Why Ban Cousin Marriages?

Discussion in 'Politics' started by IMFTrader, Feb 10, 2013.

  1. While the Mudslimes practice cousin marriage and defile its reputation, the practice isn't limited to them, and I don't think it's as evil as some people make it out to be. Cousins often have a lot in common, so they make good marital partners. Why ban it? Is there a chance that it has something to do with the same liberal ideology that seeks to destroy the family? I know lots of people who don't even know their cousins because they grew up in broken families.

    Why Ban Cousin Marriages?

    Never go to a barber shop while you are still mulling over controversial news like, "Obama invokes gay rights in inaugural address."

    Because your mind may sputter an even more controversial question like, "Why then we smother the discussion on the topic of first cousin marriages?"

    And if the question is asked out loud, you may get a response like, "well, you don't have to be an Einstein to know that incestuous relationships lead to diseases in the babies."

    This actually happened to me last week. In one succinct sentence, my barber spelled out the three oft repeated reasons to justify banning cousin marriages. That they cause diseases, that they are incestuous, and that banning such marriages is a no brainer. But there is only one problem: all three reasons should be debunked.

    I know some of you feel grossed out. But just allow me a few minutes. Don't smother the conversation. Read on please.

    And let's be clear. I don't intent to promote cousin marriages. But when 25 US states ban such marriages in a free society, we ought to at least have a conversation about it.

    I believe the "Disease-Incest-Einstein" line of American reasoning to ban such marriages deserves a rebuttal. So let's confront them one by one.

    Disease: The risk of birth defects in children born to first cousins is increased from a baseline of 3-4 percent to 4-7 percent according to the National Society of Genetic Councilors (NSGC). In this modern age, this risk could be mitigated by mandating -- as the State of Maine has done -- pre-marital genetic testing. The NSGC, however, considers the risk to be so insignificant that it does not recommend additional testing or screening.

    But wait. It gets complicated. Because the risk of birth defects increases with other scenarios too.

    As the maternal age exceeds 35, the incidence of fetal abnormalities creeps up to the 4-7 percent range. Should we also ban such women from having children then?

    Hereditary diseases are more prevalent in certain ethnicities: cystic fibrosis in Caucasians, beta thalassemia in Italians, sickle cell in Blacks, phenylketonuria in Irish and Tay-Sachs in Ashkenazi Jews. Why then, allow these groups to freely marry within the same ethnicity?

    Incest: As you cross the scientific hurdles, you will be confronted with a mountain of taboo cloaked in words like "gross," "icky," "yucky." But where do such taboo feelings originate from? Not a single verse in the Torah, Bible or Quran -- books revered by three billion followers of the three Abrahamic religions -- prohibits cousin marriage, which were common in Jewish, Christian and Islamic history. The Bible even mentions various accounts of cousin marriages, such as Jacob and Rachel, Milcah and Nahor, and Jacob and Leah, in the book of Genesis. And please don't quote the incest prohibitions listed in Leviticus 18. It never mentions first cousins.

    Granted, the fact that something is "allowed" does not always mean that it is socially accepted. So if you still feel grossed out by the thought of marrying your cousin, that's ok. Hold on to your personal feelings; why impose them on others in a free society?

    Einstein: This is the ultimate argument made in support of banning cousin marriages. It's so obviously wrong that "You don't have to be an Einstein to figure it out." In the evidence driven societies we have a different word to describe such claims: myth. Myths are best broken by data. The fact that 20 percent of global marriages take place between first cousins and most societies, including Europe and Canada, consider cousin marriages to be legal should give us a pause.

    I personally know of Americans -- from different backgrounds -- who have either married their cousin (and kept the fact as hidden as possible) or are in an intimate relationship with one. One could argue whether there is any moral or scientific equivalence between same sex marriages and cousin marriages, but our society's apathy to the latter's "closet" is appalling.

    I have learned my lesson. America has no appetite to have a rational conversation over the topic of cousin marriages. And I am certainly not having this discussion in the barber shop again. Because after all the research for this article, I realized that actually, you have to be an Einstein in order to believe that there is nothing wrong with cousin marriages. Why?

    Because in 1919 Einstein married Elsa Löwenthal -- his first cousin.

    source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/faheem-younus/why-ban-cousin-marriages_b_2567162.html
     
  2. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Only someone who has never been to a Southern county where everyone has the same last name..... would post an article like this in P&R.
     
  3. pspr

    pspr

    An example in England.

    The problem is worst among children born in Britain's Pakistani community, where more than half of marriages are between first cousins, and children are 10 times more likely than the general population to suffer genetic disorders.
     
  4. Hold on to your personal feelings; why impose them on others in a free society?

    Notice that? "Free society". We've been hearing that arguement quite often. While the magician waves his left hand and says look over here- the "free society" marry your cousin, gay agenda, no place for ten commandments, etc in a free society.

    Meanwhile with the other hand, freedom is disapearing in a free society. "Papers please". Tsa, PC police, every fundamental freedom in society as we know it is under attack and substituted with other dubious freedoms. What an illusion.
     
  5. I don't have a problem with it being legal.
    Might be appropriate for the state to advise a blood test though.
     
  6. pspr

    pspr

    I think sterilization of one or both would be appropriate. Then they can just do what ever they like without creating little burdens to society.
     
  7. So do you think that's what's up with rcg he's the product of multi-generational first cousin pairings?
     
  8. pspr

    pspr

    LOL Either that or he is the result of a botched abortion and he was without oxygen long enough to kill all but two of his brain cells. :D

    Is one of those correct, buck?