Let's go through this one more time...
Are you seriously going to compare a Supreme Court decision that empowers citizens to one that took away every single right a person had?
Seriously?
C'mon, man. There's an obvious difference between the natural right to marry and the racist belief that blacks aren't people.
Leaving aside the question of what a "natural right" is, I was clearly using that as an example of why one should not be of the mindset of "the Supreme Court said it--so that ends the argument".
Unless you're suggesting we fight a civil war over gay marriage -- or, since Loving v. Virginia determined that the fact that marriage was a right meant that states couldn't prevent interracial couples from marrying, a civil war over interracial marriage -- then that does end the argument. Marriage is a right in the United States whether you like it or not.
Note my other example, Sci--Buck v. Bell.
We didn't fight a civil war over that. Once again, that is a red herring.
How dare the government enumerate rights for its citizens! Obviously people should be more restricted in their rights and have less freedom.
No. That's the entire point of it being a right -- that it can't be taken away. That's why civil marriage is important -- it allows people to get married even when private institutions like churches refuse to perform or recognize marriages for them. It increases people's freedom that way.
The government enumerates rights that already exist.
Or to be more specific, as President Obama would say, the Constitution is a document of "negative" liberties--what the government can't to to people--as opposed to "positive" liberties--what the government "should" do for people.
That is why I am firmly against the concept of marriage being a government institution. That is the "legal arguement" I am "invested in".
You use nice buzzwords, but the actual effect of your argument is to diminish the rights of a citizen. Your ideal situation would make people less free, because they would be dependent upon the whims of private religious institutions to get married, and they would be regarded as having fewer rights.
Let me put this way once again, Sci: You keep bringing up something called "civil marriage". Once again, with this, you bring up the premise that marriage is a government instiution.
That's because it is. Marriage has been both a governmental and religious institution since time immemorial, and has certainly been both throughout the entire history of the United States. That's why ship captains can perform marriages, why you've always been able to go to a justice of the peace.
What you're proposing is a radical redefinition of marriage, a privatization of marriage that places it in the hands of religious elites and out of the hands of the democratically-elected government. What you're proposing would inhibit people's freedoms, take away their rights, and make their ability to marry dependent upon the whims of church leaders. What you're proposing is to make people less free.
First--once again, what I am "proposing" is simply that the government-instituted "civil unions" should, as far as the government is concerned, be on the same standing as traditional marriages. Legally, it would be exactly the same. Culturally, social conservatives would also be satisfied--the institution of marriage is, as far as they are concerned, preserved.
Second--"radical redefinition of marriage"? The traditional definition of marriage involves a man and a woman. Do not call the kettle black, sir.
Let me repeat a point I'd made earlier--one that should make this point clear:
Now...let me ask you something. You say that limiting "marriage" to its traditional definition is "discrimination against LGBTs."
By that argument..."marriage" should be extended to include many other standards. For example, things considered "polygamy" and, if we were to take this to the extreme (and I frankly see no reason why not), "consentual incest", as it were.
Should blood relatives be allowed to marry? Should adult offspring be allowed to marry their parents, or aunts/uncles? Should we be allowed to lower the age limit for marriage to include, say, high-school students?
If this sounds like a "slippery slope fallacy", let me ask: isn't answering those questions with a "no" in fact discrimination against said groups?