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And even more interesting combinations. Imagine the joys of divorce court with group marriages.
Yes, it would be like dissolving a business partnership of more than two people which..er.. happens every day in the US. I'm sure it's not fun, but that's hardly a fundamental objection: divorce of two married people sucks too, but is not a reason to prevent people getting married.
I have been thinking about this a lot lately. I don't think polygamy is next, but I do think more "loosely defined" relationships in general are next.
I see my spouse as the no-contest first-place winner in my list of important people in the world. The math doesn't work out for this to be mutual in more than two people.
What if you have two children?
Realize that you sound like the people that said:

"I see my spouse as the person of the opposite sex that I want to marry."

There are real challenges to handling society with n > 2 marriages (pension splitting, wills, children, etc), but how a person feels about their personal choices shouldn't impact consensual adults that feel otherwise.

The lawsuits are coming.

They will say that there is no argument against redefining marriage to include multiple spouses that didn't apply to redefining marriage to include two same-sex spouses.

They will ask, "once the decision has been made that marriage is all about love and companionship without any regard to society's interest in defining it, why shouldn't two brothers or two sisters be able to marry?"

Well... why shouldn't they? I think there's potentially an argument against it based on genetic disorders that may come about in reproduction between siblings, but I'm not enough of an expert to know how much it's based in reality.
Considering that marriage can be more of a business relationship, does the sibling marriage issue matter at all?
I think before that happens we need to separate religious/spiritual marriage from legal marriage. Legal marriage is a shortcut for a lot of civil laws, like rights of survivorship and power of attorney. IT made no sense to let certain pairs of adults enter into this legal contract but not others.

Polyamory, or any type of other relationship involving something other than two adults who are old enough to sign a legal contract, would not fit that legal shortcut. I have no problems with polyamory or plural marriage, but our laws just haven't been designed to handle that case. There would need to be new laws, but first there needs to be a separation.

Pack mammals typically seem to give special privileges to the breeding pair. It's just basic behavior in the wild.

If our species is going to extend these privileges to non-breeding "couples", then why stop there?

Just give the everybody the same rights, including polygamous folks and regardless of genetic relationship.

Why limit the expansion of special rights to non-related homosex pairs?

The US Constitution must have something about equality in it to make it legal.

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polygamy allows “high-status men to hoard wives” and destabilizes society

They already do and they have always done it. Whenever there is a unbalance in the relationship, the party with less power will turn a blind eye to what the party with more power does. I have know of both males and females who prefer not to ask what their partner does when they go out, not to put at stake the relationship that sustains them economically.

The shame society imposes upon them and the lack of formal recourse only makes it worse. Hopefully we can fix this in the coming years.

It's an interesting direction we're headed if polygamy is "next." What's after polygamy? We have to ask ourselves what marriage actually is.

Approximate modern progression (discounting ancient marriages involving young children, which I doubt will happen again in the future):

-A man and woman of the same race. Divorce uncommon. -A man and woman of any race. Divorce uncommon. -A man and woman of any race. Divorce common. -Any two people. Divorce common. -Any number of people. Divorce common. -Human and AI? Human and animal? Human and inanimate object? Who knows? Or does the expanding definition end with polygamy? I doubt it.

This is not a slippery slope argument I'm making, it's a question of logical progression. Perhaps in the future marriage will be thought of as "a likely temporary agreement involving at least two beings - at least one of whom is sentient - for the purpose of convenience, love, and tax benefits."

I sort of doubt it, primarily because fighting a case up to the Supreme Court generally takes an enormous amount of very expensive legal work, and there are probably not enough people invested in the issue to do it - but you never know.

I personally feel it ought to be allowed, on the simple basis that people should be treated as free agents who can enter into whatever connubial relations they choose. It's disappointing to see many advocates of same-sex marriage apparently attempt to pull up the ladder behind themselves by offering obviously specious arguments against such arrangements; while this is an understandable reaction to conservative 'gotcha!' arguments against same-sex marriage, it is needlessly hurtful to people who are in voluntary poly arrangements. I'm not one of those people, but I have known quite a few folks who live in polyamorous relationships and those arrangements have been no more or less problematic than monogamous pairings, so I don't feel they are constitutively deficient.

One popular objection is to point to the low status of women in societies where polygyny is widespread, eg Saudi Arabia. However, it's far from obvious what sequence of events led to current conditions; polygyny may have originated as a rational response to intense tribal warfare in a harsh environment and correspondingly low life expectancy for male combatants. It does not follow that availability of legal plygamy will necessarily or even probably lead to the same outcomes. While it's anecdotal, my personal acquaintance with poly households in the UK and US has been that more of them were steered by the preferences of women members than men, but that's purely anecdotal.

The historical status of women in polygyny should absolutely be taken into account and studied carefully, but I think there's a chicken-and-egg problem insofar as abusive/exploitative arrangements almost invariably present with religiously-grounded arguments about male superiority in male-identified monotheistic religious contexts. It seems to me that if you begin from the premise that 'there's only one source of Cosmic authority, he's a guy, and he only talks to guys' then women's status is going to be massively discounted in such an environment, regardless of how many parties there can be to a marriage. In short, I doubt it was the case that everyone was living in egalitarian bliss until someone invented polygamy and caused everything to go downhill. On the other hand, this is a genuinely-felt concern, since sex discrimination is still rampant in many parts of the US notwithstanding the nominally egalitarian legal framework, so I don't blame anyone for predicting that legal polygamy would be exploited for the worst possible reasons by some people - but if the possibility of negative outcomes were the only factor, we'd make it much harder for people to get married or have children in the first place, given the frequency of numerous awful outcomes under plain old monogamy.

Imbalance in sex ratios is beyond the scope of a HN comment, but there is some interesting research suggesting that different patterns are strongly correlated with different economic relations and environmental conditions, and also pointing out that polyandry is historically somewhat more widespread than most people imagine: http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/02/when-takin...

The NYTimes article mentions the 'marriage market' approach of some thinkers (notably Judge Richard Posner, who is well-qualified to make such analyses), but all of those arguments seem predicated on the implicit assumption that women would flock to being collected by wealthy men and thus leave other men with nobody to marry. Certainly some people do marry for money (quite a lot of them in fact) bu...