Get ready: Polygamy is the new “gay” movement – and
talk-radio giant Rush Limbaugh warns the June 26 legalization of same-sex
marriage by the U.S. Supreme Court makes spouse collecting in America
“inevitable.”
“Look, folks, you can think all you want, but there’s no
legal basis to stop it now,” Limbaugh told his listeners on Monday’s
show. “There is no intellectually honest way to distinguish the reasoning
on gay marriage from applying the same reasoning to supporting polygamy.”
Limbaugh explained the case for same-sex marriage was “all
rooted in self-esteem and dignity and not being denied things that make you
happy.”
The Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, he
said, doesn’t assume marriage is a union of only two people. In fact, it didn’t
set any boundaries at all.
“That limit is not specifically there,” Limbaugh explained. “They’ve
rewritten what marriage is now, is the point here, folks. Marriage was
what it was as ordained from the ancient biblical texts.”
He then read passages from Genesis 2:23-24 and Matthew
16:4-6, which reaffirm the biblical definition of marriage.
“But it’s been rewritten now, and it’s been written not
under any sort of constitutional purview but rather some people out there that
were denied something and it’s not right,” he said. “A lot of people had
something and those people didn’t and then those people want it, so we think
they should have it. Their self-esteem and their dignity is tied up into
it.”
And if a man comes along and declares, “I want two wives”?
“The ruling in this case does not give anybody the right to tell ‘em ‘no,’
Limbaugh explained. “Marriage had a specific definition. Words mean
things. And now it’s become something entirely different by virtue of the
Supreme Court. You wait. There will be attempts to expand on this in ways
that you can’t even conjure.”
Polygamy in America
Don’t think a move to legalize polygamy could happen in
America?
WND has reported that, while spouse
collecting is still illegal in the United States, polygamy
is apparently thriving – and not where most Americans might expect.
The mainstream
media tend to focus on polygamists who belong to the Fundamentalist Church of
the Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in
Utah, Arizona, Texas and Colorado.
Polygamy made national headlines in
two high-profile cases in recent years: In 2007, FLDS leader Warren Jeffs was
convicted of sex crimes charges. (Jeffs is estimated to have more
than 50 wives and is reportedly
issuing edicts from his prison cell.)
And in 2008, authorities raided a Texas FLDS compound called the YFZ Ranch, and
found six men guilty of child sexual assault.
But Muslim men in America are marrying multiple wives as
well. A 2008
NPR report estimated between 50,000 and
100,000 Muslims in the U.S. live in polygamous families.
WND’s 2012 search of a popular Muslim “singles” dating site
revealed more than 1,000 results for married Muslim men – located in the United
States – who were openly seeking additional wives.
For the parameters of WND’s search, only married Muslim men
who lived in the U.S. and were interested in taking another wife were selected.
The search returned more than 1,000 results – so many, the
site recommending refining criteria because there were too many matches.
WND found active profiles for
married Muslim men seeking additional wives in every U.S. state (and
Washington, D.C.) – except Alaska.
Most of the men were in New York, New Jersey, California,
Virginia, Texas, Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Maryland. The trend can be
seen in other countries as well. Canada’s decision to legalize homosexual
marriage in 2005 became the basis for polygamists’ arguments for having
multiple spouses.
In 2009, the Associated
Press reported, “Canada’s decision to legalize gay
marriage has paved the way for polygamy to be legal as well, a defense lawyer …
as the two leaders of rival polygamous communities made their first court
appearance.”
“If (homosexuals) can marry, what is the reason that public
policy says one person can’t marry more than one person?” argued Blair
Suffredine, a lawyer representing a man who was charged with marrying 20 women.
In the U.S., with the expansion of
the legal definition of marriage to include homosexuals, now other groups are
advocating for polygamy. After New York legalized homosexual marriage in 2011, Moein Khawaja, executive director of the Philadelphia branch
of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, tweeted: “Easy to support gay marriage today bc it’s
mainstream. Lets see same people go to bat for polygamy, its the same argument.
