| OutRight
by Dale Carpenter
PHONY ARGUMENTS
One conservative pundit makes false claims about
gay marriage in Scandinavia
Gays have been blamed for just about every bad
thing that’s ever happened in human history
from the fall of the Roman Empire to the rise
of Nazi Germany to earthquakes in California.
How was homosexuality responsible for these events?
Well, they happened and there were homosexuals
around. That was the correlation.
Enter Stanley Kurtz, a research fellow at the
Hoover Institution, who is making a career out
of predicting catastrophe if gay marriage is recognized
in the United States. In his latest article, published
in the conservative Weekly Standard, he argues
we have something to learn from the Scandinavia
experience. “Marriage is slowly dying in
Scandinavia,” Kurtz begins ominously. “A
majority of children in Sweden and Norway are
born out of wedlock. Sixty percent of first-born
children in Denmark have unmarried parents. Not
coincidentally, these countries have had something
close to full gay marriage for a decade or more.”
Gay marriage will undermine the institution of
marriage, Kurtz concludes, and Scandinavia proves
it. There’s one major problem at the outset
for Kurtz’s argument. There is not one gay
marriage in any country he cites. In 1989, Denmark
adopted a registered partnership law that granted
most of the benefits and obligations of marriage
to same-sex couples, with the notable exception
of adoption rights. Norway adopted a similar law
in 1993, and Sweden expanded its cohabitation
law along the same lines in 1994. (Not until 2001
did a European country—the Netherlands—recognize
gay marriages that are legally identical to traditional
heterosexual marriages.) Thus, Kurtz blames “gay
marriage” for worsening a host of social
ills before it even existed.
Second, even if these Scandinavian gay partnerships
could be called marriages, Kurtz shows only a
correlation between them and marital decline.
For example, after Kurtz notes that marital problems
are highest in European countries where gay “marriage”
has a foothold, and lowest where it does not,
he writes: “This suggests that gay marriage
is both a cause and effect of the increasing separation
between marriage and parenthood.” But this
is a correlation; it does not show causation.
There are also correlations between marital decline
and nongay marriage phenomena, such as rising
women’s equality (in employment and elsewhere);
no-fault divorce; rising incomes and prosperity;
a generous welfare state that serves a caretaker
role; longer life and better health; contraception;
abortion; less religiosity; and so on. Any of
these is a more likely culprit than gay marriage.
Does Kurtz conclude we should return women to
barefoot-and-pregnant legal status, ban divorce,
tamp down on incomes, lower the quality of medical
care, ban the use of contraceptives, and erase
the distinction between church and state? All
of these things would probably have a positive
effect on marriage rates, divorce rates, and illegitimacy—but
at a very high and unacceptable cost to people
like him. Yet Kurtz wants to ban gay marriages,
which would have negligible or no effect on pre-existing
social problems, at very high cost to the lives
of gay people.
In an effort to demonstrate gays really don’t
want marriage, Kurtz notes that only 2,372 gay
couples had registered after nine years of the
Danish cohabitation law, only 674 after four years
in Norway, and only 749 after four years in Sweden.
These are tiny numbers in countries of 5.1 million,
4.2 million, and 8.5 million people, respectively,
in the 1990s. They seriously undercut Kurtz’s
claim that registered partnerships are destroying
marriage in those countries.
Even if Kurtz could demonstrate that these Scandinavian
gay partnerships have contributed to the erosion
of marriage as an institution, he only reaches
a conclusion long ago pressed by gay conservatives.
It is the opposition to gay marriage that has
led to the proliferation of alternatives to marriage
itself. These alternatives serve to knock marriage
off its pedestal as the gold standard for relationships,
something feminist and libertarian critics of
marriage might applaud, but traditionalist defenders
of marriage should abhor.
Traditionalists like Kurtz rightly worry about
the rise in out-of-wedlock births in Europe and
America. Notably, registered partnerships in Scandinavia
restrict or forbid adoptions or artificial insemination
by gay couples. That is, these partnerships encourage
the separation of wedlock from parenthood.
Full-fledged gay marriages would not encourage
that separation; they would encourage the opposite.
In two respects, gay marriage would result in
fewer children being raised by single or cohabiting
parents. First, there are about 150,000 gay couples
in the U.S. right now raising children. Yet these
couples cannot be married. Current law guarantees
these children will be raised in unmarried households.
Second, most gay parents get their children from
prior heterosexual marriages or relationships
that many of them entered because of the pressures
created by antigay social stigma. To the extent
gay marriage increases social acceptance, and
provides models of married gay couples, we should
expect these people to be channeled earlier into
gay relationships and away from doomed heterosexual
relationships that produce children.
Most telling, perhaps, is Kurtz’s resistance
to changing no-fault divorce laws. Of all the
legal changes to marriage over the past 40 years,
no-fault divorce has had the greatest impact on
the institution. Next to it, gay marriage as a
legal reform is trivial. This shows, I think,
that Kurtz isn’t really serious about defending
marriage. Like the many doomsayers before him,
his goal is to keep gays down.
Writing from the conservative side, Dale Carpenter
began his column for OutSmart in 1994, when he
lived in Houston. Now residing in Minneapolis,
Carpenter is a University of Minnesota Law School
professor.
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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