All tax benefits, from marriage tax deductions to corporate tax elimination, is the government picking and choosing which behaviors it wants to encourage.
That’s why conservatives didn’t want gay people to get married because they saw it as government endorsement of their behavior, and not the government recognizing equal rights.
Public equality and public liberty are the responsibility and purview of government. If they are not, we can’t really have government by consent. Instead we have hegemony in which the lower strata are governed by force.
My wife and I pay more taxes because we are married without children. If we were not married and filed as singles, our tax burden would be much less. But IDK really, mostly because I enjoy living in a working society and that means paying taxes.
That still sounds like discrimination to me. Same sex couples still have the ability to adopt, use IVF with a donor, use a surrogate, etc. All of these encourage raising children, but they’re ineligible for benefits because they aren’t a hetero couple?
You see, I’m on board with that logic right up until there are childless hetero couples. I think if a gay couple plans to adopt they should get the exact same privileges.
The fight for gay marriage was/is about the benefits afforded by the state to legally married couples.
Which is absolutely privilege because single people don’t get those same tax breaks.
All tax benefits, from marriage tax deductions to corporate tax elimination, is the government picking and choosing which behaviors it wants to encourage.
That’s why conservatives didn’t want gay people to get married because they saw it as government endorsement of their behavior, and not the government recognizing equal rights.
Public equality and public liberty are the responsibility and purview of government. If they are not, we can’t really have government by consent. Instead we have hegemony in which the lower strata are governed by force.
Depending on your situation, being married could actually mean you pay more in taxes.
My wife and I pay more taxes because we are married without children. If we were not married and filed as singles, our tax burden would be much less. But IDK really, mostly because I enjoy living in a working society and that means paying taxes.
I’m certainly not a tax expert, but I think you can both file separately. That’s what my ex and I did back when we were married.
Our wages are not really equal and when we tried to separate it all to file separately, any benefit only helps one of us at the expense of the other.
Time for a sham marriage ʕ ͡° ʖ̯ ͡°ʔ
Well in my country there are tax privileges for married couples. The goal of those privileges is to increase the amount of children in the country.
Same sex marriages are now officially recognised by the state, but do not get any tax privileges.
That still sounds like discrimination to me. Same sex couples still have the ability to adopt, use IVF with a donor, use a surrogate, etc. All of these encourage raising children, but they’re ineligible for benefits because they aren’t a hetero couple?
You see, I’m on board with that logic right up until there are childless hetero couples. I think if a gay couple plans to adopt they should get the exact same privileges.