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Title: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: mixie on February 07, 2012, 12:37:30 PM
http://www.addictinginfo.org/ (http://www.addictinginfo.org/)
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 12:51:46 PM
Not exactly, they upheld the prior ruling by Walker, since it's highly unlikely that they are going to get a en banc hearing the next stop is the Supreme Court.  What's critical is that the Walker decision (and Walker was appointed by Reagan and elevated by BushI- so all the 'activist judge' people can just suck on it) found the law unconstitutional on two different and separate grounds, forcing any appeal to essentially double the costs by putting together two teams, one to do each part (due process and equal protection).  It also means that the opponents have to win a 2 for 2, in order to overturn Walker's decision.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: mixie on February 07, 2012, 12:59:05 PM
Proposition 8 is unconstitutional.   Period the end.  As soon as Schwartenegger said the was going to let California vote on Gay Marriage,  I knew it would just be a matter of time in getting it to the Supreme Court.   Once it hits the Supreme Court it's going to be struck down as Unconstitutional.  And then we'll start making some progress.  This is just a repeat of Plessy versus Ferguson all the way to Brown vs the Board of Education of Topeka Kansas.  That took over 50 years.  This should be over with by next year.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: spacial on February 07, 2012, 01:14:11 PM
One step at a time America. There's everything to gain.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 02:11:00 PM
One step at a time America. There's everything to gain.

The wheels of justice grind slow, but they grind exceedingly fine.  The difference between the American way of doing this - though long protracted court fights - makes it law, not a whim of elected offices, who can take away what they have given.  Legislature granted 'rights' tend to be transitory, lasting only as long as that particular power group can stay in office.  By the time all this is done it's going to be cemented as law that no legislature can overturn w/o a constitutional amendment, which is almost impossible to get.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 03:32:06 PM
Quote from: tekla on February 07, 2012, 12:51:46 PM
Not exactly, they upheld the prior ruling by Walker, since it's highly unlikely that they are going to get a en banc hearing the next stop is the Supreme Court.  What's critical is that the Walker decision (and Walker was appointed by Reagan and elevated by BushI- so all the 'activist judge' people can just suck on it) found the law unconstitutional on two different and separate grounds, forcing any appeal to essentially double the costs by putting together two teams, one to do each part (due process and equal protection).  It also means that the opponents have to win a 2 for 2, in order to overturn Walker's decision.

[The decision] was narrowly hinged on whether the state had the right to withdraw the right to marry once it had been extended, as it had been in California by a state Supreme Court decision.

The federal panel sidestepped whether gays and lesbians had a constitutional right to marry, saying, "We therefore need not and do not consider whether same-sex couples have a fundamental right to marry."
_Capitol Alert, SacBee

Not all it's cracked up to be.

The 9th Circuit is the most overturned Appeals Court in the nation.  This is another one that is destined for the judicial trash heap.

The way to extend political rights is to build a poitical majority.  Judicial activism short-circuits that process and, in the long run, works counter to the real goals.

Break out your umbrellas.  It's raining on your parade.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 04:19:58 PM
Math, how does it work?  The 9th has the highest number of reversals - of course it also has the largest territory, the largest number of judges (covering nine states and two territories, and with 28 judges) and does more cases, so when you look you'll find their percentage (do the math) is equal to others, in fact, last year in percentage terms they were 3rd. 

Each year, Tom Goldstein, co-founder of the widely read SCOTUSblog, compiles and releases Supreme Court statistics. Last month, Mr. Goldstein released the final "Stat Pack" for the Supreme Court's most recent October 2010 term with these results: The Court reversed or vacated seventy-nine percent of the decisions it reviewed. Circuits with the highest percentage of reversals included the Sixth Circuit (eighty-three percent) and the Fifth Circuit (eighty percent). The Ninth Circuit came in third at seventy-nine percent....

In the October 2009 term, the circuit courts were reversed seventy-one percent of the time. That year, while the Supreme Court reversed eighty percent of Ninth Circuit cases, three other circuits plus the grouping of all appeals taken from state courts had higher reversal rates. The year prior, during the 2008 term, the Ninth Circuit was reversed only sixty percent of the time, well under the seventy-six percent reversal rate for all cases. Seven other circuits that year had higher reversal rates than the Ninth Circuit; six of them were reversed at the one-hundred percent level.


It's also a function of the cases they get.  The West has the largest amounts of federal land - hence making more federal cases - and because of the intensity of industry in California in high tech, creative industries, and intellectual property areas, gets some of the most interesting cases too.  They are seen as 'making new law' because so many of the things they are adjudicating are new problems.

And it's hardly activist, when all other courts when asked (including the Supreme Court of Iowa, not exactly your flaming radical bunch) have found that such laws are in violation of due process and/or equal protection (though this is the first finding that it violates BOTH of those at the same time).  And exactly who is supposed to rule on Constitutional questions?  Your favorite blog editor?

