The
Libertarian and Conservative Case for the Abolition of Marriage
Laws
by
Peter S. Rieth
Amidst
the ever louder public debate over the question of "gay marriage"
or civil unions for same-sex couples, one view which seems to have
gained little public exposure is the position in favor of abolishing
all marriage laws everywhere and leaving the issue of marriage to
be regulated by the private market place. I propose to examine this
view in detail, demonstrating along the way how this libertarian
methodology of dealing with the problem of marriage policy would
eventually lead to the realization of the conservative goals of
strengthening family, faith and patriotism.
The
Left and Marriage
American
Liberals and members of the political Left would likely reject this
position because the prime reason why they favor "gay marriage"
or civil unions for same-sex couples is that they believe all people
should have equal access to government regulation of personal and
social life. They would not put it quite this way, but it is essentially
their position. To abolish marriage laws would, in the liberal lefts
view, deprive all people of the "right" to file joint
tax returns, or a number of other "rights" that the state
has imagined for us over the years. All of these imagined "rights"
granted by the state are not, of course, natural rights, but rather
positive rights akin to the New Deals "Four Freedoms"
freedom from fear, want, and so forth and so on invented rights
that, politically, are fit for demagogues in a populist regime and
that are intellectually groundless.
The
political Left would never consider the viewpoint that many "rights"
which they champion for homosexual couples such as visitation
rights might be achieved in a free society via contracts between
consenting adults. Far better, the Left generally believes, to let
"experts" in public administration regulate things for
us we mere plebians are left to simply fill out all the paper
work.
There
is, of course, another reason why the political left favors same-sex
marriage or civil unions, and that is a more insidious reason. Although
they would never agree with the likes of conservatives like Harry
Jaffa on the principle that since the law molds the customs and
habits of citizens, thus the law must itself be molded by moral
customs and habits; the left would concur that the law molds customs
and habits. It is the fervent desire of the social engineers of
the political left to enhance their power and prestige by forming
men into the type of citizens who need the state to control and
command their daily lives. There is, as every good conservative
understands, no faster way to achieve this general dependency of
citizens on the state than to undermine the one private social institution
that we might call a fully functional voluntary polis the family.
I have no doubt, from my observation of both the practice and theory
of the political left over the years, that many of them hate the
family and wish to "liberate" us from this old institution.
The
Right and Marriage
Nietzsche
noted in one or another of his writings that as cultures decline,
so too the number of laws meant to preserve them seem to multiply.
Thus things that at one time did not seem to need legal mandates
are being proposes as new laws by conservatives. There is perhaps
no more direct example of this than the proposals to create a Constitutional
Amendment in the United States that defines marriage as being between
a man and a woman. One almost wants to consider whether, at this
rate, we shall not next be amending the constitution to say that
"a father is understood to be a man" or that "dogs
are not cats." As moral relativism and multiculturalism progress
in or schools and in our culture, the notion that words can be used
to signify things, and that language is a tool for communication
rather than confusion becomes out of date and old fashioned. In
light of this, conservatives often feel that they must rescue common
sense by using the full force of the state apparatus to do so. The
most extreme example of this was William F Buckleys call to tolerate
a totalitarian bureaucracy in the United States as a necessary price
to pay in order to halt communism (predictably, communism is long
halted; the bureaucracy remains and grows). The impulse to use the
state as a means to coerce virtue, or even the recognition of common
sense, is a powerful temptation and is perhaps the a particularly
fatal temptation for conservatives who should know better.
How
Civil Marriage Laws actually operate
Before
getting carried away with the notion that the political question
before us is one of conservative traditionalism versus the liberal
enthusiasm for social engineering and the universality of "social"
justice, let us explore for a moment how contemporary civil marriage
laws actually operate.
It
should be noted from the outset that it is illegal in all states,
and in all member states of the European Union (thus in the West)
to get married in a Church without concurrently being "married"
by the civil authorities. I begin with this observation because
this fact should be alarming for all of us, but seems rather to
be "quite normal" and non-controversial. "Why,"
someone might ask, "would anyone wish to get married without
also having their marriage valid in the eyes of the law?"
This
viewpoint presumes, of course, that the law is there to protect
the marriage that we have consecrated in Church. It is not an uncommon
viewpoint, in fact, to regard the law as generally being there to
protect any number of given rights we have as individuals or to
guarantee the fulfillment of obligations that we have contracted
out to others.
