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Today's Poll: Do you agree with Supreme Court rulings on gay marriage?

By Howard B. Owens
Jeff Allen

My well known faith based views aside, the ruling set a precedent of undercutting the voice of the people. The results of referendum votes everywhere are now at risk. Californians on multiple occasions turned out by the millions and voted down same sex marriage. After all appeals were exhausted, their states Constitution was amended. Yesterdays ruling just invalidated their Constitution and by virtue, the process of the vote of the people. Looking past the emotion of the debate, this sets dangerous precedent for the erosion of the voice of the majority and individual states rights.

Jun 27, 2013, 8:28am Permalink
Howard B. Owens

Jeff, setting aside the gay marriage issue, based on what I've read so far, I share a little of your concern about the Prop 8 ruling.

At just face value, I find the rulings about DOMA and Prop 8 seem contradictory. Overturning DOMA was all about preserving states rights. And Prop 8 was a state issue.

However, the main problem that happened with Prop 8 was that Gov. Brown's administration refused to defend it. The defendants in the case did not have legal standing to be the defendants. A technical detail, but one that's important to a properly functioning legal system. The fault here lies not with the court, I don't think, but with the Brown Administration, which I think had an obligation to defend a proposition legally passed by the voters, even if the administration found it distasteful.

On the other hand, I've always opposed the referendum system in California. This is the same system that passed a three strikes law that puts a guy who steals a pizza in jail for life. The system is easily manipulated by special interests with a lot of money and a good propaganda machine to stir up emotions. The referendum system is totally contradictory to a representative style government.

Jun 27, 2013, 9:17am Permalink
Jason Crater

Jeff - What if the "voice of the people" was to outlaw a different class of people from sharing equal rights? Would you still be in support of it?

I don't see how you feel justified projecting your personal religious views on everyone else?

Jun 27, 2013, 9:56am Permalink
Jason Crater

Getting to the more political side of your issue w/ the Supreme Court's ruling...

What if a southern state voted to resegregate black and white citizens? Would you support it? What if white people outnumbered black people in that state and all the white people voted for resegregation and all black voted against?

Just a hypothetical situation...but sometimes the court has to protect the minority because their voice may not be heard otherwise.

Jun 27, 2013, 10:00am Permalink
Jeff Allen

Jason, it is obvious you didn't read my post. My comments were aside from religious views. The issue I raised and politely disagree with Howard on is that a new precedent has been set that erodes the vote of the people. For the people of California to hold multiple, legal referendum votes that lead to amending to their Constitution only to have it only to have it invalidated by the Supreme Court without recourse now opens that possibility in any or all decisions made by majority vote in any state. Read them in their entirety minus what Fox, MSNBC, CNN, or any other news outlet tells you what it says and means. It supports the age old notion that people will unknowingly (sometimes willfully) sacrifice democracy for a cause that they are passionate about.

Jun 27, 2013, 10:26am Permalink
Phil Ricci

Thank you for saying that Mark!

The thing that everyone keeps missing here is that the reason why we are a Republic that has a democratic process and NOT a democracy like I keep hearing people mistakenly say, is to protect the individual!

The Constitution and the Bill of Rights are to protect the individual from the masses.

It means, Jeff, that tomorrow if 50.01% of Americans wanted to outlaw, Heavens forbid, Christianity, they could not. The constitution protects your rights to freedom of religion. It says that no matter what you believe, you have the right to it.

What the Supreme Court said yesterday is that the federal government cannot discriminate against a single group of people.

But no fears! For anyone who still wants to deny others equal rights because you find gays immoral or just plain icky, you can still live in one of the 37 states that don't believe in freedom.

That said....better move quick, because I think the tide has turned on this stupid debate!

Wouldn't it be great if all of these people who would wasted my tax money on this hate could actually do something useful with their time....like stop wasting our money!!!!

Jun 27, 2013, 10:38am Permalink
Kyle Couchman

Mark is absolutely correct, thats why the US is a democratic republic, not a democracy.... Whats the difference you say, well jut so happens I know that answer LOL here is the distinction....

