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The Federal Marriage Amendment Is Hopeless....(long, but worth reading!)
The Daily Standard ^ | 11/19/2003 12:00:00 AM | Dennis Teti

Posted on 11/19/2003 11:57:24 AM PST by livianne

...But federal law can succeed in protecting marriage where a constitutional amendment is destined to fail.

THE MASSACHUSETTS SUPREME COURT has legalized same-sex marriage for the first time in this country. Most suspect the U.S. Supreme Court will throw a blanket of federal constitutional protection around this precedent.

Faced with the judicial deconstruction of marriage, angry conservative spokesmen and panicky lawmakers have rushed to embrace the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA), a constitutional amendment to ban homosexual unions. These well-intentioned religious and pro-family leaders believe the high court will strike down anything less imposing. But trying to change the Constitution to resolve a fundamental social conflict is a deeply mistaken strategy. Not only will it almost certainly fail to be ratified; it will end up enshrining these "marriages."

There must be a more deliberate response. For three years President Bush has been saying that he believes in traditional marriage between a man and a woman. At his press conference following the Lawrence v. Texas anti-sodomy decision, he suggested that the administration is considering alternatives to a constitutional amendment. With firm leadership, the Republican majority in Congress could enact legislation right now to close the door on unisex marriages before the Supreme Court rules.

THE SLIM POPULAR MAJORITY now in opposition to "gay marriage" is not nearly sufficient to ratify a constitutional amendment. The Framers designed the constitutional amendment route to be difficult. Two-thirds of each house of Congress must first approve the amendment language, which then must be ratified by legislatures in at least 38 states--usually within seven years. (The alternative procedure, a constitutional convention, has never been tried.)

If every Republican senator voted for the FMA, 16 Democrats would have to be found to support it. In the House some 60 Democratic votes would be needed in addition to a unanimous Republican vote.

If some political miracle allowed the FMA to pass Congress and escape to the states, a higher series of hurdles awaits. Any 13 state legislatures can defeat it by either taking no vote or rejecting it. It is theoretically possible for two percent of the American people, strategically distributed in 13 small states, to kill an amendment favored by the other 98 percent. A small, energized minority would have little trouble doing so.

BUT LOGISTICAL CHALLENGES ASIDE, proponents of a marriage amendment seriously misunderstand the Framers' intention concerning constitutional changes. The founding generation vigorously debated these procedures (e.g., Federalist Papers 43 and 85, and the anti-Federalist Old Whig Essay I). The same Framers who democratized national elections and legislative enactments designed the amendment process to be partly national and partly federal--requiring a consensus of states, not merely majoritarian/democratic. And they set it up to take a long time so that deliberation, not anger or passion, would control the outcome.

The history of using constitutional amendments to resolve basic social problems is daunting. Like opposition to homosexual unions, the movements to abolish slavery, alcoholic consumption, and polygamy were centered in Christian churches. The anti-slavery struggle took over 60 years to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, and only after civil war forged a consensus of sorts. During those decades many federal laws were enacted to limit the growth of slavery. The temperance movement began in the 1820s but the first prohibition amendment was not introduced until 1876, after which they were proposed almost every year. An amendment was ratified in 1919 after 90 years of work, only to be repealed in 1933.

The social conflict most like gay marriage involved the Mormon practice of polygamy in the western territories. Americans overwhelmingly opposed plural marriage. The first Republican party platform in 1856 denounced polygamy and slavery as "twin relics of barbarism." President Grant proposed an anti-polygamy amendment in his 1875 State of the Union message, and for decades thereafter, amendments were introduced. Before World War I, 26 states had petitioned for a constitutional convention. Yet legal recognition of polygamy was crushed not by amendment but by a series of limited executive actions and federal laws that were sustained by the Supreme Court.

