The old California gay marriage thread is dead.So.I've ceased to care about the will of the majority in this scenario. This is a matter of civil rights. This will hopefully become my generation's Brown v. Board.
1/13/2010 11:45:42 AM
I've never really cared about what the majority thinks. If it were up to the majority the earth would still be flat and we'd be eating our food with sticks.
1/13/2010 11:57:18 AM
The current law is pretty messed up. If a gay couple got married before prop 8, they are fully married in the same sense that everyone else is, and if you got married after prop 8 then you are not (although I think you could file for a domestic partnership). Same goes for if you were married out of state before said date and then moved to CA today.
1/13/2010 12:14:01 PM
I guess it's better than simply voiding all present and past marraiges
1/13/2010 12:18:09 PM
No, that would be awesome. Void all marriages, give everybody a fresh start and a chance to escape their miserable married existence penalty free!
1/13/2010 12:19:35 PM
Think of the gold diggers, man. They have to make a living too.
1/13/2010 12:22:30 PM
While the SCOTUS is in the habit of giving all rights to anyone one or anything, why not gays?
1/24/2010 9:06:45 PM
^Total agreement here with you Boone. Gov't politicians have no business deciding which consenting adults can get married.
1/24/2010 11:05:53 PM
there are no rights being suppressed here. Gays are free to marry anyone they want of the opposite sex. Pretty straightforward. They don't meet the legal definition of marriage. Case closed.
1/25/2010 1:42:42 AM
^ahahahahahahahahahaha hahahaha hahaCome on, burro. We all knew you were stupid, but I wasn't expecting you to be that stupid.Unless of course that whole post was facetious, which doesn't seem to be the case.v Shit, that doesn't even merit its own response. You shouldn't need this spelled out for you... and what little faith in humanity I have is telling me that you don't actually believe a word of what you just posted and are just trying to tow the republican line. I hope.[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 2:11 AM. Reason : I'm sorry... but what you just posted is dumber than most of the things mambagrl says.]
1/25/2010 1:45:50 AM
look. there is nothing being denied them. They want to marry, they can. I can't marry a dog. Why? Because the law does not allow me to do so (the whole capable of making contracts thing, notwithstanding). Likewise, the law says I can't marry a guy. Should it be so? I dunno. I don't see a reason for it to be that way. But, let's admit that the law defines who can get married. It says a man and a woman. Well, two guys come up... There's no woman. Case closed. Now, when a guy and a girl show up and they are denied because one is gay, well, then, we've got another issue there.
1/25/2010 1:55:15 AM
that is one of the worst pieces of logic i have heard.the fucking case is about the constitutionality of the law.and your defense is "well. it's the law. what're you gonna do?"and comparing marrying a dog to marrying someone of the same sex? real classy.
1/25/2010 2:04:17 AM
I'm pointing out that there is no actual discrimination via the law. I'm sorry that you can't wrap your brain around that. Again, the law does NOT say "gay people can't get married." If it did, then you might have a case. Rather, it says "a marriage takes a man and a woman." Which clearly allows gays to get married. Just not to who they might want to.The dog comparison is obvious. It's showing why you can't just marry whatever the fuck you want. Because you aren't meeting the legal definition. Durrr.[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 7:06 AM. Reason : ]
1/25/2010 7:05:46 AM
The dog comparison is not valid. Marrying a dog or any other form of animal isn't possible since the animal cannot give informed consent to marriage (at some point, the other person has to AGREE to get married).Quit using it, it's ridiculous and makes anyone who does use it (or any other animal comparison) immediately less credible.
1/25/2010 8:09:03 AM
^ What if he had used the example of marriage among more than two people?
1/25/2010 8:14:27 AM
that has far different legal implications (for instance many of the implied rights of a spouse are called into question because there would be more than one spouse -- for instance in matters of estates and schiavo-type situations). but honestly if people want to get multi-married i don't give a shit.
1/25/2010 8:22:57 AM
^ I don't, either--I was simply posing the question. If such a "marriage" were among adults of sound mind, then consent would no longer be the issue.
1/25/2010 8:26:55 AM
Honestly, at this point I don't particularly care about polygamy. I can see it being a pain-in-the-ass for our government to process, but it's not like our system is set up for an easy conversion to homosexual marriages either. The system would just have to adapt. Personally I couldn't imagine having multiple wives (my wife is more than enough thank-you-very-much), but that doesn't mean that it can't work in a community designed to support it.At least, that's looking at it on one level. There is a concern that polygamy has led to a rise in extremist behavior in some Islamic countries because young males find it hard to gain mates on this planet, and therefor an alternative of paradise seems more and more appealing to them. But that's just speculation.