And if that is true, then we need to stop electing Republicans who put people like Walker in the federal judgeship in the first place (Ronald Reagan) and further elevated him to the 9th (G.H.W. Bush).
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 04:25:26 PM
Quote from: mixie on February 07, 2012, 12:59:05 PM
Proposition 8 is unconstitutional.   Period the end.  As soon as Schwartenegger said the was going to let California vote on Gay Marriage,  I knew it would just be a matter of time in getting it to the Supreme Court.   Once it hits the Supreme Court it's going to be struck down as Unconstitutional.  And then we'll start making some progress.  This is just a repeat of Plessy versus Ferguson all the way to Brown vs the Board of Education of Topeka Kansas.  That took over 50 years.  This should be over with by next year.

Plessy v Ferguson (1890) is universally recognized as one of the worst Supreme Court decisions, which was rightfully set aside.

The Plessy decision was clearly a bastardization of the 14th Amendment "citizenship" and "equal protection" clauses.  The 14th Amendment was proposed as a response, in part, to the dreadful Dred Scott (1857) case, in which the Supreme Court opined that blacks were "... beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations, and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."

The decision in Brown v Board of Education (1954), setting aside Plessy, was a truer interpretation of the meaning and intent of the 14th Amendment, which was designed to ensure equal political rights for the former slaves and people of color.

The 9th Circuit ruled, essentially, that the people of the State were not allowed, through the state constitutional amendment process, to "overrule" the State Supreme Court, even though the State Supreme Court subsequently acknowledged the validity of the Proposition.  The decision is, on its face, a sort of judicial tyranny.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 04:31:17 PM
The 9th Circuit ruled, essentially, that the people of the State were not allowed, through the state constitutional amendment process, to "overrule" the State Supreme Court, even though the State Supreme Court subsequently acknowledged the validity of the Proposition.

Yeah, so what?  The 9th Circuit Court is a FEDERAL COURT, it's responsibly is to enforce the U.S. Constitution which the State of California agreed to accept as superior to its own laws in any and all cases as part of becoming a state in the first place.  Civics?  How does it work?


BTW, State Supreme Courts are overruled close to 100% of the time.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 04:37:14 PM
Quote from: tekla on February 07, 2012, 04:19:58 PM
Math, how does it work?  The 9th has the highest number of reversals - of course it also has the largest territory, the largest number of judges (covering nine states and two territories, and with 28 judges) and does more cases, so when you look you'll find their percentage (do the math) is equal to others, in fact, last year in percentage terms they were 3rd. 

Each year, Tom Goldstein, co-founder of the widely read SCOTUSblog, compiles and releases Supreme Court statistics. Last month, Mr. Goldstein released the final "Stat Pack" for the Supreme Court's most recent October 2010 term with these results: The Court reversed or vacated seventy-nine percent of the decisions it reviewed. Circuits with the highest percentage of reversals included the Sixth Circuit (eighty-three percent) and the Fifth Circuit (eighty percent). The Ninth Circuit came in third at seventy-nine percent....

In the October 2009 term, the circuit courts were reversed seventy-one percent of the time. That year, while the Supreme Court reversed eighty percent of Ninth Circuit cases, three other circuits plus the grouping of all appeals taken from state courts had higher reversal rates. The year prior, during the 2008 term, the Ninth Circuit was reversed only sixty percent of the time, well under the seventy-six percent reversal rate for all cases. Seven other circuits that year had higher reversal rates than the Ninth Circuit; six of them were reversed at the one-hundred percent level.


It's also a function of the cases they get.  The West has the largest amounts of federal land - hence making more federal cases - and because of the intensity of industry in California in high tech, creative industries, and intellectual property areas, gets some of the most interesting cases too.  They are seen as 'making new law' because so many of the things they are adjudicating are new problems.

And it's hardly activist, when all other courts when asked (including the Supreme Court of Iowa, not exactly your flaming radical bunch) have found that such laws are in violation of due process and/or equal protection (though this is the first finding that it violates BOTH of those at the same time).  And exactly who is supposed to rule on Constitutional questions?  Your favorite blog editor?

And if that is true, then we need to stop electing Republicans who put people like Walker in the federal judgeship in the first place (Ronald Reagan) and further elevated him to the 9th (G.H.W. Bush).

Judicial analysts attribute the high reversal rate at least partly to the 9th Circuit's reputation as a liberal-dominated bench, even though more recent conservative appointments have diluted that influence. Experts, including former law clerks, say the Supreme Court justices are inclined to look over the shoulders of the 9th Circuit judges they suspect of favoring the underdog....

But the 9th Circuit's record this term [2009, 15 of 16 cases overturned], with 94 percent of its cases reversed at least in part, extends a long-running trend of being disproportionately overturned. The appeals court -- the only one where a majority of judges were appointed by Democratic presidents -- has had a larger-than-average share of its cases overturned in eight of the past 10 years.


