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Monday, October 30, 2006
Star Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Jersey same-sex ruling may energize conservatives
by Star Parker
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Republican prospects in November's elections are decidedly brighter today as result of the ruling by the New Jersey Supreme Court on same-sex marriage.

The court ruled that same sex partners must be granted the same rights and benefits afforded opposite-sex couples under New Jersey's civil marriage statues, but deferred to the state legislature the decision on whether the same sex arrangement should be called marriage. So the court essentially said that same sex partnership walks like a duck, looks like a duck and should be granted all the rights and benefits of a duck, but concluded it didn't have the authority to call it a duck.

Now the state legislature has 180 days to decide whether to call it a duck, or to call it a goose that has the same legal standing as a duck. It will decide whether to legalize same-sex marriage, or whether these homosexual partnerships should exist under a separate but equal civil union regime.

I guess you might call the latter possibility, which local pundits say is the more likely outcome, the Plessy V. Ferguson equivalent of same-sex marriage. Plessy, of course, was the Supreme Court ruling in 1896 that found segregation in public facilities constitutional as long as the separate facilities were of equal quality.

How the New Jersey legislature handles this will not be known until well after the November elections. But those who are saying that this decision, because it fell short of outright legalization of same sex marriage, will not be the adrenalin injection to disillusioned and apathetic conservative voters that Republicans claim it will be, are wrong.

Conservatives are not as dumb as liberals might think we are. You might call a duck a goose, but we really know a duck when we see one.

Consider the disappointment among homosexual activists in the wake of this decision. Listening to these folks make their case for same sex marriage over recent years, you would really have thought that this was all about complaints about discrimination in rights and benefits.

But if that was what this was all about, they'd be ecstatic with this decision. Same sex partners in New Jersey now have identical rights and benefits to those of traditional marriage. The complaint about legal discrimination is off the table.

Their disappointment emerges from the fact that homosexual activism is as much about legitimacy and acceptance as rights and benefits. It's about culture and values.

A club that is not enthusiastic about my becoming a member may grant me all the benefits of membership, but withhold the designation "member." When I show up for functions, even though I can do everything everyone else does, I'm still an outsider. I'm still different.

Conservatives understand that this movement is about rewriting our cultural script, and redefining our values, as it is about legal technicalities and rights and benefits.

But if this is the case, why should the New Jersey decision, which falls short of outright legalization of same sex marriage, be a motivator in boosting Republican turnout in November?

Because the decision moves the ball a long ways downfield. Continued...

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About The Author
Star Parker is the founder and president of CURE, the Coalition for Urban Renewal & Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of White Ghetto: How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
 
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APR's True Identity
I found out his name is really Bob Witherspoon.

Here's his picture:

http://cedros.globat.com/~thebrites.org/images/WitherspoonJr.jpg

Remember Whitman v. Florio
Roo writes: Monday, October, 30, 2006 3:39 PM
Judicial Apointments
Lee may have good reason for his concerns. This one does go to the core of things that are very important. I have to ask Lee, given his conservitive views, Would he like a Democrat to win New Jersey's Senate race if it meant that the Democrats thereby won control of the US Senate? Should the Democrats gain control they will likly block any of the President's conservitive judicial nominees. Lately it looks like Judicial appointments are quite significant.

Reply from Lee:
Back in 1994, someone asked if I wanted Florio to win? My answer then ... and now to Menendez winning is ... "Of course not!" But, I would not vote for Whitman and I would not vote for Kean. Why? Kean's a nice guy, but tied to the Whitman/Kean wing of the party that will energize them in 2008? Menendez will probably be indicted for something anyway.

Now, let's take a good, close look at the "conservative" judges Bush is (not) appointing. Sad to say, we who gave up lots of fun and frolic for his election and re-election for those very judges, recognize three disappointments:
a. Harriet Miers was not conservative nor even judicial. How dare Bush do that to his conservative base?! Roberts is a smart fella but a mere Rehnquist replacement, nothing much greater there, and he'll be there for 25 years! And, Alito, well, we'll see. He better be better than O'Connor. But, there were better conservative judges out there that Bush ignored because he didn't want to fight for them.
b. The "5" judges in the lower courts floundering in the appointment process and which have to be reappointed again got no place becuase Bush/Rove did not fight for them as hard as they should have.
c. Chertoff's seat was not replaced with a conservative and Alito's seat is still hanging. Where is President Bush with all these conservative judges?!
d. Only about 100 of over 7000 cases are accepted by the U. S. Supreme Court. That's why the lower courts are so important. And, Bush has NOT been appointing conservatives to the lower courts.



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