SOME CONSERVATIVES RESIST federal legislation on gay marriage because, they contend, family regulation belongs to the states, not the federal government. (Of course if these conservatives support FMA, they don't really object to the shift.) In fact the horse has been stolen from the barn. Lawrence v. Texas dragged same-sex marriage into the federal arena. If the Supreme Court blesses the Massachusetts decision, gay marriage will be nationalized to stay.

For example, instead of directly forbidding same-sex partners to marry, a federal marriage privilege protection measure would make it a criminal offense for state or local officials acting "under color of law" to issue a marriage license to persons of the same sex. Constitutional authority to pass this measure comes from the Fourteenth Amendment, buttressed by the Republican Guarantee clause (S. 4 of Art. IV) and the Necessary and Proper clause (par. 18, S. 8 of Art. I).

To appreciate this, consider the nature of the marriage relationship as understood from antiquity through centuries of thought and experience that shaped its meaning in American legal practice: The marriage union is a relationship characterized by privilege. Each spouse is recognized to have a privilege "to have and to hold" the person of the other. The privilege is exclusive: No one else may claim a right to join that union.

The marriage privilege is prior to government in the sense the Declaration of Independence speaks of regarding inalienable rights: "among these [implying there are others] are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Families exist by nature to perpetuate the species, or natural rights themselves would disappear. Government's purpose is not to dispense rights but to "secure" rights created by "Nature and Nature's God." To do this, governments enforce laws placing limits on how people exercise their natural rights and privileges. For instance, the rights to liberty and life can be constrained by jailing or executing criminals. The marriage privilege also must be regulated because the family is central to the well-being of society. No nation has ever claimed that a person should be permitted to marry anyone he or she chooses. The legal requirement of a marriage license grants a social privilege par excellence, a relationship to be enjoyed only by specific persons permitted and protected by law.

So deeply embedded in our society is this privilege that a thick network of legal rights and duties has been woven to reinforce it--over a thousand federal and 400 state laws by a rough count from the General Accounting Office. They comprehend everything from parents' duties to their children, adoption, estates and inheritances, survivor benefits, immigration rights, domestic violence protections, and divorce settlements, to customs claims, lease renewals, tax laws, judicial evidentiary immunity, and many other areas. No other privileged relationship has been so marked out by legal benefits and obligations to prove its centrality for free society.

As Stanley Kurtz demonstrated in Beyond Gay Marriage, the movement to redefine marriage to include homosexual unions brings in its wake demands to legalize polygamy, polyamory (group marriages), triple parenting, incestuous partnerships, and worse. Expanding marriage to include same-sex partnerships implies the abolition of the marriage privilege, as proponents of these various arrangements clearly understand. Andrew Sullivan and other gay activists are angered by what they say is the equation of gay marriage with other unnatural unions, but no one has claimed these differing sexual arrangement are the same. The real issue in common among these relationships is the principle that is supposed to legitimize gay marriage: personal affectional preference. But marriage is not capable of being radically redefined. Reason itself, fixed in the nature of the relationship, imposes limits. Transcend the limits, and, as Kurtz shows, the marriage union dissolves as a social and legal institution.

For most of its history, the Supreme Court held that traditional marriage forms a family unit which is the fundamental building block of free society. The forms of self-government could not survive without it, so any weakening of the marriage privilege undermines free government. To preserve republicanism, the federal government is obligated (Art. IV, S. 4) to strengthen its basis in the marriage union.

The states' power to enact marriage laws presupposes the purpose of securing the marriage privilege, not weakening it. By the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment, the states may not do so. Here is why.

MOST OF US KNOW the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process and Equal Protection provisions. Constitutional jurisprudence is filled with cases involving state actions denying one or the other. In a landmark 1873 opinion known as Slaughter-House Cases, however, the Supreme Court refused to recognize the butchers' business in Louisiana as a federally protected "privilege" under the Amendment's Privileges or Immunities Clause. The Amendment had been ratified after the Civil War to allow the federal government to protect the civil rights of ex-slaves. The case had nothing to do with marriage as a "privilege." The consequence of Slaughter-House was to turn to the other great provisions to enforce civil rights and liberties.

