Question:
when gay people ask for equal rights, what rights do they think are presently unequal ?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
when gay people ask for equal rights, what rights do they think are presently unequal ?
22 answers:
anonymous
2006-10-30 04:57:22 UTC
You are wrong as far as the estates go...a woman can claim an estate as a common law partner....the family of the man can't touch it...

also with being critically ill..not only could my partner not make decisions for me he well may not be allowed into the hospital to see me as he is not considered a close relative.

These are all things that have happened to me.

Also our taxes are not fair..our income taxes paid are inapporpriate...people often will not rent to same sex couples..yes I know it can be disputed (but why should I have to go through that every time)....all kinds of other things...to many to mention right now....but I'm Canadian and now married so a lot (if not all) have been solved for me.
anonymous
2006-10-30 05:37:19 UTC
theres only one right i want in order to feel equal, that's the right to live my life as i want without having to suffer the prejudices of homophobes, biggots & bible bashers
Powerpuffgeezer
2006-10-30 04:57:39 UTC
Try having friendly people deaf you out after finding out you were Gay. Or a member of your own family too scared to let you hold their new born baby boy, cause they are paranoid. Walk passed any playground in Britain and you hear F AG this Puff That he's a queer. Or the family of your dead partner comes to your house and empties it of stuff you bought together, and you are too grief stricken or polite to fight them. I'm not even bothering with the token gesture of same sex registration as it is hollow, we still have no legal right to our partners property.
Shossi
2006-10-30 05:02:42 UTC
One big right they need is health insurance coverage--------so each does not have to pay his own. A wife/husband can have his spouse on his/her health insurance policy. Most times, this is not true for same sex partners.



A same sex couple must be very careful and have everything down on paper, and a lawyer should be used. A will is a must, as well as all other legal needs.



I am not really for same sex marriage, but I think a same sex legal union should give the same benefits as a marriage does.
anonymous
2006-10-30 04:58:22 UTC
Yes they are. The Girl friend becomes common law wife. This is how Lee Marvin was sued for Palimony. After living together such as the case with Goldie Hawn and Curt Russell the two have what is called a common law marriage. Gays do not have this occur because gay marriage is not legalized in most states. The wishes of the family in medical circumstances are all that is looked at in a gay relationship. The gay partner may not be let in to see the his or her partner. In common law they may not be treated like this. They still will have to do some legal work and it will be a hassle if they are common law married but they will win. A gay couple has no rights. Even the partnership laws are void of the same rights. Remember this has already been decided in Brown-VS the Board of education. Separate is not equal.
geminilovingacancer
2006-10-30 06:43:34 UTC
I went to a rally on the weekend and heard a story of a lesbian couple who had been together for over 20 years, they had just come back from a holiday, it was late, one of them decided to take a shower before heading to bed, while in the shower she had and an aneurysm and fell, her partner ran into her saw her lying there and rang for an ambulance. Lucky the ambulance officer was a lesbian too otherwise she would not have been allowed to go with her partner to the hospital. When she got to the hospital she was told she could not go into the room with her. They both had legal papers made up and spent thousands of dollars on doing so, so if something was to happen to either one of them they would have some legal rights and say over what happens to them while in hospital. Well...she was taken to an office where she made a phone call to a friend to have these legal documents faxed through to her which would give her the right to be there with her partner, but before all of the papers came through her partner died.

I have only been with my partner for close on 2 years, and we are totally committed to each other as any other couple would be, maybe more as 2 women together, we are more emotionally in touch with each others feelings. If anything was to happen to her i know she would want me with her as i would want her with me.

If anything happened to you wouldnt you want your partner, a person you love and cherish with all your heart, spend most of your time with, tell your most intimate thoughts to, with you...and you wouldnt have to wait for papers to come through, you already have the right.
katsdrama
2006-10-30 05:07:03 UTC
I think that perhaps what your friend may be speaking of has more to do with the legal rights brought to spouses and partners through marriage or common law marriage.



A gay couple does not have the same rights as a hetrosexual couple, primarily because they can not enjoy the benefits of marriage. Along with marriage, comes dual benefits such as survivor rights, health insurance, parental rights etc.



In many states, couples that are not married but have lived together for a particular time frame (varies based on state) have some benefits based on common law marriage. However, the states define couple as man and woman. Thus, a committed homosexual couple who may have lived together for 30 years generally gets no palimony rights.



I am not an expert in this area, this is all based on opinion I have formed through conversations with same-sex couples that I know.
DEATH
2006-10-30 06:57:09 UTC
Here in the US, it's mainly MARRIAGE rights, which you in the UK already have.

So, in regards to a man living with a partner but dies without a will, in LEGAL MARRIAGES the estate goes to the partner and children (if there are any), not the first man's brothers and/or sisters.

Actually there are roughly 1,400 rights, protections and benefits which legally married couples get that are denied to same sex partners because our federal government does not recognize same sex marriages.

