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Iowa Court says gay marriage ban unconstitutional

Equal protection and fairness have never been a part of this issue, nor will they ever be a part of this issue.

"Fairness" requires a bit more than people crying "unfair!".



Sorry Celt...but Equal Protection and Fairness are a part of every issue under the Constitution. You might want to take a look.
 
If The People decided to allow gay marriage because the evidence shows that gays can raise children just as well as there hetero counter parts, fine; but it's still not a civil rights issue.

If marriage were strictly about raising children, then only fertile couples that signed a pledge that they would reproduce would be allowed to wed. That's just a silly argument.
 
Sorry Celt...but Equal Protection and Fairness are a part of every issue under the Constitution. You might want to take a look.

I demand a minority housing grant. Equal protection under the law.
 
Marriage is not a right. It is a discriminatory institution that confers benefits upon a specifically defined group of people. If people are going to claim a gay couple has the "right" to a marriage then I'm going to claim I have a "right" to a minority housing grant.

Normaly I wouldn't respond to a post as ignorent as this one, however it seems that I don't have a Standerd Issue Responce on file for such a claim, so here we go...


Jerry's Standard Issue Response #26:

Marriage is, in fact, a "Fundimental Right"...
LOVING v. VIRGINIA
...These statutes also deprive the Lovings of liberty without due process of law in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.

Marriage is one of the "basic civil rights of man," fundamental to our very existence and survival
.....
Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942). See also Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190 (1888)....

SKINNER v. STATE OF OKL.
....But the instant legislation runs afoul of the equal protection clause, though we give Oklahoma that large deference which the rule of the foregoing cases requires. We are dealing here with legislation which involves one of the basic civil rights of man. Marriage and procreation are fundamental to the very existence and survival of the race....

...but what does that even mean?

The Supreme Court has adopted the doctrine of a constitutional “fundamental right to marry,” and has construed this doctrine to mean a fundamental right to state-recognized legal-marriage. However, the doctrine has several problems:
  • The Court never satisfactorily explains why marriage is a fundamental right;
  • The Court never defines the boundaries of marriage as a fundamental right; and..
  • The Court has occasionally treated marriage as if it were not a fundamental right.

Further, the idea of a “fundamental right to marry” contains a debilitating internal contradiction: the notion of a fundamental right implies firm privileges which the state cannot deny, define, or disrespect, but marriage boundaries (the legal rules establishing who is eligible to marry whom, what formalities are required for marriage, and the legal ramifications of marriage) in the United States have always been subject to almost plenary state control which denies some marriages and refuses to give legal effect to others. What can a “right to marry” protecting individuals against the state possibly mean when the state itself determines what this thing called “marriage” is?

Two observations about marriage suggest the answer to this question.
First: The word “marriage” carries several different meanings which are related to each other but conceptually distinct. The “fundamental right to marry” conundrum arises in part from the conflation of these various meanings.
Second: The history of western marriage regulation—particularly the contemporary rejection of the traditional beliefs about sexuality and marriage that once provided principled boundaries for a right to marry—explains why the various meanings of marriage often are conflated today, and it suggests how the law can escape the “fundamental right to marry” conundrum. The Supreme Court should reinterpret the fundamental right to marry as referring to the practice of personal-marriage behaviors (cohabitation, economic partnership, joint decision-making, etc.) rather than state-recognized legal-marriage. This would preserve the entrenched idea of a fundamental right to marry while cohering wit! h the negative liberty nature of the Court’s other recognized fundamental rights and accommodating the reality that the Constitution does not (currently) textually define or even mention marriage in any way.


SUGGESTED CITATION:
Joseph A. Pull, "Questioning the Fundamental Right to Marry" (May 25, 2006). Yale Law School. Yale Law School Student Scholarship Series. Paper 26.

Yale Law School
 
Sorry Celt...but Equal Protection and Fairness are a part of every issue under the Constitution. You might want to take a look.
Apology accepted....because while fairness and equal protection are part of the Constitution, this is not a Constitutional issue (nor is it justiciable under the Constitution).

In order to establish a need for relief, you must first establish a violation of right. LambdaLegal's posturing notwithstanding, this has not been done.

Nor has it been established that gay marriage is the correct remedy. For reasons I have discussed elsewhere on DP, I believe a persuasive argument exists that gay marriage is not the correct remedy.

