Results 11 to 16 of 16
-
06-27-2013 #11
- Join Date
- Jun 2012
- Posts
- 7,916
Re: DOMA - Prop 8 has been struck down
4 out of 4 members liked this post.
-
06-27-2013 #12
Re: DOMA - Prop 8 has been struck down
Well just wanted to sound off in support of a couple steps in the right direction!
-
06-27-2013 #13
-
06-28-2013 #14
Re: DOMA - Prop 8 has been struck down
Well, technically yes. It wasn't so much that they punted on equal marriage, but the creation of an equal protection class. First year of law school they teach you the basic classes of race, religion, etc. It's extremely rare that they do that. A new protected class under with strict scrutiny under the law affects countless other rulings, laws and regulations. So it has to be pretty epic for it to happen. And to be honest, even with a liberal court, I don't see it ever happening for LGBT rights. Not that I don't think it would be a good thing, but I just don't see it happening. The level of discrimination isn't the same kind of thing as the African American population or Jewish communities went through. Especially now that America is more accepting of this.
That said, the argument for kicking Prop 8 back to California based on lack of standing is the only correct argument the court really could have made. Before you can determine a resolution to a claim and apply an appropriate remedy, there must be a harm suffered. No one who was bringing the suit experienced any kind of harm. Without that, it's hard to change the law to protect against the harm. (Remember, the case before the court was brought by Supporters of Prop 8, not the LGBT Population of California, who had been granted relief under the Courts prior to the Supremes getting involved.) So punt, no punt, it was really the only outcome they could deliver.
DOMA, that's another matter though. There, they could have had the best shot at creating a Federal Protected Class, and didn't. They also set up countless legal challenges with their decision. Specifically, the challenge that will most likely be brought up in relation to the parts of DOMA that are still in effect are those relating to the Full Faith & Credit Clause in Article IV. Section 1. If a marriage is legally valid in say, California, and that couple moves to some backwoods piece of crap state like Ohio (I say that as a loving resident of the state), currently under DOMA, that craptastic state doesn't need to recognize the marriage or provide benefits. But Full Faith & Credit usually ensures that a marraige between a male-female couple in one state must be recognized in another. That will be the next challenge, and the context which the challenge arrises will probably effect the outcome as well. If it's something like a state tax break, or other (hate to use the word discriminatory, but it kind of fits) benefit being denied to the couple based on same-gender marriage, it might work. But if it's something that a state could modify easily, or is repealable, probably the court will punt again. There are a few sections of DOMA still in place after the ruling, this is the main one, the one that doesn't make states enforce other states same-sex marriages in their own jurisdictions.
But as for Federal stuff, Federal Benefts and Federal recognition is now the law.
And if Jennifer would finally like to lower her standards, marry me, and move to Ohio, I'd be happy to test the legality of the Full Faith & Credit clause for everyone else. Just puttin that out there.
Last edited by JenniferParisHusband; 06-28-2013 at 12:32 AM.
Jus wookin puh nub.
-
06-28-2013 #15
-
06-28-2013 #16
Re: DOMA - Prop 8 has been struck down
Possibly the funniest comment I've read in ages! Great poke at the whole slippery slope concept (as well as at Dino, who wants to poke back).
Nicely summed, flabbybody. And the implication--implied, but carefully left unstated--is that this effectively opens the gate for marriage equality in all states, as quite deftly pointed out by Rachel Maddow last night. It's coming; within five years at least half the states will support it, and ultimately it'll be the law of the land.
As the Massachusetts Supreme Court declared in 2003, it's not legalizing same sex marriage so much as declaring that not allowing same sex marriage is unconstitutional and therefore illegal to begin with.
1 out of 1 members liked this post.
Similar Threads
-
Prop 8 in CA
By MdR Dave in forum General DiscussionReplies: 3Last Post: 02-08-2012, 08:22 AM -
Prop 8-overturned
By hiwatt1000 in forum General DiscussionReplies: 1Last Post: 08-05-2010, 12:42 AM -
Prop 8 is no more!
By Solitary Brother in forum General DiscussionReplies: 3Last Post: 12-20-2008, 09:31 AM -
Prop 8 : The Musical
By GroobySteven in forum General DiscussionReplies: 5Last Post: 12-07-2008, 08:27 AM -
Prop 8...THE MUSICAL!!!
By luv2playwithTgirls in forum General DiscussionReplies: 0Last Post: 12-05-2008, 07:21 AM