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View Poll Results: California's Anti-Gay Marriage Proposition
I support the idea behind Proposition 8 8 8.08%
I do not support the idea behind Proposition 8 87 87.88%
I do not know/ other 4 4.04%
Voters: 99. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 05-26-2009, 01:57 PM   #321 (permalink)
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You've probably all read the news today, but here are the results...

Quote:
California high court upholds same-sex marriage ban
SAN FRANCISCO, California (CNN) -- California's highest court upheld a voter-approved ban on same-sex marriages Tuesday but allowed about 18,000 unions performed before the ban to remain valid.

Supporters of the November ballot initiative Proposition 8 hailed the ruling, but about 1,000 advocates of same-sex marriages who gathered outside the court building in San Francisco met the 6-1 decision with chants of "Shame on you."

"It's nice that my marriage is still intact, but that's not the point," said Kathleen White, who married her partner in 2008. "The point is that everybody should have the same civil rights across the board."

Proposition 8's supporters argued that Californians have long had the right to change their state constitution through ballot initiatives. But opponents of the ban argued it improperly altered the state constitution to restrict a fundamental right guaranteed in the state's charter.

Tuesday's ruling found the proposition restricted the designation of marriage "while not otherwise affecting the fundamental constitutional rights of same-sex couples." Watch what was at stake »

"We further conclude that Proposition 8 does not apply retroactively and therefore that the marriages of same-sex couples performed prior to the effective date of Proposition 8 remain valid," California Chief Justice Ronald George wrote.

The court, which is dominated by Republican appointees, ruled in May 2008 that the state constitution guaranteed gay and lesbian couples the "basic civil right" to marry. That decision came four years after San Francisco began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

But in November, state voters approved Proposition 8, 52 percent to 48 percent. The measure provided that only heterosexual unions would be recognized as marriages by the state.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Carlos Moreno wrote that the measure "violates the essence of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution and fundamentally alters its scope and meaning." View reactions to the ruling »

"The majority's holding is not just a defeat for same-sex couples, but for any minority group that seeks the protection of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution,"wrote Moreno, the court's only Democratic appointee.

The Family Research Council, a conservative Christian group that supported Proposition 8, argued in court papers that the effort to overturn the measure "strikes directly at the heart of California's system of government." Its president, Tony Perkins, hailed Monday's ruling, but said the decision to preserve marriages performed before the ban could open the door for a possible appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"At every opportunity, the people of California have voted to protect marriage because they recognize the far-reaching consequences that redefining marriage will have for children, the family, religious liberties, businesses and every facet of American society," Perkins said. "Today's decision should encourage pro-family activists not only in California but across the country."

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who opposed the initiative, praised the court for leaving the previous marriages intact and urged opponents of the decision to respond "peacefully and lawfully."

"While I believe that one day either the people or courts will recognize gay marriage, as governor of California, I will uphold the decision of the California Supreme Court," Schwarzenegger said in a statement.

It was unclear whether advocates have an avenue to appeal Tuesday's ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court or would have to seek a new referendum to overturn Proposition 8.

The state justices left unaddressed whether same-sex marriages performed in other states before the ban was adopted would be recognized in California, and advocates would have to argue that the measure violated their rights under the U.S. Constitution for the federal high court to take up the case.

Proposition 8's approval sparked protests against and criticism of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which strongly supported the measure.

Opponents of the ban said the Utah-based church donated a majority of the money that funded the Proposition 8 campaign. But the Mormons said they were being unfairly singled out for criticism when other religious leaders -- including Cardinal Roger Mahoney, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Los Angeles -- also supported the ban.

Four states -- Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, and Iowa -- currently allow same-sex marriages. A Vermont law making such marriages legal will take effect in September. And the District of Columbia voted May 5 to recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere, though it does not itself give marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

In April, New York Gov. David Paterson introduced legislation to make same-sex marriage legal in his state.

