rcrocket wrote:Until May 2008 marrriage between homosexuals was not a constitutional right in California or in the feds.
So what? The CA Supreme Court recognized that gay couples have the fundamental constitutional right to marry.
Status quo was restored in November 2008.
I've never heard the stripping of a fundamental constitutional right referred to as 'a return to status quo.'
"Civil rights" are not inaliable rights; they come and go.
Don't be coy. This is the first time I know of when a fundamental constitutional right has been taken away from a targeted segment of society.
They are what the civil government says they are.
No. The courts do.
California has a long history of passing initiatives which strip persons of one civil right or another. Some day victims of murders will be stripped of their right to see murderers put to death.
Sorry. but this is not a fundamental constitutional right. Keep trying ....
(Actually, that happened in California, but then an initiative passed restoring the death penalty. One group of people lost their civil rights (to live), another group gained (to obtain retribution)).
Nothing undergoes greater scrutiny than capital punishment, so the right to life remains a fundamental and constitutional right (subject to very rigorous scrutiny). In contrast, the right to "retribution" is not a fundamental constitutional right. Keep trying, counselor.