American courts is exactly the same as the argument that will be in the courts for polygamy. By ruling favorably on the broad, lazy argument of the gay marriage movement the SCOTUS has left no argument against any marriage.

Then how can you explain why no other nation that has adopted SSM has done the same for polygamy? Why would we be the first? It is nothing but sour grapes talking. Don't play us for fools.
 
That isn't a very good argument. You are arguing that polygamy and SSM are not the same in US law because they aren't the same in Islamic law.... You need to go back to the drawing board with that one.

The point in bringing up polygamy is that the rationale for SSM in the American courts is exactly the same as the argument that will be in the courts for polygamy. By ruling favorably on the broad, lazy argument of the gay marriage movement the SCOTUS has left no argument against any marriage.

Why should you or anyone else care if polygamy does become legal? What possible effect does it have on your life? Most people still won't be doing it and the ones that do were living together anyway. Why do we have to jump from one group to another trying to impose our will on them instead of just letting people live as they choose? Got Freedom?

That is one silly argument. Answer your own question: Why is recognition of SSM a "move forward" for society? What does gay marriage actually offer the society as a whole? The one solid argument in favor of SSM is actually a detriment to society. The ability for a gay couple to qualify for each other's Social Security spousal benefits is the one thing that a normal contractual agreement couldn't accomplish... but that is just an added drain on a program already in dire straights, so it doesn't really benefit society to create more SS beneficiaries.
You missed the point. Insurance charges more per person in a single coverage than in a family plan, especially since most plans cap premiums at 4 family members. 9 individual plans would be far more expensive that a plan for 9 family members.

When our citizens have rights and the freedom to live their lives as they choose, society benefits greatly. If we banned Christians (or whatever you identify with) from marrying, would that make America more or less free?
 
That is one silly argument. Answer your own question: Why is recognition of SSM a "move forward" for society? What does gay marriage actually offer the society as a whole? The one solid argument in favor of SSM is actually a detriment to society. The ability for a gay couple to qualify for each other's Social Security spousal benefits is the one thing that a normal contractual agreement couldn't accomplish... but that is just an added drain on a program already in dire straights, so it doesn't really benefit society to create more SS beneficiaries.

My argument is not silly, you just fail to understand the gay marriage issue. Perhaps you would like to state why the supreme court should NOT have made it legal across the land. I will explain why they did make it legal. The characteristic of being gay is possessed by a large percentage of the worlds population and it always has been. Estimates vary from 5 - 10% of the population, both male and female. That would make being gay a normally observed human variation in the population. Normal is not bad. You may not understand it, you may not like it, you don't have to. But we all need to respect these peoples dignity as humans. If you think we were made by god, god doesn't make any junk. From the point of view of the state, marriage is not about romantic love, it is about legal rights and responsibilities; rights that people get to enjoy because they chose to commit to a relationship for life, and responsibilities they must live up to within the marriage and afterward if the marriage does not survive. If being gay in a normal human variation in a substantial part of the population, why should those people be denied the right to marry the person they chose?

The mental health community states that being gay is normal, and we should not try to change the gay person, rather we should change the society so it does not view gay people as wrong or in need of being changed.

Conversion therapy is any treatment that aims to change sexual orientation from homosexual to heterosexual. Such treatments have been criticized as pseudoscience and have been a source of controversy in the United States and other countries. Medical, scientific, and government organizations in the United States and Britain have expressed concern over conversion therapy and consider it potentially harmful. United States Surgeon General David Satcher in 2001 issued a report stating that "there is no valid scientific evidence that sexual orientation can be changed".

