You are most likely common law married already anyway.
> -Original Message-
> From: Ray Champagne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 11:19 AM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: help. I need to know if I'm married or not.
>
> Yea, it sounds f
Not to be a stickler, but why does the church get to "keep" the term
Marriage?
Mainly, in my mind, because it is probably slightly easier to change the minds
of a bunch of bureaucrats then it is to change the minds of all the various
religious leaders.
--
Ian Skinner
Web Programm
They don't.
I think the term "married" should apply to two people who have a legal
marriage license with a State.
You are not married until you have that license. Wait, except for common law
heh. But anyway, if you have a Catholic wedding, but don't obtain and sign a
marriage license...you aint m
>> To: CF-Community
>> Subject: Re: help. I need to know if I'm married or not.
>>
>> Yes, but that has nothing to do with an actual marriage as far as the
>> state is concerned, which is what I'm talking about. Legislation. Not
>> the church. I perso
Not to be a stickler, but why does the church get to "keep" the term
Marriage?
G Money wrote:
> Exactly to a T what i've been saying all along. Makes perfect sense, is
> fair, and fixes all the problems of the current system.
>
> On 6/15/06, Ian Skinner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> in the end i
Exactly to a T what i've been saying all along. Makes perfect sense, is
fair, and fixes all the problems of the current system.
On 6/15/06, Ian Skinner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> in the end it's a simple legal contract that has little to do with
> religion.
>
> From the states point of view, e
The church doesn't have a say in it. The people however do.
> -Original Message-
> From: Ray Champagne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 12:51 PM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: Re: help. I need to know if I'm married or not.
>
>
tango got married there too, st lucia that is... he might know.
tw
On 6/15/06, Ian Skinner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> in the end it's a simple legal contract that has little to do with religion.
>
> From the states point of view, exactly. That's why the fairest solution to
> me is to separate
2006 12:20 PM
>> To: CF-Community
>> Subject: Re: help. I need to know if I'm married or not.
>>
>> Not only that, what about those of us who didn't get married in a church
>> by a church official?
>>
>> Which brings the whole deal full circle,
in the end it's a simple legal contract that has little to do with religion.
>From the states point of view, exactly. That's why the fairest solution to me
>is to separate the religious "Marriage" from the state Contract. Give the
>state contract a new name that applies to everybody. Then it
mpagne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 12:20 PM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: Re: help. I need to know if I'm married or not.
>
> Not only that, what about those of us who didn't get married in a church
> by a church official?
>
> Which brings
And many churches are quite willing to participate in marrying gays.
On 6/15/06, Ray Champagne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not only that, what about those of us who didn't get married in a church
> by a church official?
>
> ...the church's services to get married is only one way to go about it, a
"cheapen the institution" is just a pc codeword for "gays give us the creeps".
Much like "culture of life" is shorthand for "no abortions, assisted
suicide or living wills, but war and the death penalty are just fine,
thanks."
On 6/15/06, G Money <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I can move in with wh
Not only that, what about those of us who didn't get married in a church
by a church official?
Which brings the whole deal full circle, at least for me. Marriage is
somewhat defined as a legal contract, or at least it seems, since all
these states have legislation regarding marriage, so what e
Additionally, lets say you live in Nebraska, and want to marry the person you
live with. You can rent an apartment in Kansas for one month, move in with your
sweetie, declare that you are "married", then move back to Nebraska, and they
will legally recognized your common law marriage from Kansas
Which brings up another very interesting question Rayif religious
zealots are so hell bent on preventing gay marriages because they are an
afront to their moral beliefshow the hell can they ignore these common
law marriages?
I can move in with whomever I want, as long as she's female, and
> Ray wrote:
> My wife and I got married in St. Lucia back in '04, we got the marriage
> license and all that crap while we were on the island, got married by an
> "official" (don't know what they call them there, JP, whatever).
>
I believe the US recognizes marriage from hundreds of countries. F
Yea, I always thought there was some kind of time value that needed to
be met, like 5 or 7 years or something. Until I read that site.
So...does it work the same way for gay couples? *That* would make
things interesting. :)
G Money wrote:
> This common law stuff is really frickin' goofy. All
This common law stuff is really frickin' goofy. All you have to do to become
legally married, is live together and claim in public "we are married".
BOOM. You are afforded all the rights of a couple with a marriage license
(that they had to PAY for, I might add).
Additionally, lets say you live in
New Hampshire's on that list. Dammit, there goes my out. (although it
does say "for inheritance purposes only"...)
G Money wrote:
> I count only 12 states (including DC) that recognize common law marriages.
> Found the info here:
>
> http://www.unmarried.org/common.html
>
> What I found weird
I count only 12 states (including DC) that recognize common law marriages.
Found the info here:
http://www.unmarried.org/common.html
What I found weird reading this stuff, though, is that if you live in a
common law state, you live with a significant other, and you joke with
people that you are "
> I suspect it should be; I believe the US has pretty good relations with that
> country.
besides, in many states cohabitating under the same name (e.g. playing
married) makes you common-law anyway.
Washington provides for some hefty bonuses in the case of a common-law
break-up...
:-\
--
wil
all right man, you've got yourself an out! :)
On 6/15/06, Ray Champagne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yea, it sounds funny, but here's the story:
>
> My wife and I got married in St. Lucia back in '04, we got the marriage
> license and all that crap while we were on the island, got married by an
I just read about something like this in a newspaper advice column. A lady was
worried that her marriage in Mexico was not valid in the states. According to
the columnist, the US, or at least LA, recognizes Mexican marriage licenses. I
suspect a quick call your local vital statistics official
Sweet, thanks.
Jerry Johnson wrote:
> I can't help you till tonight, but I'll call my mom after work (she's
> in meetings all day). She is a JP, marries people, and was a paralegal
> and legal secretary for 30+ years. She MAY no.
>
> On 6/15/06, Ray Champagne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Yea, it
I can't help you till tonight, but I'll call my mom after work (she's
in meetings all day). She is a JP, marries people, and was a paralegal
and legal secretary for 30+ years. She MAY no.
On 6/15/06, Ray Champagne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yea, it sounds funny, but here's the story:
>
> My wife
Yea, it sounds funny, but here's the story:
My wife and I got married in St. Lucia back in '04, we got the marriage
license and all that crap while we were on the island, got married by an
"official" (don't know what they call them there, JP, whatever).
My father-in-law called my wife yesterday
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