Kiwi in IE wrote: » Very proud of my country today New Zealand has just legalised gay marriage!
robp wrote: » Peck it to death? Gays are been metaphorically pecked to death? In fairness isn't that grossly ridiculous?
Clandestine wrote: »
JimiTime wrote: » Ok. Because they go to college? Have a good job? Have a relationship? Talk to psychologists who think, 'They seem fine to me'? Guess what? My fatherless nephew would likely tick all those boxes. We cannot measure the impact like some science experiment. Its EVEN HARDER given the tiny number and various makeups of 'alternative families' there are. We cannot raise a child with a nuclear family, then raise it again with a same sex one and see what the difference is. In fact, if we take children from their parents forcibly, and give them to other adoptive parents to raise, it would probably come up with similar results: Good job, education, socially good etc. The fact is, people don't really care about these social studies until it is lending weight to the position they already hold. Men and women are different hormonally, biologically, emotionally. How they react to a variety of things is different, how they deal with loss, trauma. How they rationalise, problem solve, play, express themselves. The list goes on and on, and no book should need reading to know it!! It SHOULD go without saying that further on from having a loving family unit, it is best for a child to have the wholeness of the gender spectrum shining on their lives. Providing positive role models, and included in this, gender-centric role models giving them the practical implicit experience for understanding the idiosyncrasies of the sexes. Sure, a single mother/father can raise a child, and they will be a normal, functioning member of society. Great Job, good education, and be socially functioning. However, you really cannot measure what they COULD have had. All I can do is ask people to have some consideration for the ones who have no voice in this. Those who DON'T get the choice. Yes, they'll grow up knowing no different, and will likely think, 'I'm grand' in not knowing any different. However, as a society, we will have consigned children to these un-natural (in a gender sense) family make-ups when there would have been the alternative to give them the natural gender-centric family they would have enjoyed if their natural parents could have raised them. No doubt, children will continue to be denied parents for multitudes of reasons. However, when the circumstance so arises that a child for whatever reason is up for adoption, society has an opportunity to try give them the best they can, rather than pander to emotional blackmailing, agenda bombardment, and people pretending that its actually scientific. I still believe, that but for divine intervention, this argument is lost. The brainwashing through media implicitly through entertainment, and explicitly through the vilification and shouting down of any dissenting voice is winning the day. The fact there is such conformism on this rather HUGE matter that changes our understanding of parentage and the needs of children should in itself ring alarm bells. Sure, people will cite studies as if that somehow is a QED, but the fact is that most people will not have read them, nor questioned them, nor even cared that they exist if the truth be told. They are just glad that there is something there with the word 'science' in it that somebody who has letters after their name compiled that appears to back up their already held notions. Nobody cares about the 'evidence'. They care about their agenda's, which is why they pass over their responsibility to think to googling, 'Studies to prove my position'. Ironically, its those of us who DON'T pass over our responsibility to think, who are made out to be the irrational ones. How arrogant of us to think that we can think, and see that the emperor has no clothes.
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Although it should be pointed out that marriage is not afforded the ridiculous 'special status' that it is here anyway. Civil unions and cohabiting couples (after a certain amount of time and unless otherwise specified legally), already have equal rights to the married.
Peregrinus wrote: » Actually, I think this is not correct, with respect to cohabiting couples. In NZ there’s a procedure by which civil partners can convert their relationship to a marriage by a simple re-registration (no ceremony required), and a married couple can convert to civil partnership. This isn’t possible in Ireland, because an opposite-sex couple can’t form a civil parthership, and a same-sex couple can’t marry.
Peregrinus wrote: » Actually, I think this is not correct, with respect to cohabiting couples. In New Zealand, on the breakdown of a relationship, cohabiting couples (who have spent a certain minimum time together, or who have had children together) have their affairs sorted out under the same rules as apply to married couples. But that is true in Ireland also. But, while the cohabitation relationship is continuing, it doesn’t enjoy anything like the status of a marriage. There are many differences of treatment. For example, spouses have protected rights of inheritance which cohabitants do not have. Cohabiting couples cannot jointly adopt a child, whereas spouses can. (For that matter, civil partners cannot jointly adopt a child in New Zealand, so they are not on all fours with married couples either). There’s a long list of these differences of treatment and, if you compiled such lists for both Ireland and New Zealand, they wouldn’t be identical, but they’d have a good deal in common. In short, as regards marriage, civil partnership and cohabitation, Irish and NZ law are mostly pretty similar. But there are some significant differences. And I think the big differences are: (a) in NZ, both opposite-sex and same-sex couples can form a civil partnership, whereas in Ireland only same-sex couples can; and (b) in NZ, same-sex and (soon!) opposite-sex couples can both marry, whereas in Ireland only opposite-sex couples can (yet!). In NZ there’s a procedure by which civil partners can convert their relationship to a marriage by a simple re-registration (no ceremony required), and a married couple can convert to civil partnership. This isn’t possible in Ireland, because an opposite-sex couple can’t form a civil parthership, and a same-sex couple can’t marry.