The American Psychiatric Association opposes "any psychiatric treatment, such as 'reparative' or conversion therapy, which is based upon the assumption that homosexuality per se is a mental disorder or based upon the a priori assumption that a patient should change his/her sexual homosexual orientation" and describes attempts to change sexual orientation by practitioners as unethical. It also states that debates over the integration of gays and lesbians have obscured science "by calling into question the motives and even the character of individuals on both sides of the issue"[6] and that the advancement of conversion therapy may cause social harm by disseminating unscientific views about sexual orientation. As a solution, today's mental health profession advocates for societal change rather than changing individuals' sexual orientation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_therapy

So, for correct reason, society has changed to recognize that being gay is a normal human variation, and these people should be entitled to all the rights that anyone else is entitled to. The supreme court has ordered the society to change, and that is good.

But we are still in the realm of "one person marrying another person", or two in the marriage. There is no change to SS, because if the people were not gay and married a hetero partner they would pay in to cover that person, they pay into SS anyway, and so their gay partner is already covered, unless you can show that SS presumed a certain percentage of gay people who would not be covered.

I await your reasons why polygamy should be allowed.
 
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jmotivator said:
You missed the point. Insurance charges more per person in a single coverage than in a family plan, especially since most plans cap premiums at 4 family members. 9 individual plans would be far more expensive that a plan for 9 family members.


No, you miss the point. It doesn't make any difference to the discussion whether the cost per person is higher or lower for an individual, its irrelevant. The reason most plans cap premiums at 4 family members is because on average, that is the size of a standard family in the US (Its actually 1.9 children per married couple since 1980, so if they charge for 4 people they can scrape together a few extra dollars to cover those few people with 3 or more kids).


Here is a typical polygamous family with Dad, 4 wives and 17 children (that's a total of 22 people in the family). If all the marriages were legal, I don't think an insurance company is going to want to cover them for the same premium that they cover the typical american family of 4.


The show follows the lives of advertising salesman Kody Brown (46), his wives Meri Barber (44), Janelle (45), Christine (42) and Robyn Sullivan (36) and their seventeen total children. In the first season the show televised Brown's courting and eventual marriage of his fourth wife, Robyn Sullivan, who herself had three children from a previous marriage.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sister_Wives


So, you miss the point. The premium for family coverage can be capped at 4 people simply because that is on average how many people are in the typical american family, per the census data. If that were to swell substantially due to the introduction of polygamy, the health insurance policies would have to be rewritten to cover that with a new family class called "plural" or something, unless you want to pay for their expenses in your rate, and I do not.


In fact the Dad may not be able to afford his plural family period. I posted above that 65% of plural families are on welfare, and there is a reason for that. The father cannot cover all the expenses for his large family without help from the state. That is another argument against polygamy as a viable institution, it is not generally economically viable.
 
Heh, I think you misinterpreted my post. I was responding to another poster who claimed that polygamy would be extremely rare, even if legalized, I suggested that acceptance was growing, and that even if he might not consider such an arrangement, there's a chance his children or grandchildren would, should this trend continue to grow.

I guess I did then, but I do not think I was the only one. It I do agree with you, and would further point out that polygamy and polyamory are already growing trends and that there has been much more of it out there that was not before the public eye, FLDS aside, that people realized. A look at the sites I linked to earlier in this thread (#29 I believe) will show accounts of how people have been doing this for decades. I guess the poly closet is the next one for people to come out of.
 
You assume that wealthy women have an interest in marrying many men. I see little evidence to support it. And really all I need it a rational state interest. A societal imbalance makes that cut easily.

You assume that wealthy men have an interest in marrying that many women. While I see evidence that many would keep a bunch around for their various "interest", why would they necessarily want to marry them, again FLDS aside.

That aside what about all the women unavailable now because they are lesbian, bi with other women, or just plain asexual? Is that not also creating an imbalance? I also note that you have not addressed the poly families like mine and others where there is a mix of men and women.
 
That aside what about all the women unavailable now because they are lesbian, bi with other women, or just plain asexual? Is that not also creating an imbalance?
Only if you assume that there are far more of them than there are gay men, bi with other men, or just plain asexual. is there any evidence that this is the case?
 
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