- Los Angeles Times, July 05, 2009



Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 04:45:22 PM
Quote from: tekla on February 07, 2012, 04:31:17 PM
The 9th Circuit ruled, essentially, that the people of the State were not allowed, through the state constitutional amendment process, to "overrule" the State Supreme Court, even though the State Supreme Court subsequently acknowledged the validity of the Proposition.

Yeah, so what?  The 9th Circuit Court is a FEDERAL COURT, it's responsibly is to enforce the U.S. Constitution which the State of California agreed to accept as superior to its own laws in any and all cases as part of becoming a state in the first place.  Civics?  How does it work?


BTW, State Supreme Courts are overruled close to 100% of the time.

Proposition 8 was a political question.  Generally speaking, as outlined in Baker v Carr (1962), state political issues are nonjusticiable in the federal courts.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 05:20:01 PM
You know all that laughter is no longer people laughing with you.  And if it's political to deny people of their rights I kinda hope your side wins, you know you'll be among the first group of people they feel they can do without.
Title: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: SandraJane on February 07, 2012, 05:33:43 PM
(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ontopmag.com%2FImages%2FBody%2Flogo.png&hash=67668d60dfd87c449f12ba000dcca5e5f66d676c)


Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional


By Carlos Santoscoy | Published: February 07, 2012

http://www.ontopmag.com/article.aspx?id=10878&MediaType=1&Category=26 (http://www.ontopmag.com/article.aspx?id=10878&MediaType=1&Category=26)

A 3-judge panel on Tuesday ruled Proposition 8, California's gay marriage ban, is unconstitutional.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals handed down its long-awaited decision to the cheers of gay marriage supporters. However, supporters of Proposition 8 will most likely appeal the decision to the United States Supreme Court. That means another lengthy wait for engaged gay and lesbian couples in California.

The court upheld now-retired U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker's 2010 ruling which said Proposition 8 violates the constitutional rights of gay couples who wish to marry.


____________________________________________________________________________________________

(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fstatic.guim.co.uk%2Fstatic%2Fbab8a7926e6235ca61253adba6885b024dc3620c%2Fcommon%2Fimages%2Flogos%2Fthe-guardian%2Fnews.gif&hash=44f11ec9eaae69f26c74156b74989fda75b23276)


Prop 8: California gay marriage ban struck down by federal appeals court



Ninth circuit court of appeals rules Proposition 8 unconstitutional and says it 'lessens human dignity of gay and lesbian people'

     

    Karen McVeigh
    guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 7 February 2012 14.07 EST

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/07/prop-8-california-gay-marriage-ban-struck-down?newsfeed=true (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/07/prop-8-california-gay-marriage-ban-struck-down?newsfeed=true)


(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fstatic.guim.co.uk%2Fsys-images%2FSport%2FPix%2Fpictures%2F2012%2F2%2F7%2F1328639319943%2FProp-8-celebrations-007.jpg&hash=d43147853cc76e9f1e90882556b13c9814780980)
Prop 8 campaigners said the ruling added California to the growing list of states that have ended barriers to marriage for gay and lesbian couples. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images


Gay marriage campaigners were celebrating a major victory on Tuesday after a federal appeals court ruled California's same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional. The long-awaited ruling could pave the way for a US supreme court decision on the voter-approved measure known as Proposition 8.

In a 2-1 decision, a three-judge panel of the ninth US circuit court of appeals in San Francisco agreed with a lower court judge who in 2010 declared the ban to be a violation of the civil rights of gay and lesbian people.

____________________________________________________________________________________________

ADVOCATE.COM


An LGBT Law Expert's Take on Tuesday's Prop. 8 Decision


By Advocate.com Editors | Posted on Advocate.com February 07, 2012 05:49:47 PM ET


http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2012/02/07/An_LGBT_Law_Experts_Take_on_the_Prop_8_Decision/ (http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2012/02/07/An_LGBT_Law_Experts_Take_on_the_Prop_8_Decision/)


Expert analyses of the Ninth Circuit's Prop. 8 ruling Tuesday have been legion throughout the day, though one from Williams Institute legal director Jennifer Pizer stood out as particularly thoughtful. The former Lambda Legal marriage project director wrote earlier today:

The decision breaks new ground because it's the first federal appeals court to strike down a state's exclusion of same-sex couples from marriage. But it doesn't break new ground legally. Instead, the ruling's close application of Justice Kennedy's 1996 equal protection analysis (in the Romer v. Evans, Colorado Amendment 2 case) both makes it less likely that the Supreme Court will grant review, and more likely that that plaintiffs would win if the case does go up. Justice Kennedy is generally seen as the key vote, and today's decision – looking at another state ballot measure – uses his 1996 analysis as a roadmap.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: SandraJane on February 07, 2012, 05:49:29 PM
(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Flatimesblogs.latimes.com%2Flat_header_logo.gif&hash=005ffb88562f43f0e9e1a5ea9d519a4b5ba53bf9)


Gay marriage: U.S. Supreme Court may not hear Prop. 8 appeal


February 7, 2012 | 12:47 pm


http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/prop-8-supreme-court-may-not-hear-california-gay-marriage-case.html (http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/prop-8-supreme-court-may-not-hear-california-gay-marriage-case.html)


(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Flatimesblogs.latimes.com%2F.a%2F6a00d8341c630a53ef016761e7bc4e970b-640wi&hash=13375b9cee59f72928ae92397bbedffc1a60dbbe)


Until Tuesday, it looked like California's Proposition 8 gay marriage case would be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. But that looks less certain now.