New Hampshire's move to legalize same-sex marriage hit a road bump Wednesday after that state's House of Representatives did not agree to legislation changes made by the governor.

Both New Hampshire's House and its Senate already had approved allowing gay couples to marry. But Gov. John Lynch, a three-term Democrat, said he would sign a same-sex marriage bill only if it provides "the strongest and clearest protections for religious institutions and associations, and for the individuals working with such institutions."

The House on Wednesday fell two votes short of approving Lynch's language. The chamber then voted to send the legislation to a committee to be considered further.
Wondering what will happen next.
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Old 05-26-2009, 02:18 PM   #322 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by genuinegirly View Post
You've probably all read the news today, but here are the results...



Wondering what will happen next.
just a theory, but with the court leaving the 18,000 marriages valid, did they purposefully set this up for a federal 14th amendment challenge?
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Old 05-26-2009, 02:43 PM   #323 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Frosstbyte View Post
Yes, that's exactly what it's like, but that's about what I expect from him after his years of relegating gays to second class citizens on this board, so, nothing to see here.
Excuse me? Not agreeing with gay marriage = "relegating gays to second class citizens"? Strawman, much?

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just a theory, but with the court leaving the 18,000 marriages valid, did they purposefully set this up for a federal 14th amendment challenge?
No. They were just following legal precedent. And gay rights advocates would be dumb to take the case to SCOTUS atm, as they're setting themselves up for an almost assured defeat given DOMA and the current make-up of the court. And a defeat there would be worse than a simple defeat in a state court as any decision SCOTUS reaches is legally binding on all state courts.
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Old 05-26-2009, 02:47 PM   #324 (permalink)
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But it still leaves open 14th Amendment (and other legal) challenges.
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Old 05-26-2009, 02:53 PM   #325 (permalink)
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No. They were just following legal precedent.
which precedent? That there is now no 'equal protection' for the numerous other gay couples that didn't get to marry? or that 18,000 marriages are recognized because they happened to slide in before the lock? I see a 14th Amendment challenge coming.
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Old 05-26-2009, 03:31 PM   #326 (permalink)
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which precedent? That there is now no 'equal protection' for the numerous other gay couples that didn't get to marry? or that 18,000 marriages are recognized because they happened to slide in before the lock? I see a 14th Amendment challenge coming.
Laws have never been applied retroactively unless they were stated to be applied retroactively beforehand. Prop 8 never stated this, in part because it was drafted before any same-sex marriages had been performed. As a result, the courts simply decided that Prop 8 couldn't be used to invalidate every same-sex marriage performed in California-- Just those occurring after Prop 8 was passed.

But, like I said, good luck with the 14th Amendment challenge. I don't see that going very far, especially with DOMA in the way. And then there's the fact that Alito, Scalia, Roberts and Thomas will almost certainly vote against any such arguments brought forth by gay rights advocates, which would mean that gay rights advocates would have to get the other five justices to vote in their favor. They'd most likely get Ginsberg, Stevens and Breyer. I don't know anything about the new lady, so I can't comment. I don't see Kennedy siding with the more liberal wing, as while he's generally supportive of gay rights, he's always stopped short of insinuating that the government should have to legally recognize any relationship that gays enter into. So, at best, I'd see a 5 - 4 split against gay advocates, at worst a 6 - 3 split.

I'm pretty sure gay rights advocates know this, so they won't try to press the issue in a Federal court. Sure, they could win, but they probably wouldn't and losing there would be a major blow to their cause.
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Old 05-26-2009, 04:42 PM   #327 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Infinite_Loser View Post
Excuse me? Not agreeing with gay marriage = "relegating gays to second class citizens"? Strawman, much?
Giving rights to some people and not other people based on immutable characteristics is the very definition of relegating someone to a second class citizen. You not liking what you are doesn't change it.

