Boston Marriage.

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    • Abstract:
      The author comments on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision in favor of gay marriage. "This is it--the big breakthrough" said one veteran of the gay marriage movement, adding that the work has just begun. But before gays and lesbians could uncork the champagne (or, just as likely, argue among themselves over the rightful place of marriage in movement strategy) they were hit with a cascade of hysterical pronouncements, from the Family Research Council's declaration that "a tyrannical, judiciary" is "redefining marriage to the point of extinction," to George W. Bush's pledge "to defend the sanctity of marriage." Will the Christian mission to manufacture an anti-gay marriage backlash work? But if progressives cast the issue in terms of fairness and equal protection, they might be able to pre-empt the backlash. That's what the leading Democratic presidential contenders have tried to do, without using the m-word, aware that the public still prefers civil unions to gay marriage. While we celebrate the Massachusetts decision, it's worth recalling that the countries that have recognized same-sex marriage--Belgium, Canada and the Netherlands--are social democracies where access to healthcare and other social benefits is not contingent on marriage. Gay marriage passed in those countries without all-out cultural war in part because there was less at stake. The United States would do well to emulate them in more ways than one.