1/25/2010 8:30:35 AM
You people really have no clue what it truely means to be married. When you are married you have an agreement between the two individuals and God. You don't get married to have your relationship "blessed", you get married to make an eternal promise to God to be true to your spouse. Ever wonder why the divorce rate and such is so high in today's society, it is in direct relations to people not understanding the true meaning of marriage a society with dying morality.
1/25/2010 10:19:13 AM
1/25/2010 10:20:52 AM
1/27/2010 1:06:40 AM
1/27/2010 1:19:00 AM
Blacks are free to marry anyone they want of the same race. Pretty straightforward. They don't meet the legal definition of marriage. Case closed.look. there is nothing being denied them. They want to marry, they can. I can't marry a dog. Why? Because the law does not allow me to do so (the whole capable of making contracts thing, notwithstanding). Likewise, the law says I can't marry a black woman. Should it be so? I dunno. I don't see a reason for it to be that way. But, let's admit that the law defines who can get married. It says a black man and a black woman. Well, an interracial couple comes up... They aren't the same race. Case closed. Now, when a black guy and a black girl show up and they are denied because one is black, well, then, we've got another issue there.I'm pointing out that there is no actual discrimination via the law. I'm sorry that you can't wrap your brain around that. Again, the law does NOT say "black people can't get married." If it did, then you might have a case. Rather, it says "a marriage takes a black man and a black woman." Which clearly allows blacks to get married. Just not to who they might want to.The dog comparison is obvious. It's showing why you can't just marry whatever the fuck you want. Because you aren't meeting the legal definition. Durrr.
1/27/2010 1:30:05 AM
it was a joke. bigun20 posted that retarded shit in another thread
1/27/2010 12:06:24 PM
Hey, I picked up on it.The anti-gay marriage crowd has been cornered into the semantics argument. "Marriage equals A man + a woman, therefore, a man + man does not equal marriage." It's not a good argument, because no one has a monopoly on language, and words often carry different meanings and connations across different groups. So, you kind of have to get away from the word marriage and define your terms. If someone starts using this argument, you have to say to them, "alright, so a marriage is defined as a man and a woman. Would you support allowing same sex couples to join in a partnership that granted exactly the same rights and priviledges that exist in a state-sanctioned marriage?" If they answer yes, then they essentially support gay marriage. That legal partnership could be established, and no one could prevent the same sex couple from calling themselves "married." If they answer no, then they're just your run of the mill bigot.
1/27/2010 12:27:47 PM
some of you sure are passionate about letting these peterpuffers take the plunge.
1/27/2010 12:51:04 PM
1/27/2010 6:08:57 PM
1/27/2010 7:05:42 PM
I recognize that. you do realize, though, that the SC can be wrong, right? Kelo vs New London ring a bell? Moreover, the law in the Loving case made it illegal to do so, punishable by prison. The current laws simply say who can get married. There is a massive difference. What was ruled unConstitutional was not saying "whites can only marry whites." Rather, it was giving a punishment to a black person for doing the same thing a white could do without being punished.]
1/27/2010 7:13:13 PM
from another thread, but posted here for continuity:http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=565942&page=6#13692711
1/27/2010 7:23:31 PM
1/27/2010 10:13:44 PM
they are very much able to do those things. They just have to go down to the courthouse and file the paperwork for each of them. Hell, a will is binding no matter who the fuck is in it, as long as it is properly filed.
1/27/2010 11:34:34 PM
1/27/2010 11:52:45 PM
1/28/2010 12:55:15 AM
Yeah, legal documents & civil unions can never match marriage. There are many stories about hospital visits being denied because the couple only had a civil union & legal signed documents copies on hand.I recall a specific case of a family cruise, one lady fell very ill, and was rushed to a hospital. And she spent the next many hours alone in the hospital because he wife and kids were kept in the waiting room because when docked to get to the nearest hospital which happened to be in Florida, they wound up at a hospital that wouldn't accept legal documents from gay couples. After something like 18 hours alone she died. The kids couldn't say goodbye to their dying mom because some people want to have a semantics arguments over the word marriage.