It's these rights along with several other non-marriage rights we are still fighting for.

Here in the US not all states protect GLBT Employees from being fired from their job for being GLBT or even PERCIEVED as such!

Many states still do not allow second parent adoption or even gay adoption.

Several hospitals do not allow partners of gays and lesbians to remain at the bedside of their partners because they're not legally married and therefore not recognized as "next of kin."

(Granted, this is true with unmarried straight partners as well, but the straight partners have the OPTION to be legally married, whereas the gay/lesbian partners do not)

Many states recognize "Common Law" marriages, where as a couple is together for a number of years, usually around seven, and accourding to their state, they are recognized as "married" where as gay/lesbian couples are NOT recognized in this "common law" arrangement.
gvih2g2
2006-10-30 04:54:21 UTC
It is my understanding that you are correct - the new civil partnerships give homosexual couples all the rights a married couple would enjoy; and unmarried heterosexual couples don't have half the rights they think they have.



Please note that this applies to UK law - which I believe is what the original question was founded in.
anonymous
2006-10-30 05:01:35 UTC
No, his "next of kin" receives his assets after death. A legal SPOUSE is next of kin. No need for a will. A gay couple, on the other hand, has to jump through numerous legal hoops just to make sure their property is transfered to one another in the event of one of their deaths and even THEN, families contest the legal wills and often WIN.



Also yes, it's true, even with proper documentation, families often dispute gay partner's legal right to medical proxy. There is a LOT of discrimination that the courts let fall through the cracks.



Yes, there IS inequality. Even in Mass. where gay marraige is legal, they STILL don't get all the legal benefits. They aren't entitled to file jointly on federal taxes. There's more but... you can look it up for yourself.
Angry Gay Man
2006-10-30 10:48:10 UTC
I do not know the exact ins and outs of civil rights for gay people in the UK.



But I do know they are not able to be married. Yes, civil unions provide most of the legal rights that heterosexuals have. But it's called a civil union, not marriage. In other words, not the same as marriage. Marriages are life long, or that is the vow taken. Civil unions are not.



These are the sorts of things that are designed to appease the bigots, of which there are many or it wouldn't be necessary.



From your question, the issue is to be treated fairly and equally in every regard. Aside from the legal aspects, can you truthfully say that gay couples are treated fairly and equally in every way, when compared to married couples?



The civil union legislation wasn't even passed in the UK until 2004. And don't for one minute think that heterosexuals woke up one morning and decided that it was time to treat gay people fairly. Passing this law is the result of years of struggle by lesbians and gay men.



A bill that absolutley bans employment discrimination and firing of gay people was passed. In 2003.



Why do you think it only happened so recently? There have always been gay people. Always.



The reason is that there is still an awful lot of bigotry against gay people. It has an ancient history. It's not as if the people who opposed equal treatement for gay people all of a sudden died when the legislation passed. And of course those attitudes are passed on to children.



Also, I do know that gay people in the UK are targeted for violence just as they are in other countries. Because I've read of too many cases of it happening. A lot of the times, it seems like there's a big stink about it, but then the criminals are given very lenient sentences.



What if you leave the UK, is a gay civil union recognized under international law so that gay couples will be treated fairly?



Remember, in the vast majority of countries throughout the world, gay people live in fear.



How about gay couples doing something really basic like linking arms and walking down a public street. Isn't it really not the best idea to do it in many areas, probably even the majority of areas once you get outside of very liberal enclaves in major cities? I'm sure some couples do it, but if it's anything like the England I recall from prior visits, it's unusual.



Some of these things are really societal attitudes regarding gay people. But if the best a country can do is create a second class civil union for gay people, and they cannot even bring themselves to call it marriage, that sends a clear signal.



Yes, the UK is much better than most countries around the globe. I understand. But gay couples are not really viewed the same. The laws passed are a very good start, though. And people are grateful that it's beginning to change.



But it's important to tell the truth about this issue, and to do that you've got to look at the full picture. Not just two acts of legislation, both of which have been passed only within the past three years.
Atropis
2006-10-31 02:05:32 UTC
Some areas DO have common law marriages and such that would equate living with someone for 30 years to gaining SOME rights. More importantly, these are all rights covered by marriage that we are unable to choose. If a man lives with a woman for 30 years and dies unmarried, it is because they made a conscious CHOICE not to get married. If two men want to get married, or want to get CLOSE to similar rights, it can cost thousands of dollars, whereas a wedding license costs $40. And in some states, they may not even have access to these "loophole" legal agreements. Whether or not you want to argue that gay couples have access to some of these rights, they decidedly do not have EQUAL access to them. there's a LOT of unequal rights wrapped up in marriage, but beyond that is military service, employment and housing protection (sexual orientation is not covered on the national nondiscrimination policy), and adoption laws also vary state-by-state. An unmarried straight couple would usually have an easier time adopting than a gay couple, not to mention states that tie their adoption to marriage which, again, is NOT AN OPTION for gay people. It's unfair to compare a straight couple who did not excercise their rights to a gay couple who doesn't have them.
Mr Glenn
2006-10-30 13:16:15 UTC
Whilst being on potentially tricky ground, a long term heterosexual relationship does offer some protection for the partners involved under what people know as 'common-law'. It was easier to establish some rights...

