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Has Marriage Already Been “Redefined”?
Crisis Magazine ^ | April 10, 2013 | Kenneth D. Whitehead

Posted on 04/10/2013 2:27:24 PM PDT by NYer

Supreme Court

Nobody knows how the Supreme Court will ultimately rule on the two cases concerning so-called same-sex “marriage,” the California Proposition 8 case and the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) case, on which the high court recently heard two days of testimony. However, some of the comments made by several justices in the course of the hearings on these two cases point to at least one possible way, dismaying to contemplate, in which the court might well invalidate DOMA in particular, in spite of what would seem to be the unassailable truth it represents in affirming that a true marriage must be a conjugal relationship between a man and a woman.

The non-lawyer citizen could not but be disconcerted by the way in which the court found it necessary to go into non-substantive issues such as whether the two cases were properly before the court at all, since neither the state of California nor the federal government was willing to defend in court the law pertaining to it; and hence the question was raised whether those who were defending these laws had the standing to do so. With the whole world watching, and the absolutely fundamental social question of what marriage is at stake, the justices nevertheless seemed unconcerned about dwelling on what seemed to be legal quibbles, sometmes even appearing to be little better than bickering pettifoggers themselves.

Yet sandwiched in between what seemed to be some relatively trivial and even inconsequential procedural questions, glimpses were afforded of how some of the justices apparently view the legal question of marriage itself, and they proved to be even more disconcerting than the procedural wrangling.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for example, averred that “if we are totally for the states’ decision that there is a marriage between two people, for the federal government then to come in to say: no joint return, no marital deduction, no Social Security benefits, your spouse is sick, but you can’t get leave—one might well ask, ‘What kind of marriage is that?’” What kind indeed? This kind of characterization, though, begs the question of whether the relationship being referred to is a marriage. Instead, it simply assumes that to be the case.

Similarly, Justice Sonia Sotomayer spoke of how “Congress can create a class they don’t like—here, homosexuals—or a class they consider suspect in the marriage category…and decide benefits on that basis, when they themselves have no interest in the actual institution of marriage.” Again, this simply assumes about the “class” whose “marriages” the justice is referring to truly are marriages. Somewhat surprisingly, Justice Sotomayer came out here as a champion of federalism when she asked: “What gives the federal government the right to be concerned at all about the definition of marriage?”

Justice Elena Kagan denied that marriage in its essence had anything to do with procreation when she advanced the (specious) argument that the law allows older or sterile men and women to marry. But marriage in its essence does involve a complementary physical relationship ordered to procreation. As everybody knows, not every congjugal act results in a pregnancy, any more than does such an act performed by a sterile or older person; but even in the latter cases it remains the same kind of act that can and often does result in a pregnancy. This, however, cannot ever be predicated of homosexual acts; the latter are not the same kinds of acts as true marital or conjugal acts performed by men and women together. Justice Kagan got this wrong.

She also alleged that in enacting DOMA Congress was motivated merely by bias against homosexuals. She read from a House of Representatives report which said inter alia that “Congress decided…to express moral disapproval of homosexuality”—thus confirming the conclusion of the judge in the California Propostion 8 case, who could find no reason to judge same-sex unions to be non-marriages except prejudice against homosexuals.

All three of the justices quoted here belong to the reliable “liberal” wing of the court. The fourth justice considered to be consistently liberal, Stephen Breyer, made the same point as Justice Kagan when he observed that “couples that aren’t gay but can’t have children get married all the time.” Yes, because belonging to different sexes they can get married.

Both the language and the substance of what all four of these liberal justices of the Supreme Court say about same-sex relationships, however, appear to take for granted that these relationships already are, in fact, marriages. The justices themselves do not really understand what marriages essentially are—judging by their remarks quoted here on the subject—but they nevertheless seem to be utterly confident that homosexual liaisons do qualify as marriages. They do not argue this point or offer evidence for it; they simply assume it. Evidently, they do not think there is any need to prove or establish it with facts or arguments, so obvious does the truth of it seems to appear to them.

Moreover, they certainly make no effort whatsover to refute the standard and abundant arguments that deny the status of marriage to these same-sex relationships. Again, they do not seem to think any such refutations are at all called for or necessary. Meanwhile, a couple of them go on strongly to deplore that the benefits which the law normally grants to married couples are being “denied” in the case of these homosexual relationships assumed to be marriages. The clear assumption here seems to be that these benefits should be accorded to these relationships. Again, this is not argued or proved; it is simply taken for granted.

Kennedy Takes A Slightly Different Approach
A fifth Supreme Court justice, Anthony Kennedy, whose vote with these four would constitute a majority, did not treat the matter in the same way as the other justices. They contend, in effect, that the same-sex relationships are marriages when the partners say that they are. In other words, they evidently believe, and take it for granted, that marriage has already been redefined—by society’s current acceptance, tacit or otherwise, of the claims of same-sex couples and their supporters.

