The Banned said:
I'll try not to get too into the weeds here, but first I'd ask you read my original post. "Illegal" doesn't need to mean jail time. The strong reactions to this seem to straw man it by assuming severe penalties. I am not suggesting that.
Secondly, did the husband or wife that was cheated on consent? They're the ones with the mental harm and they damn sure didn't consent. In fact, they entered into a life long relationship in the assumption the other would not commit adultery. If you enter into an "open marriage" (which I would suggest is not a true marriage) then obviously these sort of laws wouldn't matter.
Your other examples don't really rise to this same level and therefore can not be applied evenly in all cases. The closest we'd have would be a spouse refusing to stop drinking despite deleterious effects on the family or their unwillingness to get and keep a job harming the family financially. Similar to my feelings on making adultery "illegal", I don't support jail time for these types of things. Public humiliation is a far greater deterrent in my opinion. If people want the government to aid in the public humiliation by making adultery illegal, then ok. If they don't, that's fine too. I don't have strong feeling on this. I'd rather people just stop being *******s.
I think my argument stands as is whether 'illegal' implies a fine, jail time, or any other legal penalty. Can we fine a parent for being lazy? Or drinking too much?
Regarding the second paragraph, is it the government's job to legislate that people uphold common standards in social or marital relationships? A neglectful person can cause harm to their partner. Can we fine someone for forgetting their spouses birthday? There are many social 'things' that can cause stress or mental harm. A bad friend, a manipulative friend, a friend that encourages you to abandon responsibility, a friend that talks behind your back, a spouse that is neglectful, a spouse that is manipulative, a spouse that lies or cheats and on and on and on. I am not advocating that any of these things are okay or 'good'. Only that I don't see a path for justification of illegalization of this action but not others.
Alcoholism, laziness, work stress, PTSD . . . those things absolutely destroy families. I reject that they don't rise to the same level.
I agree with hoping people would stop being *******s. If I judged Christianity to be immoral and advocated for public humiliation of Christianity, would I be an *******? Yes, this is an obvious trap question.