For example, you could name your partner as next of kin, something same sex couples could not.



More importantly though, is the issue of choice...heterosexual couples always had the choice of marriage to enable the full power of the law to be on their side...until December 2005, this choice was denied same sex couples.



In general, try telling a prospective employer you are gay, and still have a realistic chance of securing the job you wanted...

However much people like to think we live in a liberal, accepting society, there are still very many racist, sexist, ageist, homophobic people out there, in all sorts of positions of power.

These hard fought gains to our HUMAN rights (not gay/lesbian) would be taken away in an instant by many people in public life.

Just read lots of answers in this section to verify what I say.
templeman
2016-10-21 03:56:39 UTC
there is not any 'good' to wealth and monopoly. while the stability of wealthy and poor get too a ways out of whack, with the wealthy being conceited and unthinking of the poor, issues happen, revolutions, social gathering adjustments, unionizing, greater supervision of how and the place those earnings are spent. this would not happen with out some strife, as those with no longer something to lose behave in tactics that are often violent. while it is going too a ways any different way, as in Socialist or Communist societies, human beings, sense entitled and unrewarded and don't make contributions in a fashion that grows the monetary device, this many times ends because it did interior the U.S., too many human beings, no longer sufficient workers. A stability is critical and it in easy terms seems to discover itself one for a quick era till now it swings too a ways lower back. yet lower back, wealth and belongings are no longer a superb.
Phedre D
2006-10-30 09:36:54 UTC
Well, if a man lives with a woman for 30 years, that's common law marriage, and she is entitled to his estate upon his demise.... if a man lives with a man for 30 years, it's called a man living with another man, and the family of the deceased get his things... we also want the right to marry, the right to file joint taxes, the right to medical and retirement benefits for our partners, and the right to live our lives in peace like everyone else... thanks for letting me vent.
anonymous
2006-10-30 05:06:17 UTC
hy hons gay boyfriends davey and steeviie, and why shouldent we get the same equal rights as anyone else, here, my present boyfriend and i have spent the last 5 years building a solidd commiteed relatioship, together and grew up as boyhood friends. we we spend a lifetime to gether like any other couple, pay our taxes go too work every single day of our lives, are contribuiting like anyone else in this so caled society and are sticking together like anyone else, and, are law abding citizens can spend lts say 30 or 40 years of our lives, contribuiting, and trying to make a difference, in our lives bye sticking bye one another, and love cherish one another who in the hell is anyone else, is giiven the right too run around and dictate stupiid half baked policies in our lives, we dident ask for any kind of special treatement, just the right too, certain things as mariage in this country when one goes sick or in a coma or what ever, or even dies, why shouldent it go a gay maried couple, who have lets say built 30 years or what ever of there lives towards, making the union work, and busted there, nuts towards, a good lives for them selves. it isent right for some body else too wlaltz in in and take and drag everything else away that some body has worked for in a gay relationshipp. yes things arent, right with our rights like if my partner if he goes into the hos[pital and maybe dying of aids and i have no right, too see him. or even too visit him if he were dye at his funerall. this is such, nonense. lets ay i have spent 30 years of my life loving that person, sharing a life with him and a bed, and al of a sudden one day owe excuse me your no good/. thats why we have a, will betwen the two of us and urgre other gay bros and sisters too stand up too your rights. we, got wills lat year betwen the two of us. as far as benifits,, go, like social security, we know thats years away or may never ever be reconogizedd/ thats the systemm for yeah.they talk about times changing, its time changedd for us gay bros and sisters, we contribuite too socity, whenever you like it or not.
anonymous
2006-10-30 05:09:28 UTC
in a sense, the civil partnership thing is discriminatory towards heterosexuals. we have to get married to get the same legal rights. there should be a civil partnership option for all.



to clarify, I'm talking about here in the UK, where Common Law doesn't exist.
anonymous
2006-10-30 05:08:40 UTC
Still problems with housing, adoption and marriage
anonymous
2006-10-30 04:52:22 UTC
I think they mean the right to be miserable in a marriage just like the rest of America.
Martin the baby
2006-10-30 06:44:23 UTC
as I always say, In provincetown on cape cod, mass, normal (heterosexual) white people have no rights.
?
2006-10-30 05:23:56 UTC
heaven is unequal like the choice people made in sodom to be unthankful and worship the created rather than the creator-Romans chapter 1-david in Jesus forgiveness and amazing grace to chose Jesus to worship and not a person :D amazing grace that saved a wretch like me.
pokerplayer16101
2006-10-30 05:40:43 UTC
tthe gay men want a vagina the lesbians want a penis so thier wanting equal rights is just a smoke screen


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