Not to belabor the "why do conservatives oppose gay marriage" point, but here's yet another barely-coherent "justification" for such opposition from Princeton scholar Robert George. In contrast to David Frum, George seems to support the legalization of gay "civil unions." Yet gays, he says, are not entitled to sanctify their committed loving relationships through marriage because they lack "sexually complementary" parts that can be used for the purpose of procreation.
I can't speak from personal experience, but having spent a rather educational hour or so at a live, gay sex show in Bangkok, it is my reasoned conclusion that gay men do, in fact, have sexually complementary parts. Admittedly, that's probably not the case for lesbians, and George probably was not thinking about strap-ons when he wrote his rant. But what, exactly are "sexually complementary" spouses? Does this mean simply that round pegs fit into round holes? Or rather that one spouse's parts make the other spouse's parts feel good? Wouldn't spouses with fingers and tongues and maybe even toes or knees or elbows qualify as "sexually complementary" under the latter interpretation? And are conservatives even allowed to enjoy one another's "parts"? I'm not buying this "sexually complementary" excuse.
George might have a stronger point when he talks about marriage as geared chiefly towards procreation. Yet these days, many, many lifelong sexual unions (whether hetero or homo) do not include birthing and raising children, and many more include kids acquired through adoption, artificial insemination, re-marriage, surrogacy, and probably some means that I haven't even considered.
George also says that "moral obligations of fidelity and exclusivity" hold marriages together. He seems to argue that gay people are incapable of forming exclusive, faithful lifetime bonds because they cannot impregnate one another using their sexually complementary parts. I've been sitting here trying to come up with a sizzling, intellectually unassailable rejoinder to this assertion. But so far, all I've got is this: Hogwash. And more hogwash.
Let's first set aside the fact that roughly half of all marriages fail, and that (if women's magazines like Glamour, Redbook, and Cosmo are any indication) infidelity is a veritable epidemic plaguing marriages these days. Regardless of how their marriages ultimately fare, I think it's fair to postulate that most people get married because they love each other and want to build a life together. Sometimes they want to raise children together. Sometimes they don't want children at all. Sometimes they have to work a little harder to have children together. Sometimes one or both of them already have children. Sometimes they are well past their child-bearing years. But it seems inherent in human nature that we seek to form lasting bonds of love, devotion, fidelity, and exclusivity with a partner. We want to stand up with that person in front of our friends and families and proclaim our love. There's certainly no place in the marriage ceremony for the nuptial couple to display their sexually complementary parts (at least since we stopped parading the virgin-blooded sheet before the wedding guests).
I know it's time for me to move on and observe elsewhere, and go back to writing about fun stuff like yurt trips and birthday parties and my nephew's prodigious burping abilities. But to David Frum, Robert George, President Shrub, Sen. Wayne Allard, and the rest of the folks who are falling over themselves to amend the Constitution to ban same-sex marriage, I pose a simple question (which my mother used to mutter in response to the prayerful bigotry of Head Promise Keeper and former CU football coach Bill McCartney): does your wife suck your sexually complementary parts?