I don't disapprove of marriage. I disapprove of the notion that the government has any legitimate say in it.
This would be fine if it was not, in fact, a legal institution.
...would you clarify what precisely you mean by that? And whether you think it's a "good" thing?
If you're simply acknowledging that marriage is a social custom to which legal consequences have become attached, I agree that this is the case. But I would prefer that it not be the case. What people who engage in the homosexual marriage debate often forget is that that the state "reserves the right" to reject marriage licenses to heterosexual partners too. The problem here, in my mind, has nothing to do with sexuality at all. It's the fact that we as a society seem to accept the notion that the government has
any business at all deciding which relationships are "approved." And for some reason that I don't entirely understand a tremendous value is placed by many people on this approval.
Generally speaking, I think it's unhealthy for two people to believe that they need a third party to approve of what they willingly choose to do with each other.
At face value, I would think that even the people who disagree with me in this thread would agree with that statement. That's kind of your whole point, isn't it? That it's not reasonable for somebody not even involved to decide what two people of their own free will choose to do with each other? Then why do you feel the need to seek government approval of your relationships?
If it's really because of the fact that it's become a "legal institution" and you want the carrot-on-a-stick benefits that have become attached to it...then that would make this is a very different argument than I think some of you think we're having.