canuck_in_uk said:
What I said was that to me, marriage is a piece of paper. Those other connections mean more to me than marriage. For you, they are simply financial arrangements; for me, they are the combining of our lives.
Obviously marriage is more than a "piece of paper", and yet you and others continue to throw that phrase around. It's insulting, especially from people who's only concern is money.
canuck_in_uk said:
We have no contract for our pet, so I'm a bit confused by what you mean there.
Oh? Maybe it was someone else who mentioned they have shared ownership of their pet? Whoever it was, i find that really amusing. That the pet warrants a contract but not the spouse.
canuck_in_uk said:
Again, it's only your personal belief that "it's sad to see" what traditions are evolving into. Many of us have no issues with this evolution and actually welcome the changes that fit better with our chosen life.
I was specifically referring to the fact that society is becoming focused on the material. And with marriage being disparaged as "just a piece of paper" (which is a very common phrase that is thrown around all the time, not just by you.)
canuck_in_uk said:
It's not that we refuse to have a contract outlining our relationship. You need to understand that WE DON'T SEE THE NEED TO HAVE CONTRACT DEFINE OUR RELATIONSHIP.
Right. You only need them for financial matters because money is the only real concern in life.
canuck_in_uk said:
The definition of common-law was not created because unmarried couples were splitting up. It was created because they were staying together and
That's a very clever way to rephrase things. You should work in politics.
canuck_in_uk said:
wanted the same rights as married people: to share benefits such as medical/dental, life insurance, to have legal rights to their common property if one partner happened to die, to file taxes together,
Those are good points, but they seem like largely financial concerns.
canuck_in_uk said:
to deal with the legal responsibilities for their children together etc.
Irrelevant because people can have children together and not be common-law. The courts still divide up responsibilities for the children.
canuck_in_uk said:
CIC hasn't in any way "moved the meaning...beyond the purpose intended by the courts." The courts recognize a common-law relationship as essentially equal to a married relationship, as does CIC.
I disagree, i think the courts have only recognised that it is a similar relationship from a financial management perspective. Although CIC does require you be exclusive sexually with your common-law partner, i don't think that's part of the general definition.
canuck_in_uk said:
Really, this is simply a matter of our differing beliefs and views on the world. Luckily, we live in a free country where we are all entitled to our own beliefs and no one person is right or wrong. I respect your belief that marriage is important and fully support you in your choice to be married.
And I am also free to express my opinion on the subject. I don't really see why you are taking it all so personally. And I think you also need to realize that society
creates beliefs in people as well. Children growing up in a society where they hear that marriage is meaningless and just a piece of paper (which it certainly is not, marriage has existed before there even was paper), but "make sure you have shared ownership of your pets!" are going to internalize that kind of thinking.
canuck_in_uk said:
However, I expect that you will fully support my choice of a common-law relationship, even if you don't agree with it.
I don't agree it should be allowed as a qualification for sponsorship. That's not an attack on you or your freedoms. We have just have different perspectives.
A couple that gets married very quickly will raise "red flags" with CIC, but a couple that can't even be bothered to get married, in the case of common-law, doesn't. The law as it is, while its good for you, because it protects and enshrines your "way of life" , with the other hand it is
denouncing the traditional way of life. Common advice on this forum is to "live together for a year" before applying, even for couples that are planning to get married! If you don't you may get "red flagged".
If you think all these rights and privileges were granted to you and no harm was done to people with traditional values, you are wrong. Society is changing, and when society changes it forces everyone to change with it. It doesn't feel like freedom to me when i am pressured to change.