*crickets*”
In
a 2011 survey conducted by The Muslim Link,
42 percent of the Muslims surveyed said “they were either in or knew others in,
polygamous marriages within the local Muslim community,”
According to the report, “Thirty nine percent said they would
engage in a polygamous marriage if it were legal in the United States. … Nearly
70 percent said they believe that the U.S. should legalize polygamy now that it
is beginning to legalize gay marriage.”
In
March 2012, a WND/Wenzel Poll,
conducted exclusively for WND by the public-opinion research and media
consulting company Wenzel
Strategies, indicated there is a surprisingly
high level of support for polygamous marriage developing across the U.S. A full
22 percent of the respondents said there is no legal justification for denying
polygamy, based on the fact that legislation and judicial decisions have
affirmed the validity of same-sex “marriage” for homosexuals. Another 18.7
percent were uncertain. Further, 18 percent of the respondents said there was
no moral justification for denying polygamy, and 14.5 percent were uncertain.
The scientific telephone survey had a margin of error of 3.72 percentage
points. While only 6.1 percent said polygamy is a “preferred” lifestyle,
another 15.9 percent said it is an “equally valid lifestyle.” Across America,
that would mean tens of millions accept the idea.
What else is next?
Limbaugh noted that “a lot of liberalism” is “rooted in the
misery and unhappiness of being in a minority.”
“Along with that unhappiness is a resentment of the
majority, a resentment or an envy of the majority,” he said. “So the motivating
mechanism here is to be what the majority is, to have what the majority has,
simply because it’s not fair that some people have it and some people don’t.”
The homosexual movement reduced marriage to it “to a thing
or a benefit that some people get and some people don’t.”
“And that isn’t fair, and it’s not democratic,” Limbaugh
said. “They … think that getting what the majority has is gonna make ‘em happy,
and they’re gonna find out that it doesn’t.”
All of their efforts and triumphs will never be enough, he
explained, because there’s a fundamental misunderstanding of why there’s misery
in the first place.
“The unhappiness born
of envy and resentment is never, ever mollified,” he explained. “That’s why all
of the great philosophers have warned people, ‘Do not act on vengeance, do not
act on envy, ’cause you’re not gonna like what you get. It’s not gonna
give you the happiness you thought.’”
In fact, as Limbaugh noted, Chief Justice John Roberts
mentioned the “inevitability” of polygamy in his dissent:
“Although the majority randomly inserts the adjective ‘two’
in various places, it offers no reason at all why the two-person element of the
core definition of marriage may be preserved while the man-woman element may
not. Indeed, from the standpoint of history and tradition, a leap from
opposite-sex marriage to same-sex marriage is much greater than one from a
two-person union to plural unions, which have deep roots in some cultures
around the world. If the majority is willing to take the big leap, it is hard
to see how it can say no to the shorter one. It is striking how much of the
majority’s reasoning would apply with equal force to the claim of a fundamental
right to plural marriage.”
And, as
WND reported in April, Justice Samuel Alito asked during
oral arguments why four lawyers wouldn’t be allowed to marry if people of the
same sex may do so.
Limbaugh also noted that in the 2003 Supreme Court case
Lawrence v. Texas, Justice Antonin Scalia correctly predicted that the Supreme
Court would soon hear a case on the constitutionality of same-sex marriage.
Just as Scalia warned same-sex marriage was coming as a result of overturning
Texas’ anti-sodomy law, Limbaugh said, Roberts is now warning that polygamy is
right around the corner.
“Folks, you’ve gotta understand
here: Supreme Court decisions create a lot of things. Precedents, new rules,”
he said. “Now, animals? The one thing about animals is that even though a
woman in the U.K. did marry her dog,
animals cannot give consent, so that’s not a legitimate thing. An animal
can’t consent to a marriage to its master. … I’m thinking that the line
would be drawn there.”
But then Limbaugh questioned even that assumption:
“Actually, who the hell knows anymore?”
http://www.wnd.com/2015/06/1-wife-is-not-enough-polygamy-now-inevitable/
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