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SAME-SEX UNIONS ARE DIFFERENT
Same-sex unions are different from heterosexual
marriages. Don't take it from us, but from the experts on
the topic - a homosexual couple themselves - a psychiatrist,
Dr. David McWhirter, and a psychologist, Dr. Andrew Mattison,
who had been cohabiting together for a twelve-year period
at the time they studied 156 other homosexual couples. Their
findings were described in their book, The Male Couple, published
by Prentice-Hall in 1984.
Although the book was published some time
ago, there is no reason to believe that the conclusions reached
would be different today, especially since we now live in
an even more permissive society than when the study was conducted.
Moreover, no one can claim that their study is biased, as
it is written by homosexuals for the benefit of homosexual
couples. Their findings are both fascinating and revealing.
The study reveals, first of all, that since
homosexual couples lack models for their relationships, other
than the traditional heterosexual one, they are required to
establish different ways to maintain their relationship. In
effect, the values and practices that are the cornerstone
of heterosexual relationships are generally absent from male
unions. According to the authors, some of the qualities identified
with stability and intimacy between opposite-sex partners
are actually detrimental to homosexual couples.
Male relationships the study finds, acquire
unique features that distinguish them from heterosexual couples,
and, apparently, lead to a quite different social script,
These differences include the following:
Sexual Infidelity
One of the most explicit differences between
opposite-sex and same-sex couples is that heterosexual couples
enter their relationship both expecting and generally remaining
sexually faithful to one other. However, few homosexual couples
remain sexually monogamous throughout their relationship.
According to the study, ninety-five percent of the couples
studied had an arrangement whereby the partners had sexual
activity with others outside their union. Only seven couples
had totally exclusive relationships, and these had been together
for fewer than five years. Simply stated, all homosexual
couples in the study with a relationship lasting more than
five years, had incorporated some provision for outside sexual
activity in their relationship.
The findings also described that outside sexual
encounters to male couples were regarded as stimulating and
thought to improve relationships by broadening and varying
their sexual repertoire. Understandably, jealousy can result
from these outside sexual encounters. To avoid jealousy, some
of the male couples studied engaged in three-way sexual activity
with a friend or outsider, which then rendered the outside
sexual encounter a "shared event" between the partners.
That is, many homosexual couples maintained their sex life
together by introducing other sexual partners and experimenting
with new sexual opportunities. According to the authors, "fidelity"
to male couples means an emotional commitment, but not sexual
exclusivity.
The authors concluded that, far from undermining
the relationship, the outside, sexual contacts contributed
to the stability and longevity of their relationship.
The authors stated:
As a result of this study, we believe
that the single most important factor that keeps couples
together past the ten-year mark is the lack of possessiveness
they feel.
In short, homosexual couples regard sex as
recreational without emotional content. The partners regard
their mutual freedom to express their sexuality with others
as one of the most important factors in maintaining their
bond.
Financial Management Between Male Partners
Another difference between heterosexual and
homosexual couples is that "equality" between two
men is very different from that of opposite-sex partners.
Due to biology, tradition or practicality,
in most heterosexual relationships, the woman is usually dependent
upon the man for financial support of the family since he
often has the greater earning power. While modern feminism
has demanded changes to this arrangement in the heterosexual
partnership, only a small percentage of male-female couples
have succeeded in establishing a substantially different pattern
- especially when children are born to that union. Lacking
a difference in gender, however, the expectation in same-sex
unions is that each partner will take care of himself financially.
That is, male partners in a relationship remain as single
financial entities. Male couples retain this financially separate
independence indefinitely, unless they are able to establish
that rarity in same-sex unions, a relationship that lasts
twenty or more years. Only at that time does there appear
to be any attempt to share finances.
In summary, the money in male unions is managed
differently in that it does not go into a joint financial
arrangement as it does in traditional heterosexual unions.
Instead, each partner puts in 50%, regardless of his income.
Male couples apparently do not believe that they are "in
this together", as do heterosexual couples, but remain
independent of each other both financially and sexually.
Skills Compatibility
Since there are no set "husband and wife"
roles, each man usually can perform all necessary tasks at
some level of competence. As a result, one of the male partners
must develop what the authors describe as a "planned
incompetence" so as to unlearn his level of competence
in order to show appreciation for his partner, and to satisfy
the other partner's wishes and/or needs.
Finding "compatibility" in skills
with each other which does not arise naturally as it does
between different sexes, is frequently one of a male couple's
greatest challenges. According to this study this achievement
is one of the most important factors in keeping them together
as a couple.
Duration of Same-Sex Unions
The median for the length of time same-sex
relationships were maintained in this study was 5.0 years.
However, according to the authors, other researchers have
found that male relationships commonly end at the end of the
third year.
Male couples who have remained together the
longest and who report the most satisfaction, usually have
a wide disparity in ages. The authors believe that "gay
men's homing fantasies and longings for liaisons with their
fathers may prove accurate for some male couples." Moreover,
the authors found that another characteristic of the homosexual
partners was that they had experienced little or no male bonding
during their formative years. This all suggests that a homosexual's
attraction to other men is based on psychological needs, not
met as a child from his father and other male influences,
rather than genetically based, as claimed by homosexual activists.
Male Couples' Use of Drugs
Drug and alcohol use are an integral part
of a same-sex union lifestyle. According to the authors, the
majority of the male couples and individuals use drugs as
a regular part of both their social and sexual lives. That
is, extensive use and availability of drugs at the majority
of social gatherings are a part of the homosexual sub-culture.
According to these authors the widespread availability and
use of drugs among homosexual men is due mainly to the to
the fact that the use of drugs has the reputation of increased
sexual enjoyment. The authors state:
The use of the nitrites, both amyl and butyl,
has become common over the past decade. The ready availability
of butyl nitrite as a legal, over-the-counter 'incense' or
'room deodorizer' has greatly increased its usage.
some of the younger participants have tried other drugs, such
as methaqualone (Quaaludes or ludes), which has the reputation
of being a potent aphrodisiac. Among all drugs, alcohol is
far and away the most commonly used substance.
Same Sex-Unions are Consensual Sexual Liaisons
Only
Homosexual activists claim that their relationships
are marginalized in society because they are not recognized
in legal marriages. They also fiercely argue that their relationships
are very similar to heterosexual relationships. This is not
the case.
Homosexual activists want to make marriage
"user-friendly", tailored to the needs and wants
of the self-interested adults, whether heterosexual or homosexual.
Their cultural message is clear: marriage must have no essential
relationship to long-term heterosexual bondings and children,
but must be reduced to a cluster of perks and benefits for
adults who happen to be in a consensual sexual liaison.
In a genuine marriage, however, there is set
in motion a deep and permanent sexual and emotional bond between
one man and one woman which is a life-long, complex, intimate,
cohabitational, day-to-day, bonding of two sex-opposite lives.
It is tailored to the complex challenges and struggles of
long-term heterosexual bonding and the rearing of biological
offspring. The heterosexual act in a marriage generates procreation,
which weaves men, women and offspring into complex genealogical
histories and kinship, forming bridges, from past, present
and future generations.
Conclusion
Homosexual activists claim that their relationships
operate from the same dynamics and meet similar needs as heterosexual
unions and, therefore, should be treated the same in law.
This study of 156 homosexual couples published in the book
The Male Couple shows clearly that this is not the case. Not
only are these homosexual unions, due to their biological
limitations, unable to provide the important contribution
to the continuation of our society by producing children,
their relationships are essentially different in structure,
values, practices, and longevity. Such relationships lack
the cornerstone of heterosexual unions and should not be regarded
as "marriages" in law.
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