Daniel Peterson wrote:Sethbag wrote:No, this doesn't mean that Dred Scott and Plessy vs. Ferguson were rightly decided. But they were decided, and until they were subsequently overturned, they constituted binding precedent in US courts.
And Proposition 8 represents an attempt to overturn a one-vote state supreme court decision that many, in and out of California (myself emphatically included) think was wrongly decided.
I see nothing un-American in declining to genuflect before state and federal supreme courts.
I don't either. Un-Americanism is just a colloquial term which, by interpretation, I take to mean "not consonant with my personal interpretation of American ideals".
"That's un-American!" is therefor, by that definition, one of the very few charges to which "no, it's not!" actually constitutes a fairly complete and reasonable defense.
Luckily for us all, we have the right (excepting such things as treason and breaking the law) to be as un-American as we please. I, for one, find Sen. Chuck Schumer's attitudes towards gun control to be very un-American. Yet, he is as American as I am, and indeed, as one our political elite, is far better situated than me to determine what becomes American law. Oh well.
Sethbag wrote:Daniel, such an obvious strawman argument does not become you. Who here is arguing that one-vote court decisions can never be altered? Nobody. Obviously they can, either by subsequent visitation of the issue by the court, or by constitutional amendment. This is what happened in California, and nobody is arguing that this process in and of itself is bad, or illegal, or un-American.
I don't see it as a strawman. Rollo Tomasi is effectively demanding genuflection before a state supreme court decision.
And so, in effect, do you, by presuming that the decision overturned by Proposition 8 should not have been challenged:
Well, I don't think it should have been challenged. Whether you agree with it or not, that 1-vote majority had established as a fundamental right the right of gay people to get married to each other, and something like over 18,000 gay couples had already availed themselves of that right and received state marriage certificates prior to the election. Prop 8 stands a very good chance of actually nullifying these couples' marriages, indeed I have read that at least one lawsuit has already been filed asking the court to void all these gay marriages (though what standing the plaintiff claims, I have absolutely no idea). I'm very much against that, and think it is not consonant with American ideals of liberty. As such, I regard Prop 8 as un-American.
You may well regard support for gay marriage as un-American. If so, then that's your right.
I don't argue against Prop 8 as illegal. I disagree with it as a matter of principle. Obviously you and I don't agree on this, and however un-American I may regard your attitude toward gays and Prop 8, I recognize that you are just as American as I am, and just as entitled to your beliefs in the matter as I am.
Sethbag wrote:What people are saying is un-American is the unprecedented action by a majority of citizens to remove a right from a minority which has been previously recognized as a matter of law by the court. It is the removal of rights that is seen as un-American, since America has typically, over its history, stood for strong individual rights - not the taking away of such.
You repeatedly declare same-sex marriage to be a "right," yet, since that is precisely the point at issue, you beg the question in doing so.
Not really. As of the handing down of the relevant ruling in the California Supreme Court, the
right of same-sex couples in California to marry was established law. That right existed as of the day that ruling went into effect, whether it had existed before or not. Thus, Prop 8 removed a right that did in fact exist under California law during the entire Prop 8 campaign and right up until Election Day 2008. The dispute is over whether this right ought to have been recognized, not whether or not it had been.
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