dblagent007 wrote:Ah, yes, I must think all judicial decisions are an unwarranted exercise of raw judicial power. Uh, no. However, the vast majority of the controversial ones are (e.g., Roe, cannot execute rapists, Lawrence, etc.).
Ah, I get it. What you really are saying is that the court decisions that you don't like personally are the ones that constitute an unwarranted exercise of raw judicial power. Now I understand you perfectly.
By the way, you oppose Lawrence? Do you believe it's really within the government's purview to enter into a private citizen's home and arrest consenting adults for having sex the "wrong" way? This is a serious question. Given the idea of freedom and liberty, and limited reach of government into the lives of the citizenry, do you honestly believe that it's the government's right to dictate what parts of each others' bodies consenting adults may touch or penetrate in the privacy of their own homes? You really believe that?
The 14th amendment was ratified with race based legal discrimination in mind. In fact, the court distinguished its action in Loving with other cases that upheld discrimination because they were not race based.
So do you support the Supreme Court of the United States telling a state that they cannot define which people can and cannot marry within their state? Was Loving correctly, or incorrectly decided?
Do you believe that Griswold was correctly decided? I'm just curious, but I'd appreciate an answer, if you don't mind.
In the latter, there are good reasons to restrict it to one man and one woman (e.g., because it takes a man and a woman to produce children, etc.). Even if you disagree with the state's reason, it is not so far fetched as to merit being overturned wholesale by the judiciary.
Out of curiosity, do you believe the (anti-polygamy aspects of) Morril Anti-Bigamy Act was constitutional? The Edmunds Act, making polygamy a felony?
I'm just curious, because you seem to be just fine with the idea of the feds, and the states, defining marriage as between
one man and
one woman. And this, despite the fact that your church actually says that polygamy is a celestial law in its very own scriptures? You're OK with the government officially prohibiting the practice of an eternal principle established by Elohim himself? Sure, since the Manifesto, you can be fine with that, but what if Elohim sent Jehova down to tell Pres. Monson to resume polygamy? Would you still be OK with laws prohibiting that?
At some point, the state must be allowed to define marriage. If sexual orientation is not a valid restriction on marriage, then how can other restrictions such as quantity (polygamy anyone?), relatedness (i.e., adult incest), and potentially even age and species restrictions, be valid?
The age and species restrictions are easy - those incapable of legal consent can't get married. Period. The incest laws are a little shakier, but even there there's a basis in genetics for prohibiting such relationships. Oh, and you're fine, or you're not fine, with anti-polygamy laws?
If the next study that comes out says that 9 year olds in sexual relationships are well adjusted, the courts won't be far behind saying that the 9 year old has the RIGHT to get married.
Lame attempt at scaremongering.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen