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Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The Land

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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by Tenshinai   » Sat Sep 12, 2015 6:03 pm

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dscott8 wrote:
There's a big difference between a politician expressing personal faith and one who wants to use an elected position to force their beliefs on others and limit people's rights. Which is the crux of the Kim Davis case.


Expressing personal faith? :lol:
Ending speeches with "god bless america"(or whatever)?

The person officially in charge expressing "personal opionions". So you would be perfectly fine if the next president ended speeches with allahu akbar? Or maybe "there is no god, that´s just delusional"? Or why not "god is an evil SOB who should be killed ASAP"?

Would you still be happy about "a politician expressing personal faith"?
I really, REALLY doubt it.

Here, only the politicians of one single party would ever even think about throwing around religion in politics, and if i´m really really lucky, next election they will fall under the 4% votes requirement to stay in parliament and finally get kicked out. They´re back to polling at 3-3.5% again so i can certainly hope and wish.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by PeterZ   » Sat Sep 12, 2015 10:01 pm

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Marriage has always been a contract between a man and a woman. Love was incidental. Anyone can marry a willing partner of marriageable age of the opposite sex that is not too closely related prior to this ruling. This applied equally to everyone, including gays. The current SC ruling establishes that any two people of marriageable age not too closely related might marry.

That does indeed establish a new law or definition of marriage. The old definition of marriage applied equally to both gays and straits. I doubt we will agree on this, but that's not the point.

The point is that this change is sweeping and will impact more than a few people. That sort of change is best done as a legislative matter. Otherwise, there will be those that will feel imposed upon rather than willingly follow the law.

hanuman wrote:
PeterZ wrote:Sure, obey the judges. What Law might those judges administer, Annachie? Considering these words are from Moses after he gave the Israelites the Law, you have distilled the issues surrounding the county clerk to their essence.

The entire issues with said clerk revolves about this point: to follow what she considers an immoral law or find a moral response to her situation. Those are the options before her. Regardless of what I think is her moral course, she did not face any dilemma prior the SC decision. After that decision the clerk faces further limits on how she might act in accordance with her conscience.

Effectively changing the Constitution alters our sovereignty; our ability to live life as we see fit consistent with our conscience and the law. Having the SC interpret the Constitution to effect significant change allows the governmental body furthest removed from popular election to make those significant changes which impact everyone's sovereignty.

Those sorts of sweeping changes are best done in ways that involve as many of the citizens as possible. That way the results will have broad support. Changing things in this way simply crystalizes opposing views. That makes it difficult to ever really resolve.


I have a question, did you react the same way when the SCOTUS made the Hobby Lobby ruling a while back, or the 'corporations are persons' ruling before that?

The US Constitution does guarantee equal treatment under the law for everyone, and since the government is in fact in the business of regulating and enforcing contracts (including civil marriage contracts), I think that its Obergefell ruling was indeed based on a sound constitutionalist interpretation of the US Constitution.

The SCOTUS did not, in fact, establish a new right or enact a new law. It identified an existing right and used existing constitutional principles to rule that the aforementioned preexisting right must apply to everyone. That is ALL it did.

With the 'corporations are persons' ruling - which is a conservative darling, by the way - it went far beyond that. Nowhere in the US Constitution are corporations accorded personhood, yet that was the SCOTUS' finding. In that case it did in fact establish and enact an entirely original 'right'. To date I still have not heard a single conservative complain about that ruling.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by hanuman   » Sat Sep 12, 2015 10:41 pm

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PeterZ wrote:Marriage has always been a contract between a man and a woman. Love was incidental. Anyone can marry a willing partner of marriageable age of the opposite sex that is not too closely related prior to this ruling. This applied equally to everyone, including gays. The current SC ruling establishes that any two people of marriageable age not too closely related might marry.

That does indeed establish a new law or definition of marriage. The old definition of marriage applied equally to both gays and straits. I doubt we will agree on this, but that's not the point.

The point is that this change is sweeping and will impact more than a few people. That sort of change is best done as a legislative matter. Otherwise, there will be those that will feel imposed upon rather than willingly follow the law.


I do not understand how marriage rights for same sex couples can be said to impose upon heterosexual couples, unless it's a question of the kindergarten bully not wanting to share the toys with the strange kid?