Justice Kennedy took a slightly different tack. Like Justice Sotomayer, he rather surprisingly turned out to be a strong proponent of federalism. He warned of the “risk” involved in the fact that DOMA infringes upon the responsibility of the states in defining and regulating marriage. He characterized DOMA as “inconsistent” because while it purports to accept the authority of the states to define and regulate marriage, it nevertheless then turns around and imposes limits on the authority of those same states.

While conceding (as was argued before the court) that references to marriage as occurring between a man and a woman are found in some 1,100 federal laws and statutes—which would seem to suggest that the federal government has to define marriage for its purposes, if there is any question about it—Justice Kennedy also agreed that the federal government is necessarily “intertwined with the citizen’s day-to-day life.” But he nevertheless argued that with DOMA “we are at real risk of running in conflict with what has always been the state’s police power, which is to regulate marriage, divorce, custody…” (emphasis added).

In the end, Justice Kennedy also sided with the other four justices, who evidently believe that denial of the benefits of marriage to same-sex unions constitutes an injustice. Citing an amicus brief to the effect that some “40,000 children in California live with same-sex parents,” and presuming to speak for those children, he confidently asserted that “they want their parents to have full recognition and full status…The voice of those children is important,” he added, as if his citation truly and effectively established him as their spokesman.

Thus, five of the nine Supreme Court justices seem to have effectively taken the position that same-sex relationships indeed are “marriages,” and that for them therefore the principal issue in need of remedy by the high court is the “injustice” of the denial to same-sex couples (and their children) of the benefits of marriage which the law has always recognized.

The premise and argumentation here seem to be that, in the American system under the Constitution, the various states have the power to define and regulate marriage. Nine states and the District of Columbia now have defined it to include same-sex relationships. Ergo, in these jurisdictions same-sex unions are marriages. Nothing further therefore remains to be decided or done by the high court except to give them the benefits that pertain to marriage.

All the appeals, pleas, rallies, demonstrations, exhortations, law review articles, amicus briefs, etc., calling on the Supreme Court not to “redefine marriage,” need not be considered at all, but can simply be by-passed and left aside. Marriage already has been redefined in nine states and the District of Columbia. The court does not even have to address all the other issues that has been raised. All that needs to be done is to extend the legal benefits of marriage to same-sex unions in those nine states and the District of Coumbia by invalidating the part of DOMA that currently excludes them from those benefits. Presumably the part of DOMA that guarantees that other states need not recognize same-sex unions defined as marriages by other states could even be left in place. If states truly have the authority to “define” marriage under the Constitution, then the states that have redefined it have acted in accordance with the authority they have, and nothing more needs to be said or done about it.

Majority May Have Already Redefined Marriage
Could the U.S. Supreme Court really rule in such a way as this? As already noted above, it is dismaying to contemplate such a thing. But as also noted above, nobody knows how the court will rule. The focus here has been on things the justices plainly did say, though one can only speculate on how they might apply what they said in an actual ruling. Moreover, they said other things besides what has been quoted here, so it remains unknown how they will rule.

Still, the language employed by a majority of the justices in the hearings quite clearly did indicate that they believe that marriage has effectively been redefined at least in those jurisdictions that have legalized same-sex unions as marriages And so it would seem that the court could indeed rule on the basis of that belief.

It was surely a mistake on the part of some observers to imagine that the idiosyncratic Justice Anthony Kennedy could ever be counted on to help preserve traditional marriage simply because he had recently stated that “a democracy should not be dependent for its major decisons on what nine unelected people from a narrow background have to say.” He also complained during the hearings that the court had been led into “uncharted waters.” But he himself probably bore greater responsibility for where the court now found itself than any other individual. For it was none other than Anthony Kennedy who authored the decision in the 2003 Lawrence v. Texas Supreme Court case that legalized sodomy, or sexual relations between two men. If sodomy itself is not illegal, it is hard to see how the same-sex couplings held to constitute “marriages” could continue to be judged illegal.

Justice Kennedy is also the author of the notorious 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey Supreme Court decision which ruled that abortion on demand had to remain legal because, after all, people generally wanted it and needed it; and because, in Kennedy’s words, “at the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.”