Although the Court abandoned the Privileges or Immunities Clause after 1873, we are not without guidance as to what might be included. In a circuit court opinion in 1823, Supreme Court Justice Washington said that the privileges and immunities of state citizens "are, in their nature, fundamental; [they] have, at all times, been enjoyed by the citizens of the several states which compose this union, from the time of their becoming free, independent, and sovereign," adding that "it would perhaps be more tedious than difficult to enumerate" what they are. The privilege of marriage precisely fits this description, especially since it was always thought to be basic to society's well-being.

In a 1923 case called Meyers v. Nebraska, which struck down state laws forbidding foreign language courses in primary schools, the Supreme Court, referring to the Fourteenth Amendment, said: "the right of the individual . . . to marry . . . and generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law [is] essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men." Not only did the Meyers opinion infer that marriage is a protected "privilege," it cited Slaughter-House to support the inference.

Same-sex marriage proponents admit the traditional understanding of marriage as monogamous and heterosexual, which is why they call for it to be redefined. Of course, to stretch the limits of the marriage union beyond a man and a woman is by definition, a change in its nature. Those who assert that redefining marriage would be a good thing cannot also claim that redefinition would not change marriage as we have understood it: changing it is their whole purpose. But any fundamental state-imposed change would "abridge"--weaken or limit--the marriage privilege within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. A new constitutional amendment would be needed to allow the states to redefine or abolish marriage. Short of that, the Fourteenth Amendment imposes on Congress the duty to defend the privileges of American citizens against state actions to change their meaning.

ENACTING A MARRIAGE PRIVILEGE PROTECTION STATUTE in the current Congress would give Republicans a significant advantage in next year's elections. Compared to the lengthy process of ratifying the FMA, they would have taken immediate action to protect traditional marriage. This would not stop gay marriage from being an issue in the election campaigns. Rather, it would bring the question to the forefront.

The long delay connected with getting an amendment through Congress would allow incumbents to obscure their position. Neither Republican nor Democratic lawmakers want to vote on divisive issues like gay marriage. Some in both parties would say they support traditional marriage, yet find a multitude of objections to the amendment: the idea of changing the Constitution, the need for more expert testimony, etc. Even now the amendment's sponsors don't agree with each other about the proposed text's meaning and whether it should be changed. Opponents will have a field day with the "vague" language. If President Bush took a leadership role, the marriage privilege protection statute could be brought to a vote before November 2004. Every senator and representative would be on record, and the party division would not be buried in platform statements.

If Republicans, supporting traditional marriage, keep the White House and increase their legislative advantage, important judicial consequences would follow. The late constitutional scholar Alexander Bickel taught that constitutional interpretation is a kind of colloquy among the three branches. When the judiciary veers too far from the common sense of the Constitution, the other branches open a conversation with the judges.

We badly need a colloquy like this today. Historical precedents suggest the justices might not disregard a clear assertion of legislative will on such a basic issue. Neither a weak "sense of Congress" resolution nor a fanciful constitutional amendment that will be dead on arrival can do much to advance this conversation. Enforceable law is Congress' authoritative means to voice its position. With an election mandate to protect the marriage privilege, Congress and the White House would give the high court incentives and an opportunity to rethink its agenda. Should the justices persist, the conflict will intensify, not go away. A constitutional crisis--much like the New Deal crisis--would be almost inevitable.

Those who favor a constitutional amendment to protect marriage object to ordinary legislation, claiming the Supreme Court will certainly strike down a federal statute. President Franklin Roosevelt gave this classic response to such arguments:

[There are] those who honestly believe the amendment process is the best and who would be willing to support a reasonable amendment if they could agree on one. To them I say: we cannot rely on an amendment as the immediate or only answer to our present difficulties. When the time comes for action, you will find that many of those who pretend to support you will sabotage any constructive amendment which is proposed. . . . Even if an amendment were passed, and even if in the years to come it were to be ratified, its meaning would depend upon the kind of justices who would be sitting on the Supreme Court bench. An amendment, like the rest of the Constitution, is what the justices say it is rather than what its framers or you might hope it is.

