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[Marxism] Marriage, yes; benefits, no: the marriage oppression




This item ought, in my view, to give pause to the supporters of same-sex marriage, including the kneejerk self-described Marxists on this list. The options (e.g., domestic partnerships...) that have been crafted get flushed down the toilet when marriage is installed. Case in point: In Massachusetts people have been told by large employers to either get married or lose benefits for their domestic partners. But this is all of a piece with the larger gay fantasy of “marriage equality” – which may sound good but produces more of the same old status quo. In New Jersey after a state domestic partner law had been on the books for a year, the leader of the Garden State Equality group trashed the law as unworkable despite enabling gays and straights to get kinship recognition and said, “Nothing less than marriage will do.” (The NJ law applies to same-sexers 18 yrs and older, different-sexers 65 yrs and up – seniors want kinship but do not want to mess up their pensions and other matters.) That one size does not fit all is a lesson lost on such “leaders.” These days not only are many people waiting to get a ball and chain (“marriage”) but some use private contracts (prenuptial agreements) to lighten the burden. It is time to get marriage off the law books and in the churches where it belongs; we need a variety of kinship options along with social justice – single payer health care for all!
I would like to point out also that for all our lives, gays have been confronted with the question, "Why aren't you married?" or "When are you going to get married?" Now, with the clamor for gay marriage (unfortunately abetted enthusiastically by many leftists, both gay and straight), we are being asked the same question (coming from the opposite angle): "Why aren't you married?" Many straight people probably can't appreciate the oppression involved in this question. But then, they should stop trying to force the marriage chain on all same-sexers.
David
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http://www.rep-am.com/News/382600.txt

Marriage, yes; benefits, no.

Ruling to cost state workers' same-sex partners health coverage

BY PAUL HUGHES REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN

HARTFORD — Same-sex partners of state employees are losing pension and health benefits because gay marriage is now legal in Connecticut.

An arbitration award that established the benefits eight years ago was conditioned upon same-sex marriage remaining illegal here.

The state Supreme Court's recent recognition of same-sex marriage means the state government no longer must provide this coverage to same-sex partners and their dependent children.

State Comptroller Nancy Wyman notified the heads of all state agencies on Friday that the benefits will cease Nov. 30, 2009, unless the partners marry or enter into a civil union.

Under federal law, unmarried partners and dependent children may continue coverage at the group rate for 18 months, and possibly longer under certain conditions.

There was no immediate reaction from Love Makes A Family, a gay rights group that led the efforts to legalize same-sex marriages through the state courts and the legislature. Executive Director Anne Stanback didn't return telephone calls seeking comment on Friday.

Today, there are more than 50,000 state employees and upwards of 40,000 retirees. It was unclear Friday how many same-sex partners and children stand to lose pension and health benefits.

This year, Gov. M. Jodi Rell and the legislature budgeted $504.4 million for health insurance for state workers and another $500 million for retirees.

Public employee unions fought for several years to win coverage for same-sex partners and their dependent children in the health and pension plans.

A coalition of unions representing most state employees and the admini- stration of Gov. John G. Rowland negotiated an unusual 20-year deal on pension and health benefits in 1997.

The unions and the administration couldn't agree on coverage for same-sex partners and their dependent children. It was a potential deal-breaker. The two sides agreed to revisit the issue in 1999 to salvage the 20-year agreement.

The negotiations in 1999 didn't produce any agreement. The issue then went to binding arbitration. In arbitration, the unions and Rowland administration each adopted the same positions they took in the failed negotiations.

The unions prevailed in arbitration in early 2000, but the arbitrator added a hitch. If same-sex marriage became legal in Connecticut, the health and pension benefits would cease within one year.

On Oct. 10, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that gay and lesbian couples have the right to marry under the state constitution. The landmark ruling took effect Nov. 12.

Wyman advised state agencies that the state government stopped recognizing new domestic partner- ships for benefit purposes effective Nov. 13.

She told department heads that health and pension benefits for same-sex partners and dependent children will cease effective Nov. 30, 2009, unless the partners marry or enter into a civil union.

Visit www.rep-am.com <http://www.rep-am.com> to comment on this story.

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