Reflections on Ethics
About this web siteWrite to us, pro or con.Links, Graphics & ChatEssays & ArticlesMembership & OrdinationAbout our churchMain Table of ContentsHome
1 - 20
21 - 40
61-80
81 & up

Reflections on Ethics 56
Slippery slope family values

A discussion has been opened on this article. To add your comments to the debate, please use the contact page.

Bishop Fred Henry of the Catholic Diocese of Calgary has a regular column in the Calgary Sunday Sun which I like to read because on occasion he provides me with inspiration to write. The man tends to be outspoken and controversial.

Today, he opened with describing a traditional Hindu wedding in India attended by 2000 guests, the bride an adult woman, and the groom, a cobra.

Having given that pretty picture, he went on to his message on... no, not on the mortal sin of sex with barnyard animals, but on same sex-marriage. The wedding between the woman and the snake received no further mention in his column.

What did Bishop Harvey have to say about same-sex marriage?

To summarize his argument (which is nothing more than so-called family values):

  1. [Marriage] "is a framework that... is designed for the care and harmonious development of the child."
  2. A report presented to the parliament of France "accepted the fundamental principles of the law of filiation, which are based on the tripartite unit of a 'father, a mother and a child' citing the principle of caution."
  3. Therefore the Government of Canada should reverse its approval of same-sex marriage.

As a logical argument, it just does not hold together; questionable assumptions which do not lead the the conclusion.

But what about the woman marrying the cobra? Why did he open with that?

It's just a sleight-of-hand trick to suggest without explicitly stating the old slippery slope argument. Allow same-sex marriages, and next thing you know people will be demanding to marry their pet goats, or pigs, or sheep. Or even a cobra.

The trouble with this is that marriage to animals has been a Hindu tradition for thousands of years.[1] And yet same-sex marriage between humans is still not permitted in India. And most likely, a human marrying a snake of the same sex would be officially frowned upon.

Slippery slope or family values - neither argument is more than smoke and mirrors to get in the way of people's legitimate happiness.

Reflection 55

Discussion

 Reflection 57

  1. This possibly exaggerated claim has been challenged.
25 June 2006

HOME | CONTENTS | THE CHURCH | JOIN US | ESSAYS | LINKS | CONTACT US | SITE INFO