Posted on 06/28/2003 7:08:52 AM PDT by Polycarp
It's given me some food for thought.
Yes, I'll behave now. Mea culpa ;-)
Then, by logical necessity, you must agree that there is a rational basis for disparate sentencing for homosexual and heterosexual rape. To think otherwise would defy common sense.
We had in my own town a Police Chief who favored people and harassed others -- if he didn't like a man he'd have his officers follow the man's sons and ticket them for the smallest infraction. If you were from a family he liked -- you might be stopped for speeding, but the ticket would get lost. This went on for years and became worse not better.
However he was stopped in the next State by the State Troopers at a motel with another man's wife. The man had called it in. The Troopers called the local municipal officials -- under threat of a charge of moral turpitude the Chief resigned.
With the Law of the Land after Thursday, that Chief is still on duty, making live miserable for all and aggravating the contentions between people. That is NOT a good outcome.
(Note: this is a "close enough to the truth" version -- some facts are different.)
* * * * *
Anyway you are celebrating the onset of chaos and petty tyrannies -- eventually wholesale tyranny -- by celebrating this decision.
Check out these cases of Moral Turpitude, open your head and heart:
The Commission on Judicial Conduct has determined that Calvin M. Westcott, a town court judge in Hancock, Delaware County, should be removed for having sex with a mentally retarded woman entrusted to his care, the New York Law Journal reports.In November, Westcott was convicted of endangering the welfare of a mentally retarded person, a crime of moral turpitude, according to the commission.
The state Constitution provides that upon conviction of a crime of moral turpitude, a judge shall be removed from office.
What about sex between staff and students where both sides agree to participate? As a result of a serious case involving a tutor, the sexual harassment committee at the University of Wollongong began looking into this issue in late 1991.We were concerned about two types of problems associated with "consensual" staff-student sex. The first is a conflict of interest, such as where a teacher has sex with one (or more) of his or her students. In this situation, the teacher cannot be, or be seen to be, an objective assessor of the student's academic work. A conflict of interest should be grounds for complaint by anyone affected, including colleagues and other students.
The other type of problem is abuse of trust. An academic is under an implicit obligation to foster the intellectual development of students. The trust that a student puts in the academic for this purpose can be abused when the relationship becomes sexual. But it is difficult for others to say whether trust has been abused -- only the student should be able to make a complaint.
In court Suzanne gave details of regular assignations at several different beaches, usually sandbanks (the professor carried a rug in his car) and once on a piece of Burnie-board at his partially completed house. In most cases they were unobserved, although 'two men and a dog' passed close by on one beach and at Bellerive beach Orr's car got stuck in a ditch and they had togo to a nearby house to get a tow. Once the university accountant saw her at the house site, even though she tried to hide. Some time after her nineteenth birthday they moved Indoors to the bedroom at his home. It was, after all, the middle of winter.When questioned about why she did not resist Orr, Suzanne said 'he did have some sort of power over me ... all through our association I held back and was talked into things by Professor Orr.' She had not intended the sexual relationship 'but I suppose I got into such a state that I thought it would be rather peculiar if I didn't or that it would be wrong or something like that.' She felt that Orr did have a powerful hold on her. She was very suggestible. Over two years of lectures she had come to identify totally with his ideas. '
As a matter of policy, the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy Council has used the definition set forth in IAC, Chapter 2.1(5) (hiring standards for regular enforcement officers) as the definition of moral turpitude. This rule states in part or crime involving moral turpitude. Moral turpitude is defined as an act of baseness, vileness, or depravity in the private and social duties which a person owes to another person, or to society in general, contrary to the accepted and customary rule of right and duty between person and person. It is conduct that is contrary in justice, honesty or good morals. The following nonexclusive list of acts has been held by the courts to involve moral turpitude: Income Tax Evasion, perjury, or its subornation, theft, indecent exposure, sex crimes, conspiracy to commit a crime, defrauding the government and illegal drug sales. Various factors, however, may cause an offense which is generally not regarded as constituting moral turpitude to be regarded as such. For example, a record of a number of convictions for simple assault would involve moral turpitude, whereas a single act would not.
If Bowers can be reversed, then Roe can be reversed. And so can Lawrence.
Scalia points that out in his dissent.
