rcrocket wrote:Rollo Tomasi wrote:There you go, another personal slam. You just can't win, can you, without mocking some personal attribute of mine?
Being lawyer is so antithetical to your actions re Prop. 8, counselor. Deal with it.In reality, "civil rights" are those defined by the people. They can be granted; they can be taken away.
And under the CA state constitution, gay couples had the fundamental right to marry. What makes Prop. 8 so abhorrent is that it was specifically tailored to take this right from gays.There is nothing unconstitutional about "taking them away" unless it is somehow in conflict with the constitution.
Equal protection and Section 7(b) of Article 1 of the Declaration of Rights say otherwise, counselor.It is a continuing canard of yours to say that somehow it is unlawful to take away somebody's rights.
Then why bother to have equal protection? You cavalier attitude about such a basis tenet of American jurisprudence is embarrassing, counselor.If Prop 8 fails, it will not be on your favored ground. If it fails it will fail on the the amendment vs. revision issue, or the fact that Prop 8 did not overrule Marriage Cases' holdings about suspect classes and equal protection. But not on the nutty doctrine that one can't pass an amendment to take away somebody's rights?
You can so amend, but it is wrong, period, to let religious dogma and superstition lead to such a result, which is what Mormon involvement in Prop. 8 was all about. And the fact you can't grasp the concept, counselor, reflects your lack of legal understanding.Where was the hew and cry when Californians reimposed the death penalty? People v. Frierson, 25 Cal. 3d 142 (1979), the California Supreme Court, upheld California's death penalty initiative when it was argued that one cannot use the initiative process to strip away rights.
After it was held by a court that California's school system was de facto segregation, and a court imposed forced busing, an initiative changed the constitution to prohibit forced busing. Crawford v. Board of Education, 113 Cal. App. 3d 633 (1980), affirmed 458 U.S. 527 (1982) upheld the initiative against the claim that one can't take away the rights of minorities.
And Prop 187 which took away the civil rights of illegal immigrants? That was not overturned on the basis that rights were taken away once possessed.
Did any of these cases involve an equal protection analysis? If so, how did the court so analyze, counselor? You, sir, are an embarrassment to the legal profession.