Changes in the Constitution never happen merely because voters are angry. The Framers designed the process to insure that momentary passions don't damage a Constitution that must endure for centuries. Amendments are possible when the political conflict is over and a consensus is established. Losing a fight over the FMA, which is virtually certain, will only give ammunition to those who would claim popular support for same-sex marriage. Enacting a marriage privilege protection law can advance the effort to forge a consensus that will preserve marriage and constitutional republicanism.

Dennis Teti is a writer who lives in Hyattsville, Maryland, who has taught political philosophy and constitutional law.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: amendment; family; gay; homosexualagenda; marriage; marriageamendment; supremejudicial
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To: JohnnyZ
I understand the author's contention that FMA would be too long and difficult, but I don't understand what it is he does want to do. Can you or someone else explain it?
21 posted on 11/19/2003 1:16:37 PM PST by Zack Nguyen
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To: JohnnyZ
The writer seriously underestimates the chances of the FMA passage.

I agree. And I don't think it would take more than a couple of years to have it ratified. When 4 out of every 5 Americans want something done the politicians will jump through all the hoops to get it done in a hurry. Offhand I can't think of more than 5 or 6 states where there would be any doubt about ratifying the amendment. In the great majority of states the state legislators would love to climb on board an issue that's supported by 77% of the voters.

Anyway, what's to keep congress from approaching this from both directions? Congress could pass a law like the writer suggests, and also pass an amendment defining legal marriage as a legal union between 2 people of the same sex. Then the courts would have no way to deliberately misinterpret the intention of the amendment's authors.

IMHO, any law that isn't backed up by a clearly written new amendment will be slapped down by the same court that threw out the TX sodomy law.

22 posted on 11/19/2003 1:18:17 PM PST by epow
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To: livianne
read later
23 posted on 11/19/2003 1:18:33 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: Scenic Sounds
I wonder when it was that marriage licenses first became required. I'll bet none of our founding fathers had to get a "marriage license" from the state. ;-)

Yes, but at that time, marriages were an undoubtedly more sacred institution, acknowledged with the blessing of a religious authority. Whether or not the government should authorize marriage is not the point, but it's in their best interest to support traditional marriage.

24 posted on 11/19/2003 1:19:53 PM PST by Lou L
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To: JohnnyZ
To which I said, "Who said it was fast?" Half the article is fairly obvious, half is just wrong. You know for a fact that this amendment would pass? Despite the fact that the passage of a constitutional amendment is deliberately very difficult? And even if it does pass, it could take YEARS to be ratified. That makes an amendment pretty much hopeless in terms of dealing with what is going on NOW. You can't wait 2-4 years to fight someone who's got you on the ropes today.
25 posted on 11/19/2003 1:21:23 PM PST by livianne
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To: livianne
#####As far as I know, Mass cannot amend the constitution in anywhere close to 180 days.#####


You mean the VOTERS and their ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES can't amend the Massachusettes state constitution within 180 days. Unfortunately, the advocates of gay marriage didn't have to worry about that. They had four friendly judges who simply amended the state constitution by decree with this gay marriage ruling.

This is one of the most damaging loopholes in our generally excellent system of government. The Founding Fathers of our nation, as well as those of the state of Massachusetts, assumed good behavior on the part of judges. They made amending the constitution difficult, requiring super majorities, to keep amendments from being ratified without broad popular support. But such a system presumes that judges won't usurp power from the bench. Unfortunately, the do and they have.

So we now have a situation where liberal judges simply impose liberal policies on the country. If proponents of gay marriage lack the votes to enact their agenda, then pro-gay marriage judges go searching through the existing constitution, find some vague passage ratified decades or even two centuries ago, and "interpret" it as mandating gay marriage (even though the people who originally wrote and ratified that passage never in their wildest fantasies thought they were legalizing gay marriage).