A republic is a government in which a restricted group of citizens form a political unit, usually under the auspice of a charter, which directs them to elect representatives who will govern the state. Republics, by their very nature, tend to be free polities, not because they are elected by the citizens of the polity, but because they are bound by charters, which limit the responsibilities and powers of the state. The fact that people vote for representatives has nothing to do with making anything free. The logical consistency and rationality of the charter, as well as the willingness of the people to live by it, is what keeps people free.

A democracy is government by the majority. There is still a restricted group of citizens in a democracy, but this group rules directly and personally runs the state. The group may delegate specific tasks to individuals, such as generalships and governorships, but there is no question that the ruling force in a democracy is not a charter (if there even is a charter), but the vote of the majority. Democracies are free only if the people know what freedom is and are consistent in their application of it. If they don’t know this, or more appropriately, if a majority of the people don’t know this, then a democracy could be just as tyrannical as the worst dictator (see Socrates’ forced suicide by the Athenian democracy.)

And as a interesting note there is a commentary on the mindset of those who sat at the constitutional convention and wrote our constitution, it's comments made me think about my stand and others on subjects like gay marriage and smoking bans etc. Especially on how even my own thinking was wrong so to speak.....

As should be plain, there is a giant difference between the two systems of government. One of the main fears at the Constitutional Convention of the United States was that the government they created would be too democratic (causing Alexander Hamilton to suggest a restricted monarchy), because it was quite obvious, then and now, that any majority could vote itself anything it wanted, be it property or executions. That is why it irks me so much when politicians (who have no excuse not knowing what kind of government they serve in) and ignorant people say that this country is a democracy; it does a tremendous disservice to all of the people whose thought went into creating our republic.

But the more pernicious effect is that people actually begin to attribute and incorporate tenets of democracies into our republican structure. Things like referendums and ballot initiatives. These are not only irresponsible but entirely illogical. Why should we be making decisions we elect people to make? What legitimacy is gained from getting a majority of voters to pass anything? If 70% of voters vote to ban gay marriage, does that make it right? If 51% of voters vote to ban smoking, does that make it right? If 99.99% vote to redistribute property, does that make it right? The answer to all of these is “NO!” absolutely not. Truth isn’t determined by how many adherents one can get to go along with you. This is why democracy should be fought off wherever it shows its ugly face, it can and will be used to justify anything a majority of voters wants. Theoretically, a majority could vote for selective free speech, or to have certain unpopular people thrown out of the country or killed. There is no law in a democracy except whatever the majority of people say is the law.

Makes one think a bit doesn't it.

Jun 27, 2013, 10:39am Permalink
Doug Yeomans

Why do hetero Christians always think they have the right to tell everyone else what they can or can't do? I find it appalling that anyone thinks they have the right to deny anyone else equal rights based on skin color, gender or sexual orientation. We're all supposed to have equal rights.

Jun 27, 2013, 10:47am Permalink
Tim Miller

The issue with Prop 8 that the SC ruled on has nothing to do with states rights not individual rights. That (non)decision was based on a technicality that this court has been very consistent with - for an individual or group to sue, they must have a personal stake in the suit.

I sincerely believe that, had that technicality not been there, Prop 8 should have been overturned. In our society, marraige is not simply a merging of two people, it is a legal contract between two people conveying many, many rights to each other. This contract is so powerful it overrules the implied contracts between parent/child and between siblings and other family members. Prop 8 ripped the right to make that contract away from one specific group of people.

And that, barring other considerations such as the well-being of children (which is why we have age restrictions on marriage laws), is clearly unconstitutional. Majority rules in most situations, but basic rights fall outside of those situations... That also is why the portion of DOMA that affects federal activity was overturned in the other case before the Court.

Jun 27, 2013, 10:50am Permalink
Howard B. Owens

After I read your comment Tim, I thought ... maybe I got it wrong, so I went back and found another article to double check

http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/26/politics/scotus-prop-8/index.html

The court said private parties didn't have standing to act as defendants in this case, not sue.

Also, I agree with Mark on two fronts: The Bill of Rights is about protecting individual liberties against overreaching government. The Constitution is about limiting the power of the government.

Also, Jeff, I think it's a fair question: if Alabama passed a referendum by a majority of the people banning blacks from marrying whites, should the Supreme Court have the power to invalidate that law.