The narrow California-only approach adopted by the 9th Circuit means the high court might choose to steer clear of the dispute.

If so, that would leave for another day — perhaps several years in the future — a national ruling on same-sex marriage.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: tekla on February 07, 2012, 06:18:45 PM
That's because the ruling specifically covered taking away a right already granted.  A situation unique to California so far.  Though it's going to be cited in lots of cases going forward.  And the Supremes have shown that they have no inclination to take on this issue, even less so this one.
Title: Re: Proposition 8 Struck Down!!!
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 07:03:31 PM
Quote from: tekla on February 07, 2012, 05:20:01 PM
You know all that laughter is no longer people laughing with you.  And if it's political to deny people of their rights I kinda hope your side wins, you know you'll be among the first group of people they feel they can do without.

The 9th Circuit passed on the main issue, as I demonstrated, above. The said that the people of California could not reverse the decision of its own courts through a state constitutional amendment.

That is preposterous.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 07, 2012, 07:08:37 PM
Quote from: SandraJane on February 07, 2012, 05:49:29 PM
(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Flatimesblogs.latimes.com%2Flat_header_logo.gif&hash=005ffb88562f43f0e9e1a5ea9d519a4b5ba53bf9)


Gay marriage: U.S. Supreme Court may not hear Prop. 8 appeal


February 7, 2012 | 12:47 pm


http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/prop-8-supreme-court-may-not-hear-california-gay-marriage-case.html (http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/prop-8-supreme-court-may-not-hear-california-gay-marriage-case.html)

Until Tuesday, it looked like California's Proposition 8 gay marriage case would be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. But that looks less certain now.

The narrow California-only approach adopted by the 9th Circuit means the high court might choose to steer clear of the dispute.

If so, that would leave for another day — perhaps several years in the future — a national ruling on same-sex marriage.

When the 9th Circuit issues a ruling that quotes current-Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy of California, Groucho Marx, and Marilyn Monroe, it is just begging to be overturned.

Some would call that a "lack of judicial temperament."
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 08, 2012, 04:15:27 PM
Shaky Grounds for Prop. 8 Ruling (http://townhall.com/columnists/debrajsaunders/2012/02/08/shaky_grounds_for_prop_8_ruling)

Two of three judges on a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel on Tuesday found Proposition 8 unconstitutional. Judge Stephen Reinhardt stipulated that the ruling skirted the larger issue of whether same-sex couples have a right to marry. That's a shame, because at least an equal-right-to-marry claim makes for a clean argument.

Reinhardt praised himself for overturning Prop. 8 on "the narrowest ground." It is also on the shakiest ground. The narrow ruling is based on the fiction that Prop. 8 eliminated a right without a legitimate reason. Prop. 8 was born of "animosity toward the class of persons affected," he wrote....

Because [San Francisco Mayor Gavin] Newsom had flouted state law, there was a hiatus between the decision that allowed same-sex marriage and the decision that banned it. That allowed the judges to maintain their construct that Prop. 8 took away something that only existed because Newsom had gamed the system.

Dissenting Judge N. Randy Smith was not impressed. As he pointed out, unless given no other option, federal courts should defer to state law.


QED
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Butterflyhugs on February 08, 2012, 07:31:45 PM
I find it mildly amusing that you're here quoting a website with the likes of Ann Coulter and Michelle Malkin as regular contributors.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: ToriJo on February 08, 2012, 09:14:06 PM
I just find it humorous that hate voted into law as Amendment 2 (CO) is going to end up being Prop 8's downfall. It almost makes me believe in karma.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 08, 2012, 09:25:47 PM
Quote from: Butterflyhugs on February 08, 2012, 07:31:45 PM
I find it mildly amusing that you're here quoting a website with the likes of Ann Coulter and Michelle Malkin as regular contributors.

The guilt by association ad hominem fallacy.

The question is, whether the lawyer is correct in the recitation of her history and the facts.  She is.  And from that history and those facts, she has drawn a reasoned conclusion.

Compare the shenanigans the gay lobby in California has resorted to, versus the democratic process we see happening in Washington State and elsewhere.  It has been divisive.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 08, 2012, 09:29:46 PM
Quote from: Slanan on February 08, 2012, 09:14:06 PM
I just find it humorous that hate voted into law as Amendment 2 (CO) is going to end up being Prop 8's downfall. It almost makes me believe in karma.