This
viewpoint of the law as beneficial protector of rights is, in fact,
the cornerstone of modern democratic society (whether socialist
democrat, liberal democrat or even Christian democrat). But libertarianism,
and particularly public choice theory as well as the general political
economy of "unintended consequences" teaches us to be
wary of the law as a protector of anything.
This
is something that any man or woman who has gone through a divorce
will surely attest to. In a divorce, the parties to a civil marriage
turn to the law to redress their grievances. Suddenly, in most cases,
they realize that the civil law is not concerned with the just redress
of grievances, but rather only with the application of a law that
is all too often predicated on the notion that far from being
a binding contract to love and care for spouses, marriage was more
like a "lifestyle choice", made for temporary gratification
of whims. Divorce courts rarely end up satisfying both parties.
They compound the damage by usually taking a very long time to come
to a decision, thus prolonging the anguish of the disillusion of
a civil union.
In
short just like a government post office doesnt deliver mail
on time and a government train doesnt run on time so to the lack
of a price mechanism and any real pressure from market forces of
supply and demand leads government courts to fail in the delivery
of their promised goods: justice.
Why,
you might ask, did people not think about this before getting
married? Why not sign a prenuptial agreement or a separate civil
agreement? The standard answer, if ever this question is asked,
is usually that to do so would be unromantic and somehow introduce
some element of doubt into what ought to be a firm and serious desire
to form a lasting union.
Libertarian
political economy leads me, however, to suggest another answer:
whenever the government takes it upon itself to craft fiat laws
of inter-personal conduct and impose them on humans, humans tend
not to think independently about said aspects of interpersonal conduct,
and by force of habit cede their responsibilities to the government
that has in effect taken them away from the individual. In other
words moral hazard functions in the realm of marriage no less
than in the realm of government flood insurance. Since government
promises the redress grievances justly in an eventual divorce case,
and since marriage laws promise a plethora of rights to spouses
and promise the execution of duties from spouses potential spouses
do not think at all about what marriage entails they have been
conditioned to focus on the proverbial ceremony and not on the nature
of the relationship.
Imagine
if business were expected to run this way? Imagine if government
regulated the terms of employment contracts or set the rules of
trade? Isnt it likely that traders and businessmen would become
more and more careless since the issue is out of their hands by
fiat anyways? Isnt this, in fact, what happened on Wall Street
or in the Banking Sector, where government control and regulation
reached such grotesque heights, that all traders were left with
was the option of buying high, and all bankers were left with was
the option of selling credit at low interest rates? Once the government
introduces top down command and control it conditions the market
to act within an unnatural, mandated framework. Why would it be
any different with government command and control of marriage?
Catholicism,
Marriage and Civil Marriage
I
wish to speak here of one specific example, because it is an example
I am familiar with namely the issue of Catholic Marriage and Civil
Marriage laws. I do not mean to suggest here that the Catholic Church
is somehow more deserving of attention than other Churches, institutions
or individuals, but rather alongside what I hope is slowly becoming
a logical argument in favor of the abolition of marriage laws
I would like to demonstrate my argument by way of a practical example.
I
am a practicing Catholic, having been through one year of preparation
for Communion and Confirmation within a Jesuit Order (something
I am very proud of), and have given much thought to the following
conundrum:
Catholics
define marriage as a sacred union of a man and a woman before God.
Because it is sacred, it is also a sacrament, which in the Catholic
religion is perhaps the most intimate relationship imaginable between
a man and God. As such, Catholics naturally believe that marriage
cannot be dissolved. To suggest that it can would be akin to suggesting
that the sun didnt shine yesterday when clearly we saw that it
did.
It
is, however, possible to continue the metaphor that having violated
some precepts of our religion (lets say we gluttonously drank too
much) we found ourselves staring into a Police flashlight, thinking
that this very shiny thing was actually the sun. For anyone who
has ever experienced excessive intoxication, you will understand
this metaphor quite well. In such a case, no matter how convinced
we might be that what we saw was the sun no matter. Witnesses
will testify otherwise, and it will turn out that we did not, in
fact, see the sun but only a bright flashlight dimly thought to
be the sun in our state of mindless intoxication.
In
its wisdom the Catholic Church recognizes that this unfortunate
metaphorical scenario could well be a true event in the case of
marriage. That is to say, Cannon law recognizes that it is possible
that, under certain very specific circumstances, a Catholic Wedding
ceremony in spite of having nominally been performed was actually
never in fact performed. Thus Catholic Cannon allows for the Church
to declare something that once was thought to have been a wedding
null and void as never having actually taken place.
