| News
Features
Views
Editorial
Letters
to the Editor
Columns
Arts
Looking
For Your Next Ex-Lover
Rauch's
Reasons
Community
Compass
Comics
|
|

Rauch's
Reasons
For or against marriage, this is a must-read for all.
by Robert W. Wolff
Gay
Marriage:
Why It Is Good for Gays,
Good for Straights,
and Good for America
Jonathan Rauch
Henry Holt & Co., 2004 |
In
Gay Marriage: Why It Is Good for Gays, Good for Straights, and Good
for America, Jonathan Rauch addresses each gay marriage positive
or negative he can imagine from every conceivable viewpoint. Rauch is
a correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, writer and columnist
for National Journal, and writer in residence at the Brookings
Institution. He has calmly and methodically illuminated the argument for
same-sex marriage with wit and a true sense of justice. He makes transitions
from speaking for one public to the next, and then to his very personal
viewpoints with the ease of a trapeze athlete. This ability to walk in
the moccasins of others with greatly differing viewpoints in addition
to stating his personal attitudes is central to the book’s success.
Then, with equal ease, he deftly wraps up his arguments with constructive
political approaches for future progress on the issue.
Rauch, the vice president of the Independent
Gay Forum and a DC-area resident, is enthusiastic about marriage for anyone
who wishes it. He believes marriage is a great civilizer, especially for
males. He says gay marriage will be an inspiration for future lesbian
and gay youths as they might, after several generations of marriage for
all, be free to dream of growing up to marry a person they love. Even
those who are not currently particularly interested in marriage will find
this book inspiring. It embraces hope for the future.
I wish I could get everyone in our country
to read this book. Everyone who has thought about same-sex marriage will
see his or her thoughts in black and white. They will read new arguments
for and against their own views. Rauch makes these arguments craftily,
in detail, with nuances few readers have encountered before. Moreover,
Rauch has the rare ability to bring his points on both sides of the debate
to logical and emotionally effective conclusions. His conclusions support
careful, respectful resolution of the current injustices surrounding same-sex
marriage: a roadmap for success. Rauch makes an excellent case for marriage
in the face of those who say that lesbians and gays "cannot"
form permanent relationships in support of children. He rightly takes
no prisoners on this point.
At the same time, he provides an especially
helpful and well reasoned case for avoiding halfway partnership approaches:
"With social conservatives dead set against same-sex marriage, a
variety of 'anything but marriage' alternatives are proliferating, such
as domestic partnership, which ironically may undermine support for marriage
among heterosexuals. Someday conservatives will look back and wonder why
they undermined marriage in an effort to keep homosexuals out." He
believes same-sex marriage will ultimately strengthen heterosexual marriage,
not weaken it.
He argues that allowing same-sex couples
to marry will be a plus for society as a whole. He permits readers to
feel his pain about not being able to marry his partner and acknowledges
the feelings of those who currently do not understand how two people of
the same gender could have feelings that would lead to the desire to marry.
According to Rauch, "The new conservative
drive for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage isn't just disingenuous
about its goals and ill-conceived as public policy. It's a betrayal of
two core conservative principles: the linkage of love to marriage and
the American commitment to federalism." He argues for each of the
50 states taking on the gay marriage question independently, keeping marriage
the domain of the states and avoiding federal action. He thinks it is
important to allow each state to set its own timetable for addressing
the issue. Rauch postulates that when the people in states that accept
same-sex marriage first learn how little changes after a few years of
legal gay marriage, people in other states will move toward acceptance
of marriage for all.
My suggestion: buy this book. If you have
enough money, buy two or more. Read the book. Give one to your town's
library. If your local school has an LGBT Straight alliance, give the
advisor a copy. Pass on your copy to someone you know who might be on
the fence about gay marriage. Hand one to your parents or aunt and uncle.
Our own state representatives and senators should be at the head of our
lists. Don't forget your U.S. Senators and Representative. Ask them to
read the book and hand it on to someone else. I think if sufficient number
of Vermont residents do this, the same-sex marriage debate that is surely
coming in our state will be a whole lot more humane and less heated. If
our federal representatives know Jonathan Rauch's arguments, they will
be better able to discuss gay marriage with their colleagues in Washington.
Robert William Wolff lives and writes in Randolph. A member of the
R.U.1.2? Queer Community Center board of directors, and of the Mountain
Pride Media fundraising committee, Wolff is a scenery, lighting, performance
facility designer and potter.
|