This has happened over and over on numerous issues, ranging from abortion to the death penalty to sodomy laws. And it never happens in the other direction. No court ever finds a conservative political agenda item to be mandated by the constitution.

So liberals can get their laws passed, and their constitutional changes made, without even having majority support, let alone super majorities. Then we, as conservatives, sit here worrying about whether we can get a super majority to put the constitution back to what it was in the first place.
26 posted on 11/19/2003 1:24:25 PM PST by puroresu
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To: longtermmemmory
Did the court say they have to issue marriage licenses or that they have to "adress" the issue. I would say they have "adressed" the issue. They have put it before the voters in the most expeditious manner.

All they said is that they were putting a stay on the ruling for 180 days to allow the legislature to change the laws to fall in line with this ruling. But of course they and everyone else knows that 180 days is barely enough time for anything big to be done. But it wasn't as vague as address the issue - the court said that the legislature has 6 months to make the laws constitutional according to their ruling.

27 posted on 11/19/2003 1:27:42 PM PST by livianne
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To: Viva Le Dissention
if you got 2/3s, you'd fall short. You need 3/4. And don't hold your breath.

By my count 39 states have already passed the DMA. Using the old math that would equate to 78%. 78% > 75%. Won't have to hold my breath long.

28 posted on 11/19/2003 1:34:37 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: puroresu
You mean the VOTERS and their ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES can't amend the Massachusettes state constitution within 180 days. Unfortunately, the advocates of gay marriage didn't have to worry about that. They had four friendly judges who simply amended the state constitution by decree with this gay marriage ruling.

Exactly. The elected Governor of the commonwealth is completely opposed to this ruling, but his hands are tied short of this amendment, which is a very good but long term solution. What really gets me is that when a majority of people want something but the court decides the other way NOT in the favor of liberals, it's evidence of a facist state and a complete violation of democracy. When the same situation exists but THEY are the majority, it's true justice and good judgement. Oh, and I read through the Mass constitution - you REALLY have to stretch to get their decision out of it. In fact, it specifically says this: Article V. All causes of marriage, divorce, and alimony, and all appeals from the judges of probate shall be heard and determined by the governor and council, until the legislature shall, by law, make other provision. doesn't say a thing about the judiciary

29 posted on 11/19/2003 1:38:06 PM PST by livianne
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To: puroresu
If proponents of gay marriage lack the votes to enact their agenda, then pro-gay marriage judges go searching through the existing constitution...

Or, increasingly, in the decisions of courts that are in entirely different countries. That is frightening.

30 posted on 11/19/2003 1:45:22 PM PST by Zack Nguyen
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To: Zack Nguyen
There is a perfect storm brewing in the culture war Zack.

The SCOTUS legislated from the bench in Lawrence.

The SJC of Mass legislated from the bench in changing the meaning of the word marriage.

The Eleventh Circuit oredered a state judge to remove the decalogue from a courthouse in Alabama.

The Ninth Circuit ordered the cessation of children reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, with the words "under God" contained therein, in their district, since rescinded by an uprising from the plebes.

Two other circuits issued orders reversing Congress' ban on killing half born babies.

While all this is going on, left wing whack jobs have put up a sign in the senate that states "CONSERVATIVES NEED NOT APPLY".

And now we have Mike the Snake allegedly molesting yet another child on 24/7.

If this doesn't get a bunch of the frogs in the slow boil pot to jump to safety, nothing will.

31 posted on 11/19/2003 1:55:57 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: livianne
You guys don't get it. If you pass this Amendment, the next time we have a Leftest President, he or she will declare that only liberal democrats can be adult men or women and strip conservatives of their right to get married and be married.

Then what are you going to do?

