East of Eden wrote:cnorman18 wrote:
Evidently there are; perhaps they came out to vote in larger numbers than those who don't oppose gay marriage. Or can you document another bloc of voters, large enough to be significant, who oppose gay marriage on nonreligious grounds?
Sorry, I'm not into identity group politics. I assume many CA non-religious voters voted on common-sense grounds. Your idea of common-sense may be different.
Can you explain these "common-sense grounds" and why they are unrelated to religion?
I have seen no justification for opposition to gay marriage other than religious. ALL such opposition takes it as a given that homosexuality is either morally evil or some sort of defect. The "common-sense" position to me is that homosexuality is no more "evil" or "defective" than being left-handed.
If you can define opposition to gay marriage on grounds that don't assume that homosexuality is a "bad thing," please post it.
Once again, it is irrelevant whether the voting motives were religious or non-religious. To tell a religious person they can't excercise their vote in accordance with their conscience is borderline infringement of their constitutional right of free excercise of religion.
Who's talking about forbidding anyone to vote on whatever grounds? You can vote for slavery on "common-sense grounds" if you like.
What we're talking about is whether the law prohibiting gay marriage is
just and
constitutional. In the American system, religion itself has no vote and no veto, only the people; and the people themselves are subject to the restrictions of the Constitution. As McC pointed out, a majority vote does not guarantee implementation of any legislation.
If the only justification for a given law is religious dogma, that law is illegal under the Constitution. The number of people who vote for it or their reasons are irrelevant, I agree; but that's not the issue, is it?
There is no separation of church and mind for many of us.
No comment necessary.
True on a personal level, but we are discussing the impact of religious beliefs on civil policy here,
Like what ML King did.
True enough; and anti-gay religious folk have the same right to promote their views as Dr. King. No one's denying that.
But Dr. King's views prevailed because they were in accord with the concept of JUSTICE and with the CONSTITUTION, not because they were based on Christian beliefs and ideals and were therefore inarguably "right."
and that makes motivation a legitimate topic for discussion. You don't get to speak against gay marriage on religiious grounds and when challenged, say it's no one's business what your reasons are.
Yes I do.
Again, no comment necessary.
A particular religious dogma may not directly dictate American civil law. If the nonestablishment clause in the First Amendment means anything at all, it means that.
If you have dozens of different denominations or religions voting against gay marriage, what church is being establlished?
Establishment of a particular denomination is not the subject of the First Amendment, but establishment of
any kind of religion at all. A law which follows the dictates of one group of religions, no matter how many, and forces it upon the rest (like my own) as well as those who choose not to believe, is simply illegal, and cannot be legally enforced. That is the consistent ruling of the US Supreme Court, and in the American system, there is no appeal from that decision except impeachment of the Justices by the Senate on some grounds or other, followed by their conviction at trial by the House and their removal from office. Feel free to start the process.
If the religious left votes for gay marriage because of their religious convictions, is that also an 'establishment' to you?
How can it be? Voting is not "establishment" of anything. That only comes into play when a law is actually
passed, and in the case of dropping the prohibition of gay marriage, it doesn't establish anything. Religious people are still free to NOT marry if they are gay, and NOT to perform marriages in their churches (forcing a church to perform gay marriages in contradiction to their beliefs would ALSO be an illegal and unconstitutional interference with religion). If gay marriage were legal, no one would be prevented from doing anything, nor would anyone have his or her rights infringed upon, unlike the situation at present.
The issue is JUSTICE, which is.
That is a matter of opinion, as the Constitution is silent on it.
Here is the first sentence of the Constitution, generally referred to as the "Preamble":
the Founders wrote:
We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
Further: Justice, in the American legal system, is not a matter of opinion; it is a matter of law. Your personal opinion is your own, but JUSTICE, that is, the actual administration of it, is established by laws and courts, and our Constitution and our legal system is set up to achieve genuine justice as objectively and rationally as possible. It isn't always successful; that's what the appeals process is for.
In other words, your opinion is irrelevant unless you can establish it in a court of law. It is my
opinion that O. J. Simpson was as guilty as hell; as a matter of
law, he isn't.
The government has an interest in heterosexual marriage for the procreation of society and to have stable families, it has none such interest in the case of gay 'marriage'.
"Society" is not "procreated." If you mean the procreation of
children, I don't think there's anything in the Constitution about that either. I rather suspect that children will continue to be born in sufficient numbers for the maintenance of society whether the Government encourages that or not.
If GAYS are ever to have "stable families," gay marriage must be legal. What is the government's interest in ensuring that gay people have no legal structure for the establishment of a "family" at all, and must remain legally single for life?