Shouldn't individual freedoms be protected from the tyranny of the majority?

Jun 27, 2013, 11:13am Permalink
Daniel Jones

I cannot figure out how people who argue passionately for personal and property rights even remotely care about gay marriage. We're talking about a secular government contract. If you're against 'big government' and its regulations, then why on earth do you want to regulate for everyone who they can and cannot enter into a marriage agreement with?

Jun 27, 2013, 11:29am Permalink
Tim Miller

That's what I get for pulling my info from a news story (one less accurate than the one you referenced) than the ruling itself as a previous post had suggested...

Jun 27, 2013, 11:32am Permalink
Mark Brudz

Jeff, It is not the purview of the Supreme Court, it is the DUTY of the Supreme Court to overturn laws that infringe on the rights of individuals. That is why there is a Supreme court in the first place.

The Supreme Court's sole purpose is arbitrate laws enacted by congress and the States to ensure that new laws are within the bounds of constitutionality.

Jun 27, 2013, 11:42am Permalink
mike nixon

As a full fledge member of the right wing religious Zealots of America. I can honestly tell you that I don't give a rats ass if a man likes a man or a woman likes a woman. Its just not my thing. It is absolutely none of my business.
The thing I have a problem with is, why in the hell is the federal government making this my issue. If the state of California through its elective process has voted on something, why the hell is the federal government going to stop them. If I remember correctly smoking marijuana is still a federal crime. Why haven't we attacked this so vigorously.

Or is that coming?

Maybe I won't be able to eat beef, have a beer, and enjoy a smoke?

Jun 27, 2013, 11:54am Permalink
Tim Miller

Oh, and if anybody doubts that this whole issue is a matter of religious folks swatting down those who don't believe in their flavor of mythology, consider both Prop 8 and what happened last year in North Carolina (Amendment 1).

Prop 8 had VERY strong support and backing by the Mormons in Utah (hardly a state's rights issue when the folks from the neighboring state provide a huge amount of resources to support the restrictive proposition (per Wikipedia, "LDS members contributed over $20 million, about 45% of out-of-state contributions to ProtectMarriage.com came from Utah"). That is not an issue of state's rights, that's an issue of a religion trying to enforce their mythology's rules on everybody.

NC's Amendment 1 forbade the state from recognizing ANY form of union between two same-sex people - marriage AND civil unions. Sadly, this state voted overwhelmingly to rip the contractual rights away from one class of people. Again - a majority cannot vote to restrict rights from select classes of people. I expect the Supreme Court will ultimately decide the fate of Amendment 1.

Jun 27, 2013, 12:00pm Permalink
Mark Brudz

There are those that would take away our meat, our beer and our smokes for sure. That is exactly the reason why we need to guard against reactionary legislation.

Jun 27, 2013, 12:14pm Permalink
Thomas Schneider

I support banning government from being involved in marriage. How is any type of union between two or more consenting adults any of the government's business?

Jun 27, 2013, 1:15pm Permalink
Mark Brudz

First Thomas you would have to change the tax code, that is basically what this argument is actually all about, marriage in the eyes of religion and marriage as defined by Government are two distinctly different things.

This entire argument is not about people spending their lives together, it is about gay married couples being entitled to the same tax benefits, insurance benefits and other legal benefits under the law. That is why the 14th Amendment applied, 'Equal Protection Under The Law'

Those that argue on religious grounds should heed the words of Jesus 'Give on to Caesar what is Caesar's

Of course if we had a national sales tax instead of an income tax, this argument would probably have never arisen.

Jun 27, 2013, 2:30pm Permalink
Julie A Pappalardo

I think it was more about Estate Tax than Income Tax...and there are other issues as well, for example: Hospital visitation (which has now been changed), end of life issues, spousal privilege in a lawsuit, Social Security, I could go on and on......

Jun 27, 2013, 3:29pm Permalink
Julie A Pappalardo

Whoops!! I almost forgot: Marriage also provides protection for a couples children.

