subgenius wrote:Darth J wrote:Subgenius, you would have to know what you are talking about in order to give someone a primer. You demonstrably do not. You do not know how to read case law, you do not know how to distinguish holding from dicta, and you are blissfully unaware of the general rule of jurisprudence that a case will not be decided on a higher standard of review when a lower standard will suffice.
you are correct, i assumed you had at least a basic knowledge of law, and even a fundamental working idea of what the issue(s) is.
but, wow, the pretty-blue-cut-and-paste that you posted, just plain embarrasses you.
No, Subgenius, it does not embarrass me to quote the language from
Romer where the U.S. Supreme Court reaches a holding that is completely different from what you asserted.
Romer v. Evans, sexual orientation is not subject to strict scrutiny, but only to a rational basis test.
such an incredible wealth of information available to you, but it fails to address my point.
Let us, once again, see the error of your ways...and then we can sit back and watch you try to "cut-n-paste" your way around the actual law (which, as i said before, is overwhelmingly on my side)
Cutting and pasting from case law IS LAW. That's why you see those string citations in judicial opinions.
"Equal Protection" is divided into 3 levels of scrutiny.
same-sex marriage falls into the rational-basis level.
reference United States v. Carolene Products Co.
the court has ruled that any any law that falls into the rational-basis category is constitutional as long as the law in question is in question is reasonably related to governmental issues.
Whoa....you mean like you just figured out what I have been saying this whole time? That is some deep thinking there, dude.
DOMA makes it a state government issue to decide whether to recognize same sex marriage, any law which would ban same sex marriage is therefore not an infraction on the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
Right, because congress can supersede the full faith and credit clause by legislative fiat. Yes, you are certainly showing me the error of my ways. Thank you for clarifying that if the legislature passes a law, that means the law is constitutional.
You concede this point below at Baker v Nelson, as does the Supreme Court which states that the law does not merit there consideration "for want of a substantial federal question."
No, I must not concede that point, because it is not a valid point. If it were, the Supreme Court would never have granted certiorari in
Romer or
Lawrence.
Seriously, just stop. The above sentence is one of the stupidest things I have ever read on this board, and that is saying something.
you should read more of your own posts
"I know you are, but what am I?" Truly, a stunning refutation.
First, as far as
Lawrence being inapplicable to the issue of same-sex marriage, whom should we believe understands constitutional law better: you, or Antonin Scalia? From
his dissenting opinion in Lawrence:
errr..."dissenting opinion" ? what a convenient omission on your part....care to convey the "other" opinion?, you know, the one that counts.
It's a dazzling display of idiocy when you simultaneously continue to show that you have no idea what you are talking about, and keeping saying to someone who has done this as his profession that he does not.
Dissenting and concurring opinions are frequently cited by judges to clarify points of law. What exactly was I "omitting" when I specified that this was a dissent? You also are completely missing the point, which is that Scalia dissented because he understood the ramifications of deciding
Lawrence under a substantive due process analysis.
Romer v. Evans and Lawrence v. Texas have resolved the issue of whether there is a substantial federal question involved in classifications based on sexual orientation. I am aware that uninformed anti-same-sex marriage zealots think that a 40+ year old denial of certiorari (when prevailing societal views about sexual orientation were different) is binding precedent notwithstanding further developments in the law, but that's not how stare decisis works.
ok, you concede Baker v Nelson, check.
No, I just did the opposite, and your "I-read-a-Wikipedia-entry-about-stare-decisis" level of understanding is not impressive. If there is no substantial federal question presented in classifying people according to sexual orientation, then the Supreme Court would not have had subject matter jurisdiction over
Romer or
Lawrence. And
Perry v. Schwarzenegger also would have been summarily dismissed if
Baker means what you mistakenly believe it means. It also already would have been dismissed by the 9th Circuit, since questions of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time.
The Defense of Marriage Act has already been held unconstitutional by federal courts, because the Tenth Amendment does not allow congress to define marriage for the states. And I am glad to know that you are in favor of the United Nations defining the parameters of the U.S. Constitution for us.
i read this over and over.....where did you cite that DOMA was repealed?
This is another one of your tells that you don't know what you are talking about. When a federal court rules that an act of congress is unconstitutional, that doesn't mean the act has been "repealed."
Here is one of the cases where a federal judge ruled that certain provisions of DOMA---the provisions that pertain to your mistaken assertions---were unconstitutional:
http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/dis ... 123233/58/Glad to know, though, that you are unaware of current developments in the law, but you think that a 40 year-old denial of certiorari (which has limited stare decisis effect) is binding precedent, even though it has been superseded by other cases addressing classification by sexual orientation as presenting a substantial federal question.
and did you forget to comment about Congress and BLAG?
No.
You've already made this irrelevant allusion to
Skinner v. Oklahoma, and I already addressed it.
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=20238&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&start=42 Forced sterilization as a criminal penalty has nothing to do with whether marriage is a fundamental right simply because of procreation, since neither procreating nor having the ability to procreate is an element of the legal definition of marriage anywhere in the United States.
but the citation that "marriage and procreation are fundamental" has been used in the decisions that followed. That little gem is what you seem to be intentionally looking over.
I specifically referred to it, and yet I am "intentionally overlooking it." Oh, okay.
For the love of God, stop digging yourself in deeper. The U.S. Supreme Court has no authority under federalism to define marriage under state law (and the equal protection argument for same-sex marriage does not imply otherwise). That statement does not define what marriage is. You are making it clear, as I already said, that you don't know how to tell what the holding of a court is. The criminal statute at issue did not enact forced castration only for criminals who are married. A convicted criminal who is not married still has a fundamental right to procreate. Defining marriage as necessarily including procreation was not the holding in
Skinner because
that question was not before the court. That statement has absolutely zero legal significance for defining what marriage means. It only means that both marriage and procreation are protected by substantive due process.
