Drudge: 1 JUDGE VOIDS 7,000,000 VOTERS...

Actually its not, but its a well known fact queer couples can't have offspring by themselves.
Neither can hundreds of thousands of married straight people either. We do not grant marriage licences on the basis of who can have a children "by themselves".
 
Neither can hundreds of thousands of married straight people either. We do not grant marriage licences on the basis of who can have a children "by themselves".
LOL. Imagine, only functional hermaphrodites could get married. What would the ceremony be like?
 
Neither can hundreds of thousands of married straight people either. We do not grant marriage licences on the basis of who can have a children "by themselves".
No but we don't allow cousins to marry because their offspring are likely to have birth defects.
 
6th cousins. that's like saying i'm al sharptons cousin because we both had the same great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather. :palm:

Yup, and if you and Al had that relationship, you would be cousins.

BTW its 5th cousins, you are stretching it a bit.
 
Yup, and if you and Al had that relationship, you would be cousins.

BTW its 5th cousins, you are stretching it a bit.

i'm not stretching it at all. FDR is the 5th cousin to Eleanors father. and you're stretching it a bit to consider 5th and 6th cousins as 'related' for the purposes of states allowing cousins to marry.
 
i'm not stretching it at all. FDR is the 5th cousin to Eleanors father. and you're stretching it a bit to consider 5th and 6th cousins as 'related' for the purposes of states allowing cousins to marry.

I did not say they were 'related', I said they were cousins.
 
Here are the laws relating to cousins marrying in the US. Guess that argument sort of falls by the wayside huh?

Alabama and Alaska allow first cousins to marry with no proscriptions. Arizona allows it if they are beyond child bearing age.

•California: First cousins, yes.

•Colorado: First cousins, yes.

•Connecticut: First cousins, yes.

•Delaware: No

•District of Columbia: First cousins, yes.

•Florida: First cousins, yes

•Georgia: First cousins, yes.



•Hawaii: First cousins, yes.

•Idaho: No

•Illinois: First cousins, yes, only if they are over a certain age or cannot bear children.

•Indiana: First cousins once removed, yes, only if they are over a certain age or cannot bear children.

•Iowa: No

•Kansas: Half cousins, yes.

•Kentucky: No

•Louisiana: Marriage between first cousins is not allowed.



•Maine: First cousins, yes, only if they are over a certain age or cannot bear children, or if they get genetic counseling.

•Maryland: First cousins, yes.

•Massachusetts: First cousins, yes.

•Michigan: No

•Minnesota: No, unless aboriginal culture of the couple permits cousin marriages.

•Mississippi: Adopted cousins, yes.

•Nebraska: Half cousins, yes.

•Nevada: Half cousins, yes.

•New Hampshire: No

•New Jersey: First cousins, yes.

•New Mexico: First cousins, yes.

•New York: First cousins, yes.

•North Carolina: First cousins, yes. Double first cousins are not allowed to get married.
(wow SM doesn't even know the laws of his own state.)

•North Dakota: No

•Ohio: No

•Oklahoma: Half cousins, yes.

•Oregon: Adopted cousins, yes.

•Pennsylvania: No

•Rhode Island: First cousins, yes.

•South Carolina: First cousins, yes.

•South Dakota: No

•Tennessee: First cousins, yes.

•Texas: No.

•Utah: First cousins, yes, only if they are over a certain age or cannot bear children.

•Vermont: First cousins, yes.

•Virginia: First cousins, yes.

•Washington: No

•West Virginia: Adopted cousins, yes.

•Wisconsin: First cousins once removed, yes, only if they are over a certain age or cannot bear children.

•Wyoming: No
 
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