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Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Jacob Sullum :: Townhall.com Columnist
Rebels Without a Clause
by Jacob Sullum
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Last week, the Vermont legislature overrode the governor to legalize gay marriage. The week before, the Iowa Supreme Court achieved the same result by overriding the state legislature, declaring a 1998 ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional.

For those who agree (as I do) that the benefits of civil marriage should be available to all couples regardless of sexual orientation, does it matter how we get to that destination? I think it does, because the approach taken in Iowa, although liberty-enhancing in this case, ultimately undermines a constitution's ability to constrain government action and protect individual freedom.

The seven-member Iowa Supreme Court unanimously ruled that limiting marriage to heterosexual couples violates the state constitution's guarantee of equal protection, which it said "is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike." It seems safe to say that neither the constitutional convention delegates nor the voters who approved this provision in 1857 would have agreed that two people of the same sex and two people of opposite sexes were "similarly situated" and "should be treated alike" under civil marriage laws.

In fact, that remains a minority opinion in Iowa. Last month, a University of Iowa survey found that only 26 percent of Iowans supported gay marriage.

The Iowa Supreme Court overrode the majority's view by reinterpreting the equal protection clause to mean something it did not mean when it was adopted. "Our responsibility," the justices explained, "is to protect constitutional rights of individuals from legislative enactments that have denied those rights, even when the rights have not yet been broadly accepted, were at one time unimagined, or challenge a deeply ingrained practice or law viewed to be impervious to the passage of time."

Here we are not talking about applying a constitutional provision in a way consistent with the original public understanding of it (for example, by extending the First Amendment to television or the Fourth Amendment to electronic records). We are talking about applying a provision in a way the people who ratified it would have rejected. How can a right that was "unimagined" in this sense be a constitutional right?

According to the court, "equal protection can only be defined by the standards of each generation." But if the justices had defined equal protection by the standards of this generation (in Iowa, at least), they would have let the gay marriage ban stand.

"The point in time when the standard of equal protection finally takes a new form," the court said, "is a product of the conviction of one, or many, individuals that a particular grouping results in inequality and the ability of the judicial system to perform its constitutional role free from the influences that tend to make society's understanding of equal protection resistant to change." Let's be frank: Under this approach, it does not take "one, or many, individuals" to change the meaning of the constitution. It takes exactly four.

As the court noted, legislatures draw distinctions between groups all the time. They establish criminal penalties, impose age restrictions and set conditions for government benefits. If such policy judgments violate equal protection whenever four justices disagree with the reasoning behind them, the line between what judges do and what legislatures do begins to disappear.

Worse, this sort of result-oriented jurisprudence cannot be confined to decisions that limit government and expand freedom. If courts can reach "a new understanding of equal protection" that renders invalid heretofore constitutional laws, they also can reach a new understanding of the First Amendment, allowing restrictions on political speech in the name of fighting corruption, or the Commerce Clause, allowing the federal government to intervene in areas previously reserved to the states or the people.

In these and other cases, changing conditions are said to require reinterpretation, and since no constitution is perfect, you or I may occasionally like the results. But over the long term we cannot count on an evolving constitution to protect our rights.

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About The Author
Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and a contributing columnist on Townhall.com.
 
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The Problem is Abuse of Power
What Sullum is saying here, it doesn't matter whether you agree with the actual results. What matters is how we get there.

If the judicial branch begins acting like petty dictators, then we get a dictatorship. We don't want a dictatorship, no matter how benevolent it may happen to be *this* year.

On Civil Unions....
Personally, I think the goverment needs to stay OUT of Religion and religion needs to stay out of politics...I think if the Gay/Lesbian community wants to go with "Civil Unions" then
they should be allowed to do so....either in front of a Judge or a church that allows such a thing, BUT, I don't think the goverment should force any church by legislation to conduct this ceremony if it's against their teachings...
The difference (In My View) is this, a Marriage is a religious ceremony, a Civil Union is a legal unification, that is done as a part of religious ceromony, as in a hetrosexual marriage.

