arthwollipot
Limerick Purist Pronouns: He/Him
Why not? I do.You can not recognise two people as being the both who are most close to you.
Why not? I do.You can not recognise two people as being the both who are most close to you.
All this stuff about "well, it's just people loving each other in unconventional ways" is simply nonsense. There's no point to "addressing an argument" that has no connection to reality.

Why should any of them be anything other than equal?If you're married to your wife, and you marry a husband, is that husband married to your wife too? Which one makes the medical decisions? Is your wife your 'main spouse' or a 'secondary spouse'?
Love is not a zero-sum game.In a equal heterosexual relationship the female and male sides have equal value. Split one of these sides into two so you can have three people into a relationship also splits the value. This can lead to competition between the two for the other side. Or the competition can end when one is dumped, when the two others find their bond to be on a higher level.
I support this suggestion.Good we need to abolish sex discriminatory bathrooms. No more mens rooms and ladies rooms, just bathrooms.
In a equal heterosexual relationship the female and male sides have equal value. Split one of these sides into two so you can have three people into a relationship also splits the value. This can lead to competition between the two for the other side. Or the competition can end when one is dumped, when the two others find their bond to be on a higher level.
That's almost worth opening a new thread.
I wish I'd noticed this thread earlier.
I am a part of a family that consists of four adults (two male, two female, if you must know, only one of whom is bisexual) and our three collective children (one of whom is now also an adult, the other two early teenage). We all have equal status under the law. We are all covered equally in all of our wills. We have a joint bank account, we are co-signatories on our mortgage, and we have all the legal rights (as far as I know) that a married couple has. We're just a married foursome. We're extremely stable, and our kids are growing up smart and well-adjusted.
Each of us also maintains at least one relationship outside the family, which does not involve the same legal rights.
I am happy to elaborate on request.![]()
Why not? I do.
Why should any of them be anything other than equal?
That is just a statement.This is a simplistic view of human emotion that does not bear true under experiment. People are not interchangeable in this way. People are more than their gender.
I think you say that from the fact that there are many kinds of love. However that doesn't prevent one bond from being stronger then the other.Love is not a zero-sum game.
That's very important to remember.
In response to the OP, so long as everyone marrying up is a grown up, it's non of my business. Just so I'm clear no kids, no mentally ill, no VICTIMS. Otherwise, just don't do it in the streets and upset the horses.
So on your honeymoon, you'll go off and f___ yourself, with nobody first suggesting it?Someone wake me up when I'm allowed to marry myself. Nothing else compares.
No, we have set up everything specifically such that we all have legal rights. We got our solicitor to make sure of that.I suspect that if legal push came to legal shove you would find out that they are not all equal(well maybe if you are all common law marriage and no individuals have signed specific binary liciences).
I don't know - what's financial college aid when it's at home?Looking at an earlier question of how to rewrite laws and regulations, how would your family be viewed for financial college aid compared to a married pair?
That is unthinkable. We discuss things like rational human beings. Of course we have occasional arguments - we are human beings after all, but for any one of us to call lawyers in against any other is so ridiculous as to be absurd. It's an utterly ludicrous suggestion and I doubt any of us would ever consider it. I certainly wouldn't.So they need to make a decision for you and do not agree, who's decision wins? Enter the lawyers to fight it out.
They haven't broken down in twenty years, and while I don't presume to predict the future, I can't see them breaking down ever.It is easy to say that when things work, but when they break down does it still hold?
I don't understand. No situation is "ideal" or "perfect". I'm a realist, not a Platonist. It works in the real world.To prevent legal ambiguity and tug-of-war. It happens all the time with just two equal partners. It's easy to say, 'it works' based off of ideal situations, but then any law, form of government, relationship, form of marriage, or stool soften works in ideal or perfect situations.
I'm sorry, you've completely lost me on this. Are you saying that homosexual relationships are more equal than heterosexual relationships? 'Cause if not, then I'm completely missing your point.I think you say that from the fact that there are many kinds of love. However that doesn't prevent one bond from being stronger then the other.
Also my example is valid under the stated conditions of 'heterosexual' polygamy. A bisexual or homosexual polygamy relationship might actually work as the bonds between each member can be more equal.
That is unthinkable. We discuss things like rational human beings. Of course we have occasional arguments - we are human beings after all, but for any one of us to call lawyers in against any other is so ridiculous as to be absurd. It's an utterly ludicrous suggestion and I doubt any of us would ever consider it. I certainly wouldn't.
They haven't broken down in twenty years, and while I don't presume to predict the future, I can't see them breaking down ever.