---------- Post added at 08:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:37 PM ----------

Unfortunately, a 14th Amendment challenge will go nowhere. It's language has been read on numerous occasions to exclude sexuality (homosexuality, transsexualism, etc.) and the current courts do not have the proper make up to change that-assuming that it'd even be a good idea for them to do so. Even being a staunch advocate for gay marriage, I think constitutional amendments are the way to grant them rights, just as we did with sex and gender. Unfortunately, that just means it's going to take some time.
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:14 PM   #328 (permalink)
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Giving rights to some people and not other people based on immutable characteristics is the very definition of relegating someone to a second class citizen. You not liking what you are doesn't change it.
And I agree. Too bad for you marriage isn't a right.
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:28 PM   #329 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dksuddeth View Post
this is why california should have a con-con. so that they can deal with that pesky majority rule thing. still though, it does provide a really good example of why people shouldn't take the whole 'we won, we're the majority, what we say should go' thing seriously.

a con-con?
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:29 PM   #330 (permalink)
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a con-con?
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:31 PM   #331 (permalink)
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And I agree. Too bad for you marriage isn't a right.
right, privilege, Happy Meal Toy.....whatever you want to call it, it's being granted carte blanche to some (heterosexuals) and denied to others (homosexuals). You can play the semantics game all day, but the facts remain the facts
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:32 PM   #332 (permalink)
 
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in the end, this is obviously a numbers game. i would hope that another initiative is mounted, and soon, and that this time people who do not support the relegation of people who happen to be gay to a second-class status will find themselves defeated in california as they have been in state after state.

i look forward to that day.


there is no argument, no belief, no system of beliefs that enables folk to arrogate to themselves the prerogative to tell people who are not them who they can and cannot choose to love.
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:32 PM   #333 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Derwood View Post
right, privilege, Happy Meal Toy.....whatever you want to call it, it's being granted carte blanche to some (heterosexuals) and denied to others (homosexuals). You can play the semantics game all day, but the facts remain the facts
That sounds about right.
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Old 05-26-2009, 05:34 PM   #334 (permalink)
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Laws have never been applied retroactively unless they were stated to be applied retroactively beforehand.
well this is totally false. All one needs to do is look up cases that were affected by the Lautenberg amendment.


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Originally Posted by Infinite_Loser View Post
But, like I said, good luck with the 14th Amendment challenge. I don't see that going very far, especially with DOMA in the way. And then there's the fact that Alito, Scalia, Roberts and Thomas will almost certainly vote against any such arguments brought forth by gay rights advocates
They'd have to be fools if they do, unless they can come up with a very convincing opinion laying out why equal protection doesn't apply in this particular instance....other than the standard 'we disagree' sentence. Doing so would basically render the USSC irrelevant and people and states would tell the feds to finally fuck off.

---------- Post added at 08:33 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:32 PM ----------

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a con-con?
con-con is short for constitutional convention.

---------- Post added at 08:34 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:33 PM ----------

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Originally Posted by Infinite_Loser View Post
And I agree. Too bad for you marriage isn't a right.
say what? and you can prove that it isn't? for instance, you can show in any state constitution that it says you can only marry who the state says you can?
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Old 05-26-2009, 06:07 PM   #335 (permalink)
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in the end, this is obviously a numbers game. i would hope that another initiative is mounted, and soon, and that this time people who do not support the relegation of people who happen to be gay to a second-class status will find themselves defeated in california as they have been in state after state.
Wait. What states are those? Because I must have missed them.

And, for the love of God man, disagreeing with gay marriage does not equal "relegating gays to second class citizenry".

Quote:
there is no argument, no belief, no system of beliefs that enables folk to arrogate to themselves the prerogative to tell people who are not them who they can and cannot choose to love.
You can love whom you wish. No one's ever debated that.

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Originally Posted by dksuddeth
well this is totally false. All one needs to do is look up cases that were affected by the Lautenberg amendment.
Well, I have to say that's news to me because the U.S. Constitution explicitly prohibits retroactive laws.