Contrary
to what many people might think, the Catholic Churchs private court
system deals with thousands of such annulment cases on a yearly
basis. In the majority of instances, these cases are brought to
the attention of the Church by a devote Catholic who was betrayed
by their spouce (by "betrayed" I mean in the full sense,
not the narrow sense of sexual betrayal I mean that someone betrayed
their wedding vows and left the other person). The Church must then
determine whether or not this marriage was ever valid in the first
place. In the majority of cases where annulment is granted, it is
on the basis of psychological immaturity of one or more of the parties
participating in the wedding ceremony.
The
Church is very thorough in its investigations. Unlike civil divorce
courts, the Church is interested in truth and justice and not
in the satisfaction of the desires of the participants to the court
case. It does not matter what people "want" all that
matters is what they have done, and what it means.
Those
who do not agree with this system are, of course, free to simply
ignore it. The Catholic Church does not have and does not seek to
have any state sanctioned legal powers of coercion towards anyone.
Yet Catholic Courts function with a power greater than most government
courts precisely because it is the voluntary consent of Catholic
parishioners which fuels them. So many Catholics wish to live virtuous
lives that they insist on clearing up what has developed into a
bad situation rather than remaining outcasts in the eyes of the
Church. The Church has thus set up these private courts to deal
with the matter.
Now
consider this for a moment: an entire system of private courts,
run by a Church, on a purely voluntary basis all dealing with
a problem that the majority of people think cannot be dealt with
except by the government. Naturally, all of this costs less than
what government divorce courts cost as well. The Catholic Church
generally charges the equivalent of the monthly salary of a parishioner
who wishes to have his case heard. Thus, if you make 1,000 USD per
month that is what you pay. I f you make 1,000,000 USD per month
that is what you pay. Hence the wealthy pay more and the poor
pay less, but both pay what is proportionally just in lieu of their
income. In practice of course, this means that the wealthy subsidize
the poor (voluntarily), but the poor do not become corrupted by
this because they must pay a sum which, proportionally for them,
is nevertheless high enough to be felt in their households budgets.
It is, from the point of view of ethics, a wonderful situation that
promotes virtue. Not surprisingly at the core of this system is
the principle of liberty, or faith which is in effect the same
thing, since it is impossible to have true faith except freely.
Now
imagine for a moment if two Catholics wish to be married and protest
against civil marriage under the pretext that the civil marriage
laws violate their religious convictions. What religious convictions,
you ask? The religious conviction that marriage cannot be dissolved.
The majority of civil laws in the world allow for divorce, and the
path towards divorce is ever easier. Why should I, as a Catholic,
be forced to marry someone who might receive legal sanction one
day if they wish to leave me? What if I am not satisfied with the
notion of possibly signing a prenuptial agreement because a long
train of abuses at the hand of government agencies has taught me
not to trust them including not to trust their courts or their
capacity to uphold contracts? What if my would-be spouse feels the
same way?
If
we declared ourselves leaders of a new church lets call it the
"unregistered, informal church of God" we could go off
to the forest, perform our wedding vows, and be done with it. We,
however, being Catholics, have made a free choice to entrust our
marriage to the Catholic Church. What now? Why can we not have a
Catholic wedding without a Civil Ceremony?
This
problem is actually not as abstract as you might think. The Catholic
Church is often forced to break the civil law and grant Catholic
Weddings without civil ceremonies to people who, due to prior civil
divorces, might lose their social security benefits, alimony payments
and other hard one legal compensations. Now you might say that they
should lose them, because if someone remarries, then they
do not "need" them. But this is all predicated on the
states notion of justice, which is to say injustice.
If
a person enters into a contract that stipulates that a) there is
a God, and b) we are vowing before this supreme God to be together
forever then you would think that the breaking of this contract
by one of the parties ought to carry with it a very hefty punishment.
Catholics believe it does but only in the court of the Final Judge.
Here on Earth, civil courts often reward people who turn out to
have been irresponsible husbands or wives who have left their loyal
spouse. The least that the injured party can expect is to collect
compensations and not have to be put in the agonizing situation
of choosing between recovering some of their costs or marrying again.
These
kinds of situations exist, of course, because the civil law considers
marriage a mere "life style choice" one that can be
reversed essentially whenever one party to the wedding wants. If
a Catholic argued in civil court that he or she had been cheated,
that they entered into a life-long contract, the government court
would tell them that the only contract the law recognizes is the
civil marriage contract and that one clearly stipulates that you
can divorce whenever you feel like it. Ergo there is no possibility
for a Catholic to gain justice through government divorce courts.