For Example: The couple in question is from a State that doesn't recognize their marriage. They have a kid or 2 together....One kid gets sick....The parent who isn't the "legal" parent of the kid brings the kid to the ER....the ER people say something like "Where is the kid's REAL mother?" "We can't treat the kid unless we get consent from the REAL mother". All the while, the kid's parent is saying "but I AM the kids mom" .... in the meantime, the kid is SICK and needs treatment and the "real" Mother is out of the country because she is an executive for a Fortune 500 company, and has to travel............Not that something like this has ever happened to any of MY friends or anything.................

This stuff happens EVERY day in this country...

:::::shaking my head:::::::

Jun 27, 2013, 3:38pm Permalink
mike nixon

Hey Tim Miller, How about its not a religious thing, but maybe a science thing? God or Darwin proved there are entrances and exits. Let me ask, do you go in the exit. I am religious and I definitely don't go in the exit. How does that translate to only religious mythology.

Men and woman who are gay, have chosen to be gay. Its not something that you are born with. Its a choice. So when is it ok to have some ones personal sexual choice infringe on some one else's choices? Why is the federal government going to tell me that I have to except some ones personal sexual choices?

Jun 27, 2013, 3:52pm Permalink
JoAnne Rock

Kyle, you really should provide a citation to credit an author's work when you copy and paste it.

Plagiarism is the "wrongful appropriation" and "purloining and publication" of another author's "language, thoughts, ideas, or expressions," and the representation of them as one's own original work.

Jun 27, 2013, 3:59pm Permalink
Randy Smart

Doug, you say "We're all supposed to have equal rights."
Does that include the unborn? Are you righteously indignant about what happened in Texas? That an effort to protect the rights of the unborn failed? Just curious.

Jason, you say "I don't see how you feel justified projecting your personal religious views on everyone else?"
Couldn't it also be said (by the religious) "I don't see how you feel justified projecting your personal secular (non-religious) views on everyone else?" The truth is everybody has an opinion and everybody believes that their opinion is correct and everybody (purposely or not) tries to project their opinion unto others.

Religion, science and politics all have the following in common: They are basically tools. They are neither good nor bad in themselves, but can be used for either good or bad purposes. But remember, not everyone will agree on what a good purpose is or what a bad purpose is.

Jun 27, 2013, 4:18pm Permalink
bud prevost

So, is it between 2 people? That's the consensus? I see this opening the door to polygamy. And honestly, I have no problem with either; gays marrying or John having 4 or 5 sister wives. As long as you aren't hurting someone, why should the government have a thing to say about it?

Jun 27, 2013, 4:25pm Permalink
Kyle Couchman

Joanne I was pretty clear that it wasn't mine, especially in the second cut and paste where I said the comments made me assess my own position on some issues. But your right I have never been good at Citing my sources.

Jun 27, 2013, 4:36pm Permalink
Kyle Couchman

I have to say on the religious vs politics of marriage.... It's fine if a religion wants to set definitions for what a marriage is. However marriage is also a legal contract which grants rights, and legal status and obligations on the couple. All the states and gov have the power to effect is the legal definition.

If a religious group doesn't like the legal form of marriage then don't recognize it. I don't see nearly this much debate over certain religion's non acceptance of divorce vs the govt's allowing divorces at a staggering rate. Hell some churches don't recognize marriages outside their faith. To me all this is, is a pissing contest between the devoutly religious and the liberally flexible.

How many of these religious folk that sit there and demand this denial of marriage rights based on the morality of being gay.... Also cheat on their wives and do other less (in their eyes) pure acts that they would never admit to in their church.

Jun 27, 2013, 4:52pm Permalink
david spaulding

mike, a persons sexual orientation is a choice? mind sharing with us when you made your choice? been trying to figure out when I made mine and I keep drawing a blank..

Jun 27, 2013, 5:57pm Permalink
Tim Miller

Thank you, David, for pointing out the weakness of that "argument"... I confess, I did not think twice when I saw the future ex-Mrs. Miller when I realized she was a beauty and attractive. Don't recall ever sitting down, looking at pics of good looking guys and gals and debating "which arrouses me?"....

There are those who have the ability to choose (some may even simply say "Yes!"), but for most of us, contrary to what Mike claims, we like what we like. And per Seinfeld - there is not a darn thing wrong with that.