Quote:
They'd have to be fools if they do, unless they can come up with a very convincing opinion laying out why equal protection doesn't apply in this particular instance....other than the standard 'we disagree' sentence. Doing so would basically render the USSC irrelevant and people and states would tell the feds to finally fuck off.
Not really. You're assuming that sexuality is a suspect class offered full protection under the 14th Amendment.

Quote:
say what? and you can prove that it isn't? for instance, you can show in any state constitution that it says you can only marry who the state says you can?
Huh? 20-something states, I believe, have passed constitutional amendments which limit marriage to one man and one woman.

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Originally Posted by Derwood View Post
right, privilege, Happy Meal Toy.....whatever you want to call it, it's being granted carte blanche to some (heterosexuals) and denied to others (homosexuals). You can play the semantics game all day, but the facts remain the facts.
What facts? What argument? Gays are not specifically prohibited from marrying nor are they specifically targeted by any measure. Your problem is that you assume the latter two statements to be true whilst simultaneously ignoring the fact that there is no fundamental difference in limiting marriages based on the genders of the persons looking to be wed and limiting marriages based on age, consanguinity or even number of persons looking to be wed. Yes, I went there.

Passing it off as semantics doesn't make it semantics. It means that you don't fully understand what it is you're arguing about/for. You can argue for same-sex marriages all you want, but to insinuate denying people the ability to enter into same-sex marriages is discriminatory is simply inane.
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Old 05-26-2009, 06:15 PM   #336 (permalink)
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Well, I have to say that's news to me because the U.S. Constitution explicitly prohibits retroactive laws.
One would think that, especially since it says right in the constitution that there shall be no ex-post facto laws, but you'd be wrong. I was shocked also, as were lots of other gun owners.

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Not really. You're assuming that sexuality is a suspect class offered full protection under the 14th Amendment.
and if this country actually had a supreme court that ruled via the constitution and the rule of law, there wouldn't need to be. We are, however, lorded over by a federal government that makes up rulings on the fly as it wants or needs to.

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Huh? 20-something states, I believe, have passed constitutional amendments which limit marriage to one man and one woman.
and for those states, great. They actually went through the process of amending their constitution. It's sad to see that they were goaded in to giving their state governments the power to discriminate though. But that's what happens when we have a nation of cowards.
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Old 05-26-2009, 06:45 PM   #337 (permalink)
 
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states where gay folk can marry:

* Connecticut
* District of Columbia
* New Hampshire
* New Jersey
* New York
* Maine
* Massachusetts
* Vermont
* Iowa
* Oregon
* Washington
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Old 05-26-2009, 07:01 PM   #338 (permalink)
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One would think that, especially since it says right in the constitution that there shall be no ex-post facto laws, but you'd be wrong. I was shocked also, as were lots of other gun owners.
Well, now I know, though I'm not so sure how that's constitutional, much less legal.

Quote:
and if this country actually had a supreme court that ruled via the constitution and the rule of law, there wouldn't need to be. We are, however, lorded over by a federal government that makes up rulings on the fly as it wants or needs to.
If that were to happen then there would be an awful lot of SCOTUS rulings over the past 40 years that would have been thrown out, which is part great, part not-so-great.

Quote:
and for those states, great. They actually went through the process of amending their constitution. It's sad to see that they were goaded in to giving their state governments the power to discriminate though. But that's what happens when we have a nation of cowards.
Wait. How were they "goaded" into anything? You don't have to like the process by which they did it, but it's a right allowed to them by their respective constitutions unless the U.S. Constitution, or SCOTUS, says otherwise.

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Originally Posted by roachboy View Post
states where gay folk can marry:

* Connecticut
* District of Columbia
* New Hampshire
* New Jersey
* New York
* Maine
* Massachusetts
* Vermont
* Iowa
* Oregon
* Washington
This isn't totally true.