Finally and most crucially, even if gay marriage is an equitable remedy, courts do not have the competence to rewrite laws, nor government regulations. This is not an issue that courts have the power to decide; this is not an issue the courts should ever have the power to decide.
 
Apology accepted....because while fairness and equal protection are part of the Constitution, this is not a Constitutional issue (nor is it justiciable under the Constitution).

In order to establish a need for relief, you must first establish a violation of right. LambdaLegal's posturing notwithstanding, this has not been done.

Nor has it been established that gay marriage is the correct remedy. For reasons I have discussed elsewhere on DP, I believe a persuasive argument exists that gay marriage is not the correct remedy.

Finally and most crucially, even if gay marriage is an equitable remedy, courts do not have the competence to rewrite laws, nor government regulations. This is not an issue that courts have the power to decide; this is not an issue the courts should ever have the power to decide.

The Iowa Supreme Court disagrees with you.

Additionally...everything you say courts are not to do, is exactly what they are there to do.

I've seen your argument regarding gay marriage. Is isn't very persuasive. Sorry....just being honest
 
If marriage were strictly about raising children, then only fertile couples that signed a pledge that they would reproduce would be allowed to wed. That's just a silly argument.

Hmm well there ya go: If the ban on incest were about protecting children from genetic diseases then people with Familial combined hyperlipidemia or
Familial hypercholesterolemia wouldn't be allowed to marry. Therefore, since people so afflicted can marry, and familial relation is a federally protected class, any ban on incest is unconstitutional.
 
I demand a minority housing grant. Equal protection under the law.

You're simply showing that you do not understand Equal Protection analysis.

You absolutely could raise a claim that minority housing grants violate equal protection.

However, under Equal Protection analysis, right to a housing grant would likely only trigger minimal scrutiny (You do understand that there are three levels of scrutiny under Equal Protection analysis, right? ...I'm not trying to be facetious, but there are some people like NP that don't understand and refuse to read "EP for dummies")

Under minimal scrutiny, the government would have to show that there is some legitimate public interest that is advanced for the discriminatory conduct or else it would be found to violate equal protection.

I doubt it would be difficult for attorneys on behalf of the government to establish a legitimate basis for providing such grants.
 
Hmm well there ya go: If the ban on incest were about protecting children from genetic diseases then people with Familial combined hyperlipidemia or
Familial hypercholesterolemia wouldn't be allowed to marry. Therefore, since people so afflicted can marry, and familial relation is a federally protected class, any ban on incest is unconstitutional.

Wow...that was a twist on logic....practically rising to Stinger level
 
Wow...that was a twist on logic....practically rising to Stinger level

Coming from you that's a compliment :2wave:

(using random pro-gm argument generator): "Who are you to dictate who people can love?"

(another contribution from the random argument generator): "The government needs to keep it's nose out of the bedroom of consenting adults."
 
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If The People decided to allow gay marriage because the evidence shows that gays can raise children just as well as there hetero counter parts, fine; but it's still not a civil rights issue.

What issue is it then... according you to?
 
If marriage were strictly about raising children, then only fertile couples that signed a pledge that they would reproduce would be allowed to wed. That's just a silly argument.

That was the point that I was making... although a bit more subtle, I guess. ;)
 
Normaly I wouldn't respond to a post as ignorent as this one, however it seems that I don't have a Standerd Issue Responce on file for such a claim, so here we go...

Jerry's Standard Issue Response #26:

Marriage is, in fact, a "Fundimental Right"...

LOVING v. VIRGINIA
...These statutes also deprive the Lovings of liberty without due process of law in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.

Marriage is one of the "basic civil rights of man," fundamental to our very existence and survival.....
Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942). See also Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190 (1888)....

SKINNER v. STATE OF OKL.
....But the instant legislation runs afoul of the equal protection clause, though we give Oklahoma that large deference which the rule of the foregoing cases requires. We are dealing here with legislation which involves one of the basic civil rights of man. Marriage and procreation are fundamental to the very existence and survival of the race....

...but what does that even mean?

The Supreme Court has adopted the doctrine of a constitutional “fundamental right to marry,” and has construed this doctrine to mean a fundamental right to state-recognized legal-marriage. However, the doctrine has several problems:
The Court never satisfactorily explains why marriage is a fundamental right;
The Court never defines the boundaries of marriage as a fundamental right; and..
The Court has occasionally treated marriage as if it were not a fundamental right.