And by the way, since you are selectively deciding when you are a strict constructionist (which you do not appear to realize): there is nowhere in the text of the U.S. Constitution that grants a right to procreation. A long-term trend of extending substantive rights is not exactly the death knell for extending equal protection to gay people.
Griswold v. Connecticut has nothing to do with marriage being only about procreation, either, especially since the Supreme Court extended that same right to privacy to
unmarried couples.
Eisenstadt v. Baird held that equal protection required the same right of privacy for both married and unmarried persons.
and, like others, took precedent from Skinner, but i see why you ignore that.
No, you can't, because I did not ignore it, and you don't understand how case law works. There is nothing anywhere in any of these cases that says that procreation is a necessary element of marriage, and the U.S. Supreme Court does not have the authority to define that, anyway, because defining marriage is a question of state law. Deciding whether the state definition of marriage violates equal protection, however, is a question of federal constitutional law.
maybe you should find a different topic to offer your uninformed opinions on.
wow, its like you are saying things that i am thinking....eerie it is
The difference would be that I have shown that I know what I am talking about, and you continue to prove that you don't. You're not even informed enough to know how uninformed you are.
You should enjoy such Supreme Court gems as seen in Murphy v. Ramsey where we read:
"the union for life of one man and one woman," .... "the sure foundation of all that is stable and noble in our civilization."
Oh, Jesus Christ......you are such a moron.
Case law does not mean you pick out-of-context dicta and say, "See?!? That's what the law is!!!"
At the time
Murphy was decided, Utah was not a state. There was no sovereign state law to raise a 10th Amendment issue. The only significance to equal protection for homosexuals that an 1885 case about polygamists having voting rights is that the language you are referring to was cited
unfavorably by the dissent in
Romer v. Evans.
"[C]ertainly no legislation can be supposed more wholesome and necessary in the founding of a free, self-governing commonwealth, fit to take rank as one of the co-ordinate States of the Union, than that which seeks to establish it on the basis of the idea of the family, as consisting in and springing from the union for life of one man and one woman in the holy estate of matrimony; the sure foundation of all that is stable and noble in our civilization; the best guaranty of that reverent morality which is the source of all beneficent progress in social and political improvement." [Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U.S. 15, 45 (1885)]. I would not myself indulge in such official praise for heterosexual monogamy, because I think it no business of the courts (as opposed to the political branches) to take sides in this culture war. (Scalia, J., dissenting).
That is it. It means nothing. Your cherry-picked dicta from
Murphy has absolutely no legal significance regarding the definition of marriage. Not even the three justices dissenting from
Romer relied on it as precedent---in fact, they joined in criticizing the editorializing by the Supreme Court.
or how about (speaking of dissenting opinions)
Meltzer v. C. Buck LeCraw & Co.:
"one of the cornerstones of our civilized society."
Yep, that's case law. You just randomly pick phrases,
and it's the law!!!Meltzer was a case denying certiorari by petitioners claiming their right to due process was denied because they could not afford court fees. This is the full context of your Magic 8-Ball approach to law:
The other distinction between divorce and different kinds of controversies suggested in the Boddie opinion is the degree to which the disputes are regarded as "fundamental." The extent to which this requirement limits the holding of Boddie is found in the very facts of that decision -- the right to seek a divorce is simply not very " fundamental" in the hierarchy of disputes. Marriage is one of the cornerstones of our civilized society. Society generally places a high value on marriage and a low value on the right to divorce. And since Boddie held that the right to a divorce was "fundamental," I can only conclude that almost every other kind of legally enforceable right is also fundamental to our society.This has no precedential value, and it is also irrelevant. People are who are arguing that same-sex people have a right to marry do not dispute that marriage is a fundamental right. That is why they think gays should be able to get married, too.
i particularly like California Supreme Court Justice Carol Corrigan (allegedly LGBT):
"The concept of the equal protection of the laws compels recognition of the proposition that persons similarly situated with respect to the legitimate purpose of the law receive like treatment."
the "legitimate purpose" of the law....hmmm....what have we seen over and over and over and over with that....hmmmm
What we have seen is that there is no legitimate purpose to denying same-sex marriage, because there is nowhere in the United States where people are required to have children in order to be married.
It is no denigration of one class or the other to acknowledge the biological truth that same-sex and opposite-sex couples are not similarly situated with respect to at least one of the purposes of marriage, namely, procreation. As was noted by Chief Justice Margaret Marshall, of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and author of that Court's 2003 decision in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health mandating same-sex marriage in Massachusetts, the capacity for unassisted procreation is "the one unbridgeable difference between same-sex and opposite-sex couples." Although Chief Judge Marshall, like Judge Vaughn Walker in the Proposition 8 litigation in California, Perry v. Schwarzenegger (2010), responded to this indisputable truth with the rather extraordinary claim that procreation has never really been a purpose of marriage, denying the obvious does not make the point any the less obvious. And yet, with that "unbridgeable difference," a classification that recognizes the biological differences and thereby treats differently situated persons differently, is no violation of equal protection
See the part that I underlined? How many kids has Dallin H. Oaks had with his current wife? How many kids do you think they will have before he dies?
Bottom line
my original assertion is correct...i still need not "defend" anything, because i am not the one in want.
Now I know how Simon Southerton feels when Mormon hobby apologists tell him he doesn't know anything about genetics.
Note to readers: I make the above post for your benefit so you will not be confused by pseudolaw. It is not a futile attempt to convince Subgenius of his ignorance. If an orangutan could be trained to type, it would offer more intelligent legal commentary than what Subgenius provides. Therefore, I do not expect to reason with the latter.EDIT: Another typo. Spell check doesn't seem to work any better than seer stones.