Jokodo
Veteran Member
<snip>They cannot be equal because homosexuality and heterosexuality are very different things.
By he gospel of mojorising. That doesn't make them different in any legally relevant way, and even if it did, that would be no reason to deny equal rights to individuals. If Tom is allowed to marry Sue and Anne is not allowed to marry Sue's identical twin Jane, that's unequal treatment on the basis of sex whichever way you turn it. We don't do that anymore, not legally.
Marriage is very explicitly a heterosexual institution<snip>
It used to be in the old days when the legal concept of husband and wife were substantially different things with different sets of rights and responsibilities (though even that isn't necessarily an obstacle if you allow for same-sex couples to choose who is to take which role). It stopped to do so the moment marriage became a contract between equals, making husband and wife interchangeable labels for one and the same legal concept of spouse. I've learnt from this thread that this happened in 1961 in Australia (congrats, mates, it took us until 1975 in Austria), so you're 54 years late.