If somebody chooses to follow the beliefs of their brand of mythology -all power to them! But to claim the arbitrary tenets of their mythology should rule how folks who do *not* follow that mythology should follow their "laws" is fascism is a very nasty form of totalitarianism.

And Mike - one more thing. Have you ever had a dinner at a nice restaurant, being nicely sated before the desert tray is offered, but still ordered desert? How unnatural is that - eating beyond your level of satisfaction....

Jun 27, 2013, 6:35pm Permalink
Howard B. Owens

Just read this protest sign on a picture on Facebook: "So what if people choose to be gay. People choose to be a-holes and they can still get married."

There's an essential truth there: You can believe that being gay is a choice, that still doesn't give you the right to interfere with how somebody choses to live his or her life.

To me whether being gay is a choice or biological is completely irrelevant. It's none of my business how another person wants to live.

Jun 27, 2013, 8:27pm Permalink
Doug Yeomans

Howard, I work with a few holy rollers and they believe that being gay is a curable affliction. I've Asked them if being born black, white, male, female, short or tall was also a choice. One of them said we actually make the choice before conception. I'm just amazed at the absurd statements made by people. I guess gay people asked to be gay?

Jun 27, 2013, 9:43pm Permalink
Randy Smart

People are advocating for equal rights for homosexual couples to marry, but what about an unborn child's 'equal rights' to live? To me it seems that if you are passionate about 'equal rights' you would not limit that passion to just the issues that may effect you, but work universally toward promoting 'equal rights' for all. I was just curious as to how many people who support 'equal rights' for homosexuals to marry are also for abortion, which basically denies 'equal rights' to those who have not been born yet.

Jun 28, 2013, 8:36am Permalink
Randy Smart

Consider this:
1. If you believe that homosexuals do not have a choice in being homosexual (that they are born that way) AND
2. You believe in the theory of evolution (God didn't create the Earth, life or anything else, we are all the product of the Big Bang and billions of years of evolutionary processes) THEN
3. By your own admission you believe that homosexuals are in some way inferior to heterosexuals, since they cannot pass on their genes to their progeny, a basic tenet of evolution--Natural Selection (at least not without utilizing 'heterosexual means'. Remember there have been homosexuals a lot longer than there have been technologies to assist in creating children.)
Now if you believe in homosexuals being born the way they are, but not in evolution, then you're okay (logically speaking). Or if you believe in evolution, but also believe that homosexuals have a choice, then you're okay. But if you believe in both evolution and that homosexuals are born that way, then you have a conflicted belief (logically) that needs to be reconciled.

Jun 28, 2013, 9:08am Permalink
mike nixon

In millions of dollars spent, if not hundreds of millions of dollars, they have NEVER found a gene that creates homosexuality.

God love them, again I have no problem with homosexuals, in fact I have friends and relatives. All are very decent God fearing men and woman, oh and conservative for the most part.

Every one of them will tell you to stop victimizing them. In two conversations I had yesterday, both stated THAT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT NEEDS STAY OUT OF THEIR BUSINESS AND LET THE STATES DECIDE!

Jun 28, 2013, 9:20am Permalink
Kyle Couchman

An interesting counter argument to religion and other anti gay groups that homosexuality is a choice or isnt natural...

Homosexual behavior in animals is same-sex behavior, homosexual or bisexual, among non-human species. Such behaviors include sexual activity, courtship, affection, pair bonding, and parenting among same-sex animal pairings. Homosexual behavior has been observed in close to 1,500 species, ranging from primates to gut worms, and is well documented for 500 of them.[1][2] The sexual behavior of non-human animals takes many different forms, even within the same species. The motivations for and implications of these behaviors have yet to be fully understood, since most species have yet to be fully studied.[3] According to Bagemihl, "the animal kingdom [does] it with much greater sexual diversity – including homosexual, bisexual and nonreproductive sex – than the scientific community and society at large have previously been willing to accept."[4]