With a justice capable of this kind of thinking supplying the “swing vote”in the ruling on marriage that the Supreme Court is supposed to deliver in June, nobody should be in the least surprised if the high court fails to uphold the understanding of marriage common to the last ten thousand years or so of human civilization.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: glbt; homosexual; homosexualagenda; marriage; scotus; ssm
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Kenneth D. Whitehead is a former career diplomat who served in Rome and the Middle East and as the chief of the Arabic Service of the Voice of America. For eight years he served as executive vice president of Catholics United for the Faith. He also served as a United States Assistant Secretary of Education during the Reagan Administration. His most recent book is Affirming Religious Freedom: How Vatican Council II Developed the Church’s Teaching to Meet Today’s Needs (St. Paul’s, 2010).
1 posted on 04/10/2013 2:27:24 PM PDT by NYer
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To: netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; SumProVita; ...
Catholic Ping
Please freepmail me if you want on/off this list

 

2 posted on 04/10/2013 2:27:52 PM PDT by NYer (Beware the man of a single book - St. Thomas Aquinas)
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To: NYer

The Supreme Court is directly responsible for the killing of over forty million human lives. Its very doubtful that these people will be much troubled by a traditional definition of marriage.


3 posted on 04/10/2013 2:30:58 PM PDT by allendale
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To: NYer

No, marriage has never been “redefined” - however, the meaning of the term HAS been grossly perverted and horribly stained by America’s homosexuals.


4 posted on 04/10/2013 2:33:39 PM PDT by Jack Hammer (American)
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To: NYer

Marriage is a union to protect procreation where the two become one. Procreation requires male and female complementary reproductive systems. Gay marriage is a fraud.


5 posted on 04/10/2013 2:41:19 PM PDT by ex-snook (God is Love)
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To: NYer

THAT’S GAYCIST!


6 posted on 04/10/2013 2:42:27 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I can neither confirm or deny that; even if I could, I couldn't - it's classified.)
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To: NYer
OK.......I'll be the one who agrees with this and at the same time defends the truth about what Rush Limbaugh said along these same lines...

All the appeals, pleas, rallies, demonstrations, exhortations, law review articles, amicus briefs, etc., calling on the Supreme Court not to “redefine marriage,” need not be considered at all, but can simply be by-passed and left aside. Marriage already has been redefined in nine states and the District of Columbia. The court does not even have to address all the other issues that has been raised. All that needs to be done is to extend the legal benefits of marriage to same-sex unions in those nine states and the District of Coumbia by invalidating the part of DOMA that currently excludes them from those benefits. Presumably the part of DOMA that guarantees that other states need not recognize same-sex unions defined as marriages by other states could even be left in place. If states truly have the authority to “define” marriage under the Constitution, then the states that have redefined it have acted in accordance with the authority they have, and nothing more needs to be said or done about it.

The unfortunate fact is that the States themselves have been compromised by liberals putting forth arguments that use "fairness" as a basis to extend marital rights and privileges to gays. Trying to counter that with substitution of Marriage with Civil Union, a area specifically assigned to government and not the church has failed in these states. The only way to save the institution of marriage is to remove it from government and that has not even been tried or lobbied for.

So........it's lost, because the institution of marriage was never defined properly in the first place when government began to regulate it, and government has since distorted and redefined it for their purposes, starting with the first marriage performed by a notary at some city hall. Which was really a civil union, but nobody ever made that argument or complained about the process. We should have, and Churches should have complained and differentiated the government civil union from the marriage performed by a Church, But it never happened or was never a argument that was acted on because of a lack of public support.

What Rush is saying, and this author is saying, is that in their view it is to late to do something that should have been done many, many decades ago. The fairness argument is now winning and it really has nothing to do with the institution of marriage and everything to do with government control of it.

7 posted on 04/10/2013 2:55:58 PM PDT by Cold Heat
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To: NYer
Kenneth D. Whitehead is a former career diplomat who served in Rome and the Middle East and as the chief of the Arabic Service of the Voice of America.

I just barely skimmed the article and he's entitled to whatever his opinion is, but I have a hard time trusting the motives of anyone whose job was to spread government propaganda, regardless of which government it is.

8 posted on 04/10/2013 3:02:55 PM PDT by Orangedog (An optimist is someone who tells you to 'cheer up' when things are going his way)
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To: Jack Hammer
No, marriage has never been “redefined” - however, the meaning of the term HAS been grossly perverted and horribly stained by America’s homosexuals.

The no fault divorce laws and the divorce industry did a lot more damage than you're giving the homosexuals credit for.

9 posted on 04/10/2013 3:04:54 PM PDT by Orangedog (An optimist is someone who tells you to 'cheer up' when things are going his way)
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To: NYer
Whitehead's arguments are all based in natural law. The only justice that still cares about the natural law is Clarence Thomas.

DOMA and Prop 8 could go down 8-1.

10 posted on 04/10/2013 3:05:37 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear
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To: NYer

Why aren’t the supreme court rulings from the 1800s regarding Mormons and plural marriage defining it as one man and one woman being cited in the current gay marriage case?