Only four, five in September, allow SSM to be performed within their borders: NH, NJ, Iowa, Maine and Massachutes. The others provide some sort of recognition for same-sex marriages performed out of state but do not perform them themselves. And, even then, I was asking you what state has legalized SSM by popular vote? The answer is none of them. So I don't understand your whole "move out of the way and be defeated as they have in state after state" quip.
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Old 05-26-2009, 07:57 PM   #339 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Infinite_Loser View Post
Gays are not specifically prohibited from marrying nor are they specifically targeted by any measure. Your problem is that you assume the latter two statements to be true whilst simultaneously ignoring the fact that there is no fundamental difference in limiting marriages based on the genders of the persons looking to be wed and limiting marriages based on age, consanguinity or even number of persons looking to be wed.
You've said this before, and it's still wrong. Gays have insisted on being permitted to marry, and they have been denied.

Because they're gay. That is discriminatory.

The ONLY reason they aren't allowed to marry is because they're gay. They can't marry because they're gay. Gay couples cannot be married because they're the same sex. There is nothing else out of the ordinary. John and Tony cannot get married because they'd need to deny their sexuality and find women to do that. Beth and Tammy have the same problem, except they'd need to break up and find men.

How many other ways can I put this?

Leave minors, consanguinity, and polygamy out of this. Gays aren't going for any of those things any more or less than heterosexuals.

If a member of the clergy is willing to marry gays, what right does the state have in denying that?

Denying same-sex marriage in a way is a refusal to accept gays as "legitimate" couples. It sends a statement to all gay couples: You are not a real relationship.
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Old 05-26-2009, 11:18 PM   #340 (permalink)
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You've said this before, and it's still wrong. Gays have insisted on being permitted to marry, and they have been denied.
That's not quite true, though. As this one exchange between you and IL goes, he's right and you're wrong. Gays are allowed to marry under the same conditions that others are allowed marriage. There's really no way around that fact. They're denied - wrongly, of course - their preferred version of marriage, but heterosexuals are denied the same.

A better tact is to question why the government bestows special privileged upon one type of committed union and not this other type. Why do certain heterosexual couples get to file jointly but not any homosexual couples? Why can't homosexuals with kids get the same tax breaks that heterosexuals with kids do? Why can't homosexuals arrange for hospital visitation rights as heterosexuals can?

Or alternately, for those who have a partial deal, why is it that heterosexuals get all these perks in one easy package while homosexuals have to jump through hoops?

It's my suspicion that the anti-gay marriage position is ultimately just plain indefensible without resorting to some theocratic perspective (however veiled), but myspaceish mischaracterizations like "how can you deny people the right to love who they love??!?" really help to muddy questions of each side's relative credibility.
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Old 05-27-2009, 04:07 AM   #341 (permalink)
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Old 05-27-2009, 04:14 AM   #342 (permalink)
 
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my my timalkin, what a noxious little sentence.
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Old 05-27-2009, 04:17 AM   #343 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by roachboy View Post
states where gay folk can marry:

* Connecticut
* District of Columbia
* New Hampshire
* New Jersey
* New York
* Maine
* Massachusetts
* Vermont
* Iowa
* Oregon
* Washington
since when in NY? We attended a wonderful commitment ceremony of a lovely gay lesbian couple and it was a commitment ceremony beause they couldn't get married in the traditional sense.

or better yet, how.
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Old 05-27-2009, 04:29 AM   #344 (permalink)
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Old 05-27-2009, 05:02 AM   #345 (permalink)
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Would you care to explain in a post that is at least reasonably comprehensible?

You seem to be drawing a line somewhere, but I don't see how a line can be drawn. Either marriage is between one man and one woman, or the entire concept of marriage is open to interpretation. There will be only one debate if gay marriage is upheld: Will polygamy or child-marriage be next? My vote is for polygamy. That might be a good thing for some people, but you're delusional if you think that this stops at gay marriage.
this is a meme that the anti-gay marriage people like to cling to. the options aren't "draw a line here or erase the line entirely". one can choose to move the line. I dont' for a second buy the argument that allowing same-sex marriages opens the floodgates for people marrying their moms, sisters and dogs.

