I see BOTH socialism and capitalism as fundamental truths and not in any way opposed to each other. Each has a place, and within their place they are beneficial, and complement each other well, but outside their place they are harmful.While socialism, in the form of leftist marxism is toxic, the same in rightist Christian communities wasn't.
Socialism is how we interact with family (including church family) and close friends. If I ask to borrow my brother's car, I expect him to say "yes" - he could say no, but I'd be surprised if he did. Same goes if he asks to borrow my stuff. That's fundamentally socialism - free sharing of goods to those who have need of them. But it's private, voluntary socialism. Either of us can choose to say "no" if we find through experience that we can't trust the other one.
Capitalism is how we interact with people outside our immediate family / tribe. If I ask to borrow a rental company's car, I expect to have to pay a lease on it. And if they asked to borrow mine, same deal. That's capitalism.
Marriage is in the realm of socialism - within the tribe. But government is outside the tribe, mediating between multiple tribes (criminal law, trade regulations etc), and is therefore in the realm of capitalism. So government should be capitalist, but should welcome and even encourage private voluntary socialism to provide the needs of individuals.
Socialism is only a problem when it is moved outside the realm of the family / tribe, and the government tries to impose it en-masse to an entire population. The fundamental error of marxism etc is that it might be well-meaning but simply doesn't work on that scale. And capitalism is only a problem when it is moved into the family / tribe, e.g. if children are taught they deserve payment for every job they do around the house and don't learn everyone simply has duties within the tribe.
And since marriage is an in-tribe socialist thing, while government's role is outside the tribe as a capitalist mediator, it's really not within the jurisdiction of government except for bare-minimum laws to prevent inter-personal harm. Government-imposed marriage laws will always fail simply because they're unnatural.
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