pgwenthold
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2001
- Messages
- 21,821
My bidexterous marriage is a beautiful thing. When my boy grows up, I will love him no matter what his orientation, right or left.
I'd give my left arm to be ambidexterous.
My bidexterous marriage is a beautiful thing. When my boy grows up, I will love him no matter what his orientation, right or left.
My bidexterous marriage is a beautiful thing. When my boy grows up, I will love him no matter what his orientation, right or left.
Even more oddly, I remember when I "became left handed". I kept moving the crayon back and forth between each hand trying to figure out which one was more comfortable. Did I choose to be left handed, or did I realize I was left handed?Oddly, when I was growing up, someone did once ask me why I chose to be left-handed. I should have told him not to judge my lifestyle.
Oddly, when I was growing up, someone did once ask me why I chose to be left-handed. I should have told him not to judge my lifestyle. Thankfully, I have parents who were very supportive of my widdershins ways.
Most striking is the sharp shift in public opinion on same-sex marriage. Forty-nine percent said it should be legal for gay people to marry, and 46 percent said it should be illegal. About three years ago, a broad majority said such unions should be illegal (58 percent illegal to 36 percent legal).
So, what happens if allowing gay marriage was the will of the people?
Something about genitals and mortgages, as I understand it.They will have to change their arguments then.
Quite. It depends on the group as well, but it is part of that whole "reclaiming" thing.
Only British hets get away with using fag.
Perhaps there's a shift in public opinion. I think legally recognizing gay marriage is silly, but if it is due to the LEGISTLATURE -- public opinion demand their representatives recognize such marriage -- than that's something else entirely than the courts discovering a "right" to gay marriage.
Silly laws are one thing. There's nothing new there -- the world is full of silly laws passed by public opinion demanding it. But the courts overruling the people because the people are not "enlightened" enough is something else entirely.
I do not imagine it is any different in the US though the existence of state and federal law probably make the process more complicated and more steps will be required. I think the principles will be the same and I think they are mostly sound.
If that is the case then the complaint quoted above makes no sense whatsoever: it is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the system, IMO
All of the states where such laws existed were imposed by the judicial branch, and many people are urging that the Supreme Court of the United States do the same thing nationwide.
It is not the case in the US. The system is quite different. You have no written Constitution. We do.
The Constitution is considered a sort of "super law", above the laws passed by the legislature. If a statute passed by the legislature conflicts with the Constitution, a judge can declare that the statute is void. They can also modify and extend laws in order to bring them in line with the Constitution.
Individual states also have constitutions, and on the state level judges do the same thing.
In America prior to 2003, the statutes on marriage were crystal clear. One man gets married to one woman. There was no ambiguity, or difficulty in interpretation.
Meanwhile, in the Constitution, the fourteenth ammendment says, (quoting from memory, so it might not be exact) all persons are entitled to "equal protection under the law". Many states have similar clauses in their constitutions.
Judges in many states have decided that that simple phrase means that you cannot have a law that treats gay people differently than straight people, including a law that creates a condition called "marriage" that only allows one man and one woman.
Until last month, no legislature in the United States had ever passed a statute recognizing either gay marriage or civil unions. All of the states where such laws existed were imposed by the judicial branch, and many people are urging that the Supreme Court of the United States do the same thing nationwide.
This is just not the case. The landmark civil union law in Vermont was legislative. It was prompted by a Supreme Court decision, but the decision did not specify how equal protection should be implemented, and left the mechanism up to the legislature. Civil Union was an entirely legislative invention.Until last month, no legislature in the United States had ever passed a statute recognizing either gay marriage or civil unions. All of the states where such laws existed were imposed by the judicial branch, and many people are urging that the Supreme Court of the United States do the same thing nationwide.
Sorry Meadmaker: I don't see the difference in principle. It seems to me that your constitution is akin to human rights provisions in european law: but to me that makes little or no difference to what I have outlined in terms of underlying principle.
Am I wrong about that? It does not look like judge made law to me: it looks like the judges are telling the legislature what the laws they wrote mean
Perhaps there's a shift in public opinion. I think legally recognizing gay marriage is silly, but if it is due to the LEGISTLATURE -- public opinion demand their representatives recognize such marriage -- than that's something else entirely than the courts discovering a "right" to gay marriage.
Silly laws are one thing. There's nothing new there -- the world is full of silly laws passed by public opinion demanding it. But the courts overruling the people because the people are not "enlightened" enough is something else entirely.
Perhaps there's a shift in public opinion. I think legally recognizing gay marriage is silly, but if it is due to the LEGISTLATURE -- public opinion demand their representatives recognize such marriage -- than that's something else entirely than the courts discovering a "right" to gay marriage.
Silly laws are one thing. There's nothing new there -- the world is full of silly laws passed by public opinion demanding it. But the courts overruling the people because the people are not "enlightened" enough is something else entirely.
Apparently gay marriage is wrong if it leads to people pushing for and getting, say, polygamy. So Skeptic, or anyone else making this argument, would you be against inter-racial marriage, too, if it led directly to people pushing for, and getting, polygamy?