If Bush appoints pro-life justices, Lawrence will be the basis of reversing Roe. The irony would be delicious. I wish I could be sure Bush is going to appoint pro-life justices.
This is much more worse than using the argument of privacy. At least about the privacy many people who still want to adhere to the rules of morality, can agree that policing peoples bedrooms is not a good thing.
But when the issue is defined in the context of liberty - the vices (probably others are in the queue) acquire the ultimate protection - even to be publicly displayed, to be celebrated and promoted by the state. The liberty itself gets redefined as a licence.
Other quote from Kennedy's statement:
"The case does involve two adults who, with full and mutual consent from each other, engaged in sexual practices common to a homosexual lifestyle. Their right to liberty under (the Constitution) gives them the full right to engage in their conduct without intervention of the government." ( AP, Sat, Jun 28, 2003, by Anne Gearan
"Full right to engage in their conduct" without limits of privacy?
We have successfully avoided since 1793 the disaster that befell France, because we have not accepted any method to determine the "general will" except the election of our representatives and latterly our senators.
Now, Anthony Kennedy and the rest of the Committee of Public Safety can discern the will of the people by consulting "references" to an "emerging awareness".
As I posted before, this is very bad, and it is bad irregardless of the result.
The Court also can't say that the Fourth Amendment's prohibition of undue search and seizure constitutes a right to abortion, but it did.
This is the sort of thing that kills us. We stand behind a clearly unconstitutional piece of legislation such as the DoMA, never giving full tought to the consequences, then, when a Court declares that it is clearly unconstitutional, we cry foul, and blame activist Judges instead of idiotic members of Congress.
You claim that this verbiage actually supports the DoMA:
"Section 1. Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State; And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof."
You say that somewhere in there, the Constitution has granted the Federal government the ability to legislate an exception to the Full Faith and Credit Clause...it's not there.
The DoMA is a good example of the Federal government acting in excess of its power.
"The federal Constitution protects state sovereignty by limiting what the federal government may do, i.e., by defining the federal government's "enumerated powers." The Constitution does not delegate to the United States the power to create a categorical exception to the Full Faith and Credit Clause, thereby inviting states to disregard the official acts of other states. Rather, the Full Faith and Credit Clause empowers Congress to enact general laws and to prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof. Simply stated then, the Full Faith and Credit Clause does not allow Congress to decree that a state action which is disfavored by Congress on substantive grounds may be disregarded by states that share the congressional viewpoint. Taken to its logical extreme, were Congress to have the power it deems it has by proposing the Defense of Marriage Act, Congress could next declare that one state need not recognize a no-fault divorce of a sister state, or need not recognize a punitive damages award in excess of $100,000. Obviously, Congress could not enact such legislation." -- Source.
This Act is in actuality an afront to State's rights.
Your California Proposition 22 is in direct conflict with the recently passed Domestic Partners Rights and Responsibility Act of 2003. It will be interesting to see how this Act, Proposition 22, the DoMA, and the 14th Amendment interact with one another in the huge legal mess you have headed your way.
The more Laws we enact to control the behavior of homosexuals, the more strenght we will give to their claim that homosexuals should received the strict scrutiny afforded all protected classes of citizens.
There are no laws that say that most motorcycle riders do not have to wear helmets, but some do. In each State, either all have to wear the helmet, or none do.
This law stated that most people could commit sodomy, but some could not.
Your herrings are starting to stink up the joint.
The whole point of the 9th is NOT to mention any specifically. Do you mean to imply that the 9th, by not specifically mentioning other rights, does no allow the people to retain ANY rights other than those specifically mentioned in the others? What rights do you see in the 9th then?
Funny, one who claims to be such a "conservative" condoning the Federal government's violations of the US Constitution.
Show me where in the Constitution the Congress is given power to legislate an exception to the Full Faith and Credit Clause.
More to the point, what the hell is the matter with Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy? These people were Reagan appointees, but they're writing stuff that sounds like they're channeling Wm. O. Douglas and Earl Warren.
I think it's code for, "You've all been overruled by the Fourth Estate." The quote is a direct reference to the media campaign against morality.
So what's your answer? Let the gays win? Let them take their pick of the schoolyard? Speak up, don't be shy -- you are noticeably not shy. So speak up, signify to us.
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