You claimed that Romney signed a permanent GUN ban.
What he signed was an "assault weapons" ban. It did not ban: revolvers, semi-automatic pistols, shotguns, or most categories of rifles. But okay, chief. If you want, I'll agree to your terminology. Romney obviously did sign a bill that banned some guns and he was wrong to do so, no matter what his rationale. Banning some guns is not the same thing as banning "all" guns, but it's still wrong and obviously we agree on that.
Now, you have chosen to focus on this particular issue to avoid having to answer my original statement to you in which I accused you of telling lies about Romney. I was not just talking about guns - you made other questionable statements, including:
"Obamacare is the same thing as Romneycare, just nationwide".
FALSE - Obamacare is vastly more intrusive and complex and involves the creation of hundreds of new bureaucracies and thousands of new regulations. Romneycare was a model of simplicity by comparison. It still sucks. But it is a far cry from what Obama has done.
"Mittens gave Massachusetts homosexual marriage".
FALSE. - The Courts did that. Same-sex marriage in Massachusetts began on May 17, 2004, as a result of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ruling in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health that it was unconstitutional under the Massachusetts constitution to allow only heterosexual couples to marry. The court gave the Mass. legislature 180 days in which to "take such action as it may deem appropriate" following its ruling. Governor Romney ordered town clerks to begin issuing marriage licenses on May 17, 2004.
The federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) prevents married same-sex partners from having their marriage recognized by the federal government. In 2010, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts held provisions of the Act to be unconstitutional. In May 2012, the First Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed the ruling, finding DOMA unconstitutional, but stayed enforcement of the decision pending appeal to the Supreme Court.
"The Founders had lots to say about homosexuals."
LOL. Really? I don't recall that from my repeated readings of Madison and Hamilton's Federalist Papers or John Adams' diaries or Thomas Jefferson's essays, or Patrick Henry's speeches, or George Washington's letters. Sorry. I must have missed their key insights on that issue.
Andy.
You said that Romney didn’t ban guns.
Romney banned “assault weapons” which are, drumroll, guns!
So where is the lie?
Tell me again how a gun ban is NOT a gun ban?
http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/amendVIIIs10.html
“Whosoever shall be guilty of Rape, Polygamy, or Sodomy with man or woman shall be punished, if a man, by castration, if a woman, by cutting thro’ the cartilage of her nose a hole of one half inch diameter at the least.”
Thomas Jefferson’s opinion on homosexuality.
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/mgw:@field%28DOCID+@lit%28gw110081%29%29
“At a General Court Martial whereof Colo. Tupper was President (10th March 1778) Lieutt. Enslin28 of Colo. Malcom’s Regiment tried for attempting to commit sodomy, with John Monhort a soldier; “
George Washington Courts Martial of Lt Enslin for homosexuality.
Hadley Arkes, Professor of Jurisprudence, Amherst College, said that the deeper failure must go to the man who stood as governor
.and if it is countdown for marriage
it is also countdown for Mitt Romney, whose political demise may be measured along the scale of moves he could have taken
Robert Bork, who was somehow persuaded to endorse Romney, back in his more alert years described the Goodridge decision as being completely untethered from the state and Federal constitutions and from the rule of law.
Dr. Herb Titus: Rick Santorum challenged Mitt Romney to justify the former Massachusetts Governors decision to implement the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ruling that declared that the exclusion of otherwise qualified same-sex couples from civil marriage violated the state constitution. After the debate, Mr. Romney stated to Mr. Santorum that he did all that he legally could to stop the implementation of the courts decision before he exercised his duty as Governor to enforce the courts decision requiring local officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. He issued a challenge to Mr. Santorum to find any qualified legal authority that would not agree with him. I have been asked to meet that challenge. I am a graduate of the Harvard Law School. I am an active member of the Virginia bar and the bar of a number of federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court. As a professor of constitutional law for nearly 30 years in four different ABA-approved law schools, and as a practicing lawyer, I have written a number of scholarly articles and legal briefs on a variety of constitutional subjects; including the nature of legislative, executive and judicial powers and the constitutional separation of those powers. I am generally familiar with the Massachusetts Constitution, and especially familiar with that constitutions provision dictating that no department shall exercise the powers that belong to either of the other two departments to the end it may be a government of laws and not of men. As Governor, Mr. Romney has claimed that he had no choice but to obey the Supreme Judicial Courts opinion. This claim is false for several reasons. First, Mr. Romney was not a party to the case. Only parties to a case are bound to obey a court order. As President Abraham Lincoln said in support of his refusal to enforce the United States Supreme Courts infamous Dred Scott case the nations policy regarding slavery was not determined by a court opinion, even by the highest court of the land. Likewise, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts policy regarding marriage may not be determined by the Supreme Judicial Court, the States highest court. Second, the Supreme Judicial Court did not order any party to do anything. Rather, it issued only a declaration that, in its opinion, excluding otherwise qualified same-sex couples access to civil marriage was unconstitutional. Thus, even the Massachusetts Department of Health, which was a party to the case, was not ordered to do anything. Third, the Massachusetts Board of Health was not authorized by statute to issue marriage licenses. That was a job for Justices of the Peace and town clerks. The only task assigned by the Legislature to the Board of Health was to record the marriage license; it had no power to issue them even to heterosexual couples. So the Department of Health, the only defendant in the case, could not legally have complied with an order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Fourth, if the court were to order the Department of Health to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, then Mr. Romneys duty as governor would have been to instruct the Department that it had no authority to do what the court ordered. Nor could the court confer such authority, such an authorization being in nature a legislative, not a judicial, act. Fifth, the decision whether to implement the Supreme Judicial Courts opinion was, as the court itself acknowledged, for the Legislature to take such action as it may deem appropriate in light of [the courts] opinion. By the very terms of the order, the Massachusetts legislature had discretion to do nothing. Sixth, because the legislature did nothing, Mr. Romney had no power to act to implement the court decision. By ordering justices of the peace, town clerks, and other officials authorized to issue marriage licenses to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, Mr. Romney unconstitutionally usurped legislative power, a power denied him by the Massachusetts constitution that separated the three kinds of powers into three different departments. "Professor Scott Fitzgibbon of Boston College Law School wrote that the Goodridge decision did not mandate that the executive branch issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Constitutional scholar Herb Titus said that Romney exercised illegal legislative authority and added there was no order. There wasnt even any order to the Department of Public Health to do anything. Matt Staver, Dean of Liberty Law School, said that Romney went out and ordered to licenses to be changed, and if fact, thats not his duty. His duty was to abide by the legislature
.the governor actually participated, in my opinion, in advancing same-sex marriage.