Research indicates that various forms of same-sex sexual behavior are found throughout the animal kingdom.[5] A new review made in 2009 of existing research showed that same-sex behavior is a nearly universal phenomenon in the animal kingdom, common across species.[6] Homosexual behavior is best known from social species. According to geneticist Simon Levay in 1996, "Although homosexual behavior is very common in the animal world, it seems to be very uncommon that individual animals have a long-lasting predisposition to engage in such behavior to the exclusion of heterosexual activities. Thus, a homosexual orientation, if one can speak of such thing in animals, seems to be a rarity."[7] One species in which exclusive homosexual orientation occurs, however, is that of domesticated sheep (Ovis aries).[8][9] "About 10% of rams (males) refuse to mate with ewes (females) but do readily mate with other rams."[9]

The observation of homosexual behavior in animals can be seen as both an argument for and against the acceptance of homosexuality in humans, and has been used especially against the claim that it is a peccatum contra naturam ('sin against nature').[1] For instance, homosexuality in animals was cited in the United States Supreme Court's decision in Lawrence v. Texas which struck down the sodomy laws of 14 states.[10]

and so JoAnne doesn't scold me again LOL this comes from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosexual_behavior_in_animals

Jun 28, 2013, 9:45am Permalink
Linda Knox

Observed great bumper sticker on vehicle when driving down Main St. the other day. To paraphrase - You'll defend the rights of the unborn fetus but will you continue to defend their rights if turn out to be gay? Sort of somes it up, don't you think? One's personal rights must/should follow one's personal agenda. Double standard to me.

Jun 28, 2013, 10:09am Permalink
Mark Brudz

The bottom line is that whether by choice or birth, it doesn't matter. These were 14th amendment cases pure and simple

14th Amendment

Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

Jun 28, 2013, 10:12am Permalink
Julie A Pappalardo

A choice? Come ON......That implies that EVERYONE is bisexual, and has to "choose" which way to go. So, when did you choose to be a hetero??

You don't "choose". I can tell you that the day you figure out what the heck is going on with your hormones, you look in the mirror and think (at least in the 80's.....thankfully things have changed)

"Oh CRAP!! I am going to have to keep this a secret from everyone for my WHOLE life" Immediately followed by : "OMG, I NEVER want to go into the locker room AGAIN!!! How am I going to get out of P.E?"

If I could have changed it when I was 13, I would have.......Today, I have WAY too much fun being FABULOUS!

That is all.

Jun 28, 2013, 10:33am Permalink
Randy Smart

There are also numerous well documented cases in the animal kingdom of species that kill/eat their young, species that kill/eat their mates, etc. So then in the few cases where this happens in the human species it must be natural? The people had no choice? They were born that way?

Choice is a powerful thing. Whether you are homosexual or heterosexual, don't you choose whom to sleep with? Why choose Mary over Margaret or Joe over John? Everybody exercises some degree of choice.

Jun 28, 2013, 10:55am Permalink
Kyle Couchman

Making a choice infers that a being has cognitive thought. Therefore please tell me where Randy's argument places in that.

We as people make the choice not to kill and eat our young, nor our spouses (although some may like this option) Such acts have been pretty taboo for millenia of human society. We punish those that commit this type of behavior. And as far as people who DO participate in those activities against fellow humans it is generally an accepted fact that they are born that way, and some really have no choice. It's called a psychosis.

As for Mike's comment.... Really how is it a learned behavior, why do only 10% of domestic sheep practice the homosexual behavior while the other 90% dont? Sheep learn other behaviors almost 100% like where they are going at certain times of the year when the shepards move them to certain pastures and so on.

Jun 28, 2013, 11:13am Permalink
Randy Smart

Kyle, are you saying that there is no cognitive thought involved in sex? Also, people with psychosis experience hallucinations, delusions, paranoia, etc. and very rarely commit acts that involve killing or eating people. Psychopaths are probably the ones you meant. But not everybody that kills their spouse or children is mentally ill.

Jun 28, 2013, 1:08pm Permalink
Mark Brudz

The Ironic thing here is that either side of the argument of "Choice vs By Birth" both sides actually bolster the argument.

1) If it is by birth, the 14th Amendment applies in that one can not help what they are born to be physically.

2) If it is by choice, than the 14th Amendment applies in that the liberty is all about your freedom to choose so long as your choice does not do harm to others.