Legally, same sex marriage is no different whatsoever than opposite sex marriage. No new definitions have been introduced, no new legal requirements, no new legal benefits, no new legal burdens, no new legal consequences. I dare you, show me a single facet of marriage law that had to be changed beyond the fact that now one's spouse may be of the sex one is actually attracted to.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by PeterZ   » Sat Sep 12, 2015 11:05 pm

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hanuman wrote:I do not understand how marriage rights for same sex couples can be said to impose upon heterosexual couples, unless it's a question of the kindergarten bully not wanting to share the toys with the strange kid?

Legally, same sex marriage is no different whatsoever than opposite sex marriage. No new definitions have been introduced, no new legal requirements, no new legal benefits, no new legal burdens, no new legal consequences. I dare you, show me a single facet of marriage law that had to be changed beyond the fact that now one's spouse may be of the sex one is actually attracted to.


That's truly not the point. Change the law through the legislative process or the Constitutional Amendment process to reflect that one small facet you wanted to change in the law. Its an extension of why the Boston Tea Party happened; the citizenry is not given sufficient representation in this change. As more major changes happen this way, laws no longer are rules that are broadly accepted and followed, but odious impositions of the authority of our ruling elites.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by gcomeau   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 12:16 am

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PeterZ wrote:
That's truly not the point. Change the law through the legislative process or the Constitutional Amendment process


No. Because they already did that. Specifically the 14th Amendment.

That some people don't like what that means today is their problem, not everyone else's... so they can go through the Constitutional Amendment process and try repealing the 14th if they want to change what the law says.

Stop trying to turn things backwards.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by Annachie   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 2:30 am

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PeterZ wrote:Marriage has always been a contract between a man and a woman. Love was incidental. Anyone can marry a willing partner of marriageable age of the opposite sex that is not too closely related prior to this ruling. This applied equally to everyone, including gays. The current SC ruling establishes that any two people of marriageable age not too closely related might marry.

That does indeed establish a new law or definition of marriage. The old definition of marriage applied equally to both gays and straits. I doubt we will agree on this, but that's not the point.

The point is that this change is sweeping and will impact more than a few people. That sort of change is best done as a legislative matter. Otherwise, there will be those that will feel imposed upon rather than willingly follow the law.

hanuman wrote:[quote="PeterZ"]Sure, obey the judges. What Law might those judges administer, Annachie? Considering these words are from Moses after he gave the Israelites the Law, you have distilled the issues surrounding the county clerk to their essence.

The entire issues with said clerk revolves about this point: to follow what she considers an immoral law or find a moral response to her situation. Those are the options before her. Regardless of what I think is her moral course, she did not face any dilemma prior the SC decision. After that decision the clerk faces further limits on how she might act in accordance with her conscience.

Effectively changing the Constitution alters our sovereignty; our ability to live life as we see fit consistent with our conscience and the law. Having the SC interpret the Constitution to effect significant change allows the governmental body furthest removed from popular election to make those significant changes which impact everyone's sovereignty.

Those sorts of sweeping changes are best done in ways that involve as many of the citizens as possible. That way the results will have broad support. Changing things in this way simply crystalizes opposing views. That makes it difficult to ever really resolve.


I have a question, did you react the same way when the SCOTUS made the Hobby Lobby ruling a while back, or the 'corporations are persons' ruling before that?

The US Constitution does guarantee equal treatment under the law for everyone, and since the government is in fact in the business of regulating and enforcing contracts (including civil marriage contracts), I think that its Obergefell ruling was indeed based on a sound constitutionalist interpretation of the US Constitution.

The SCOTUS did not, in fact, establish a new right or enact a new law. It identified an existing right and used existing constitutional principles to rule that the aforementioned preexisting right must apply to everyone. That is ALL it did.

With the 'corporations are persons' ruling - which is a conservative darling, by the way - it went far beyond that. Nowhere in the US Constitution are corporations accorded personhood, yet that was the SCOTUS' finding. In that case it did in fact establish and enact an entirely original 'right'. To date I still have not heard a single conservative complain about that ruling.
[/quote]
It hasn't. Truely it hasn't.
Even the bible, your source of all historical information, has marriages that are not between a man and a woman.

Homosexual marriage damn near predates Christianity, so it's not a new thing. (Constantine the first christian emperor of Rome passed a law banning the practice)

Marriage itself exists in cultures that had never heard of Christianity, Jews, or their God. Cultures that worshiped their own Gods. Gods plural. Or Spirits.


It's not even a new thing to perform a same sex marriage in a christian church since it was reportadly done around 1,000 years ago.

But to all those Americans why are screaming at SCOTUS, remember that they are way conservative biased.