"All causes of marriage...shall be heard and determined by the governor and council, until the legislature shall, by law, make other provision." (PART THE SECOND, Ch. III, Article V.)In hearing the Goodridge case and issuing an opinion, four of the seven judges violated the Supreme Law of Massachusetts. Massachusetts courts have admitted, on other occasions, that neither they nor legislators, nor the governor are authorized to violate the Constitution:
g[The words of the Constitution] are mandatory and not simply directory. They are highly important. There must be compliance with them.h (Town of Mount Washington v. Cook 288 Mass. 67)Nevertheless, after these judges issued an illegal opinion, you told the citizens of Massachusetts and all of America that you had no choice but to "execute the law." Oddly, you were not referring to a law, but to the judgesf opinion.
"[T]he people of this commonwealth are not controllable by any other laws than those to which their constitutional representative body have given their consent." (PART THE FIRST, Article X.)The Constitution also disproves your assertion to the nation that the marriage statute (M.G.L. Chapter 207) was somehow suspended or nullified by the four judges:
"The power of suspending the laws, or the execution of the laws, ought never to be exercised but by the legislature, or by authority derived from it, to be exercised in such particular cases only as the legislature shall expressly provide for." (PART THE FIRST, Article XX.)In light of both your actions and your explanations, it comes as a great surprise to many of us to learn that, under the Massachusetts Constitution, judges cannot suspend or alter statutes. This principle is clearly fundamental to Massachusetts' system of government and is restated in multiple ways.
"The judicial shall never exercise the legislative and executive powers, or either of them: to the end it may be a government of laws and not of men." (PART THE FIRST, Article XXX.)We note that the Massachusetts Constitution so completely protects citizens from the rule of judges that even laws passed in the Colonial period before the Constitution itself was ratified cannot be suspended by judges:
"All the laws which have heretofore been adopted, used and approved c shall still remain and be in full force, until altered or repealed by the legislaturec" (PART THE SECOND, Article VI.)We note, Governor, that in all of your justifications to the nation, there was no mention of these parts of the Constitution which you swore to defend. Why? Even this same court is forced to admit:
"The Constitution as framed is the only guide. To change its terms is within the power of the people alone." (Opinion of the Justices, 220 Mass. 613, 618)We note Massachusetts Chief Justice Hutchison's words in 1767: "laws should be established, else Judges and Juries must go according to their Reason, that is, their Will" and "[T]he Judge should never be the Legislator: Because, then the Will of the Judge would be the Law: and this tends to a State of Slavery.' " As Judge Swift put it in 1795, courts "ought never to be allowed to depart from the well known boundaries of express law, into the wide fields of discretion."
"The courts [instructing] when and how to perform...constitutional duties" (mandamus) "is not available against the Legislature [or] against the Governor)."We also note this ruling in 1969: "an unconstitutional overreaching by the judiciary is an act that is gnot only not warranted but, indeed, [is] precluded.h (Commonwealth v. Leis)
"The...principles expressed in...the Massachusetts Constitution...call for the judiciary to refrain from intruding into the power and function of another branch of government." (LIMITS v. President of the Senate, 414 Mass. 31, 31 n.3, 35 (1992)
gHere, no one argues that striking down the marriage laws is an appropriate form of relief."In fact, they admitted that under the statute, Chapter 207 of the Massachusetts General Laws, homosexual marriage is illegal: gWe conclude, as did the judge, that M.G.L. c. 207 may not be construed to permit same-sex couples to marry.h
"But the statute, so long as it stands, imposes upon both branches [of the Legislature] uniformity of procedure so far as concerns this particular matter. One branch cannot ignore it without a repeal of the statute. A repeal can be accomplished only by affirmative vote of both branches and approval by the governor." (Dinan v. Swig, 223 Mass. 516, 519 (1916)Nevertheless, with no legislation authorizing you to do so, you ordered the Department of Public Health to change the words on marriage licenses from "husband" and "wife," to "Partner A" and "Partner B." Stunningly, you later admitted that without enabling legislation you cannot change birth certificates in a similar way.
. they violated the oath of office, a constitutional felony, and
. as a citizensf constitutional petition, that initiative remains pending until brought to one of the five final actions the Constitution requires and
. therefore their crime against the Constitution is perpetual and without statute of limitations
. unless they vote, you will call them into session on that original marriage petition and
. will order the state police to arrest them and bring them to the chambers to vote (as the Governor of Texas ordered in May 2003 when Texas legislators refused to convene a quorum).
Andy, you should know better.
During the founding times, mores were explicitly tied to an orthodox reading of the Judeo-Christian bible. Both testaments of it explicitly frown upon homosexual conduct. Our de facto if not de jure modern severe separation of church and state is a novel, untypical situation. The constitutional promise not to designate a particular Church Of The United States has spread far beyond its initially designed boundaries.