We'll see where the process ends up.  My guess is that the 9th Circuit will be overturned again.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: tekla on February 08, 2012, 10:56:28 PM
This is the issue that should go to the United States Supreme Court
some day.

The people that we`re representing and others like those people are
not asking for anything special. They are asking for the right to be
treated with decency and respect and dignity and afforded the same rights
we afford other citizens in this country. They are not asking for much,
just equality...

Marriage is a conservative value, no conservatives own it or liberals own it -- but the loving
relationship between individuals that want to be respected by their society
and treated as equals is a conservative value. It involves liberty and
privacy and association and identity
.

Marriage is a building block of our society. Young people get it.
Older people are still getting it.

But all of the polls are changing. People more and more are
understanding that these are our American citizens, these are our brothers
and our sisters, and we have got to treat them right, we have got to treat
them decently, and we have got to give them the same freedom and justice
that we give to other people
...

It not a conservative or liberal issue, or Republican or Democrats,
when David Boies and I came together on this, our mission was to persuade
the American people that this is an issue of American justice, American
freedom, American equality
. These are the principles all men are created
equal in this country. We have got to get there.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Michelle. on February 08, 2012, 11:51:03 PM
^Theodore Olsen.

"W's" Solicitor General.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: SandraJane on February 09, 2012, 12:01:41 AM
And I hope "ya'll" will click on this article,  https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,115321.0.html (https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,115321.0.html)  , coming on the heels of the Prop 8 ruling.

SJ
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 09, 2012, 03:39:27 AM
You're right, SandraJane.  The article is well worth reading.  In Washington State the process has been democratic.  That certainly was not the case with the Prop 8 litigation.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: ToriJo on February 09, 2012, 09:20:53 AM
Quote from: Jamie D on February 08, 2012, 09:29:46 PM
We'll see where the process ends up.  My guess is that the 9th Circuit will be overturned again.

Perhaps, but, at the same time, to uphold Prop 8 it there will need to be some plausible government purpose to be served by the law and the law has to have some sort of effect related to that purpose.

It's hard to say that just naming the relationship differently (since that's *ALL* Prop 8 does) serves any purpose other than othering gay people because gay people's relationships are morally disapproved.  That's not a valid reason for a law, even if a majority of people would vote for it.

It's hard to see even a conservative Supreme Court, as we have today, being able to find a legitimate government reason to enshrine in law a different label for gay relationships while still allowing gays all the state rights of marriage.  Now if the law actually protected the kids, banned gay sex (oh, nevermind, they tried that elsewhere), forced people to procreate responsibly, etc, then that's different.

We can hope they'll go further.  The court could also rule - as they have previously - that marriage is a fundamental right.  Or that gays are a suspect class that needs protection from abusive legislatures in the same way that religions, races, and disabled people do. But they don't have to even go that far in this case to rule against Prop 8.  They could do none of those things and still support the appeals court's ruling, which are basically Justice Kennedy's words thrown back at him.  Of course such a ruling would likely not accomplish much - except in states that have civil unions and marriage, and grant exactly the same rights to both; I'm not sure any do, since even states with same-sex marriage typically have inequalities (*1).

*1: For instance, in New Hampshire, which allows gay marriage, 13 year old girls and 14 year old boys (yes, different ages) can become legally married.  But only so long as they marry an opposite sex spouse.  If they marry a same-sex spouse, both have to be 18.  It's interesting that they felt the need to protect kids from gay marriage, but not child marriage, when they revised their laws.  These types of differences in the laws are not uncommon between heterosexual and same-sex marriage laws.  (I'll add that a 13 year old girl married to a 45 year old guy in New Hampshire would be recognized as married by all 50 states and the federal government; I guess as long as we expect the 13 year old girl to be having vaginal sex rather than oral or anal, it's okay to the people of New Hampshire and the rest of the 50 states that would recognize that marriage as legal).
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: tekla on February 09, 2012, 10:53:27 AM
Minors are difficult as they are one group that the law clearly and distinctly carves out for all kinds of special treatment (both good and bad, and depending on your values) as a set class.  So - and it's really freaky weird because it involves taking about sexual practices and 13 and 14 year olds - you have that rather strange set of crossing classes (gays and minors) regarding laws governing sexual behavior.  Wee!

But I would also love (because now we've had a freaking decade plus of all sorts of people dragging all this through the courts again and again) how are any of the people who opposed expanding the right of marriage hurt or injured?  If they can't demonstrate any sort of injury - physical? status? financial? property wise? - then on what grounds do they have standing to sue in the first place?  The people going forward with the Prop 8 fight are not doing it with the aid or blessing of the State of California.  The State of California (with its' ever changing tiny little mind) is currently is in favor of letting gays get married, hence opposing the Prop and so is against going forward - at least until the next election.  So if the State is not involved, you can't argue that the government/state has a compelling interest.  What you are left with is a bunch of right wing lawyers suing on the behalf of churches and individuals.  And other than 'not liking it to the point of irrational fear mongering' I don't see where letting this other class of people get married hurts or injures either of those groups/classes of people in any way.

