Yes. There is, to coin a phrase, a lot of it about.
Is that simply a statement, or do you have any evidence for such longitudinal research?
You won't have seen any of it, then.
No, but that's not to say I haven't searched for it. What I have been able to find, seems to be 10 or less years old. That, in terms of child development, isn't longitudinal, though I'd also agree that it isn't merely short-term.
In the meantime, why come over all Helen Lovejoy and bring children into an issue which is about the right of two individuals of the same sex to marry? Marriage and procreation are separate and separable, and always have been.
Shakes, in your usual fashion, you pick up on a response to a different poster (Floo in this case) and then try to make a totally irrelevant critical point to that response. Lest you had missed several other posts that refer to children and their parents, wiggi quotes the US judge 's comment about children in the OP
“That is not to say the right to marry is less meaningful for those who do not or cannot have children,” writes Kennedy, after pointing out the advantages for children of same-sex couples. “An ability, desire, or promise to procreate is not and has not been a prerequisite for a valid marriage in any State.”
In Reply #23, Spud says
"Excluding same-sex couples from marriage thus conflicts with a central premise of the right to marry. Without the recognition, stability, and predictability marriage offers, their children suffer the stigma of knowing their families are somehow lesser. They also suffer the significant material costs of being raised by unmarried parents, relegated through no fault of their own to a more difficult and uncertain family life. The marriage laws at issue here thus harm and humiliate the children of same-sex couples"
The biological parents of the above children will still be unmarried, and so these children will still 'suffer the stigma of knowing their families are somehow lesser'.
- again quoting Kennedy followed by a critique of the quote.
Two posts later, Floo states - in response to Spud:
RUBBISH! Children are often no better off if their parents are married, ever heard of divorce? My 'born again' parents didn't get on for all of their 58 years of marriage, I remember begging them to divorce, but because of their flipping faith they didn't!
a statement that is based on her own experience and generalises from a spoecific case. That is not to say that all children from all heterosexual couples enjoy a perfect childhood, but the research does sem to be that Floo's experience is not the norm.
In the next post, jeremy responds to Spud's post, followed by HB responding to Floo's post.
Reply #28 is Floo's
But as I illustrated it isn't always sweetness and light if parents are married and stay together! It is the quality of the parents relationship with each other and with their children, which is important not whether they are married!
, whilst Reply #29 is my response to that post.
I then picked up on an earlier Floo post (Reply #22) which I hadn't previously noticed, to which you responded with Reply #32. Is there any reason why you didn't refer to 'Helen Lovejoy' earlier in the discussion when children were first mentioned and Floo, for instance, tried to generalise from her specific situation?
Could it be that, so long as children were simply being treated as the pawns/hostages to fortune in this 'game', you were happy to let it slide, but as soon as a serious attempt to argue for their prior rights - be that over those of heterosexual or homosexual people - was put forward, you couldn't stomach it?