You realize that your exact same argument was made by those who opposed interracial marriage. In fact, you can replace the phrase "same-sex" with "interracial" in nearly every current argument and you'd have a carbon copy of the argument that was made a few decades ago....
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Old 05-27-2009, 05:10 AM   #346 (permalink)
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Excuse me? Not agreeing with gay marriage = "relegating gays to second class citizens"? Strawman, much?

^^^^^ Exactly.
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Old 05-27-2009, 05:13 AM   #347 (permalink)
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^^^^^ Exactly.
Okay, then give us you reasons for denying them the option to marry so we can understand better. Explain how you justify it in a way that doesn't draw the line between two groups of citizens
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Old 05-27-2009, 07:55 AM   #348 (permalink)
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Would you care to explain in a post that is at least reasonably comprehensible?
Children and animals cannot properly consent to sexual relationships.
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Old 05-27-2009, 08:04 AM   #349 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FoolThemAll View Post
Children and animals cannot properly consent to sexual relationships.
I've always found this confusing.

Gays shouldn't be able to marry in the same way that people shouldn't be able to marry horses and toddlers.

WTF?

Wait a minute! We should ABOLISH marriage, because there is always the RISK that one day ALL of this will be permitted! Marriage at its essence is too dangerous! Heterosexual marriage can only lead to the marriage to the devil!

Let's abandon this marriage experiment.
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Old 05-27-2009, 08:07 AM   #350 (permalink)
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I don't understand why folks who aren't involved in a marriage think that it is any less valid than any other. "Because that's the way it's always been" seems like a particularly lazy excuse since slavery, facial hair requirements and unreversable sworn loyalty to a superior (regardless of their competency) all have died out in Western society, and they're all examples of "the way it is." Of course, those against gay marriage also tend to be those who want to keep folks from buying sex toys or alcohol at random times or making sure that none of their precisious snowflakes ever learn to think for themselves.

Then again, my kids have at least 4 friends being raised by same-sex couples, and they're all great parents.
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Old 05-27-2009, 08:21 AM   #351 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by timalkin View Post
Would you care to explain in a post that is at least reasonably comprehensible?

You seem to be drawing a line somewhere, but I don't see how a line can be drawn. Either marriage is between one man and one woman, or the entire concept of marriage is open to interpretation. There will be only one debate if gay marriage is upheld: Will polygamy or child-marriage be next? My vote is for polygamy. That might be a good thing for some people, but you're delusional if you think that this stops at gay marriage.
You do know that some of the first mentions of marriage in the bible actually refer to polygamy, right? David, Solomon, Abraham were all polygamists... So the concept of marriage has changed, without necessarily meaning that anything goes.
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Old 05-27-2009, 08:23 AM   #352 (permalink)
 
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timalkin: i'll use caps so you follow this one, ok?

The backwater meme you repeated above: it's fucking idiotic.
There's nothing to discuss because it's not worth taking seriously.
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Old 05-27-2009, 08:33 AM   #353 (permalink)
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Quote:
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Let's abandon this marriage experiment.
Motion seconded.
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Old 05-27-2009, 09:00 AM   #354 (permalink)
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I'm fine with a complete separation of church and state on marriage. Let church's "marry" who they want, but strip them of any legal rights (priests/pastors can no longer sign marriage certificates, etc.) Make any civil unions be a purely government/paperwork exercise, and don't discriminate based on sexual orientation.
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Old 05-27-2009, 09:51 AM   #355 (permalink)
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Okay, then give us you reasons for denying them the option to marry so we can understand better. Explain how you justify it in a way that doesn't draw the line between two groups of citizens

-- Sure. As soon as you tell me where the line is.

Remember, I am not calling for Gays not to be able to marry.
I feel the individual states should make the call.

That way when the next group says, "If marraige isn't between a man and a woman, why is it restricted to just two people?" and the battle starts again, individual states can find their own solutions.

So tell me, how are you going to respond to polygomists who say, "My civil rights are being violated because I can't be married to more than one person at once."

