steerpike said:
Cond 51 achieves it's goals by using "time spent together" as a method for determining sincerity. They have fallen for the modern ideal and thrown out the old ideals. There's a million ways to deal with fraudulent applicants, but the specific method they chose is very telling indeed.
It's the easiest possible way to deal with fraudulent relationships. Before this rule came into effect, it took tremendous time, cost and resources to track down all fraud claims after someone got PR, and only a tiny fraction of the fraudsters were actually caught and deported. This is nothing new, as other countries have had this similar rule in place for quite some time now.
Common-law may be harder to fake (debatable) but it can also be much more easily entered into by people who are no where near ready to "get married" and don't even like each other all that much.
It's not even debatable, it's simple fact. To fake a marriage, you can do it in 1 day by simply registering and getting married in a civic ceremony. To fake common-law, you actually need to prove you lived together 1 year first. There's a reason practically every single case of fraud you read about in the news is via marriage, not common-law.
but we have spent several generations drilling it into the heads of young people that marriage means nothing.
That is your own opinion, and you are welcome to it. However neither myself, nor my family, nor my friends, nor it seems most other people on this site... even remotely agree with you. Marriage means a lot, but I also understand that there are other legal ways to show your commitment and be together with someone forever. Luckily CIC is not so narrow minded that they will only accept certain traditional ways to do things, and not adapt as the world changes. So you are welcome to your old-time views but should realize you're in the vast minority on the subject.