Gordon, a week or 3 ago I posted the findings of a number of surveys and studies into homosexual relationships, that pointed to trends that lead to societal damage. As far as I am aware, no-one has yet provided any rewsponse to those.
If it was as recently as that it won't be difficult for you to show us all a link to this alleged post.
I trust that these so-called findings are on firmer ground than the Pink News article to which you linked earlier, which merely provided the results of a survey which found the proportion of gay men who had had open relationships. Somehow you forgot to join the dots between this and the "societal damage" you bore on about, "societal damage" not even being defined yet as far as I've seen.
Not the the same extent, proportionately
You're the one who tries to fob us off with the supposed figure that the gay section of the population is 1-2% (on no firm grounds at all, since multiple surveys give widely, even wildly varying results - homophobes, I've noticed over the years, always like to quote the lowest figures and consistently ignore the higher ones). And yet you would have us believe, apparently in all seriousness, that this 1-2% of the population have more unstable relationships and do more "societal damage" (still undefined and undemonstrated) than the 98-99% of heterosexuals.
This indicates to me that you have utterly taken leave of whatever senses you may have started out with.
Well, the logical extension of your argument is legalising polyamory, removing adultery from the potential grounds for divorce, polygamy and polyandry - yet I never see you supporting these when we have debates about them. Hypocrisy?
I've never seen any debates here about polyamory and all the rest of that list as it's only homosexuality with which you and your kind are obsessed - again, you're going to have to provide a pointer to where these debates have been had here. Not somewhere else in another one of your mythical other places; here on R & E.
In any case this is, as Gordon has pointed out, the slippery slope fallacy, although for the record I personally have no issue with any of those things. A mature, diverse, tolerant society, in the matter of emotional attachments and sexual relationships, treats people as competent consenting adults (in the absence of evidence to the contrary) and leaves them alone to act as such. If equal marriage actually was a slippery slope instead of one of your febrile fantasies, if it leads to such a society (more so than at present I mean) then bring it on.