Polygamous TRIO applies for marriage license

By Cheryl Chumley

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A married Montana man has taken his wife and his girlfriend to the Yellowstone County Courthouse and told the clerk: Marry us – if the Supreme Court OK’d “gay” unions, then we should be allowed to join together in holy polygamy.

“It’s about marriage equality,” said Nathan Collier, who filed for a marriage application to two women, Victoria and Christine, CBS News reported. “You can’t have this without polygamy.”

Victoria is currently his legal wife. Christine is his girlfriend.

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County officials at first denied the application, but then backtracked and said they’d have to consult with attorneys.

Critics of government-sanctioned “gay” marriage have been warning for years that would-be polygamists would use same-sex unions as a means of pressing an equal opportunity argument. And Collier specifically cited the Supreme Court’s ruling as justification for his application, pointing to Chief Justice John Roberts’ dissenting opinion that spoke of the legal argument the case was handing polygamists.

Don’t miss Phyllis Schlafly’s book, now available autographed at the WND Superstore: “Who Killed The American Family?”

Collier, 46, is a former Mormon who was excommunicated for polygamy.

He told KTVQ in a previous interview he and his two female partners had been hiding their relationship for years, but then decided to go public with an appearance on the reality cable show, “Sister Wives.” They now want government-stamped legitimacy for their union.

“We just want to add legal legitimacy to an already happy, strong, loving family,” he said to KTVQ.

The three have seven children.

“My second wife, Christine, who I’m not legally married to, she’s put up with my crap for a lot of years,” Collier said. “She deserves legitimacy.”

And Christine said, CBS reported: “It’s two distinct marriages, it’s two distinct unions and for us to come together and create family, what’s wrong with that? I don’t understand why it’s looked upon and frowned upon as being obscene.”

Collier has already looked into legal representation, if need be, and sent an email to the ACLU of Montana about his campaign.

His efforts could prove precedent-setting.

Anne Wilde, a co-founder of the polygamy advocacy group Principle Voices said Collier’s application is the first she’s heard about, CBS said.

See WND’s extensive coverage of “same-sex marriage” since the Supreme Court decision to legalize it across the U.S.:

Final order! Christian bakers must pay $135,000
Millennial GOPers: Let’s back gay marriage
Justice Thomas slammed as ‘clown in blackface’
Episcopalians vote yes to gay marriages
Famous Iwo Jima flag goes gay
Forecasts dead on! Polygamists’ demand cites Supremes
‘Blame Supremes’ for clash with 1st Amendment
Mom scorched for 8-year-old in ‘gay’ march
Franklin Graham: ‘Gay’ rainbow ends badly
Glenn Beck slams Disney on Cinderella’s rainbow castle
Serious pushback over same-sex marriage
Fox News anchor stands up for ‘gay’ marriage
Deserters! Republicans jump ship on marriage
Pentagon urged to boot chaplains who oppose ‘gay’ marriage
Rand Paul: Shut down government’s marriage racket
Rush Limbaugh: Here’s what’s next for marriages
How deceitful Obama became ‘gay marriage president’
Texas attorney general: Marriage ruling ‘lawless’
Lawmaker: Congress can halt same-sex ‘marriage’ in tracks
Family group: Marriage ‘persecution’ starts
Cruz amendment makes Supreme Court subject to elections
Schlafly: Marriage ruling ‘not the end, it’s the beginning
Resistance! No marriage licenses for anyone
The Big List of marriage-ruling reactions
Scalia: Marriage ruling ‘threat to democracy’
What presidential candidates, others, are saying
Obama hails high court: ‘#LoveWins’
Supreme Court: ‘Gay marriage’ legal nationwide

Cheryl Chumley

Cheryl K. Chumley is a journalist, columnist, public speaker and author of "The Devil in DC." and "Police State USA: How Orwell's Nightmare is Becoming our Reality." She is also a journalism fellow with The Phillips Foundation in Washington, D.C., where she spent a year researching and writing about private property rights. Read more of Cheryl Chumley's articles here.


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