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Last I knew they were still going the "every last vote hasn't been counted yet so don't assume"...
...but yeah, it passed.
We can be angry all we want but fact is DEMOCRACY has spoken in California and Florida on issue of gay marriage. Majority ruled just like they did for Obama.
Our constitution functioned as it is designed. Americans have become too disillusioned about what the constitution means and the history behind its blue prints. We are too quick to scream "my constitutional rights" when they are not there. We are not a totalitarian regime where we rely on Federal Government and Federal courts to dictate our social mores and to rule our lives.
We can't put faith into government by demanding it to force gay marriage through the legal system while at the same time criticize the same government when it passes something like the PATRIOT ACT. People can't have it both ways, or else government loses its point.
There isn't a single bill of right that was violated because marriage is not a federal right. The states had traditional control over issues such as criminal, civic and health laws through the 10th amendment. The modern age stretch of 14th amendment incorporation is borderline dangerous to our dual constitutionalism and federalism.
Gays wish for liberal Supreme Court so the judges favor their agendas, but at same time we are pissed when conservatives have their judges represent their agendas. Who says one is right or wrong over the other. Both use the constitution to justify their claims and personal beliefs.
Citizens of California objected a few judges to impose certain legal precedences. I support referendums on social and economic policies because that is how Democracy should work, not allow interest groups lobby their ideas into the judicial process. California always used referendums on legalizing certain drugs, tax policies and now gay marriage. The majority voted and don't support it.
Constitutions whether Federal or State are compacts between people with common goals and beliefs; constitutions are not universal divine laws with Taliban like force over will of majority.
Honestly if you were to argue that in court and I were a gay judge I'd say it's a weak argument.
"All men are created equal" is not part of constitution but part of the Declaration of Independence letter which predates Articles of Confederation and our Constitution. If our glorious forefathers who framed the constitution cared about "all men are created equal" they would not allow slaves or slavery to continue until the Civil War not laws and judges changed that.
Privacy laws are semi explicit in the 4th amendment unlike marriage. Remember that marriage in early America was NOT regulated by the government but by CHURCH and religion. Past societies went to Church to get married and not the mayor's office or the courts. Local governments slowly took over marriage regulations for health and economic reasons.
There is a reason why people are still not comfortable to idea of same sex marriage it is because nowhere in ancient or 20th century societies did people even have it in their minds to rationalize that 2 same sexes could join a "holly matrimony."
For many societies of any religion, race, custom, ethnicity, marriage is just that---between a man and a woman, and not between 2 same sex people, not between man a dog, woman and a cat, or man with a car.
May sound ridiculous by stretching the example but that's how it is.
Time needs to pass to see if society is ready to redefine millennium old traditions.
Democracy has spoken... Hmm...
Tell me something, what were the total votes by the American public when it came to granting equal rights for women to vote?
How many votes were made by the American public when it came to banning discrimination to black Americans in regards to voting, selling and renting houses and employment?
Tell me, F-22, how your arguments regarding how it isn't the government's or the court's place to enforce equality for all when the people are too blinded by prejudice to see can be true.
Can you?
I blame it on America (even California) not being quite there yet. The strides that have been made have been extremely significant, but there's still further to go. I'm confident that within a decade or so, we'll be there. If we keep the visibility up, if we show those who voted "yes" that we're "just us folks", I think they'll eventually come around.
Lex
The irony is that what we traditionally identify as minorities i.e. blacks voted against gay marriage. So this issue is complex, while pro gay activists might identify themselves as a "minority" group, minorities and others of all backgrounds do not see sexual labels as individual identity as race and nationality is. The courts have not identified gays as some unprivileged group, so I don't think it will sway people with "minority rights violations" arrangements on the issue of gay marriage.
I don't understand why people even have the right to vote whether we an marry whoever we want.
Personally i think the single stupidest things that occurred was that school trip to a lesbian wedding. no on prop 8 was telling people it had nothing to do with schools, but then some moron thought it was smart in the middle of this campaign to send school kids on a field trip to see a lesbian wedding?
this should be a wake up call to every minority out there or anyone who has ever had to fight for equal status, your rights can be taken away in a moment, through a simple majority vote by the public at large.