-Randy.

Constitution-Perfect
The problem lies in understanding and recognizing the constitution.

The courts are over stepping their bound because they will not recognize the constitution as the guiding light to decisions. That was claimed in 1928(if I remember right).

individual freedom would allow them to do what they want and me to marry my opposite bride. After all, how does their marriage affect me or mine them?

of course with government making all sorts of rules and regulations outside of individual freedom. They cut individual freedom to the ground. Thereby causing the conflict.

No the consensus or people or the courts is another form of majority/mob rule and not constitutional for individual freedom. They take an oath of the constitution with no intention of honoring it. They are not American Patriots.

Nonsense
Buy these psychological misfits (homosexuals) a high school biology book and get them counseling. The courts are wrong and anyone with a modicum of intelligence should see this.

Ummm...excuse me
How can any politician, federal, state or local court make the argument, "Marriage is a right," and proceed to issue a permit for the activity in the form of a license?

I have been told by politicians and law enforcement that driving is a privilege, not a right. Their proof is I must obtain a drivers license.

Just curious.

Happy now ?

Something's going on here
Marriage seems to be two things: a legal contract and a religious sacrament.

I see nothing sex-specific about the legal contract.

As for the religious sacrament, aren't we supposed to have something called "separation of church and state" in this country?

If you want a "marriage" in a church, find one that recognizes it - or start your own, it's the American Way.

Something else is going on here, it seems to be less a question of civil rights than an attitude of "notice me!"

Freedom of Religeon
The 1st amendment was designed to protect religious people from being forced to follow a faith dictated by the government and supported by taxpayers against their will. Marriage was established within the church based on the religious writing of various faiths and has been so interpreted so for thousands of years. The interference started when churches bowed to secular state demands that only those licensed by the state could perform a marriage ceremony and those getting married needed permission of the state, hence marriage licenses. Any couple regardless of sexual orientation should be allowed a civil ceremony making them a couple under the law with the rights and privileges of a legal union. But that does not mean to be called a married couple as marriage is a religious term. However these unions should be established by the elected representatives not by a political motivated jurist or group of jurists

principles and their applications
When constitutions are written, they are often written in the form of general principles. The people who write them often favor these principles in theory, but in practice are less concerned with their application to other people than to themselves. And they bring their personal prejudices and bigotries to them.

That is not surprising. It is probably true that the founders would have been ok with censoring a lot of speech that we can see is clearly protected by the 1st Amendment as written. In such cases, the issue becomes should judges rule on the basis of the principles that were written into the Constitution (whether state or federal) or how they think the people at the time would have applied those principles.

In the 1st Amendment cases Sullom can be counted on to go by the principle. If the founders would have allowed bans on discussing abortions, that is kind of irrelevant to the fact that they wrote an Amendment that clearly protects discussion of that sort based on a principle that clearly allows for it. I don't see any good basis for Sullom switching sides in this case. Presumably he believes that homosexuals should be able to marry who they choose, but he is willing to have them sacrifice in the name of something.

But there is not really a lot of bravery in being willing to let other people sacrifice in a way that one would not be willing to sacrifice if the issue affected oneself.

Sullom's general point that it matters how laws are passed is a valid one. But the idea that we should interpret laws accorded to the prejudices of the writers rather than what they wrote (although only sometimes) is not.

Rights of Marriage
The supposed unfair social advantages given to heterosexual couples in allowing them to marry are not necessary for same-sex couples. The government rightfully gives tax and other advantages to married couples to promote families where children are born and raised. It is clear from casual observation as well as more in depth research that children that grow up with a father and mother in their home, are more apt to contribute positively to their society. Same sex unions being incapable of producing offspring, do not need the same consideration. While it is true that they can adopt, just as it is true that women and men can produce offspring out of wedlock, there is no observed social advantage to promoting either behavior. This is not a condemnation of the individual, but a condemnation of the collective practice which has not shown itself to be socially advantageous.
I personally am not opposed to rights being extended that would allow same sex couples to establish rights of inheritance, hospital visitation/power of attorney, or resolve other similar issues. This can be done and in many states already has, without changing the nature of marriage.

