mentalgymnast wrote:The fact is, however, that the court struck down the will of the majority at that point in time.
That is one of the fundamental purposes of the Supreme Court and the Constitution: to protect the rights of minorities from an aggressive majority. In the words of Kenneth Roosevelt, "the majority is not always supposed to have its way."
According to the
LA Times,
As the issue moved into the high court, Brad Sears, executive director of the Williams Institute at UCLA's law school, which examines sexual orientation and the law, said the state's broad domestic partner law had undercut the traditional argument that children were better off being raised by opposite-sex parents.
"Taking those issues off the table, which the domestic partners act did, might have made this an easier case for everyone," Sears said. Once the state recognized the right of gays to rear children, the fight for same-sex marriage was shaped as "the right to have a family" and the ruling became "about family being protected."
The court concluded that giving gays a separate institution -- domestic partnership -- "marked gays and lesbians as second-class citizens," Sears said.
In its decision, the court appealed to "this court’s landmark decision 60 years ago in Perez v. Sharp (1948) 32 Cal.2d 7114 — which found that California’s statutory provisions prohibiting interracial marriages were inconsistent with the fundamental constitutional right to marry, notwithstanding the circumstance that statutory prohibitions on interracial marriage had existed since the founding of the state — makes clear that history alone is not invariably an appropriate guide for determining the meaning and scope of this fundamental constitutional guarantee."
The bottom line in the court's decision was that since the state already recognized the right of homosexual couples to have more or less all the substantive rights accorded heterosexual couples, and since the state had officially recognized homosexual families as such, the Constitutional protection of families extended to homosexual families as well as to heterosexual families. And since the distinction between marriages and domestic partnerships has the effect of marking homosexual families off as second-class citizens, retaining the distinction would, "as a realistic matter, impose appreciable harm on same-sex couples and their children, because denying such couples access to the familiar and highly favored designation of marriage is likely to cast doubt on whether the official family relationship of same-sex couples enjoys dignity equal to that of opposite-sex couples."
So you see, what it really came down to for the court was a question of "separate but equal". California voters wanted to maintain a verbal separation on the grounds that such a separation was purely formal, and did not violate the protections afforded to homosexual families. The court followed in the old American legal tradition according to which separate is never equal, especially when-- as in this case-- the purpose of the separation is generally understood by both sides to be the maintenance of boundaries between different classes of people, one of which has often been the target of hate crimes that zero in on its separate identity.
In short, Proposition 8 would re-establish a verbal distinction that the court has ruled to be harmful to legally-protected families. What's more, it would actually enshrine that verbal difference in the Constitution of our state, thereby making it immune to future judicial review. I am not comfortable with having something that even
potentially harms families enshrined in our Constitution. If the court has found that all families have the right to equal dignity and protection under the law, I want nothing to do with the kind of majority that thinks it has "every moral right" to partially revoke that dignity and protection in the name of its own parochial, sectarian interests.