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But Can You Get Gay Married in Space?

Posted by Emily Farris

 

If you have $2.3 million lying around and are dying to have an out-of-this world wedding, you may be in luck.

A Japanese company is teaming up with an American firm to offer space wedding trips for you, your soon-to-be spouse and three guests (presumably a minister or justice of the peace and two witnesses). It sounds like kind-of a rip off to us, considering you spend five days training only to spend an hour getting married while orbiting the earth. If we were going to spend $2 million on a space wedding, we damn well better have our first dance on the moon. 

Additionally, neither company's site says anything about gay marriage. Our assumption is that while outer space has no same-sex marriage laws, one would have to be married according to his or her state's law, or at least under the jurisdiction of the officiant. Any legally-minded folk want to help us figure this one out? 

Anyway, all this space wedding talk got some people thinking... astronauts have got to being doing it up there, right?  

Right. We mean, there's no way people can spend three years locked up in a space station and not do it. Right? Right? 

We can only hope — for the sake of the astronauts — as NASA officials won't talk about it:

"We don't study sexuality in space, and we don't have any studies ongoing with that," said NASA spokesman Bill Jeffs of the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "If that's your specific topic, there's nothing to discuss," he added, referring to "sex in space."

Somebody get to work on studying sex in space, and by the time we get married we'll give you $3 million for the ability to wed and bed in outerspace. Or we'll save our millions for barbeque and a live band, which really sounds like a lot more fun to us.  

[Live Science: Japanese, U.S. Firms Offer Space Weddings, For Better or Worse, Sex in Space Is Inevitable]

Related:

I Love Myself for Hating You: Outer Space

Video of the Day: Inside the International Space Station

It's the End of the World As We Know It

[Image] 


+ DIGG + DEL.ICIO.US + REDDIT

Comments

Daniel J Dwyer said:

I don't know if there is any established way of determining what laws are governing activities on board a particular non-governmental spacecraft, but I'm going to go ahead and use the following logic:

1) In Star Trek, the spacecraft have USS designations, such as USS Enterprise, like current naval vessels;

2) In Star Wars, dudes have ranks like Admiral;

3) Space is thus essentially a giant ocean, and spacecraft like flying boats;

4) When you are on your boat, even in international waters, you are subject to the laws of the country in which your boat is registered, or, in the case of an unregistered vessel, your country of citizenship.

5) In space, you are subject to the laws of the country in which the vessel you are on board is registered, or the country of origin of the company owning the vessel, or something like that.

But that doesn't matter anyway (unless you want to smoke a j during the ceremony). The challenge with gay marriage has never been getting someone to perform the ceremony, it's getting the state in which you reside to recognize the marriage. So, unfortunately, not even outer space can provide that loophole.

A bit more on sex in space:

www.straightdope.com/.../a4_214.html

July 8, 2008 1:54 PM

About Emily Farris

Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook, "Casserole Crazy: Hot Stuff for Your Oven" was published in 2008. Emily recently escaped New York and now lives in a ridiculously large apartment in Kansas City, MO with her cat, but just one... so far.

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about the blogger

Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook, Casserole Crazy: Hot Stuff for Your Oven was published in 2008. Emily recently escaped New York and now lives in a ridiculously large apartment in Kansas City, MO with her cat, but just one... so far.

Brian Fairbanks is a filmmaker living in the wilds of Brooklyn. He previously wrote for the Hartford Courant and Gawker. He won the Williamsburg Spelling Bee once. He loves cats, women with guns, and burning books.

Colleen Kane has been an editor at BUST and Playgirl magazines and has written for the endangered species of dead-tree magazines like SPIN and Plenty, as well as Radar Online and other websites. She lives in exile in Baton Rouge with her fiance, two dogs, and her former cat. Read her personal blogs at ColleenKane.com.

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