30 Inspirational Quotes About i

Zacharycew
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Joined: Sat Jun 27, 2020 1:19 pm

30 Inspirational Quotes About i

Postby Zacharycew » Sat Jul 18, 2020 4:03 pm

Qantas ceo alan joyce says the marriage debate is a "ticking time bomb". This is true on multiple levels. First, the number of women in Australia is growing rapidly. Second, there is a growing body of evidence that suggests fewer women and younger women who were married are choosing to have babies. For example, a recent study of 20 Australian families found that in every second wedding, there were a quarter of the women who decided to have children by having their husbands commit himself to celibacy. The Australian Bureau of Statistics says the majority of marriages do not end with the vows "on the spot". Instead, these couples tend to stay together for 10 to 13 years with only temporary agreements and "mutual agreements". They're often committed for more than two decades. More than half of couples in couples' homes decide to get married on a temporary basis, because they're both afraid of divorce or they simply don't want to live apart. But if you look at how many of these couples stayed together after having children, about 7 per cent did not get married. This suggests that when they did get married, their decisions about divorce were not based on love and marriage but rather on a fear that either it would be too expensive, too stressful, or that they'd be divorced afterwards. A study of a similar Australian family found that more than half of divorcees who got divorced were married at the beginning and were happy with themselves until they realised that their marriage was broken or that they'd been lied to. If this happens to you, there's very little reason to delay your marriage for financial reasons. If you want your children to grow up healthy and thriving in healthy communities, you'd better think twice about the choice to marry. Dr Andrew Wright: We're also seeing a backlash against celibacy among people of faith. For decades, religious organizations have been asking for recognition of their right to marry. But recently, the government has taken a somewhat different course. In late September last year, it rejected a petition signed by over 700,000 members of the Anglican Church of Australia to ask the Government to grant same-sex couples legal same-sex marriage, with legal recognition that would be comparable to other marriage licences. There have also been attempts to make same-sex marriage legal in some Catholic parishes. If the debate were about marriage, a bill for marriage recognition would be introduced in the Senate. As we've seen in this debate, the issue of marriage equality is about more than just the institution of marriage, and it's about our future as a nation. I want to thank our noble colleague Senator Williams for his frank and engaged testimony. I look forward to speaking to the Government and the Australian Marriage Equality co-ordinator, Karen McVeigh. [3.16a] 2.14.17 (In the Senate
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