3) The basic tenant of Christianity by the way is 'Free Will' so even the religious argument lacks merit when applied to laws of the state

You can choose to follow a religious Dogma which believes that marriage is between a man and a women, (Incidentally, I do just that) but you have no right to tell others what to believe, and thus live their life so long as they do you no personal harm.

The reason why I pretty much hate this topic when it comes up is because it always strays from the question of law, specifically ones right to believe what they want and pursue their beliefs, again so long as their actions cause others no harm, and morphs into an emotional abyss of one's belief versus the belief of another.

The poll question as posed, as simply if the Supreme Court made reached a proper decision, and under the constitution, it clearly did. And that is the genius of our Constitution in itself, regardless of our beliefs, the constitution protects our right to differ in thought. Referendum is actually meaningless in matters of liberty, because the constitution equally protects those who the referendum would limit.

That is precisely why the Supreme Court came to the decision it did, and precisely why it was right in doing so.

Jun 28, 2013, 1:30pm Permalink
Julie A Pappalardo

So, what you all are actually saying is that you were attracted to both men and women before you decided you were hot for: Farrah, David Cassidy etc. right?

Jun 28, 2013, 2:37pm Permalink
Kyle Couchman

So then Mike how does the shepard affect the sheep who decide to sleep with exclusively male sheep? Where do they learn that behavior....

Right Randy but your whole argument about beliefs on homosexuality in relation to beliefs in evolution are flawed. Since you are the type that really doesnt make sense the further you take your argument I will leave it alone, you have already written enough here to prove my point.

Jun 28, 2013, 3:58pm Permalink
Randy Smart

Kyle, if you are going to call my argument flawed, you can at least do me the courtesy of providing a rebuttal...demonstrate how the argument is flawed.

Jun 28, 2013, 6:18pm Permalink
Kyle Couchman

Well Randy you first jump to a conclusion that I said there was no coginitive thought in sex.....my statement was intended to indicate that animals have little or no cognitive thought, they dont ponder actions vs consequences or consider things like that as humans do. Thats what makes the love and loyalty we get from our companion animals so wonderful, its pure they will even love despite some of the cruelest treatment.

As for your arguments on psychosis, psychopathy is considered a psychosis and to be honest you dont seem to be in touch with reality making the statement that people that kill their spouse or children aren't mentally ill. Your right though cause greed, envy and passion can cause someone to do these things. But on the average it's a mental issue either temporary, caused by stress. Or its a defect they are born with. but your comment... "people with psychosis experience hallucinations, delusions, paranoia, etc. and very rarely commit acts that involve killing or eating people."

But the reality is these crimes are mostly committed by those suffering such mental issues. Normal people just dont consider actions like this.

I'm sure you will come up with some sort of ethereal count argument but I am done with discussing this topic with you.

Jun 28, 2013, 7:20pm Permalink
Randy Smart

Kyle, you introduced the example from the animal kingdom as evidence against homosexuality being a choice. (see your post "An interesting counter argument to religion and other anti gay groups that homosexuality is a choice or isnt natural..."). But by your own admission "animals have little or no cognitive thought, they dont ponder actions vs consequences or consider things like that as humans do." therefore it makes your previous argument invalid, because humans do have cognitive thoughts and do ponder their actions/consequences, which makes any comparison between the animals and humans invalid (which was the point of my argument about animal species eating their young.)
As far as psychosis goes, check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychosis
Psychosis is a symptom, not a disease. Psychopathy falls under the category of mental illnesses known as personality disorders. Psychosis can be treated successfully, allowing the people who suffer from it to live healthy, functioning lives. Personality disorders are harder to treat. Again, my point being that it is easy, but unjust, to blame people who are mentally ill for ALL of the atrocious acts that are committed.

Thank you and Good Night.

Jun 28, 2013, 8:45pm Permalink
Phil Ricci

I find some of the logic...or severe lack there of, cute.

Let's make it clear...this is not a state's issue, federal issue, church issue...ANYTHING.

Who people choose to be with, love, marry, commit themselves to, enter into a living arrangement with, have sex with or just share their lives...is no one's business.

No one has the right to tell an individual how to live, period.

The fact that this is such a difficult concept for some is pathetic.

