I never said they couldn't be altered. But amending a state constitution for the sole purpose of taking away from a specific segment of society a recognized and established constitutional right (which the rest of society gets to keep, by the way) is as un-American as it gets.
If the "right" in question was always "fundamental and recognized" as Rollo insists, prop 8 would have been a redundancy. This little morsel of sophistry is clearly intended to show, yet again, that homosexuality and heterosexuality are fundamantally the same thing with genders rearranged, and hence, marriage for one becomes, by definition, marriage for all. And yet, anyone who knows anything about the homosexual subculture, or who has observed it at any length knows perfectly well that, in point of fact, what mainstream homosexuality actually is is a hyperaggressive version of the worst aspects of the heterosexual sexual revolution mixed with a renunciation of the entire judeo-Christian paradigm of human sexuality through, not just the celebration of sexual promiscuity, but by decoupling sex from domestic life and responsibilities by decoupling it from heterosexual relations themselves.
This was, indeed, Gay "liberation", and it was celebrated as such...until the 1980s.
The right to marry a person of one's choice has long been recognized as a fundamental constitutional right of citizens, and Prop. H8te was aimed to take that right away from just one part of society.
More puffy legalistic sophistry. Marriage is not a constitutional right at all, for heterosexuals or homosexuals, and the framing of marriage as such does nothing if not further atomize individuals and their relationships within society as distinct from the moral and social fabric of the culture around them.
Marriage and family is the fundamental core of civil society, and it is not a right, but a responsibility and a privilege given to those mature and capable of entering into it.
Marriage is never mentioned in the U.S. Constitution, just as many other things are not, because if rights, they are contingent rights, not the unalienable sort actually found in the Constitution itself.
But this all dances around the really issue in all of this, which is the redefinition and reconceptualization of gender, marriage, and family as concepts, a project so extreme and unprecedented that only the utter destruction of substantial portions of the constitution as a legal document could possibly circumscribe its true scope.