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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by hanuman   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 6:48 am

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gcomeau wrote:
PeterZ wrote:
That's truly not the point. Change the law through the legislative process or the Constitutional Amendment process


No. Because they already did that. Specifically the 14th Amendment.

That some people don't like what that means today is their problem, not everyone else's... so they can go through the Constitutional Amendment process and try repealing the 14th if they want to change what the law says.

Stop trying to turn things backwards.


Thank you! As I tried to explain to PeterZ, the SCOTUS interpreted the US Constitution - which is its job - and determined that existing constitutional provisions established the right of same sex couples to be treated equally under the law.

Methinks his protests have less to do with the 'democratic process' and more with personal bias. Maybe he should consider that the Supreme Court justices are appointed by way of the 'democratic process' before employing that argument. Also, democracy isn't just about voting. That is a truly simplistic view.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by PeterZ   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 9:29 am

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hanuman wrote:
gcomeau wrote:

Thank you! As I tried to explain to PeterZ, the SCOTUS interpreted the US Constitution - which is its job - and determined that existing constitutional provisions established the right of same sex couples to be treated equally under the law.

Methinks his protests have less to do with the 'democratic process' and more with personal bias. Maybe he should consider that the Supreme Court justices are appointed by way of the 'democratic process' before employing that argument. Also, democracy isn't just about voting. That is a truly simplistic view.


Dude! You have no idea what I believe on this issue. The SCOTUS decision was not unanimous, was it? 4 out of nine disagreed with the logic. How many Amercians will continue to agree with the dissenters? Here's a hint. Roe v Wade is still controversial.

My point still stands. Making fundamental changes to our society is best done involving as broad a base of our citizenry as possible.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by dscott8   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 10:27 am

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PeterZ wrote:Dude! You have no idea what I believe on this issue. The SCOTUS decision was not unanimous, was it? 4 out of nine disagreed with the logic. How many Amercians will continue to agree with the dissenters? Here's a hint. Roe v Wade is still controversial.

My point still stands. Making fundamental changes to our society is best done involving as broad a base of our citizenry as possible.


Roe v. Wade is still controversial because it's an emotional issue that politicians can use to whip up fury in their voter base. Since that decision, there have been times when we've had a Republican majority in Congress, but they haven't -- and will not -- act to repeal it because they need issues like this to stoke the fervor and distract voters from the REAL issues like ruining the US economy by financing China's industrialization or meddling in the Middle East on behalf of the oil companies.

Back in the 1970's, the Republicans started drawing heavily on the activist religious right as a voter base. They saw it as a well organized demographic, motivated by anger at society's secularism. The Republicans strung them along with promises to turn the clock back to the "good old days" of mandatory Christian-centered school prayer, outdated "morals" and secondary status for women. Now that religious right tail is wagging the Republicans' dog. They are so out of touch with current society that they need that reactionary voter base just to stay in the game, but they can't afford to give that base what they promised. If the Republicans actually overturned Roe v. Wade, re-criminalized homosexuality and entangled the government with religion, the voting population would sling them out on their butts and the Republican party would die.

As far as involving a broad base goes, way back in August 2010 an Associated Press poll found that 52% of Americans supported recognition of same-sex marriages. In 2011, Gallup Polls found 53%. That trend has continued, recent polls are now up to 59-60%. So, if the issue was put to a popular vote, the result would have been the same.
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Re: Supreme Court Rules Same-Sex Marriage To Be Law Of The L
Post by hanuman   » Sun Sep 13, 2015 12:29 pm

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PeterZ wrote:
Dude! You have no idea what I believe on this issue. The SCOTUS decision was not unanimous, was it? 4 out of nine disagreed with the logic. How many Amercians will continue to agree with the dissenters? Here's a hint. Roe v Wade is still controversial.

My point still stands. Making fundamental changes to our society is best done involving as broad a base of our citizenry as possible.


As recently as the 90s something like 60% of voting age Americans disapproved of interracial marriages. Should the SCOTUS have refused to rule on Loving? Or Brown, for that matter? Do you think it would have been RIGHT to make interracial couples wait 30 years and more to commit themselves in marriage?

The SCOTUS is part of the democratic process. Everyone has the right to approach it for relief from burdensome laws. Its job is to test existing laws against the Constitution to determine whether they comply with the provisions contained therein. It did so in Obergefell and determined that the laws banning same sex marriage do in fact violate certain constitutional provisions.
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