Or the 60 year old lady who wants to marry her sister, not out of love but so she will be covered by her health benefits.

Both of those examples come from Anderson Cooper from CNN. Those people at the protests gave CNN those reasons for supporting Gay marraige.

They, by their own admission, don't care about gays. They just want the definition of marraige to change so they can then sue to have it cover them, as well.
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Old 05-27-2009, 10:34 AM   #356 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Polar View Post
-- Sure. As soon as you tell me where the line is.

That way when the next group says, "If marraige isn't between a man and a woman, why is it restricted to just two people?" and the battle starts again, individual states can find their own solutions.

So tell me, how are you going to respond to polygomists who say, "My civil rights are being violated because I can't be married to more than one person at once."

Or the 60 year old lady who wants to marry her sister, not out of love but so she will be covered by her health benefits.
I have no say in the matter, so they wouldn't be pleading their cases to me. I would, however, like to hear the arguments.
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Old 05-27-2009, 11:04 AM   #357 (permalink)
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I have no say in the matter, so they wouldn't be pleading their cases to me. I would, however, like to hear the arguments.

-- I am not sure if the interviews are on YouTube or not.
Their argument is basically this:

If marraige is no longer defined as just between a man and a woman, then it can no longer be defined as just between two people.

They state that there is no argument for removing just the gender restrictions. If they can remove that, there is no way they can argue against removing the number restrictions.

What argument would they use against expanding the definition further? Tradition? Societal norms? etc. etc. If those arguments wouldn't wash for gays, it wouldn't/shouldn't wash for polygamists.

Same with WHO you marry. Why can't sisters marry if the reason is simply to ensure one has medical coverage or right to life insurance benefits?

They also brought up NAMBLA. Why can't there be a 'marraige' between a man and a boy? Their argument is based on the fact that in some states, a minor can leave school without parent's knowledge to get an abortion. If a child can be thought mature enough to choose to have a surgical procedure, they are mature enough to be married. The way around it would be a promise for it to be a 'plutonic' relationship until age of consent.

So I ask, where woul the line be? And more to the point...how would you justify it?
Apparently 'the will of the people' in a legal vote isn't enough to satisfy.

I don't think labeling over half the population of CA as homophobes is going to fly in the next round.

Last edited by Polar; 05-27-2009 at 11:13 AM..
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Old 05-27-2009, 11:12 AM   #358 (permalink)
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you move the line one case at a time. The line will never move to incest (even if it's a non-sexual, monetary/benefit based partnership), and the NAMBLA argument is moot because minors can't enter a legal contract.

And again, look at this slightly modified version of your post:

Quote:
If marraige is no longer defined as just between a white man and a white woman, then it can no longer be defined as just between two people.

They state that there is no argument for removing just the racial restrictions. If they can remove that, there is no way they can argue against removing the number restrictions.
Those who opposed interracial marriage found that slope was nowhere close to being as slippery as they had forecast....
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Old 05-27-2009, 11:49 AM   #359 (permalink)
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The line for me is consent. Homosexual couples can give knowing consent, heterosexual couples can give knowing consent, polygamous couples (or triples or quadruples, etc.) can give knowing consent and incestuous couples can give knowing consent. I know a lot of people will have trouble wrapping their heads around those last two, but no one is forcing you into those relationships so it's really none of your business. Even if the people next door are in a polygamous homosexual incestuous relationship, it's none of your business just like a heterosexual couple is none of your business.

Children cannot give consent, animals cannot give consent, and non-living objects cannot give consent. Also, some mentally disabled people cannot give consent, which might also cause some head-wrapping troubles.
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Old 05-27-2009, 12:05 PM   #360 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Willravel View Post
The line for me is consent. (N)on-living objects cannot give consent.
For the record, Willravel is against the sybian, dildos, vibrators, blow-up dolls, strap-ons, sex swings, anal beads, various fruits and vegetables, the Fleshlight, vibrating panties and any other sex toy that I've forgotten.
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