Droopy wrote:Rollo Tomasi wrote:Droopy wrote:Please find for me the text in the Constitution of California that could reasonably and logically be understood to support the legal recognition of homosexual cohabitation as equal with heterosexual marriage and place it in this thread with some supporting argumentation.
Right to privacy in the CA state constitution: Art. 1, section 1;
right to equal protection of the laws in the CA state constitution: Art. 1, section 7(a). In CA, "the right to marry is a fundamental right whose protection is guaranteed to all persons by the California Constitution," and is referred to as a "basic civil right to all individuals and couples...."
In re Marriage Cases, pp. 49, 66;
see also Conservatorship of Valerie N., 40 Cal.3d 143, 161 (1985);
In re Carrafa, 77 Cal. App.3d 788, 791 (1978). Of course, the U.S. Supreme Court has also recognized the right to marry as a component of the "right to privacy" under the federal constitution.
See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965). Consequently, any law that treats this fundamental, civil right differently based on sexual orientation violates the CA constitution's equal protection clause (unless the state can show a compelling state interest in the differentiation, which it failed to do in the
In re Marriage Cases decision).
Others have a different perspective. All is not a the Left would have us believe (as is verily
always the case).
Dude, the majority of the CA supreme court which held in favor of gay marriage was appointed by Republican governors.
This is, simply put, judicial activism run amok, even if it reflects the gradual judicial accretion of power over some decades.
The people chose to have a constitution and appoint judges to interpret the constitution. Blame the people, not the judges, when there's a decision you don't like.
I’ll note again that California voters will likely have the opportunity in November to override the court’s decision. I wish as well that voters could give the justices in the majority the Rose Bird treatment (see This Week for Nov. 4, 1986), but if I understand California law correctly, the earliest any of them will face a retention election is 2014.
And I'll note again that most of the judges on CA's supreme court are Republican appointees.
You're problem here Tomasi, is the original intent of the language as well as the legitimacy of the ruling, which was a form of outright judicial legislation, and hence, illegitimate on its face. While the California constitution does say that marriage is a right, it says nothing about homosexuals (your problem here is going to be showing that the authors of this language ever so much as conceived of the concept of homosexual "marriage" when this language was inserted into the document) and nothing regarding the traditional definition of marriage (one man and one woman), which was assumed at the outset.
The right to marry is not explicitly stated in the CA constitution. It was recognized by CA case authority. Do you agree that heterosexuals have a fundamental right to marry? If yes, then that pesky equal protection clause requires the same fundamental right be extended to homosexuals.
What you and the ninth circus ...
We are talking about the CA supreme court, the highest state court in CA,
not the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
... are doing here is precisely what was done with Roe and numerous decisions since then: you are stretching, twisting, and decontextualizing the language of the document without regard to the original intent or understandings of the authors of the text so as to arrive at the political outcome you desire through judicial means.
I take you to mean that heterosexuals do not have the fundamental right to marry, since it's not mentioned in either the CA state constitution or the U.S. Constitution. Am I correct?
Many of us see right through this ruse Rollo, and only the fools are fooled. The original intent of the framers of that constitution foresaw no such issue relevant to these aspects of the California constitution, and both you and the leftist social engineers on the California bench know it. The will of the people had already spoken, clearly and unambiguously, on the nature of marriage the majority desired. The constitution's vague, general language, on the other hand, had to be sufficiently massaged and dislogded from tradition and plausible original intent to arrive at the ideologically correct ruling.
The same could be said for interracial marriage or even heterosexual marriage, along with equal rights for all genders and races, etc. Are you prepared to throw all this away because they are not expressly mentioned in the constitution? Well, are you?