Something remarkable happened just the other night and yet, no one seemed to notice. I'm talking about the legislation that has become active in England & Wales which now concedes that the joining of a man with a man, or a woman with a woman in common union is a marriage just like any other marriage. The same looks set to apply in Scotland and next year in Ireland this move will go to a referendum.
I, myself, currently have no same-sex partner in my life to whom I might propose marriage, but what matters is that I now have the right. As of today I now have that entitlement which I did not have before. What's more, I won't need to describe my union as merely a 'civil partnership' and no more will I suffer the indignity of being advised that my civil service could make no reference to my union as being a 'marriage', that I could not call my partner 'my husband', nor the prohibition of the music I might have had played at my service.
'I'm getting married in the morning', 'Daisy, daisy, give me your answer do' and/or 'Marry Me' were among the songs that the law of England & Wales stipulated I could not play since the introduction of the Civil Partnership Act.
I suppose some might suggest that I was being greedy in imagining that we could go from straights-only marriage to straight/same-sex marriage in one fell swoop.
Well, possibly not greedy, but certainly overly-optimistic.
Whatever, we are are there now and a distinction that had no right being in place has been vanished; and guess what? The clock still ticks. The son came up this morning as it always did and my mate Alex drove the 89 out of Plumstead Garriage as usual while my neighbour's kids tripped out to school as they do during term time.
But much more remarkable is that up and down our land there are straight married couples for whom their contract has not been in the least bit altered or debased. Quite simply, nothing has changed with the introduction of this revision of the marriage act. Such couples are no less married than they were and the family model has by no means disintegrated.
Archbishops of Canterbury & Westminster take note and consider that Canute is not your best role-model.
What HAS changed, though, quite massively, is that millions of LGBT folk are now one degree less discriminated against in their daily lives. They are one step closer to true equality with the common society of which they have always been a part and surely that is something that can only be applauded.
I won't be getting married in the morning to the lovely man that sometimes shares my bed anytime soon, but until midnight last night such a notion wasn't even a possibility.
I can only wonder that we had to push so hard against what should have been an open door.
I, myself, currently have no same-sex partner in my life to whom I might propose marriage, but what matters is that I now have the right. As of today I now have that entitlement which I did not have before. What's more, I won't need to describe my union as merely a 'civil partnership' and no more will I suffer the indignity of being advised that my civil service could make no reference to my union as being a 'marriage', that I could not call my partner 'my husband', nor the prohibition of the music I might have had played at my service.
'I'm getting married in the morning', 'Daisy, daisy, give me your answer do' and/or 'Marry Me' were among the songs that the law of England & Wales stipulated I could not play since the introduction of the Civil Partnership Act.
I suppose some might suggest that I was being greedy in imagining that we could go from straights-only marriage to straight/same-sex marriage in one fell swoop.
Well, possibly not greedy, but certainly overly-optimistic.
Whatever, we are are there now and a distinction that had no right being in place has been vanished; and guess what? The clock still ticks. The son came up this morning as it always did and my mate Alex drove the 89 out of Plumstead Garriage as usual while my neighbour's kids tripped out to school as they do during term time.
But much more remarkable is that up and down our land there are straight married couples for whom their contract has not been in the least bit altered or debased. Quite simply, nothing has changed with the introduction of this revision of the marriage act. Such couples are no less married than they were and the family model has by no means disintegrated.
Archbishops of Canterbury & Westminster take note and consider that Canute is not your best role-model.
What HAS changed, though, quite massively, is that millions of LGBT folk are now one degree less discriminated against in their daily lives. They are one step closer to true equality with the common society of which they have always been a part and surely that is something that can only be applauded.
I won't be getting married in the morning to the lovely man that sometimes shares my bed anytime soon, but until midnight last night such a notion wasn't even a possibility.
I can only wonder that we had to push so hard against what should have been an open door.
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