GAY MARRIAGE
As a very Conservative, Christian woman, I think gays should be allowed to marry. I know what I believe about homosexuality but if others don't agree, fine. In fact, I think gays who insist on marrying deserve to have to abide by the same laws straight marriages follow when half of them end in divorce. Let them hire lawyers, prove infidelity or abuse, split their assets, pay alimony, and have go to court to end their relationships. There will be no more, easily just moving out. I am sure the talk of marriage will quickly subside in the gay community. They asked for it and they deserve it with all that is involved.

Separate issues
I agree with Sullum's point that the courts have no business creating law.

What the court has done is essentially redefined marriage to include something is does not. By definition,marriage is between one man and one woman, and states have many regulations regarding it. For instance, the states may say that someone with syphyllis cannot marry. Someone under the age of 16 may not. They may preclude someone from marrying a person with developmental disabilites. They may prohibit human/animal marriages. They all forbid plural marriage.

Once the court decides that the definition of marriage is malleable to fit the desires of a group who wants it, all bets are off. We may as well say that marriage has no definition. It is a bit like dumping baby oil in a salad dressing bottle and proclaiming it food. Common sense tells us that while salad dressing contains oil, not all oil is fit for a salad. But not according to the court, apparently, where all oil is apparently equal.

I personally have no issue with civil unions. I do not, however, think it is the business of the courts to redefine institutions, especially those with religious origins, which marriage certainly is.

carol
i am a Christian and liberal and i appreciate your sentiment although i am not sure if your comment was meant "tongue-in-cheek".

i believe they should be allowed all the rights of a married couple but should not be married in a church.

Find a new word


Words have meaning, and different words describe items or actions that are similar, but different.

They have already screwed up the usage of words like Qu*er and Gay, now go find your own word for two homosexuals who are committed to each other, love each other, and have performed a ceremony to advertise that union.

For example the word “Gay” is no longer useful in polite conversation between normal people, by that I mean people who do not have a certain birth defect.

That new word would also apply to any two or more people of whatever sex or relationship, who wish to live together, or at least be in constant association with each other, including the right to control healthcare, and inherit goods when death occurs, and other such things.

The dictionary says the following, so get your own words, and leave these alone.

Marriage: the social institution under which a man and woman establish their decision to live as husband and wife

Husband: a man joined in marriage to a woman

Wife: a woman joined in marriage to a man

If two men say they are married to each other, do they have a marriage? Answer No.

Two families pay money each month to live in a house, is it the same? No, one pays rent, the other pays a mortgage.

Two wheeled vehicles are going down the street, are they the same? No, one is a bike, the other a motorcycle.

Two multi-wheeled vehicles are going down the street, are they the same? No, one is a car, the other is a truck.

If a man and a woman are married to each other, do you have a marriage? Yes, of course.

Gay Marriage
Make no mistake about it. Since the 70's the Gay agenda has been pushed on us in a slow and deliberate manner so that we will except what was previously deemed by the main stream medical establishment as a "sexual deviation". Hollywood is on board too with movies like "Milk" and "Brokeback Mountain" earning Oscars when really great movies like Gran Torino get passed by. It's really obvious if you really look at it with an open mind that they want us to embrace their adgenda therefore legitamizing their Sin. This is a slippery slope and opens the door for polygammy, Beastiality and even Nambla (who advocate the sexual relationship between young boys and men). You might say that I'm really streching here but only a few years ago Gay marriage was way outside of the mainstream. The other disturbing trend is for Gay advocates to compare their fight for marriage rights to racism. If you are conservative and believe in God and what he say's about how marrige is defined you must be a racist. Christians love all people. We just don't love what they do. In California, which is a very liberal state Gay marriage was defeated by prop 8. Attorney General Jerry Brown wouldn't even agree with the voters and support this even after it was decided. The California teachers union gave 2 million dollars to defeat prop 8. They will not quit before they get what they want. That doesn't make it right. Doe's it?

goal of "equal protection"
What is the goal of the equal protection clause and the government's role in upholding it? Sullum seems to suggest that because a majority do not favor gay marriage, then the government should not grant this right in terms of "equal protection." But isn't the equal protection clause (regardless of the authors' intentions) there to protect those who cannot protect themselves. That is, if the equal protection clause only applied when the majority agreed with it, what would be the point? The majority could easily change things through the standard legislative process if they wanted to.