The Supremes have a boat-load of these cases sitting there in the old judicial pipe-line.  I'm sure - because it's who they are - that the ones that want to rule on it (and I'm not convinced that they all do, and those that don't have different reasons for opposing hearing it) have a 'perfect storm' type ideal case that would have all the elements that that particular judge wanted to fit in.  Perhaps they'd rather do it while ruling on DOMA (a federal law, act of Congress crap) instead of one of those California Proposition deals.  They HATE the California Proposition deals.  See, because it allows rank amateurs to write potentially binding law and then encourages Californians to vote for their favorites, California Propositions (something very few states have by the way) tend to either wackadoodle or landmark (lots of work either way).  The Supremes have shown great reluctance in the past to getting into the California Proposition mess because while there is no clear instruction in the Constitution about voter/citizen driven law, everywhere where they are mentioned, these 'voters' are the ultimate authority, and that's kinda hard to get around.  Most of our Propositions - ranging from those with dubious legal standing to the outright hysterical - are left standing because the federal courts don't touch them unless they have no other choice. 

The Iowa case which as elements of the California case w/o the 'voter' thing tossed into it might be more appealing.  Or - much like your cable company, or TV insurance lizard - they can bundle a bunch of cases together and make everyone try to justify themselves at the same time.  That's always fun.  Like I said, there is a buttload of them out there and the SC gets to take its' pick on which one (if any) it hears.  AND,  that's IF the SC wants to hear it, and I keep getting this vibe off of them that they don't. 
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: ToriJo on February 09, 2012, 11:26:48 AM
Quote from: tekla on February 09, 2012, 10:53:27 AM
But I would also love (because now we've had a freaking decade plus of all sorts of people dragging all this through the courts again and again) how are any of the people who opposed expanding the right of marriage hurt or injured?  If they can't demonstrate any sort of injury - physical? status? financial? property wise? - then on what grounds do they have standing to sue in the first place?  The people going forward with the Prop 8 fight are not doing it with the aid or blessing of the State of California.  The State of California (with its' ever changing tiny little mind) is currently is in favor of letting gays get married, hence opposing the Prop and so is against going forward - at least until the next election.  So if the State is not involved, you can't argue that the government/state has a compelling interest.  What you are left with is a bunch of right wing lawyers suing on the behalf of churches and individuals.  And other than 'not liking it to the point of irrational fear mongering' I don't see where letting this other class of people get married hurts or injures either of those groups/classes of people in any way.

In the Prop 8 case, I believe the idea was that the proponents (the guys that want to keep prop 8) are the people who got the thing on the ballot, so, like a legislature that writes laws, they have an implied interest in seeing the law defended.  It's not about them being hurt, but rather about representing the will of the people, who voted for Prop 8.

As for the amateurishness of propositions, I'm not sure the legislatures actually do any better.  Look at that TN bathroom bill which would have criminalized a mom changing her baby boy's diaper in a single-stall women's room!  Or Oklahoma Senate trying to remove protections for gays from hate crime laws, only instead keeping those protections while removing the protections for race and religion.  But, yes, I recognize that California's system is relatively unique and very problematic - particularly when a simple majority can strip away rights of people.

That said, yes, I too always find the idea that a heterosexual is harmed by same-sex marriage to be, frankly, nuts.  Meanwhile, I personally would like to see an end to the harm that these "one man, one woman" laws have done to me and my wife - ironically we are in a heterosexual marriage, the kind of marriage the right wing nuts are supposedly trying to protect.  (any marriage with one intersexed or post-op trans partner is in a marriage considered invalid in some of the US, regardless of birth certificates, DNA, sex organs, etc).  It's just plain bad law (for instance, a married couple can be responsible, in many cases, for debts entered into by one partner - but if the marriage isn't recognized somewhere, the common property might not actually be common property in that jurisdiction; So a couple conceivably could simply move to another state to protect their assets in some cases, which is one of the reasons that traditionally marriages were always recognized everywhere if they were legally entered into.

But they will continue to do stuff to try to provoke laws on the idea that they cannot have religious freedom unless gays are discriminated against.  As the Prop 8 case showed, it's basically all they have.

Their arguments are basically:

1) Well, if we let gays marry, than kids will be taught about gays marrying.  And that would mean more gays, less straight couples, so less kids.  And less kids means that eventually, once all the people are converted to gay, no future of society.  (echos of Anita Bryant)

2) Gay sex is icky.  (I guess they haven't seen what straight couples do in the bedroom and elsewhere, since there is pretty much nothing that gay couples do that straight couples don't)

3) God said so.

4) We scared a bunch of people into voting to keep/remove rights from their neighbors/family/friends/etc.  It shouldn't mater that we had to bear false witness to do so (such as the "Protect our Children" garbage in California during Prop 8 - when the law had no direct effect to protect anyone's kids, even if you somehow accepted they needed protection from gays).  It's the will of the people.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 09, 2012, 04:55:59 PM
My arguments regarding Prop 8 address the process used to get where we are today.

