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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 | ||
I Floop the Pig
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NY Court reject same-sex wedding licenses
Okay, so there's a valid legislative reason for them to have made this ruling, I can understand that, and honestly if it means that legislation comes up to make a change, then it's for the better. But their logic is so freaking twisted in the ruling...
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And then there's this gem: Quote:
Excuse me while I vomit. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13736236/
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#2 |
HI!
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That is some of the most RIDICULOUS logic I've ever heard of. If there is such a concern about children growing up with both a mother and a father, why don't they outlaw divorce?
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#3 |
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Before commenting I'm reading the full opinion (since short news articles are notirious for screwing up the precise logic in these things). If anybody else wants to it is here:
http://www.nycourts.gov/ctapps/decis...86-89opn06.pdf |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
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I am hopeful.
I think the emphasis now will be to change the law. I think there is still hope. This just means the fight goes on. I'm not sad. ![]() The rationale behind this ruling is bizarre. |
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#5 |
Senior Member
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I don't understand the logic that gay parents aren't good parents. It seems to me that since they will have to go to some trouble to actually have children, either naturally or through adoption, doesn't that mean that they really want the kids. Unlike some hetro parents who have lots of "accidents" and unwanted children.
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#6 |
I Floop the Pig
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Okay, so reading the full decission, this is what I get:
The reasons stated above are not necessarily good reasons, or reasons that the law shouldn't be overturned. But they are reasons other than flat discrimination that the legislature might have defined marriage in 1909 as between a man and a woman. So, the law stands as constitutional because its intent wasn't overtly discriminatory. Well, then, my question becomes...does intent matter? If it discriminates, it disciminates, whether that was the intention or not, no? In the decission, the justices concede 316 benefits from marriage that are denied to a whole class of citizens, and their only defense of that is, "Well, the legislature didn't MEAN to deny them that 100 years ago." Still pretty twisted.
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#7 | |
Beelzeboobs, Esq.
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Not that you weren't saying that, I just wanted to highlight the somewhat back-handed compliment in there. I didn't read the due process analysis. I need to compare the analysis of the majority and dissent opinions to comment on that. But, I'm not surprised that the court punted back to the legislature. I should probably look up whether appellate judges are elected in NY. My impression from various scuttlebutt is that the "activist judge" rhetoric (whether valid or not) has left some judges eager to punt whenever possible, less they lose their elected spots on the bench.
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#8 | |
Beelzeboobs, Esq.
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Quote:
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#9 | |
Beelzeboobs, Esq.
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Quote:
Consitutional analysis is frequently not what one might think of as "fair." I need to stop replying in this thread. Moving along now...
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#10 | |||
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Ok, here are the conclusions I see reached.
1 First, it dismisses amici claims that the existing law does not exclude same-sex marriages. The court admits that the statute never explicitly excludes such unions but that this is simply because when the law was passed in 1909 it was the implicit societal assumption and whenever specific unions are mentioned in the law they are male/female in nature. Therefore the Constitutional question (whether such exclusion is constitutional) is not mooted. 2 Essentially, the same constitutional question has been asked in several other states with mixed results. This isn't binding on New York state of course, but informs the debate. The constitutional question has been affirmed in Massachusetts and Vermont but rejected in Arizona, Indiana, and New Jersey and remains a question under scrutiny in Hawaii. 3 Marriage is a benefited institution. There are at least 316 statutory benefits to marriage in the state of New York (tax stuff, probate, etc.). So marital exclusion is more than symbolic. 4 As a result of 3, exclusion must have a rational basis. In this part they do not argue that Quote:
The court does not argue that this is true, just that it is a rational basis unlike simply saying "we hates the queers." Another rational basis is that the legislature could conclude that opposite-sex parenting is better for children. The court does not argue that this is the case and acknowledges that it is not necessarily so. But that the point isn't whether the rational basis is true but whether it exists. Here's the relevant quote Quote:
It then goes on into technical detail rejections of the Due Process and Equal Protection claims on which the suits were filed but essentially the ruling is that because there remain rational bases on which the law could rest it is not the courts place to overturn it though "if we were convinced that the restriction plaintiffs attack were founded on nothing but prejudice -- if we agreed with the plaintiffs that it is comparable to the restriction in Loving v Virginia -- we would hold it invalid, no matter how long its history." It is striking to me that at root the NY Supreme Court is saying that the rational basis for the state to be involved in marriage at all is to promote the welfare of children. This raises common howls that it means Lani and I should not be allowed to marry (since we have no intention to procreate). The court responds: Quote:
In reading the decision I get the sense that some of the concurrers would have loved to overturn it but couldn't find a judicial basis on which to do so. Essentially this decision seems to have come down to whether the justice believed that the data on impacts of same-sex child rearing are substantial enough to rule a preference for opposite-sex child rearing completely irrational. The majority felt that this point hasn't been reached yet while the dissenting minority felt that it has. Essentially, the outrage I am seeing in some circles is over misunderstanding of "rational." When the court says the basis is rational they aren't saying they agree with it or that it is necessarily correct just that there is a non-prejudicial basis to the legislative action. That "encouraging a maximally beneficial environment for children" is a valid state interest and that in the absence of overwhelming evidence to the contrary it is not the courts place to dictate the legislatures priorities in achieving that goal. But it does open the door to a basis on which the court could change its mind at a future point when more substantial data is available. Personally, I think marriage should be open to everybody who wants it (actually, I think the state should get out of the game altogether but while they're in it, it should be available to anybody who wants it). But I'd far prefer to see it settled legistlatively than judicially. This decision seems to be more nuanced and grudgingly accepting of the courts role in the debate than in most of the other state supreme court decisions (on either side of the decision) I've read. |
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