Get government out of marriage, period.

Jun 29, 2013, 3:25am Permalink
Mark Brudz

This issue was never about your statement

"Who people choose to be with, love, marry, commit themselves to, enter into a living arrangement with, have sex with or just share their lives.."

And "Get government out of marriage, period" is disingenuous at best.

We are not tribal nomads that take partners by simply bedding them, There are a multitude of considerations where marriage is concerned.

HIPPA which is a medical privacy issue
Guardianship of children
Inheritance, specifically the chain if no will is present To name just a few

The Supreme Court decision had absolutely nothing to do with who one loves, has sex with spends their life wife etc.

Marriage is a legal contract by definition in the secular world, therefore because it is a contract, government has a place due to the possibility of legal dispute, Gay couples get divorced too you know.

As far as the Marriage in the eyes of the church, that is a totally separate issue.

These court findings again were not about who someone spends their life with, rather does a gay couple have the same contractual rights as a hetero couple, and the Supreme Court rightfully so deemed that under the 14th Amendment they do, and that is the ONLY issue posed by this poll. DUE PROCESS UNDER THE LAW!

There have been so many over simplifications in this thread, that to me it seems the simple question and answer was lost

Jun 29, 2013, 6:32am Permalink
Kyle Couchman

I agree Mark. That was my original position in my inital response. I truly wonder if these people who are against gay marriage because of the morals involved, ignoring the legal and contractual parts of it. Would also be as supportive if suddenly the courts began limiting divorces to what the church deems appropriate grounds for one. I'm thinking there would be alot more adultery and murder among couples if that happened.

Upon reflection, didn't we go thru this in the sixties.....with mixed race marriages?

Jun 29, 2013, 7:34am Permalink
Howard B. Owens

Mark, that's why I've always favored a marriage contract over a marriage license.

License implies a government stamp of approval. A contract puts the government in a much more neutral position.

Typically, we don't file our contracts with the government. For marriage, there should probably be an exception. There are multiple legal issues and whom you marry isn't entirely a private matter since it has implications for all kinds of business arrangements.

So filing of a marriage contract a government clerk's office should be required.

Other than that, it's none of the government's business.

Here's what I see as the major flaw in this scheme though: There are all kinds of social and civic consequences to easy divorce. If marriage contracts easily be broken, I don't think that's good for the country. Maybe we call them "Life Commitment Contracts" rather than "marriage contracts."

Jun 29, 2013, 9:48am Permalink
Mark Brudz

Howard, You and I are pretty much on the same page, you are correct that typically we do not file contracts with the Government, however, in many cases we do such as property deeds, certain business arrangements and such.

Marriage license vs. marriage contract to me are not that much different in a civil sense. I agree that the sex and/or sexual preference is indeed none of the governments business that is not even a question as far as I am concerned.

A 'Certificate Of Marriage' however is essential to ensure that property, custodial and HIPPA rights in that they protect both those individuals not only from others but also from the Government in terms of resolving issues that may arise when couple deals with courts, medical and certain matters of liability.

As far as ease of Divorce goes, property and custody are really the only impediments to divorce as things are right now when you think about it, precisely another reason why the government does has an interest as a matter of civil protections if anything.

What people miss is when something is in the courts versus other branches of government, is that the Court is an arbiter as opposed to a legislator, in other words specifically there to protect the rights of all parties concerned, without a legal basis, the courts could only arbitrate based on the Judges perceptions rather than the law, an open invitation to choose the rights of one over another. In that scenario a judges perception would be more subject to those who appoint or elected him/her rather than to the principles of liberty that the constitution protects. Whether a court be civil or criminal it's primary responsibility is adherence to the law and the protection of individual liberty, not the will of the current population. That is justice and that is the basis of resolution of civil matters, THE LAW

All said, the Supreme Court ruled correctly on this for the above stated reasons. The State Of California had the option of supporting prop 8, the Federal Government had the option of supporting DOMA, they chose not to, I suspect however, that if they did, the result would have probably been the same.

The popular argument or the personal point of view, rarely has baring on Justice or liberty itself as matter of Law or constitutionality.

Jun 29, 2013, 10:41am Permalink

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