Simple Answer
There is a very simple answer to the silly, yet, to many, seemingly overwhelming issue of gay marriage.

What in the world is the government doing LICENSING marriage in the first place? Marriage is a religious ceremony. The government should have no role in licensing it. A role for the government is to enforce contracts. Fine. Promulgate rules and forms that allow two (or more?) people to enter into a contractual relationship that provides the same rights and responsibilities that current state mandated marriage laws do. Then let religious organizations perform whatever rites they want to perform to sanctify the relationship between (among?) members of their congregations.

Problem solved.

Now, can we please get on to more important issues?

christianlib ca
WHERE CAN I FIND IN THE HOLY BIBLE THAT IT'S OK. FOR TWO MEN GETTING MARRIED? It's easy to SAY that you are a christian,but your speech gave you away. God created Eve for Adam,not Steve. Also you might read Romans 1:18-32 KJV

RANDY
YOU ARE MISSING THE POINT! There is no such thing as Gay marriage.Two homosexuals tieing the knot is not scriptural,or anywhere found in the bible.The name gay was given to cloud up the fact that they were two homo's
and homosexual marriage was shedding to much light on what they were doing.

If two men want to have sex(puke)
they don't need a license to do it!
They want society (their job) to pay for their health insurance as that is one of the benefits,thus if they get AIDS they have some rights in getting insurance co to pay their bill.
Good night America,read GOD's WORD!!

JIM CA
RIGHT ON,BRO

Homosexuality should not be treated
like race or ethnicity, as the former cannot be changed. You cannot change from African to Asian to Caucasion.

You cannot originate in Europe and India and China.

*Gay* people can live with same-sex partners or opposite-sex partners, can bear or sire children if they so choose or not, BUT THEY ARE NEVER INDELIBLY ALWAYS DISTINGUISHABLE AS A DIFFERENT ETHNICITY OR RACE.

Sexuality is fluid, elsewise we would not have the bi-sexual, the transsexual, the *player*, or the celibate.

Sex is a matter of behavior and personal habit. Translating people's preferential activities into civil rights is neither legal not smart.

The Iowa S. Ct. may think of itself as brilliant and progressive, but it is actually merely poltical.

renny
Putting aside the question of whether sexual orientation can be changed, it's ridiculous to continually imply (as many posters here do) that equal protection only applies to unchangeable characteristics.

People can change their religion as often as they like, but we still have protections for religion. That's so obvious that I have to wonder why so many conservative miss it. It's almost as if they have some sort of psychological disorder that prevents them from thinking clearly when it comes to homosexuality.

Stan
"There is no such thing as Gay marriage.Two homosexuals tieing the knot is not scriptural,or anywhere found in the bible."

The Judeo-Christian tradition did not invent marriage; nor does it have a monopoly on it.

Jim
"They have already screwed up the usage of words like Qu*er and Gay"

Actually, it was homophobes who twisted the word qu*er and used it to insult gays, and none of you oh-so-linguistically-sensitive conservatives objected until its meaning shifted and no longer became so derogatory.

Hypocrite.

Still not getting it
Conservatives like Sullum and most TH readers just don't get it at all on this issue. Consider what Sullum writes: "We are talking about applying a provision in a way the people who ratified it would have rejected. How can a right that was "unimagined" in this sense be a constitutional right? We are talking about applying a provision in a way the people who ratified it would have rejected. How can a right that was "unimagined" in this sense be a constitutional right?"