The reason Judge Reinhart's decision will be reviewed and overturned is because he used a novel legal theorem (ie - a right, once granted, may not be rescinded).  In fact, Reinhart undercut the 14th Amendment rationale used by Judge Walker in the original case.

The Circuit Court's decision will have the effect (if it holds up after an appeal) of re-instituting a California Supreme Court decision in 2008, titled In re Marriage Cases. In that ruling, the state court declared that there is a fundamental right to marry under the California constitution, and it cannot be denied to same-sex couples.

That decision, of course, was overturned in November 2008 when the state's voters approved Proposition 8, amending the state constitution to declare that "only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California." Under the Ninth Circuit Court's new ruling, Proposition 8 was found to violate the federal Constitution, so it no longer would control, and thus the right of gays and lesbians to marry would be restored fully under that ruling, assuming that the decision stands. It is still on hold, pending appeals.

Although that decision was based upon the guarantee of legal equality, in the Fourteenth Amendment, it did not declare that same-sex couples have a fundamental right to marry under the federal Constitution. Indeed, the court explicitly avoided deciding that question. The ruling was limited to the conclusion that it is unconstitutional discrimination for a state, once it has given gay couples a right to marry, to take it away from them when that has been done solely in reaction to the sexual orientation of those couples.

The Circuit Court thus stopped well short of what, in an earlier stage of the case, U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker of San Francisco had decided. He ruled that same-sex couples do have "a fundamental right to marry," under the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause, and that California could not take away that right based on a couple's sexual identity.

Since the Circuit Court did not embrace that part of the ruling, it essentially has lost its status as a binding precedent for this case.



Constitution Check: Do Gay Couples Now Have a Constitutional Right to Get Married?
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lyle-denniston/constitution-check-do-gay_b_1264443.html) - Huffington Post
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: ToriJo on February 09, 2012, 05:20:11 PM
Quote from: Jamie D on February 09, 2012, 04:55:59 PM
The reason Judge Reinhart's decision will be reviewed and overturned is because he used a novel legal theorem (ie - a right, once granted, may not be rescinded).  In fact, Reinhart undercut the 14th Amendment rationale used by Judge Walker in the original case.

Even if his rationale isn't used, I don't think that equals being overturned.  I would be shocked if the rationale of the SOCUS was either Walker's or the 9th's.  The Supremes usually don't take a case where they would rule in favor of the previously court's winning party, unless they are going to apply the law a bit differently.  And the same goes for trial vs. appeals court.

I don't think Walker was undermined, just that the Appeals court felt that they didn't need to go that far - sort of similar to how Amendment 2 was decided - strict scrutiny wasn't applied (unfortunately) at the SOCUS level because it didn't need to apply to throw out Amendment 2.

The standard the court used is not "Is there a constitutional right to rescind a right", although the court does recognize there is a difference between new and old rights.  The issue is, essentially, if I ask for a NEW right, I should have a higher burden of proof than if I ask to keep an already-recognized right (particularly, from a court's view, one that was litigated to obtain).

The second paragraph of the decision explains the primary reason that they ruled the way they did:

Quote
Although the Constitution permits communities to enact most laws they believe to be desirable, it requires that there be at least a legitimate reason for the passage of a law that treats different classes of people differently.  There was no such reason that Proposition 8 could have been enacted.  Because under California statutory law, same-sex couples had all the rights of opposite-sex couples, regardless of their marital status, all parties agree that Proposition 8 had one effect only. It stripped same-sex couples of the ability they previously possessed to obtain from the State, or any other authorized party, an important right--the right to obtain and use the designation of 'marriage' to describe their relationships. Nothing more, nothing less. Proposition 8 therefore could not have been enacted to advance California's interests in childrearing or responsible procreation, for it had no effect on the rights of same-sex couples to raise children or on the procreative practices of other couples. Nor did Proposition 8 have any effect on religious freedom or on parents' rights to control their children's education; it could not have been enacted to safeguard those liberties.

That's the crux of the issue - did the law meet rational basis (I think it should have to meet strict scrutiny, but the 9th didn't think that was required, so they used the lower standard).  Justice Smith dissented because, somehow, he felt the law had a rational relationship to a legitimate state interest.  He didn't dissent because it involved a novel interpretation of law.  And he agreed with the other justices' application of rational basis except when it came to the issue of whether not allowing the label marriage to be used by same-sex couples could rationally be related to the legitimate state interest of reasonable procreation.