In fact, the existence of these courts precludes it since Catholics
do not believe in divorce, and the nature of the marriage contract
inherent in the sacrament of Catholic marriage precludes it.
This
is one only one example of how civil marriage laws violate the
individual rights of citizens to practice their religion. It is
also an example of how a voluntary religious order (in this case
the Catholic church) regulates matters pertaining to marriage with
the full consent of parishoners. It is an example which should make
conservatives pause whenever they consider advocating for more government
control over marriage.
A
Libertarian Method towards the Conservative Goal of preserving Family,
Faith and Patriotism
Conservatives
ought to advocate for the abolition of marriage laws for essentially
the same reasons they advocate for the abolition of gun regulation,
business regulation or a number of other command-and-control regulations
and laws. They ought to do this not for the morally relativistic
purpose of "tolerating" whatever individuals want to do,
but for the thoroughly morally objective reason of ensuring the
conditions for virtue in a political community. The condition for
virtue in a political community is, of course, freedom.
Marriages
and families, as well as faith and patriotism, are only true and
good when they are freely chosen. I hope that this is not a controversial
argument. Conservatives often say that it is in the nature of man
to wish to find happiness in the community of his fellows. Nature
has given us a variety of instincts, sexual, psychological, emotional
for the satisfaction of which we require a spouse, children, good
neighbors, a meaningful life of labor, and numerous other activities
which are the traditional realm of republican citizenship. Independent
of whether or not we are more or less optimistic about the nature
of man, I think it is impossible to disagree with the proposition
as it stands above that all that is arguably good and virtuous ceases
to be so if men do it out of fear or through coercion rather than
out of a true faith or rational, free choice.
Marriage
is perhaps the most intimately private and personal of all social
institutions because unlike governments, schools, factories, universities,
corporations and other social bodies marriage is made up of only
two people; and they must have not merely consensus or mutual self-interest
to function they must nurture a true, deep, and ever- lasting
love. (I admit, of course, that "marriage" according
to some, might be defined as short-lived, consisting of three individuals
and a dog, and requiring nothing but whim and if there are people
who wish to define it so for their own purposes; or in whatever
other way they may have the freedom to do it; though I do not
speak of them here because I presume that it is not the goal of
conservative social policy to promote such relationships).
If
there were no laws on the books regarding marriage and ever man
who wished to marry a woman had to either create their own institution
for doing it, redefine marriage to mean something arbitrary or marry
in an established religious institution I submit to you that the
following would happen:
- Those
who created their own institutions in order to marry themselves
would either create new, long lived churches rooted in their deep
love and virtue which would by the power of their example nurture
more such marriages or they would create a short-lived
sham which would give shape to their childish folly and have no
further impact beyond their separation in not too long a time
after. The former situation is a conservative ideal the latter
situation, while deplorable, is a limited harm done to two individuals
by one another and they bear the psychological and emotional
costs of this harm.
- Redefine
marriage in such a way as to make it immaterial to this essay.
- Marry
in established religious orders with their own body of private
church, synagogue or mosque laws governing marriage thereby
making it extremely difficult to actually lead to a situation
wherein people would marry who had no intention of staying married,
or who thought that the civil laws would somehow sanction their
later change of hearts. Would we still have people leaving their
spouses? Yes. Would they be able to benefit financially and otherwise
from this immoral decision on the basis of civil laws which protect
the right to divorce? No. They would, in fact, if ever their vows
turned out to be worthless, lose all credibility in said religious
community which would be strengthened by the loss of such elements
form their midst.
Thus,
by restoring full responsibilities for the regulation of marriage
to individuals and churches, we would restore the grand sense of
overwhelming obligation that a man and woman ought to feel before
what is supposed to be a mighty institution. Surely this serves
the development of strong families, secures faith, and ultimately
leads to the patriotism of a people who love their country because
it gives them the means to be self-governing men and women?
It is not,
you will note, my contention that the abolition of marriage laws
will lead to perfect marriages. Rather, it is to show that private
regulation of marriage is a fact and a tradition (at least in the
Catholic church, and I expect in many others), that this is a matter
that individuals have been dealing with well for ages and that
to take away the powers and responsibilities of the individuals
and their churches for marriage is to mold dependents rather than
independent citizens.
August
3, 2011
Peter
S Rieth [send him mail] is
an American citizen, born in Poland and educated at Hillsdale College,
Michigan.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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