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Sunday, April 26, 2009
Steve Chapman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Stacking the Deck on Gay Marriage
by Steve Chapman
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The country used to be unanimous in rejecting gay marriage. But that consensus, like the polar ice sheets, is showing some cracks. Vermont recently became the fourth state to allow gays to wed, and New York will probably be next. Elsewhere, marriage remains as Miss California prefers -- solely between a man and a woman.

It's at moments like this that the framers of the Constitution begin to look even wiser than usual. Somehow they anticipated that people in Massachusetts would not want to live under exactly the same laws as people in Mississippi. So they set up a system known as federalism, which allows different states to choose different policies. Thus we simultaneously uphold majority rule and minority rights.

This, at least, is how federalism is supposed to operate -- letting subsets of the national population get their way in their own locales. There's only one hitch: In this case, it doesn't quite work that way.

Why not? Because of a huge imbalance created by that longtime nemesis of state sovereignty -- the federal government. Under the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), Virginia has complete authority to deny the privileges and responsibilities of marriage to same-sex partners. But Iowa doesn't have the complete authority to grant them.

Oh, Iowa can provide recognition to gay marriages under all its laws and policies. But that's a surprisingly small part of what marriage encompasses. Under federal law, there are more than 1,100 rights and privileges that go with being a husband or wife. And none of them is available to married same-sex couples.

Under federal law, a person may transfer property to a spouse tax-free. Married couples may file their income taxes jointly. Someone whose spouse dies is assured Social Security survivor's benefits. A married person has the authority to make medical decisions for an incapacitated partner.

Or say you're an American citizen living in this country who marries a foreigner. Normally, you would be entitled to bring your beloved to this country to live permanently and become a citizen.

But if you're both of the same sex, you can forget all of the above. Even though Iowa might like to put heterosexual and homosexual married couples on the same footing, it can't, because the federal statute blocks the way.

"In determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, or of any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States," says DOMA, "the word 'marriage' means only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife."

That decree may sound reasonable: Since most Americans and most states reject same-sex marriage, federal policy should as well. But it conflicts with how the nation has handled marriage up till now, which is to leave it up to individual states to decide who may wed -- and then honor those diverse choices. Continued...

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Steve Chapman is a columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune.
 
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John Acton in FL


I see what you mean.

Re: A Rose by Any Other Name
"Discrimination by law is not called for. We agree there's no possibility of establishing them in a faux marriage for appearance's sake. Which is their true aim-- appearance. Grace in the eyes of society, unlike their completely sordid days."

The law discrminates all the time, prohibiting incest, polygamy, etc. Those in the active military cannot get married without approval.

"Civil recognition as homosexuals intimately united, is no sanctification at all. They could well be invited to parties and balls, (pun not deliberate) and even then there would be no sanctity attached. Except in some loony minds."

For society to create a so-called "civil union" with a "wink and a nod" is as much societal recognition of this unnatural state as is marriage. Also, if you note the some recent cases involving legalizing homosexual marriage many were in states with government "civil unions" and the court used this as the nail to hang their unnatural marriage approval.
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