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Not the same at all. Read through the above and you will find significant differences . . .
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Quite different from the situation here where my partner, my sons biological father is not considered his legal guardian as we are not married . . . . My mother in NZ would be considered his legal next of kin if I were to die, over his All because a marriage official hasn't cast a magic spell over us.
Kiwi in IE wrote: » And unmarried couples can adopt in NZ, however only one of the partners can become the legal parent. Which is discriminatory and should be changed.
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Ah Jimi, you are (thankfully) fighting a lost cause. Don't worry though the world won't end. Just like it didn't when contraception, divorce and married women going to work were legalised. You'll be fine when gay marriage and abortion are legal too. Your rights won't be affected.
Zombrex wrote: » What would you call someone punching someone in the face and having to be restrained from punching them further? A mild disagreement? We have no idea how far that guy would have gone had the George's bouncers not stepped in.
tommy2bad wrote: » AFAIK in Ireland a civil partnership is just that; a partnership, anyone can form one and sex or relationship don't come into it. Apart from the fact that both must be single to enter one.
lazygal wrote: » Only two men or two women can enter into a civil partnership in Ireland.
tommy2bad wrote: » So an uncle and nephew or niece and aunt but not a sister and brother? Hmmm so they lied when they said it would sort out all the inheritance issues where a relative cares for someone and then finds themselves in legal limbo when the care-ie dies! Why am I not surprised. Too big an exchequer loss I guess.
lazygal wrote: » There's a list of people whom its not permissible to marry or enter into a civil partnership with. You'll be apprised of this if and when you register intent. Why am I not surprised some poster throw red herrings like carers being left out into a debate like this?
lmaopml wrote: » What exactly is the major difference and major problem legally speaking between a gay couple entering into a 'civil partnership' and a heterosexual couple who enter into a marriage where obviously biological children may result?
28064212 wrote: » http://www.marriagequality.ie/marriageaudit/full-list
lmaopml wrote: » Could you be more personally specific? Links are nice but kind of tiresome depending on whether there is any comment or no? I'd like to know the problems - I have a gay brother in law who signed a civil partnership with his partner - I'm just wondering what he may be thinking that I haven't really considered, I'd like to know what I am missing?
lmaopml wrote: » I can understand inheritance. I don't really understand where this is special as to do with children and adoption? Could you elaborate?
In particular they are missing from the sections on Shared Home Protection, in the section on inheriting tenancies and in the sections around maintenance - especially where the other partner is dead or has deserted. In many cases, stepchildren, adopted children and foster children all seem to have rights denied to your children. The Bill does not recognise that children must be provided for if a partnership dissolves. The Bill does not provide for the birth expenses or funeral expenses of dependent children. If you do not make a will, your children will not inherit what ought to be due to them. Also, your child - unlike a step-child - can't sue on your behalf for your wrongful death. While it is not clear how your children will be treated in tax and social welfare in the promised future legislation, it's not looking good in those areas either if this is anything to go by.
As a single lesbian or gay man, you can apply to adopt but you cannot apply together as civil partners. The Bill does not resolve this contradiction. You also cannot get custody or guardianship of your children while they are alive. The best you can hope for is access.
Zombrex wrote: » You might be thinking of the redress for co-habiting couples, which while brought in with the civil partnership law, was a different scheme.Though you still have to be in the category of people able to marry each other with that as well. I imagine brother sister type issues are handled under normal inheritance law. This is for people for whom inheritance law doesn't apply because you are not related, but have a long term relationship with each other.http://www.citizensinformation.ie/en/birth_family_relationships/problems_in_marriages_and_other_relationships/redress_scheme_for_cohabiting_couples.html
NuMarvel wrote: » Civil partnership makes no provision for a gay couple that have children (by whatever means). The child will probably already have a legal relationship with one of the parents already, but the other parent is legally a complete stranger.
So even though that other parent will be just as involved in the upbringing of the child, they can make no decisions for the child. That could be for something as complex as medical treatment, or as simple as signing a permission slip for school outing. EDIT: Or even collect them from school in one case!
That becomes infinitely more complicated if something happens to the parent with the legal relationship. It would involve going to the courts to remedy the matter, and if someone makes an objection, it's not guaranteed the child would remain with the parent who helped raise them.
And something I hadn't considered until it was pointed out at the Convention last week, was that that works the other way. When the child grows up, they can't be involved in any legal decision for the "non-legal" parent, which comes into play as they get older and may need care, etc. It's similar for adoption. Unmarried couples can't apply jointly, and any child placed in the care of an unmarried couple only has a legal relationship with whoever's name was on the application. Which brings us back to the points above.