Well, Jake, you just kissed goodbye to every piece of civil rights legislation. Certainly those who ratified the US Constitution did not "imagine" that blacks would ever have the same rights as whites. The Fouinders' generation would have rejected the very possibility that the Constitution could ever be interpreted to allow for such things.

Basically, Sullum (and lots of you folks who posted) have no problem with what conservatives used to denounce as a crude majoritarianism; majorities get to define rights, and that's that. We liberals are grateful that there are judges who reject this oppressive fantasy.

Oddly Enough
If we redefine marriage based on the equal protection clause to allow for "*gay* marriage", our system of laws and justice will be in an awkward position.

I'm not 100% sure, but I bet all states have laws preventing siblings and possibly cousins from getting married. There are reasons for this, but if the siblings or cousins are the same sex, the more serious reasons become obsolete.

So how would the courts rule in the case of marriage between opposite sex siblings or cousins? In light of the equal protection clause argument, this arrangement should also be allowed.

Or would the courts have to turn around and apply a rigid definition of marriage in order to exclude certain individuals?

Hmmmm...


Obama not meet Constitutional criteria
Obama does not meet the criteria to be President under the U.S. Constitution. Why doesn't Obama release his college applications or his passport records? Because they will show that he is an Indonesian citizen, as he never gave up his Indonesian citizenship when he returned to Hawaii from Indonesia at age 10. (Obama's mother remarried an Indonesian when Barack was five, and she and Barack moved to Indonesia, where both became Indonesian citizens). In 1981, Obama traveled to Indonesia to visit his mother, and stopped off on the return trip to visit Pakistan with school friends. He traveled there on his Indonesian passort. Why doesn't Obama release his original birth certificate? Because it will show that he was not born in Hawaii, rather he was born in Kenya (his father's native country).

Either way, because he is an Indonesian, or because he was born in Kenya, Obama is not qualified to be President. Obama and the leadership of the Democratic Party know this to be true, and he deceived the American people by keeping it a secret and refusing to release the records. Mutliple legal cases are challenging Obama's status to be President. Check out-- wnd.com or obamacrimes.us or defendourfreedoms.us and spread the word, as the media REFUSES to cover this issue! The truth about Obama will be revealed.

ROBERT CA
IF YOU ARE SO SMART,WHO PERFORMED THE FIRST MARRIAGE?

Civil marriage
The situation of the U.S. family is already very bad. The situation for children is already bad even for children who have a functioning and caring father and mother. More turmoil about marriage can only make it worse. Does no one care about the children? Many have not cared about them before they are born. Are we moving to a time when many won't care about them after they are born? It seems so. The children are the future. If we want a bad future, have a society that produces more bad children-who are very likely to become bad adults.
Donald W. Bales

Carol...just read your comment...
ok . you give up,i understand! What is your response when I want to marry my son,or my dog, or 2 12 year old girls down the block?How exactly does this come to a halt? when marraiage is completely debased,and a meaningless insttitution....Then will you admit you scerewed up?Oh wait then it will be too late.I wish for you all the fight you can muster-this is civilizations collapse. You get to see it from a front row seat....Buy some popcorn and enjoy the show.....Mark

REMOVING RELIGIOUS LEADERS
IT IS TIME TO REMOVE RELIGIOUS LEADERS ON THE GROUNDS OF VIOLATING THE FEDERAL STATUTES THAT ALLOWED THEIR ORGANIZATIONS TO RECEIVE TAX EXEMPTIONS. VOTE OUT THE LEGISLATORS THAT IGNORE THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE. hAVING TO SUFFER THE WRATH OF GOD BECAUSE OF SOME INCOMPOTENT RELIGIOUS LEADER IGNORING THE WORD OF GOD. HAVING TO WATCH THE PROMISE OF GOD UPON THE FACES OF THE WICKED AND THOSE THAT FINANACE EVIL IS A PROMISE FROM GOD. THE CHOICES ARE SIMPLE BUT THE WORLD WOULD BE UPSET AT YOU.

Stan
"IF YOU ARE SO SMART,WHO PERFORMED THE FIRST MARRIAGE?"

I don't know, and neither do you.
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