That is not the same as changing the fundamental nature of marriage as both custom and law have treated the institution. That sort of change is best done involving as many citizens as possible.
hanuman wrote: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.