Further, the idea of a “fundamental right to marry” contains a debilitating internal contradiction: the notion of a fundamental right implies firm privileges which the state cannot deny, define, or disrespect, but marriage boundaries (the legal rules establishing who is eligible to marry whom, what formalities are required for marriage, and the legal ramifications of marriage) in the United States have always been subject to almost plenary state control which denies some marriages and refuses to give legal effect to others. What can a “right to marry” protecting individuals against the state possibly mean when the state itself determines what this thing called “marriage” is?

Two observations about marriage suggest the answer to this question.
First: The word “marriage” carries several different meanings which are related to each other but conceptually distinct. The “fundamental right to marry” conundrum arises in part from the conflation of these various meanings.
Second: The history of western marriage regulation—particularly the contemporary rejection of the traditional beliefs about sexuality and marriage that once provided principled boundaries for a right to marry—explains why the various meanings of marriage often are conflated today, and it suggests how the law can escape the “fundamental right to marry” conundrum. The Supreme Court should reinterpret the fundamental right to marry as referring to the practice of personal-marriage behaviors (cohabitation, economic partnership, joint decision-making, etc.) rather than state-recognized legal-marriage. This would preserve the entrenched idea of a fundamental right to marry while cohering wit! h the negative liberty nature of the Court’s other recognized fundamental rights and accommodating the reality that the Constitution does not (currently) textually define or even mention marriage in any way.


SUGGESTED CITATION:
Joseph A. Pull, "Questioning the Fundamental Right to Marry" (May 25, 2006). Yale Law School. Yale Law School Student Scholarship Series. Paper 26.

Yale Law School

I remain hopeful that one day people will cease citing the SCOTUS as proof positive for their assertions. I will give you one chance to submit another argument; preferably one that I cannot logically dismantle in few a minutes. Should you choose to retain this flawed premise I will be happy to demonstrate the error of your ways.
 
I remain hopeful that one day people will cease citing the SCOTUS as proof positive for their assertions. I will give you one chance to submit another argument; preferably one that I cannot logically dismantle in few a minutes. Should you choose to retain this flawed premise I will be happy to demonstrate the error of your ways.

Well...if you refuse to accept the notion that the Supreme Court is the final arbiter of our laws....then I can't help you. Sorry.
 
You're simply showing that you do not understand Equal Protection analysis.

You absolutely could raise a claim that minority housing grants violate equal protection.

However, under Equal Protection analysis, right to a housing grant would likely only trigger minimal scrutiny (You do understand that there are three levels of scrutiny under Equal Protection analysis, right? ...I'm not trying to be facetious, but there are some people like NP that don't understand and refuse to read "EP for dummies")

Yes, I'm fully aware of these erroneous legal constructions.

Under minimal scrutiny, the government would have to show that there is some legitimate public interest that is advanced for the discriminatory conduct or else it would be found to violate equal protection.

I doubt it would be difficult for attorneys on behalf of the government to establish a legitimate basis for providing such grants.

"...No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
-Fourteenth Amendment.


Mmmmmm, I can't seem to find the part where it says a "legitimate public interest" is sufficient cause to violate the Constitution.
 
Well...if you refuse to accept the notion that the Supreme Court is the final arbiter of our laws....then I can't help you. Sorry.

*Sigh*

I do not deny the SCOTUS's legal role in interpreting the Constitution. I do, however, deny that they are infallible. Unless you are arguing the facts of a specific case there is no reason to cite the SCOTUS for anything. All questions concerning the Constitution can be debated factually and logically simply by referencing the text itself.
 
Mmmmmm, I can't seem to find the part where it says a "legitimate public interest" is sufficient cause to violate the Constitution.

Its because you don't understand jurisprudence. There are a lot of links on the internet if you search around. I posted some a while back.
 
*Sigh*

I do not deny the SCOTUS's legal role in interpreting the Constitution. I do, however, deny that they are infallible. Unless you are arguing the facts of a specific case there is no reason to cite the SCOTUS for anything. All questions concerning the Constitution can be debated factually and logically simply by referencing the text itself.

Thats a rather simplistic reasoning. Courts have always looked at other cases in forming their rulings. Its called starei decisis. The text of the Constitution itself is subject to the interpretation of the person reading it. If it weren't there would be absolutely no need for the Supreme Court, it would be obvious.
 
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