Eyal wrote:PeterZ wrote:In regards to mixed race marriages, racial differences are largely superficial. Men of different races are to a remarkably large degree the same. The same applies to women. Yet men are remarkably different from women even within one race.
This is completely irrelevant to your argument. It doesn't matter whether racial differences are superficial or not; only that they were perceived to be significant. And many of the opponents of interracial marriage considered it to be wrong, unnatural, and/or against the natural order. Nor was it generally accepted until fairly recently.
So again - how long do you think interracial couples should have waited for their unions to be sanctioned by the legislature rather than by the courts?
So, a mixed race marriage involves negligible differences while a SSM a more significant set of differences. Significant enough that the South Carolina law unless rewritten allows a man to marry his father but not his mother under this interpretation of the 14th Amendment. AAMOF, applicants are not specifically forbidden to marry close relations of the same sex but are forbidden to marry those closely related individuals of the opposite sex.
To avoid an misunderstanding or being gamed the law must be changed. Which supports my view that these differences are not nearly as insignificant as being portrayed.
How does it support your point? How does that prove there's a significant (nonligual) difference? The only reason it's an issue is that the worders of the law made it such. Had they decided to save space and phrase it as "no person may marry a parent, sibling, grandparent, etc." rather than one clause for men marrying female relatives and a second one for women marrying male relatives, it wouldn't be an issue.
And as I noted above, my understanding is that in such a case the law must be interpreted with the reality of SSM in mind. In much the same way that there are still deeds prohibitng the sale of property to a colored person, but those stipulations are considered void without invalidating the deed as a whole.
My argument has been that I agree that same sex couples should be able to have that close relationship found in many marriages. However, that sort of relationship is incidental to the legal institution of marriage. That institution has historically been described as union between one man and one woman. Again motives for entering this union was not an essential element to this union. As such gays have not been barred from entering into such a union. They simply have no wish to do so, understandably in many cases. Some have married with the purpose of having children, again this is understandable. That some gays have been able to enter into marriage supports the idea that gays can marry under the old definition, so the law did not prohibit gays from marrying. I agree that changes to the law to enable gays to have that satisfying long term relationship is desirable for all.
My disagreement with the ruling stems from the definition of marriage. Historically, the legal institution did not specify the reason for entering into marriage. This ruling assumes the sine qua non of marriage is the emotional satisfaction of finding one's life partner rather than the simple legal union between one man and one woman independent of any motive for entering into the union.
I have no issues with redefining marriage to reflect the changing attitudes regarding marriage. I simply prefer to have such changes go through the legislative process rather than to imbue meaning into words the Constitution never intended. Which 4 out of 9 SCOTUS justices agreed with me on.
The difference between a union between one and and one woman is intrinsically different from that of 2 men or 2 woman,
IF all motives are removed and the subject matter is the specifics of the union. The desire to find a life partner and attraction to another individual is identical between same sex couples and hetero couples. Because people are people. Conflating the two definitions of marriage when discussing this topic is what leads to all the misunderstanding.
When discussing marriage using the first definition that has historically been accepted with someone using the second and vice versa is going to make for a great deal of frustration. Prior to this ruling the definition of marriage as a legal institution held no motives intrinsic to its nature and that was how many if not most people understood it. After this ruling that definition was changed by 5 unelected judges to one where motive was the essential element to marriage.
So while I agree whole heartedly that recognizing one's hearts desire is the same for those attracted to the same sex as it is for those attracted to the opposite sex, it has nothing to do with the essential definition of marriage prior to this ruling. Since I believe this, I believe the the ruling tries to imbue meaning into the marriage laws that the drafters of all those state laws never envisioned. Not that they did not envision same sex unions per se, but that they did not view the motives of entering into marriage as essential in defining the legal institution for the citizens of their state.
SCOTUS' ruling only makes sense if the drafters of all the states marriage laws believed the sine qua non of any marriage is to find one's emotional other half. I don't believe this to be true and so disagree with the ruling.