I think he's way off base here - there needs to be a direct relationship, not an accidental relationship (and he should have dismissed the responsible procreation argument for the same reason he dismissed the changes to curriculum argument).  But what he didn't do is say that rational basis was an inappropriate legal doctrine to use to determine if the law is valid.
Title: Re: Gay Marriage Ban Prop 8 Ruled Unconstitutional
Post by: Jamie D on February 11, 2012, 05:19:18 PM
Quote from: Slanan on February 09, 2012, 05:20:11 PMSNIP

That's the crux of the issue - did the law meet rational basis (I think it should have to meet strict scrutiny, but the 9th didn't think that was required, so they used the lower standard).  Justice Smith dissented because, somehow, he felt the law had a rational relationship to a legitimate state interest.  He didn't dissent because it involved a novel interpretation of law.  And he agreed with the other justices' application of rational basis except when it came to the issue of whether not allowing the label marriage to be used by same-sex couples could rationally be related to the legitimate state interest of reasonable procreation.

I think he's way off base here - there needs to be a direct relationship, not an accidental relationship (and he should have dismissed the responsible procreation argument for the same reason he dismissed the changes to curriculum argument).  But what he didn't do is say that rational basis was an inappropriate legal doctrine to use to determine if the law is valid.

Judge Reinhardt's determination on rationale basis runs contrary to the arguments in the similar 8th Circuit case, Citizens for Equal Protection v Bruning.  In that case, which dealt with the similar issue of a state initiative passed by the people, the Court found that the Federal District Court had no business even taking up the issue.

Reinhardt hung his hat and hopes on Romer, which is not an apt comparison.  The Colorado initiative sought to outlaw "... "homosexual, lesbian or bisexual orientation, conduct, practices or relationships." The California Proposition 8 dealt only with the marriage issue.  The plaintiffs in Citizens also appealed to the Romer rationale

The 8th Circuit wrote:

If sexual orientation, like race, were a "suspect classification" for purposes of the Equal Protection Clause, then Appellees' focus on the political burden erected by a constitutional amendment would find support in cases like Reitman v. Mulkey, 387 U.S. 369 (1967), Hunter v. Erickson, 393 U.S. 385 (1969), and Washington v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 458 U.S. 457 (1982).  But the Supreme Court has never ruled that sexual orientation is a suspect classification for equal protection purposes.  The Court's general standard is that rational-basis review applies "where individuals in the group affected by a law have distinguishing characteristics relevant to interests the State has the authority to implement."  City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, 473 U.S. 432, 441 (1985).  As we will explain, that is the case here, and therefore Appellees are not entitled to strict scrutiny review on this ground.

Rational-basis review is highly deferential to the legislature or, in this case, to the electorate that directly adopted § 29 by the initiative process.  "In areas of social and economic policy, a statutory classification that neither proceeds along suspect lines nor infringes fundamental constitutional rights must be upheld against equal protection challenge if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational-basis for the classification."  F.C.C. v. Beach Communications, Inc., 508 U.S. 307, 313 (1993).  Thus, the classification created by § 29 and other laws defining marriage as the union between one man and one woman is afforded a "strong presumption of validity."  Heller v. Doe, 509 U.S. 312, 319 (1993).  The Equal Protection Clause "is not a license for courts to judge the wisdom, fairness, or logic of [the voters'] choices." Beach Communications, 508 U.S. at 31.

Our rational-basis review begins with an historical fact -- the institution of marriage has always been, in our federal system, the predominant concern of state government.  The Supreme Court long ago declared, and recently reaffirmed, that a State "has absolute right to prescribe the conditions upon which the marriage relation between its own citizens shall be created, and the causes for which it may be dissolved."  Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U.S. 714, 734-35 (1878), quoted in Sosna v. Iowa, 419 U.S. 393, 404 (1975).  This necessarily includes the power to classify those persons who may validly marry.  "Surely, for example, a State may legitimately say that no one can marry his or her sibling, that no one can marry who is not at least 14 years old, that no one can marry without first passing an examination for venereal disease, or that no one can marry who has a living husband or wife."  Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 392 (1978) (Stewart, J., concurring).  In this constitutional environment, rational-basis review must be particularly deferential.

The State argues that the many laws defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman and extending a variety of benefits to married couples are rationally related to the government interest in "steering procreation into marriage."  By affording legal recognition and a basket of rights and benefits to married heterosexual couples, such laws "encourage procreation to take place within the socially recognized unit that is best situated for raising children."  The State and its supporting amici cite a host of judicial decisions and secondary authorities recognizing and upholding this rationale.  The argument is based in part on the traditional notion that two committed heterosexuals are the optimal partnership for raising children, which modern-day homosexual parents understandably decry.  But it is also based on a "responsible procreation" theory that justifies conferring the inducements of marital recognition and benefits on opposite-sex couples, who can otherwise produce children by accident, but not on same-sex couples, who cannot.


(Footnotes omitted)

The strength of this opinion, which had a foundation as well in the precedent, Baker v Nelson, led supporters of same-sex and others non-traditional marriages to drop any appeal to the US Supreme Court.

The 9th Circuit has pitted itself against the 8th Circuit, almost guaranteeing that the High Court will hear the appeal.