You mis-understood me - read your wall.I think the procedure for charging Blackmore with whatever else is the same as that for charging him with polygamy.
Basically, what Oppal is doing is attacking a sexual predator because of his "religion".
You mis-understood me - read your wall.I think the procedure for charging Blackmore with whatever else is the same as that for charging him with polygamy.
Basically, what Oppal is doing is attacking a sexual predator because of his "religion".
I don't agree that Oppal is attacking him because of his religion. He's attacking him because he's using his religion to commit a crime.Im happily married , and I can answer that.
If we both decided to do that, then yes, I think thats fine. As its not other peoples business. No where in the concept of plural marriages does it state one married member is the "master" who decides how many spouses are involved. If everyone in the existing marriage says "Sure, whats one more" thats fine.
If one person secretly marries another, thats bigamy, and thats another crime entirely.
How many women do you know have multiple husbands?? Of course it is relagating women to second class citizens - barefoot and pregnant.
Then why not charge him with ALL his crimes? Why just pick one Oppal is probably going to lose in court over?I don't agree that Oppal is attacking him because of his religion. He's attacking him because he's using his religion to commit a crime.
What a crock...Depending on the culture, sometimes its the wife who wants a second wife for the husband.
What a crock...
There is a pretty strong basis for discrimination based on religion for banning polygamous marriages.
Monogamous Marriage is a pretty strongly Judeo-Christian structure.
I actually know three women who exist in a polygamous relationship with each other quite well. And there are many cultures out there which practice polyandry.
Technically as long as one doesn't make the marriages anything other than religious ceremonies there is no crime with polygamy already.
One is perfectly allowed to have as many women for girlfriends/baby mamas at once as they want, or as many men on the side.
What polygamy is about is giving legal rights to multiple spouses. Without legal gay marriage, gay defacto marriages still happened all the time , they just had no rights.
roflI disagree. If someone wants more than 1 wife (or read is stupid enough to want more than one wife ;-)) then they can go back where they came from. Its Canada and its monogamous marriages. Society will be going down the tubes otherwise.
Quoting Zzarchov Depending on the culture, sometimes its the wife who wants a second wife for the husband.
What a crock...
I disagree. If someone wants more than 1 wife (or read is stupid enough to want more than one wife ;-)) then they can go back where they came from. Its Canada and its monogamous marriages. Society will be going down the tubes otherwise.
Parts of the Church of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) are a break away from the main church. Bountiful Mormons are part of the "break away". We have friends who have strong Mormon faith and they believe only in monogamous relationships. Like most of us - the idea of sharing one's spouse with another is repulsive to them.
lollUhm...in case your forgetting Canada wasn't originally Judeo-Christian. Many Native Groups practiced Polygamy.
So, pack up your bags and get back to where you came from![]()
Please explain how this is relagating women to second class citizens again? Allowing multiple spouses doesn't seem to have any bias towards either gender or sexual orientation.
It seems to be purely a case of individual freedom being trounced for Judeo-Christian religious based morality.
My couple of posts seem to have generated quite a bit of discussion. I will try to answer a few points.
Quite right, Zzarchov, what people do in their private life is their business. If there is a church which marries one man to eight women, or marries a man to his goat, that is between the man, the women, the goat and the church, and nobody’s business.
What we are talking about here is, should government recognize polygamy, with all the inherent rights that married couples enjoy (government benefits, custody rights, divorce laws etc.)?
And here I say, no. Polygamy comes squarely against the equality provision of the Charter of Rights, polygamy will infringe upon peoples’ rights and it should not be recognized legally. What people do in their private life is their own business, as long as they don’t demand any government sanctioned benefits for their private arrangement.
Gladly. In a marriage, let us say one man and eight wives (let us stick to the example of one man and many women, since that is the only type that seems to be existing today) are married.
You are basing this off other countries laws on polygamy. The flaw being other countries laws on Monogamy also treat women as cattle with no rights.Then does the law give the man and each woman the same rights? Then the male part of the marriage, has a lot fewer rights than the female part (1/8th, to be precise) and it is not a marriage of equals. On the other hand, if the law gives the male and female parts of the marriage the same rights, each woman has far fewer rights than the man (1/8th) and again it is not a marriage of equals. Either way, there is no equality, and I don’t think there is any way to square the circle.
Let us take an example. Suppose the man marries a ninth wife. Does the law recognize it as a valid marriage even if the consent of the other eight wives has not been obtained? If yes, that means the women have no rights. Or does the law require the written consent of at least four of those wives before the ninth marriage will be recognized?
If yes, then man’s right to marry whomever he chooses (which he enjoys today) is violated.
Today a man (or a woman) has an absolute right to marry anybody he chooses (with a few obvious exception such as he may not marry his mother, his sister etc.), assuming of course that the woman agrees. This important right (the right of association) will be taken away from the man if he has to obtain the consent of four other individuals before he can marry.
Either way, it is going to lead to loss of existing rights on the part of somebody. And I have considered the simplest case here. What about divorce, property settlement, child custody, part homosexual marriages etc.? How does the law handle that without infringing upon somebody’s rights? The mind boggles.
That is why I think Supreme Court will probably rule that polygamy is against the Charter.
In this respect polygamy is totally different from same sex marriage. SSM does not infringe upon anybody’s right, on the contrary, it grants more rights, always a plus from the point of view of the Charter. But polygamy takes rights away from the people involved in it, so I personally think it is a non starter.