32 posted on 11/19/2003 2:02:12 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Viva Le Dissention
Not only do you need 3/4ths, you need both houses of the legislature in 3/4ths. In other words, 13 of 99 legislative houses in the country (Nebraska has only one legislative house) could block an amendment.

For now, the FMA won't go anywhere. The Supreme Court would have to overturn the full faith and credit provisions of the DMA, holding that each state and the federal government much recognize gay marriages concluded in any other state, for the FMA to catch fire.
33 posted on 11/19/2003 2:14:27 PM PST by only1percent
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To: Lou L
Marriages were actually recorded at the churches. The churches of old were the public records place. The adoption of a license, was more a issue of centralizing the recording. (mormons are used in genetic research because their churches keep very good geneology records. Not to mention individual mormon family bibles which recorded births, deaths, and marriages)

A county clerk, a clerk of court are charged with preserving the integrity of public records. As the country grew, so did the need to assure the integrity of records. The license is actually a misnomer. It is more accuratly called a recording fee.

Religious or not, marriage is an instutution not a mere contract. Marriage is far more significant tha who loves whom and how one "gets off".
34 posted on 11/19/2003 2:40:35 PM PST by longtermmemmory
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To: only1percent
no I believe you are mistaken. If you just have the states which have DOMA go forward, the DMA passes. I believe there are 38 currently.

This is a hot button issue. I care about it. I could not support any presidential candidate that would waffle on this issue. (ie any Democrat)

IOW: "Vote to protect marriage or I will not vote for you."

35 posted on 11/19/2003 2:47:15 PM PST by longtermmemmory
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To: Paul C. Jesup
You guys don't get it. If you pass this Amendment, the next time we have a Leftest President, he or she will declare that only liberal democrats can be adult men or women and strip conservatives of their right to get married and be married. Then what are you going to do?

That's just plain ridiculous. Passing this amendment would involve a lot of people agreeing with it and a lot of discussion - I don't think you're going to find a large majority that would pass what you describe. Besides, the day I decide to set my moral compass on what the liberals might try to do to me is the day I might as well give up. Because they are going to try anyway - they will push and push in every area they can. It's only in the last few years the conservatives have woken up and started pushing back. Personally, I don't think they even know what real solid conservative opposition looks like. Also, do YOU want to live in a country where almost ALL the major decisions that have come down lately have been at the hands of high courts, not legislatures? A society where four people can decide something this important to so many people isn't a lawful society. It's a society being taken over by the very people who are supposed to be protecting our laws.

36 posted on 11/19/2003 3:28:23 PM PST by livianne
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To: livianne
That's just plain ridiculous.

Compared to what, I saying nothing is impossible to corrupt when dealing with the Clintons. For example; Wag the Dog.

37 posted on 11/19/2003 3:44:58 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: HarleyD
The last count I read was that 77 percent of the population oppose "gay marriage".

Go back and read the long article. Point is well made that the amendment option is not likely to suceed, given the majorities needed at both the federal and state level. What a poll says about the sheeples current twitching is irrelevant

I think the guy is on to something.

38 posted on 11/19/2003 3:55:48 PM PST by don-o (Germany 1932)
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To: jwalsh07
If this doesn't get a bunch of the frogs in the slow boil pot to jump to safety, nothing will.

I think it will take another hit worse than 9/11 to get the sheeple focused.

39 posted on 11/19/2003 4:03:56 PM PST by don-o (Germany 1932)
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To: don-o
Go back and read the long article. Point is well made that the amendment option is not likely to suceed, given the majorities needed at both the federal and state level. What a poll says about the sheeples current twitching is irrelevant

while i agree with the substance of this, i had to comment on the sheeple thing. Don't see it here half so often as I see it when lurking over at DU, but in either case I can't stand it. Calling people "sheeple", which assumes that people just think what they are told and can't think for themselves expresses such disdain for the common folk. THere are no sheeple - just a lot of individuals with their own opinions.

40 posted on 11/19/2003 4:48:00 PM PST by livianne
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