1/28/2010 1:20:44 AM
Would you consider the issue to be resolved if the civil union were given exact same legal status as marriage and, thus, private institutions were required to recognize it as such?
1/28/2010 1:08:44 PM
Yes. Then for all legal intents and purposes they would be married. That's all the gay community wants. Hell, if it tickled their fancy they could even call themselves married (it's not all that difficult to find a church that will perform a same sex wedding in states that allow civil unions. And I'm sure you wouldn't want to dictate to a church for whom they can and cannot perform wedding ceremonies).The hang up is not about the word. The sooner some folks get it through their thick skulls the better. It is about the legal benefits. If all the same legal rights were granted I'm not sure why you would need two separate terms for it, but sure I'd consider the issue closed.
1/28/2010 2:13:31 PM
separate but equal
1/28/2010 2:52:47 PM
Which has already been ruled unconstitutional regarding race. Unfortunately sexual orientation has not received the same treatment as race when it comes to law. If it took separate but equal to move us towards that I think the gay community and its supporters would deal with it for the time being. Unfortunately civil rights often come in baby steps and not leaps and bounds.
1/28/2010 5:58:07 PM
but now that we have the hindsight of knowing that separate but equal did not work why would we want to repeat?
1/28/2010 9:38:42 PM
1/28/2010 11:43:18 PM
You assume that sexual orientation is a choice in spite of the mounting scientific evidence that it is at least partly genetic and possibly mostly genetic. Furthermore we do protect people from discrimination based on religion, which is undeniably a choice (and yes, I do realize that it is expressly mentioned in the constitution).I'm wondering why you continue to insist that civil unions provide the same benefits as marriage when, in point of fact, they do not? I'm just curious as to why you seem to believe that homophobia and downright hatred of the gay community is an acceptable legal position for the government to take.
1/28/2010 11:58:00 PM
I'm sorry, but ramming my penis into anything is a choice.
1/29/2010 12:32:26 AM
1/29/2010 2:48:50 AM
1/29/2010 7:52:49 AM
Yes, the act of having sex requires a conscious choice. Who you want to have sex with is a much more primal thing and is not a conscious decision. It's not like you just pick out who you're going to fall in love with. I hate to bring up gay sex among virtually all primates, but we can go down that route if you want. We can also talk about the fact that homosexuality is as old as human history itself. The idea that being gay is purely choice is held by almost no one who has done any kind of research on the subject.I'm just guessing here, based on my limited exposure to gay culture, but most of them wouldn't have chosen a lifestyle that makes them the target of violence, derision, and often alienates friends and family who suddenly decide they are somehow subhuman.
1/29/2010 12:09:03 PM
1/29/2010 8:34:15 PM
The argument isn't about what the legal definition of marriage is, it's whether that legal definition is constitutional based on a given state's constitution and the US constitution. Lots of laws and legal definitions exist that are later found not to be in accordance with the constitution. In point of fact the legal definition of "marriage requires a man and a woman" is not consistent across all states.Your half-assed insistence that gays can get married, just not to the person of their choice is so stupid and misses the entire point of the argument that it's not even worth addressing, so that's all I'll say about it.Marriage's social underpinnings have traditionally been put in place to provide a stable environment for child rearing, that is true. However, whether or not someone intends to procreate or is capable of procreating is of no consequence for creating a legal marriage contract. Why should we judge a sterile man marrying a barren woman any differently than two men getting married. The only difference present is that one contract is between people of two opposite genders and one is between two people of the same gender. Furthermore we don't require marriage as a prerequisite to procreation, nor do we hold marriage sacrosanct when raising children, as evidenced by the high rates of divorce and single parent households. I'm not saying this is a positive, but it is a fact.Finally, your ignorance of the research on the subject not withstanding, homosexuality is not a choice. However, even if it were, the argument can still be made that there is not reason to exclude from someone full legal access based simply on who they are fucking. Religion is clearly a choice, yet it is a protected class. Why should we not extend that status to homosexuals? There was a time when men who did not own property did not have full legal status, and after that women were still excluded, and then non-whites, etc. Don't get me wrong, I fully support private entities being allowed to exclude whoever they want from membership or involvement (I don't support affirmative action, I don't like smoking bans, etc.) but the government is supposed to treat all citizens equally and extend to them the full protection of the law as long as they are citizens of the state in question.
1/29/2010 9:08:23 PM
1/29/2010 9:21:48 PM
1/29/2010 9:23:40 PM