11 posted on 04/10/2013 3:15:26 PM PDT by tbw2
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To: NYer

Abraham and Sarah are BOTH laughing in heaven since God gave them the baby he promised. Even a seventy year old couple are more likely to have a child than two men who get it on.


12 posted on 04/10/2013 3:28:00 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: Cold Heat
There was a chain of events that led up to this point but that is a different discourse. While I am no fan of Pat Robertson, he recently made a statement that, in the context of history, is absolutely correct.

Pat Robertson on gay marriage

In history there's never been a civilization ever in history that has embraced homosexuality and turned away from traditional fidelity, traditional marriage, traditional child-rearing, and has survived. There isn't one single civilization that has survived that openly embraced homosexuality. So you say, "what's going to happen to America?" Well if history is any guide, the same thing's going to happen to us.

Back in 1969, an Italian immigrant friend of mine, educated in classical history, assessed the American landscape and made an astounding pronoucement. He first noted the rise in the feminist movement. Citing historical records, he pointed to the Ancient civilizations of Rome and Greece, stating that in both instances, once women rose to power, they were soon followed by a rise in the homosexual movement after which they collapsed. He then said that, if this pattern were left unchecked, I would witness the collapse of the US in my lifetime. This was 1969! At the time, I laughed; I stopped laughing years ago as I have watched his pronouncement unfold.

13 posted on 04/10/2013 3:33:30 PM PDT by NYer (Beware the man of a single book - St. Thomas Aquinas)
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To: NYer
I agree with you 100%.....

But unfortunately our knowledge of history is not apparently enough to change our destiny as a civilization.

I respect those who refuse to accept this, and as we both know, this political fight is far from over but we are losing the battle. I nearly threw my son out on his butt last week because of this and other things that he has been conditioned to accept as fairness...

I told him....(age 25) that I had failed as a father to prevent the lefties from indoctrinating him. To be fair, I failed with all of them.

With all this nonsense about the fiscal cliff some weeks ago, I commented to my wife that the American society had already fallen over the real cliff. The falling does not hurt and is not seen or felt because we have not hit the bottom yet.

After the fires go out, I don't know what the future will be like....not anymore...all I can do is prepare for the fires. The ones that will be lit when the stuff hits the fan.

14 posted on 04/10/2013 4:20:37 PM PDT by Cold Heat
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To: tbw2

It’s because Democracy has a flaw.....It’s because liberals have exploited that flaw in spite of the fact that the country was founded as a republic.

It took a while, but they pulled it off...


15 posted on 04/10/2013 4:25:04 PM PDT by Cold Heat
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To: Orangedog
The no fault divorce laws and the divorce industry did a lot more damage than you're giving the homosexuals credit for.

You are correct. The homosexuals would not be able to do what they are doing if heterosexuals had not already watered down the meaning of marriage so. Hardly anybody gets married for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer, etc. anymore. And greedy lawyers and biased judges have had a field day. Add to that the Hollywood elite who either shun marriage altogether or make it a serial occurance that only lasts as long as the elaborate reception.

16 posted on 04/10/2013 4:45:14 PM PDT by informavoracious (The ancient Greeks and Romans thought they were on the "right side of history.")
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To: NYer
They call it whatever they want.  The BIOLOGY stays the same.
 
 
Sex, Evolution and Behavior
By Martin Daly and Margo Wilson
 
 
Got Socio-Biological Fitness?
 
 "Gay" penguins don't - not even in the San Francisco zoo
http://www.google.com/#sclient=psy-ab&hl=en&source=hp&q=San+Francisco+gay+penguins
 
FAIL.

17 posted on 04/10/2013 5:09:40 PM PDT by TArcher ("TO SECURE THESE RIGHTS, governments are instituted among men" -- Does that still work?)
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To: NYer

“Justice Kennedy is also the author of the notorious 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey Supreme Court decision which ruled that abortion on demand had to remain legal because, after all, people generally wanted it and needed it; and because, in Kennedy’s words, “at the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.””

Its statements like that which make me question the competent of the Federal Employees in black robes. For in the act of abortion you are not merely defining your own concept of existence and beginning of life. You are defining it for someone else whom you are deeming unworthy of life.

More over in the Federal Government’s intrusting they are depriving our states of the ability to protect people from being murdered. By forcing upon us a definition of life that excludes some of the most helpless among us.


18 posted on 04/10/2013 5:40:04 PM PDT by Monorprise (`)
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To: Jack Hammer

Sexuality has been perverted just as much by heterosexuals who indulge in contraception.


19 posted on 04/10/2013 6:22:16 PM PDT by TradicalRC (Conservatism is primarily a Christian movement.)
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To: Monorprise
“at the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.””

Shorten that up a bit to:Everything is Relative

20 posted on 04/10/2013 7:46:21 PM PDT by Cold Heat
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