Saturday, July 30, 2011

Can I Marry My Cousin, As Long As He is GAY?



You may have seen two maps circling the web  last year.  But they have re-surfaced again as of lately.

Created, it appears, by The New York Times , the maps are a compelling point in the debate over same-sex marriage.

How is it that states that are perfectly comfortable with allowing first cousins to get hitched throw down the gauntlet over the same-sex variety?

It's  crazy!

 in nearly every state in the Union, it’s perfectly okay for children as young as 15 to get married. In New Hampshire, you can be 13; South Carolina, 14, only requiring parental consent.

Not a single state requires that everyone getting married be 18, without exception. In Florida, not only can minors wed, but minors who have been married before don’t need their parents’ permission.

Many of these states, coincidentally, allow people below the minimum age to get married with certain qualifications met, usually getting permission from the court. In other words, the state gets to decide if children barely in their teens get married or not. The usual cause for such a request, of course, is if a teen gets pregnant.





Love Ya Bunches

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