rcrocket wrote:In terms of the "Lord," making this decision, well, I think that if St. Paul were around expressing his views, he'd be pulling out the abomination card.
Funny how one prophet's abomination is another prophet's ticket to the CK.
rcrocket wrote:In terms of the "Lord," making this decision, well, I think that if St. Paul were around expressing his views, he'd be pulling out the abomination card.
rcrocket wrote:[Both presidential candidates opposed gay marriage. So did Pres. Clinton.
TAK wrote:That’s because they are politicians. Do you really think Bill Clinton or Hillary or most politicians for that matter are opposed to this on moral grounds? Hell no.
asbestosman wrote:TAK wrote:That’s because they are politicians. Do you really think Bill Clinton or Hillary or most politicians for that matter are opposed to this on moral grounds? Hell no.
Tee heee. You used "Bill Clinton" and "moral grounds" in the same sentence.
rcrocket wrote:Marriage is not a basic civil right, except as noted below.
Thus far, the states have asserted moral grounds to control access to marriage. A huge majority of states in the union have made the moral decision that homosexual marriages are contrary to state interest.
Legislating morality is common, and I could cite numerous examples where actions between consenting adults are subject to criminal sanction.
The Marriage Act case holds that marriage is a civil right that springs from the right to privacy, a provision added to the constitution two decades ago.
Both presidential candidates opposed gay marriage.
So did Pres. Clinton.
In terms of the "Lord," making this decision, well, I think that if St. Paul were around expressing his views, he'd be pulling out the abomination card.
I am a libertarian but I fully support and understand the position of the coalitiion.
rcrocket wrote:Except for the two states, marriage has not been defined as a civil right.
If the Supreme Court had defined marriage as a civil right available for all for whomever one wants as a partner regardless of gender, the federals would have granted gays the right to be married by now.
I don't contest the California Supreme Court's decision, or that it occurred. You seem to suggest that I do. But it was not "right."
Your slavery example is inapt. Slavery seems to be acceptable in the Bible (as well as to the anti-Nicene fathers who interpreted the Bible and lived it), to its discredit. But, homosexuality is not.
Moreover, one historical wrong does not mean that something is wrong today in a completely different subject area.
I could equally and more aptly argue that Christian governments since Constantine until today have never permitted gay marriage, so history on the very subject matter we are discussing seems to support the brethren.
But, I wait for you to explain better why it is the brethren are "wrong" in supporting Prop 8. Can you please do that? I would be persuaded with Mormon doctrine or the scriptures rather than some shifting subjective new-age basis of free love and toleration for everything evil.
rcrocket wrote:Marriage is not a basic civil right unless, as I have pointed out, partners meet the qualifications therefor and then the equal protection doctrine intervenes to give them the right to marry.
Loving v. Virginia is inapt. A statute was held unconstitutional because it relied upon race as a basis to deny marriage. The decision relied upon the Equal Protection Clause and the 14th amendment, none of which apply to gay partners, at least under federal jurisprudence.
Now, of course, California sees it otherwise. It did rely upon Loving, arguing a constitutional right to marry. But that is just one state.
And, for that, the proposition is being pursued. But I have about 40 or so other states which disagree with California. And, no federal court has agreed with California, either. Seems that precedent is overwhelming.
Comparisons to slavery are inapt. The California Supreme Court did not rely upon slavery history as a basis for analogy.
So, if the scriptures and Mormon doctrine are "wrong", and you reject them as a basis upon which to defend Prop 8 ....
I'm curious as to how you define God and his action?
Saying that God does not take sides in political and constitutional debates ignores Biblical history, as well as Christian history since Nicea.
But the tide is turning on that precedent, and none too soon, in my opinion.
The 14th amendment applies to many more than just blacks, including women, religion, etc. It's just a matter of time (when the U.S. Supreme Court gets the chance to make the change) before gays are included, precisely as the CA Supreme Court just did.
I'm talking U.S. history. That's the whole point of our Constitution and jurisprudence -- keeping religion out of governmental rule and decisions. The Bible and Nicene Creed have no relevance to this discussion.
I see "God and his action" as utterly irrelevant to this consitutional and legal issue.